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artist unkown;
from: The Scrap Book revival edition
Vol 09, no 02 (1910-feb) p201
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JOHN WHOPPER THE NEWSBOY.
by Thomas M Clark (1812-1903)
[WE
shall tell the story just as we had
it from John himself; and if our readers
are disposed to question the
accuracy of any of the details, or wish for
any further explanations, they will please
call at the "Widow Whopper's, No. 97½,
Longbow Avenue, Highlands, Boston."]
CHAPTER I.
HOW JOHN WHOPPER DISCOVERED
THE AIR-LINE TO CHINA.
TWO years ago last February, I
think it was on a Tuesday morning,
I started as usual very early to
distribute my papers. I had a large
bundle to dispose of that day, and
thought that if I took a short cut
across the fields, instead of following
the road from Roxbury to Jamaica
Plain, I could go my rounds in much
less time. I do not care to tell
precisely where it was that I jumped
over the fence; but it is a rough,
barren kind of spot, which nobody has
ever done any thing to improve.
After walking about a third of a
mile, I began to think that I had
better have kept to the turnpike;
for I found that I was obliged to
clamber over an uneven, rocky place,
among trees and bushes and shrubs,
that grew just thick enough to bother
me, so that I hardly knew where to
put my feet. All at once I lost my
balance, and felt that I was sliding
down the side of a smooth, steep rock;
while underneath, to my horror, I
saw what looked like a circular cave,
or well, some five or six feet in diameter.
I tried to grasp the rock with
my hands, and ground my heels
as hard as I could against the
surface, but it was of no use; down I
slipped, faster and faster, until at
last I plunged, feet foremost, into the
dark hole below. For a moment
I held my breath, expecting to be
dashed to pieces; and oh, how many
things I thought of in that short
minute! It seemed as if every thing
that I had ever done came back to
me, especially all the bad things;
and how I wished then that I had
lived a better life! I thought, too, of
my poor mother and my little brother
and sister at home, and how they
would wait breakfast for me that
morning; and how they would keep on
waiting and waiting, hour after hour
and day after day; and how the
neighbors would all turn out and
search for me; and how I should
never be found, and nobody would
ever know what had become of me.
And then I wondered whether Mr.
Simpson, who employed me to
distribute the papers, would suppose
that I had run away somewhere, to
sell them on my own account; and
so I went on thinking and wondering,
until it seemed as if there was
no end to the time. And yet I didn't
strike the bottom of the cave, but
just went on falling and falling,
faster and faster, in the darkness, and
sometimes just grazing the sides, and
still not so as to hurt me much. My
great trouble was to breathe; when it
occurred to me to lay the sleeve of my
coat across my mouth: and then I
found that I could breathe through
the cloth with tolerable ease. After
a while, I recovered my senses; and,
though I continued to fall on still
faster and faster, I experienced no
great inconvenience. How long this
continued, I cannot tell; it appeared
to be an age; and I must have been
falling for several hours, when I began to feel as though I was not sinking
as fast as I had been; and, after
a while, it seemed as if I were rising
up, rather than tumbling down. As
I was now able to breathe much
more freely than I had done, I began
to think calmly about my condition;
and then the thought flashed across
my mind, that perhaps I had passed
the centre of the earth, and was
gradually rising to the surface on the
other side. This gave me hope; and,
when I found that I continued to
move slower and slower, I tried to
collect my faculties, so that I might
know just what it would be best to do,
if I should be so fortunate as to reach
the other end of the hole into which
I had tumbled. At last, looking
down, I saw a little speck of light,
like a very faint star; and then, I
tell you, my heart bounded with joy.
At this moment it suddenly occurred
to me that it would not do to come
out of the hole feet foremost; and, by
a tremendous effort, I managed to
turn a complete summersault, what
the boys always call a somerset,
which, of course, brought me into the
right position. How thankful I felt
that I had been taught to practise
gymnastic exercises at the school in
Roxbury! In my present attitude I
couldn't see the bright spot any
longer: but, before long, I perceived
that it was growing lighter around
me; and I was confident that the
time of my release drew near. I had
determined exactly what I would do
when I reached the surface of the
earth again; and, accordingly, on
the instant that my head came out
of the hole, I grasped the edge with
all my might, and, by another terrible
effort, swung myself up into the air,
and leaped upon the ground.
It is impossible to describe the
strange thrill that passed over me
when I thus found myself standing
on what I knew must be the eastern
side of the globe. As soon as I had
fairly recovered the use of my
reason, I began to speculate as to the
region of country into which I had
emerged. If I had come directly
through the centre of the earth, I
knew, of course, just where I ought
to be; but this hardly seemed possible,
considering how short a time it
had required for my journey. It
then occurred to me that I was really
unable to form any accurate idea of
the number of hours that had elapsed
since I left the soil of Massachusetts;
for, before I had fallen a hundred feet,
a whole age appeared to have passed.
I knew that it was about six o'clock
in the morning when I started; and,
on looking at my watch, I found that
it had stopped at 6.45, owing, as I
afterwards ascertained, to the influence
of magnetic currents upon the
hair-spring.
The country around was in a high
state of cultivation, except in the
immediate vicinity of the spot where
I stood; this was rough and barren,
and so situated that the small cavity
in the earth from which I had just
been released would be very likely to
escape observation. Thinking that
it might be important for me to be
able hereafter to identify the locality,
I took a careful observation of
its general bearings, and twisted
together a few of the twigs that grew
near the hole, but in such a manner
as would not be likely to arrest
attention.
Striking off now at random, I soon
found myself in a low, marshy region,
covered with a species of grain
unlike any thing I had ever seen before,
but which I concluded must be rice;
and then the thought came to me,
that very probably I was in China.
After walking for an hour or two, I
reached a rising ground, and saw in
the distance an immense city on the
water's edge; which from its position,
and resemblance to certain pictures
that I had once seen in Boston, I
believed to be Canton. Refreshing
myself with some fruit that grew by
the wayside, I started off in haste,
in order, if possible, to reach the
city before nightfall. Just as the
sun was setting, I entered what
appeared to be one of the main streets;
when, tired and hungry and foot-sore,
I began to think seriously what
I should do to procure food and
lodging. Here I was, a poor boy
in a strange land, unable to address
a word to the people around me, and
with only a few cents and two or
three bits of paper currency in my
pocket, that could be of no value in
that country. What was I to do?
Just then I came to a large and
respectable-looking building; and over
the door there was this sign, in good
plain characters:
"ENGLISH AND AMERICAN COFFEE-HOUSE."
Tears of joy filled my eyes. In an
instant, I said to myself, "Your
fortune is made, old fellow! Here you
have thirty or forty Boston
newspapers, not twenty-four hours old,
strapped around your neck; and I
rather think they will be in some
demand in Canton."
With a light heart I now entered
the office of the hotel, and threw
down my bundle, with a good,
black-leather covering around the papers,
so that it looked like an ordinary
piece of luggage, which gave me the
appearance of a regular traveller;
then called for a room, and ordered
supper. It was true that I had very
little money in my possession, not
enough, certainly, to pay my bill at
the hotel; but no questions were
asked, and I gave myself little
concern as to the future. I had a first-rate
appetite, and ate voraciously.
After supper was over, I took my
bundle in my hand, and strolled
leisurely into a pleasant and spacious
room, where a number of gentlemen
English and American were
sitting around in groups, some
chatting together, and others reading the
London and New York and Boston
papers. Among them I recognized
the face of a merchant whom I had
seen several times in State Street;
and slinging the strap over my
shoulder in a careless, every-day sort
of tone, just as any newsboy would
have done at home, I went up to
him and said, "Have the morning
papers, mister? 'morning papers?'
'Advertiser,' 'Journal,' 'Post,' 'Herald,
last edition, published this
morning, only five dollars!"
Everybody in the room looked up, for I
managed, as newsboys generally do,
to speak loud enough to drown every
other sound; but no one uttered a
word. It was evident that they
thought I was crazy or something
worse; and so I just cried out again,
"Have the morning paper, sir?" at
the same time thrusting a copy of
"The Advertiser" into his hand.
He looked like an "Advertiser" kind
of man, well dressed and highly
respectable.
Involuntarily his eye glanced at
the date, "Tuesday, Feb. 16,
1867;" and then, in an excited, quivering
tone, he said, "Let me look at your
other papers." There was a long
table in the centre of the room,
which I approached; and, slowly
unfolding my bundle, I laid a few of
the papers wide open in front of the
gentlemen, who crowded around
in the highest state of excitement
Still there was dead silence; when
one of them suddenly burst out with
the exclamation, "Good heavens!
Here is a notice of the arrival of
'The Golconda' at New York, with
a full account of the cargo, and every
thing else correct. Why, this must
be genuine!"
One after another followed with a
cry of surprise at some news which
they had found; until, in a few
minutes, every gentleman in the room
was absorbed in reading the papers,
appearing to have entirely forgotten
all about me, and not caring to ask
how it was that I had brought them
to China in less than twenty-four
hours. After I had stood there
whistling carelessly as long as I
thought worth while, I spoke up in a
loud voice, and said, "Well, gentlemen,
you seem to be enjoying the
news pretty well. I hope you don't
mean to forget to pay for the papers,
only five dollars a copy!"
At this speech every one of them
looked at me with a strange expression,
as if they hardly knew whether
I was a real human boy or something
else; when the Boston gentleman
said, "How on earth did you get
these papers here?" To which I
answered very carelessly, "I didn't
get them here on earth."
"What do you mean?"
"I will tell you what I mean, and
answer your questions, after you have
paid me five dollars each; and cheap
at that, considering."
"Indeed it is, for me at least,"
said one of the gentlemen. "What I
have learned from this paper is
worth to me, in a business way,
thousands of dollars;" and with
that he came forward and put a
hundred into my hand, in the good, solid
form of gold-pieces. His example
had its effect upon the others. Instead of the two hundred which I
had hoped to receive for my forty
newspapers, I was actually in possession
of not less than well, I don't
care to tell exactly how much, on
account of the income-tax.
"Come, now," said the gentlemen,
almost in one breath, "tell us how
these papers came to China."
"I brought them myself."
"When did you leave America?"
"The morning when these papers
were printed: but how long ago that
was, I really don't know, as my
watch stopped while I was on my
voyage; only I thought it was just
as well to call out, as I always used
to do at home, 'Morning paper!'
although, perhaps, for all I can tell,
they may be two or perhaps three
days old; anyhow, I guess you find
them a good deal fresher than the
rest you have got on hand."
Having delivered myself of this
somewhat protracted speech, I began
moving towards the door with the
air of one who had said every thing.
that could reasonably be expected, in
reply to the curious inquiries of my
liberal patrons, when the Boston
merchant motioned for me to stop,
saying with some severity, "Did you
not promise that you would inform
the company how these papers came
from America to China in such an
incredibly short period of time,
whenever you should have received
your pay for the same?"
"Yes, sir; and I just told you that I
brought them over not exactly over
but in short, I brought them
here."
"You say, 'not exactly over;'
do you mean by that phrase to be
understood to say that you did not come
over land?"
"Your honor has hit my meaning
precisely."
"You don't pretend to say that you
came by water?"
"Far from it, sir."
"How then, under the heavens, did
you come?"
"I didn't come under the heavens
at all."
"I don't believe," said the irritated
gentleman, turning to his companions,
"that the fellow came at all: he must
be lying."
All the answer that he received
was the rustling of forty newspapers,
bearing the imprint, "February 16,
1867, Boston." There was no
getting over this.
After a pause of several minutes,
during which a bright idea entered
my mind, I came forward into the
circle, and said, "Why, gentlemen, I
want to see if I can make a good
bargain with you; and when that is settled,
I will tell you how I came over I
mean, I will tell you how I got here;
that is, I will tell you the route that
I took. If I can arrange for the
delivery in Canton of the New York and
Boston daily papers, within thirty-six
hours of the time when they are issued
in those cities, will you all promise to
give me your generous patronage?"
"Of course, we will," they cried all
together.
"Very well; then I pledge myself
to appear again in this place one week
from this day, ready to carry out my
part of the bargain. And now, in
bidding you good-night, allow me to
inform you that I came from America
to China by the air-line."
With this I retired at once to my
room, and was soon sleeping soundly.
I knew that I should be watched so
closely the next day as to make it
impossible for me to escape without
detection; and accordingly I got up an
hour or two before daylight; and, having
laid upon the table in my room an
amount of money which I supposed
would be considered a fair compensation
for my supper and lodging, I tied
the sheets together, and lowered
myself down into the then silent and
deserted street. It was not long before
I found myself once more in the open
country; and looking carefully for the
land-marks that I had noted the afternoon
before, I soon reached the chasm
through which I had made my remarkable
trip to the eastern hemisphere.
Taking the precaution to tie a
handkerchief over my mouth, in order that
I might economize my breath, I
summoned all my courage, and leaped into
the hole. My experiences were
precisely the same as they had been in
the previous journey; and in course of a
few hours, I found myself standing
once more in the familiar outskirts of
Roxbury, and gazing tenderly upon
the solemn dome of Boston State
House. As fast as my legs would
take me, I rushed to my poor mother's
humble abode, longing to relieve the
bitter agony to which I knew she and
my brother and sister must have been
subjected during my absence. It is
not worth while for me to describe at
length the scene that ensued when
I stood once more in the family circle,
with my mother's arms around my
neck, and the young folks bellowing
with joy. To the frantic inquiries
that were showered upon me as to
what had happened, where I had
been, had I had any thing to eat?
I coolly replied that I had not had
much to eat; and, if they would give
me a good, substantial supper, I would
endeavor to relieve their minds.
"Supper indeed!" cried my good
mother; "why, it's just after sunrise!
You haven't lost your senses, I hope."
"I beg your pardon; but it was
about sunrise hours and hours ago,
when I when I" And here I faltered, not caring just then to let the
whole family into my secret.
"When you what?" said my
mother, looking very anxious.
"Why, when I left Canton," I now
answered very promptly.
"You don't say that you have been
to Canton?" she replied, but without
any such show of astonishment as
might have been expected.
"Yes, I have, mother. It occurred
to me that I could sell my papers to
better advantage there than I could
about here; and, indeed, I did, as you
may see." Whereupon I laid in her
good old hand such a sum of money
as she had not clasped for many a day.
"Did you get all this money by
selling papers in Canton?"
"I did, and considerable more;
which I am going to deposit by and
by in the Savings Bank to your credit."
"There must be an awful demand
for papers in Canton."
"There is, mother; and they pay
such high prices there, that I am
thinking of setting up a news
establishment in the place."
"And did you walk all the way to
Canton day before yesterday, my
boy?"
"Then it was day before yesterday
morning when I left home? I thought
it was longer ago than that."
"Longer ago! Oh, dear, dear! you
are not out of your head, my son?"
"My good mother, I am as sound
as you are. Only you know that
sometimes, when we are very much
occupied, the time passes quickly; and
I have been quite busy since I left you."
"And did you say that you walked
to Canton?"
"No, mother, I didn't walk a step."
"Then you took the Providence
cars?"
"Well, mother, it was a kind of a
providence car."
[John's statement at once relieved
the old lady's mind; but those of our
readers who are not intimately
acquainted with the geography of
Massachusetts may be somewhat puzzled
at this. For the information of foreigners
and uneducated people in general,
we must mention that there is a thriving
village on the Boston and Providence
Railroad, about ten miles from
Roxbury, which rejoices in the name
of Canton.
It may here be observed, that the
young man's mind had got into a
kind of chronological muddle, and the
days and nights were mixed up
together in the most miscellaneous
manner. We, who are competent to
solve any problem gratuitously,
furnish our young readers with this
explanation. John left our American
soil on Tuesday morning, at or about
six o'clock. He is twelve hours there
or thereabouts passing through
the earth. This brings him to China
also in the morning, as every thing is
topsy turvy on the other side of the
globe. His walk to Canton fills up
most of the day, Tuesday night
here. He sleeps in Canton one
night, Wednesday here; leaves
Canton, viâ Air-Line, the next morning,
Wednesday night here; and
arrives at Jamaica Plain on Thursday
morning. Absent from home
forty-eight hours: twenty-four
consumed in travelling viâ Air-Line;
twelve in pedestrian excursion through
the Kwangtung country in China;
and twelve in pecuniary negotiations
and sleep at the British and American
Coffee-House, Canton. This
makes every thing clear and consistent.
We would simply remark,
that, when John first told us his
singular tale of adventure, we
remarked that he seemed to have had
a very small allowance of food, as he
ate but one good meal in the whole
forty-eight hours. To which he
replied in a rather lofty manner, which
repressed all further comment on our
part, that, when the mind was filled
with great thoughts, it didn't require
much to sustain the body. We should
like to take John as a boarder. But
he is now on his feet again, and we
let him speak for himself.]
As soon as I found myself alone
with my young brother Bob, a bright
fellow he was, and quick at a
bargain, I told him in strict confidence
the whole story of my adventures, and
then laid before him my plans for the
future, in carrying out which plans I
should need his co-operation.
"I am now going," said I, "to Mr.
Simpson's office, and shall pay him
handsomely for the papers I have
sold. I then propose to contract with
him for the New-York and Boston
daily papers, paying for six months
in advance, to be delivered to you
every morning at half-past five
o'clock precisely. At six o'clock you
will drop the bundle, carefully made
up and nicely secured, as I shall
direct Mr. Simpson, right through
the centre of the hole, to which I
will direct you by and by, always
being very careful to let it fall from
your hand at a height of four feet
above the surface of the earth; in
which case it will, of course, rise just
four feet above the surface on the
other side, and I shall be able to
secure it without difficulty. I will
pay you fifteen per cent on the net
profits of the enterprise for the first
six months, which ought to be
regarded as a liberal compensation for
the small amount of time that you
will be obliged to give to the work.
"Now, Bob, listen to what I am
about to say with strict attention. On
every Saturday morning you must
delay dropping your bundle for half
an hour; and, between six and half-past
six o'clock, be on the careful
look-out for a bundle which I shall
send to you from the other side.
This will contain my remittance for
the week, which I wish you to
deposit to mother's credit in three
places, the names of which I will
give you on paper. She can then
draw, from time to time, such sums as
she may need.
"I shall remain at home for a few
days, and arrange to be in China
next Monday evening. On Tuesday
morning you will forward the first
bundle of papers."
"Are you going to tell mother and
sister all about this?" said Bob.
"No: it would only worry them.
I shall merely say that I have a great
opening for making money, and shall
be obliged to be absent from home
for several months."
"I think," said Bob, chuckling,
Bob labored under the delusion that
he was a wag, "that it is a great
opening, or rather, I might say, a
lengthy opening."
Every thing was duly arranged
according to the programme; and,
on the following Monday, I bade adieu
for a while to the sweet light of day,
I don't mean that I said exactly
these words as I stood on the edge of
the hole; but that is the way in
which it would be expressed in a
book, and jumped boldly into the
dark abyss. In due time I arrived
safely in China, and took lodgings in
a small country inn about two miles
off, as I did not care to show myself
at the Canton Coffee-House until I
had the papers in my possession.
It was with a somewhat anxious
heart that I went to my Air-Line
Station, as I had taken a fancy to
call it, on Tuesday evening.
(To be continued.)
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JOHN WHOPPER THE NEWSBOY.
CHAPTER II.
HOW JOHN GOT INTO TROUBLE IN
CHINA.
IT
was Tuesday evening in good
old Massachusetts, but not far from
the break of day in China. In order
that I might be more sure to catch
the bundle of papers on its arrival, I
had woven a net-work with my strong
twine, and securely fastened it to a
stout wooden hoop. This I then
attached to a pole about six feet in
length, and stood ready to swing the
net under the package as soon as it
came within reach. The hour at
which I had calculated that the bundle
ought to come in sight, provided
Bob had been prompt to the time that
I had prescribed, had now passed, and
I began to feel excited and uneasy.
"What if Bob had forgotten to hold
the package high enough from the
surface when he dropped it, and so the
momentum had not proved sufficient
to drive it clear through the hole?
What if it had struck against the
sides of the cavity, and so the friction
had stopped it on the way? What
if the velocity with which it must
have fallen during the first few
thousand miles had torn the package in
pieces, and the papers had been left
floating about in the centre of the
earth? What if Bob had been taken
ill?" just at this moment my fears
and speculations were arrested by the
sight of a small white object, looking
like a flake of snow, away down the hole,
hundreds of feet away, as it seemed to
me. My heart almost ceased to beat:
the white object was coming nearer
and nearer, and looking larger and
larger every second. But it is moving
slower and slower all the time, as if
it was nearly tired out! Perhaps it
will not come quite within reach after
all? What an awful disappointment
that would be! No! it doesn't quite
stop up it comes ten feet more and
I will have it; five feet more hurra!
underneath goes the stout net,
and the precious bundle is clasped
safely in my arms.
I was so exhausted by anxiety and
excitement, that I had to sit down for
a while, that I might recover my
strength. I really do not think that
I was half as much overcome when I
first came out of the hole myself.
And now for the city, to keep my
appointment with the gentlemen at
the Coffee House. I had hired a pony
to carry me to Canton, and had fastened
it to a tree near by; and very
soon I was galloping off like lightning. About ten o'clock, I reached
the hotel; and, after stopping for a
glass of water at the office to clear my
throat, I entered the room where I
knew my patrons would be assembled,
and threw my bundle down upon the
table.
Every man there started to his
feet; but such was their surprise at
my appearance, for not a soul
amongst them ever dreamed that I
would keep my appointment, that
for one or two minutes, as before, not
a word was spoken. While they all
stood around staring at me as if I had
just dropped from the clouds, I
proceeded very leisurely to untie the
strings of the package; when, with
a simultaneous movement, my eager
customers rushed towards the table,
reaching out their hands frantically
for the papers.
"Gentlemen," said I in a clear,
collected voice, "before proceeding to
distribute the mail, allow me to offer
a few brief remarks." I had written
out this speech, and committed it to
memory. "It is very natural that
you should have great curiosity to
know by what means I have managed
to redeem the pledge that I gave you
a short time ago. In the presence of
gentlemen so enlightened as you are,
I hardly need to say that the speedy
communication which I have been
enabled to make with the Western
world is effected by no supernatural
agency, but by a wonderful discovery
in the realms of nature, the precise
character of which I do not at present
consider it expedient to disclose. Let
it suffice, that I am able to furnish to
you, at reasonable rates, with the latest
intelligence from the United States
of America; and I wish it to be
distinctly understood, that if I ever have
reason to suspect that my movements
are watched, or that any efforts are
made to detect my secret, from that
time my contract with you is at an
end. I also desire to stipulate that
no statement of my transactions with
you shall be allowed to find its way
into the public prints, either in China
or America. Let the whole matter
remain a profound secret between us:
your own interest will be consulted by
this as well as mine. If, indeed, it
should so happen that you should ever
see any remarkable and novel movement
in the heavens, of course I cannot
hinder you from forming your own
impressions, and making your own
deductions from the phenomena.
"And now, gentlemen, every morning
between ten and eleven o'clock, I
propose to be here with the papers;
price one dollar per copy, cash on
delivery."
The bundle, containing one hundred
papers, was immediately disposed of;
some gentlemen taking two or three,
and others half a dozen.
The tongues of my patrons were
now unloosed, and they all acceded
unhesitatingly to the terms which I
had proposed. An elderly Englishman,
with a very white waistcoat, and
a very large watch-chain, came up to
me, and, patting my shoulder, said,
"Why, my son, you have done better
than you promised: you have given
us the newspapers in much less than
thirty-six hours after their issue at
home."
"Yes, sir," I replied: "I intended
to get them here in about sixteen
hours; but I thought it more prudent
to say thirty-six, because because"
I hardly knew what reason to give,
without betraying myself "because,
sir, I wasn't certain how the magnetic
currents might operate."
"Ah-hah-ah, I begin to see.
Magnetic currents in the heavens, in the
atmosphere."
"Yes, sir," I answered promptly,
"in the atmosphere."
This was true enough; but I could
not say in the heavens, without telling
an untruth; and this I always
regarded as a great sin.
"Don't you think," continued my
English friend, "that, when you bring
the American papers over, you could
just stop on the way, and get a copy
or two of 'The London Times'?"
"I do not go for the papers
myself."
"You don't mean to say that they
come entirely by themselves?" he
replied, looking more perplexed and
astounded than I can describe.
"Of course not, " I said, breaking
into a hearty laugh. "I have a
partner on the other side, who will
forward them to me every morning."
"Then they do come of themselves,
after they are once started?"
"Why, yes," I said, feeling a little
embarrassed, and very much afraid
that I might commit myself, "after
the proper impulse and direction are
given, they do come of themselves."
"But how, in the name of all that
is marvellous, after the package gets
into the right magnetic current, does
it manage to alight in this vicinity?"
"That is easily explained by the
laws of gravity."
The attention of all present was
arrested by this conversation, and I
began to feel that I was getting upon
dangerous ground.
"Excuse me," gentlemen, I said,
taking hold of the handle of the door,
"from answering any more questions
at this time. My mind is getting a
little confused; and, what is more, I
am very hungry." Upon which I
retired to the dining-room.
Every thing went on successfully
during the remainder of the week:
all the packages arrived safely and
in good order, and on Friday evening
I was ready to remit several hundred
dollars to my brother. At the same
time, I thought that it was proper for
me to write a few lines to my good
mother; and accordingly I sat down
and made out quite a long letter,
which I enclosed in the same bundle
with the money.
On Saturday evening, the papers
arrived half an hour later than usual,
as I had arranged with Bob; and on
the wrapper I was delighted to read,
in great, scrawling letters, "All right:
money and letters received."
On Sunday, as I was lying in my
hammock, and thinking of home, it
came to my mind that my dear mother
had probably expected me to pass
the day with her; and then for the
first time it flashed across me, that,
when I wrote her on Friday, I entirely
forgot that she supposed me all the
while to have been in the little town
of Canton, on the Boston and Providence
Railroad. "What on earth,"
I said to myself, "will she imagine
when she reads my letter? I certainly
must have betrayed myself. I
don't remember exactly what it was
that I wrote; but there must have been
some things in the letter that will
lead the poor old lady to suppose that
I am crazy. Well, perhaps I shall
know more about it when the next
bundle comes; and I will try to be
patient until then."
The next morning I awaited the
usual arrival with great anxiety; and,
as soon as the package came into my
hands, I tore off the outer covering,
and, to my great relief, found a letter
in my mother's handwriting,
addressed,
"Master John Whopper, Canton,
Mass."
It read as follows:
ROXBURY, March, 1867.
MY DEAREST JOHN,
I was very
much disappointed that you did not come
home to pass the sabbath. I had a nice
dinner all ready for you; and your little
sister cried hard when she found that you
were not to sit down with us. We were
all very glad, however, to get your letter;
and I am thankful that you have been so
prospered in your business. I had no idea
that you would be able to make so much
money by selling papers in Canton: they
must be a great reading community. I hope,
my dear son, that all is made honestly.
There are some things in your letter which
have puzzled me a little, and I do not know
that I exactly understand all that you say.
You also speak of visiting the Joss-house
once or twice. I never knew any family
of that name: only I happen to remember,
that, up in Manchester, there were quite a
large number of people by the name of
Josslyn; and sometimes the boys used to
call them, in sport, "the Josses." It is not
a good habit to give nicknames to other
persons, especially where you visit the
family. You also speak of their burning
a great deal of colored paper, and a great
many scented sticks before an image. I
asked Bob what he thought this meant: but
he jumped right behind the closet-door, and
made the most extraordinary noises with
his mouth that I ever heard; and when he
came out again his eyes were full of tears,
and he looked as if he had had a fit.
"Bob," said, I, "what is the matter?"
"I have had a high-strike," he should
have said, high-sterick, "I do have 'em
sometimes." "Robert," I said very
seriously, "what do you think your brother
means?"
"Well," said he, "I shouldn't wonder
if the Josses had a bust of Daniel Webster
or Henry Clay in their parlor, and perhaps
they burn things round it to keep off the
flies." Then he began to laugh again, and
I could not tell whether he was in earnest
or not. I am not very much pleased to
hear you say that you go out in the afternoon
to fly kites with a parcel of old
mandarins. I think that you might find some
better use for your time; and I am afraid,
from the way in which you speak of them,
that these old mandarins are not very
respectable characters. Your brother says
that kite-flying means speculating, and that
the mandarins are probably brokers. I
trust, my dear boy, that you are not
making any of your money in this way.
Who is this Chim-jung-tsee, who is to be
your teacher? It is a very strange name
for a Christian to be called by, and I don't
like the sound of it. And what do you
mean, when you say you want to learn the
language, so that you may be able to talk
with the natives? I never stopped in
Canton but once, and that was when the
axle-tree of the engine, or something else,
broke down. There were a good many
people from the village came up to the
depot then; and I heard them talk for
more than an hour, and I understood
every word they said. I am almost
afraid that your application to business,
and selling your papers at such a profit, is
turning your brain. You must not work
too hard, and you must be careful about
your diet. I shall try and send you a
bundle of doughnuts next week, when I
fry. There is something in your letter
about eating rats and birds'-nests, and
other horrible things. I suppose that you
intend that for a joke. I wish that you
would tell me where you pass your evenings,
and what kind of books you are
reading, and how many meeting-houses
there are in Canton, and where you go to
meeting. Whenever you have to stay
there over the sabbath, I would like to have
you write out a full account of the sermons
that you hear. We all hope that you will
come to see us next Saturday night. Bob
says that you are so busy that you will
not be able to leave; and that you have
to sit up all night, and then sleep in the
day-time. Bob and Mamie send their
best love. I will send a pair of socks
with the doughnuts. Your little sister
says, "Tell brother that I want him to
bring me something pretty from Canton."
I don't know but she thinks you are away
off in the great city of Canton, in China.
Write as often as you can to
Your very affectionate mother,
DEBORAH WHOPPER.
I did not know whether to laugh or
cry when I had read the letter, and so
I did a little of both. I could not bear
to think that my mother should be so
deceived, and so bewildered; but it
would distress her sadly if she really
knew where I had gone, and how I
got there. I had some doubts, too,
whether she would be able to keep the
secret long, for they worm every thing
out of her at the Dorcas Society. So
I concluded that I would write her
another letter, at the end of the week,
which wouldn't give her any trouble.
Week after week passed by without
any interruption of my business; and
I devoted three hours every day to the
study of the Chinese language, under
the direction of Chim-jung-tsee, a
young Chinaman who spoke pigeon-English
very well, and had been
highly recommended by one of the
waiters at the hotel. He was a very
sleek, smooth-spoken fellow: the top
of his shaved head shone like a billiard
ball, and his tail hung four feet and a
half from his shoulders. I didn't
altogether like the expression of his
eyes; for although they were usually
turned up at the outside corners, like
other Chinese eyes, sometimes I would
catch him with one of them turned
down at the corner, and then he
seemed to be looking at me with one
eye, and looking out of the window
with the other. His nails were longer
than any I had seen in Canton; and he
usually wore stout leather cots on the
ends of his fingers, to protect them
from injury. I never knew him to
lose his temper but once; and that was
when, just for the fun of the thing, I
managed to snip off an inch or two
from one of his nails with my
pen-knife. From that moment, I have
reason to believe that he became my
deadly foe. He couldn't have made
more of an outcry, had he lost his arm.
One day, as I entered my room, I
found the young man carefully studying
a copy of "The New-York Times,"
which, contrary to my custom, I had
thoughtlessly left exposed on the desk.
After the hours of study were over, he
asked, in an off-hand kind of way, how
far New York was from Canton. I
thought it likely that the fellow knew
already, and therefore I did not
hesitate to tell him. He then took up
the New-York paper again, and, looking
with great care at the date, began
to count his fingers, mumbling
something to himself in Chinese which
I could not understand. Nothing
more passed between us on the
subject; but I felt from that day that I
had a spy upon me. I did not like to
discharge him from my service,
because that would only excite him to
greater mischief, and I never thought
for a moment of taking him into my
confidence.
One Friday morning, just as I had
finished dressing, there was a loud
knock at the door of my room; and
three Chinese officials entered, who,
having first tied my arms behind my
back, and fastened a short chain to
my ankles, proceeded to search every
nook and corner of the premises.
The evening before, I had fortunately
converted all the money that I
had on hand into a bill of exchange,
and this was concealed about my person.
The great object of their search
appeared to be newspapers; and, after
rifling my boxes and desk of every
thing in this form, I was marched off
into the street, without a word being
said by my captors. To all my
remonstrances, the only reply that I
got was the holding up before my face
of a piece of yellow paper, with a
huge green seal in the corner. Without
being subjected to any form of
trial, I was taken at once to prison. I
found myself the occupant of a cell
about ten feet square, with one window
secured by an iron grating. The
furniture of the cell consisted of a
bamboo chair, a small table, and a low
bedstead. I was glad to find that
every thing looked neat and clean. I
remained in this place for several days
in utter solitude, except when my
meals were brought to me; and then
all that I could get out of my attendant
was, "Me no talkee." I had not
the slightest doubt who it was that
had caused me to be imprisoned; and
I determined, that, if Chim-jung-tsee
ever came within my reach again, I
would cut off every one of his
atrocious finger-nails. As I lay there
thinking over all my wonderful
experiences, I could not but feel sad at
what I knew must be Bob's
disappointment, when, after waiting hour
by hour for my package to arrive on
Saturday morning, nothing appeared.
Anticipating that I might have trouble
in China, I had directed, in case my
remittance did not reach him, that he
should send no more papers through
the hole, so that no loss would occur
on this score; and I knew that he was
shrewd enough to keep my mother
and sister from having any undue
anxiety. Then I fell to wondering
whether my friends at the coffee-house
had all forgotten me, and how
they managed to get along without
their papers. I soon found out that
they had not quite forgotten me;
although, for obvious reasons, it would
not do for them to interfere with the
authorities in my behalf.
One afternoon, as I stood looking
out from my window upon an open.
square, where hundreds of people,
young and old, high and low, were
amusing themselves by flying kites, I
observed, among the monsters that
filled the air, dragons, griffins, cormorants, sharks, and numberless other
fantastic shapes, one kite that
arrested my eye and fixed my attention.
It was in the form of an American
eagle, with red and white stripes on the
wings, and brilliant stars all over the
body. From the peculiar movements
of this kite, I was led to believe that
it was an omen of hope for me, and
that whoever held the string intended
to do me a service. In the course of
half an hour, the kite was floated
directly across my window, and I saw
that there was a paper pinned on the
back. As soon as it came within
reach, I thrust my hands through the
bars, and in an instant tore the paper
off. Unfolding it, I found in the
inside three steel-spring saws, and read
these words: "As soon as you have
sawed away the bars, tie a white rag
on the grating. On the first evening
after this, when the wind is favorable,
a kite will be flown to the window.
Pull in the string very carefully, and
you will come to a larger cord. Keep
pulling until a rope-ladder reaches
you. Fasten this securely to the
window, and follow the ladder down over
the wall. You will there find your old
pony fastened to a tree: jump on
and be off. Strapped on his back
you will see a can of condensed
food and a jar of water, enough to
supply you for some days. Success to
you!" This paper I at once tore into
small pieces, and, as soon as it was
dark, threw the fragments out of the
window. I now went to work with
a light heart to saw away the iron
bars, preserving the filings, which I
moulded up with a bit of bread, to fill
the gaps that I made with my saws
in the grating, in order to avoid
detection in case the room should be
examined. In the course of about a
week, I had cut through the iron so
far that I knew it would be easy with
one good wrench to tear away the
grating; and then, with a throbbing
pulse, in the afternoon I tied a piece
of white cloth on the sash, as I had
been directed. That night there was
not a breath of wind, and I knew that
I had no hope of rescue at present.
I tried to sleep, but found myself
constantly rising up and listening for the
breeze. The next day the kites were
flying merrily; and among them I saw
the good old eagle, with a large round
white spot on his back, which I
interpreted to mean that my signal had
been discovered. It seemed to me
that the sun would never set that evening,
and I was in mortal fear that
when it did the wind would also go
down. At last, the shadows of night
descended upon the earth, and still
the breeze blew finely. I waited at
the window, and watched with all my
eyes until near midnight, when, to my
delight, I saw the shadow of a kite
coming between me and the stars.
With one quiet, strong pull I wrenched
the grating out, and stood with my
head projecting from the hole, ready
to catch the kite. As soon as I got
hold of it, I found that there were two
strings attached; and I was careful to
cut only one, as the other was probably
intended to remove the kite, and
pull it to the ground again. After
hauling in the twine and the stronger
cords fastened to it, I found the
rope-ladder in my grasp; and in a very
short time it was fastened to the iron
bars below the grating that I had
removed. At the same moment, I
felt that some one at the other end
was hauling the ladder in tight, and
no doubt securing it below. Five
minutes later and I was free! Not a
human being was in sight as I stood
once more on the earth: my confederate,
whoever he was, now that every
thing was accomplished that he could
do, probably thinking it was safer
for him to be out of the way. But
there stood my beloved pony, who had
carried me so often from the Air Line
Station to Canton; and, before many
seconds had passed, he was making
the sparks fly under his feet as we
headed for the old familiar spot in the
country. It was not necessary for
me to guide him: dark as it was,
the pony knew the way well enough;
and I soon reached the cavity, through
which I hoped to visit "my own, my
native land," where people are not
arrested without knowing what is the
crime with which they are charged.
Removing the jar of water and the
can of food from my pony's back, with
out stopping to think why I did it,
but following a sort of instinct which
afterwards saved me from perishing, I
fastened these articles on my shoulders
and around my waist; then,
sobbing, threw my arms around poor
pony's neck, and with a pang bade him
good-by. He flew snorting away to
his stable, where I have no doubt he
soon found comfort in a quart or two
of rice and a peck of oats.
And now, strange to say, although
I had accomplished the journey
through the earth three times with
entire safety, I shrank with dread
from the thought of jumping once
more into the dark hole beneath. I
suppose the trials which I had just
endured had unstrung my nerves, and
that the solemn hour of the night
made the leap seem all the more fearful.
And yet through I must go.
China was not the place for me to
remain in any longer; and so I stepped
down some two or three feet into the
cavity, and stood upon a little projection
of rock, feeling that it would
require less effort to drop from this
place downward than to leap from
the surface. Seizing the projecting
rock with my hands, I then let go,
and down I went. It was a relief to
find that I was now fairly under way;
and when, after the lapse of a few
hours, I began to see daylight brightening
around me, I thought that all
my cares were about to end. Brighter
and brighter it grew, and I had
almost reached the edge of the hole,
when, to my horror, I found that the
motion of my body was ceasing
altogether. Could it be that I had made
a fatal mistake in dropping from that
inner ledge on the other side, instead
of jumping boldly from the surface?
It must be so. Oh, what a fool I was!
I might have known that the
projectile power would not be sufficient to
take me clear through! What will
become of me? For, at this moment,
I felt myself beginning to sink back
again into the bowels of the earth.
And there through the long, long hours,
I swung backwards and forwards like
an enormous pendulum, every time
that I rose and fell, with a shorter and
shorter range, until I stopped in
equilibrium at the centre of the earth.
The sensation of absolute rest was
more terrible than motion. There I
was alive, buried deeper than any
other being ever was before. Was
there any possible way in which I
could extricate myself? I now made
a great effort to collect my thoughts,
and give to this question careful
consideration. At last, a bright idea came
into my mind.
(To be continued.)
|
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JOHN WHOPPER THE NEWSBOY
CHAPTER III.
HOW JOHN WHOPPER GOT CAUGHT
IN THE EARTH, AND THEN
GOT OUT AGAIN.
THE
idea that came to me was at
first very vague and indefinite; neither
was it at all certain that my plan could
be carried out. It had been suggested
by a peculiar sound which fell upon
my ear as soon as I became stationary,
and which had continued to reverberate
through the darkness all the while.
As I had been obliged, while in China,
to be about so much at night, I had
provided myself with one of those
compact lanterns, which can be folded
up, and carried in the pocket, with a
good supply of best wax matches. The
first thing to be done was to strike a
light, and see what sort of a place I
was floating in. The sensation of
floating in equilibrium was delightful
and soothing; and yet I felt that it
would be a relief to touch something
solid. As soon as my candle lighted
up the cavity, I saw that the walls of
my strange abode were perforated in
various places by holes, some of which
were large enough to admit my body.
Taking my cap from my head, I found
that by waving it in the air I could
readily waft my body in whatever
direction I chose; and, in less than
a minute, I found myself comfortably
seated in the largest and most
convenient of these cavities. I now felt
the need of food and drink; and, before
proceeding to do any thing else, I
opened one of the cans of concentrated
meat, and with a glass of water from
the jar which I had so fortunately
brought with me, I made quite a nice
meal. With all the burden that
weighed upon my mind, I could not
help smiling when I thought that I
was the only person that had ever
dined in that particular locality. After
dinner, I stretched myself out, and
took a good long sleep. At last I
awoke as bright as a lark, and began
to explore the surrounding region.
The point that I wished particularly
to determine was this: What is the
cause of the low, grinding sound that
I continually hear? and from what
locality does it proceed? Upon the
answer to these questions depended all
my hopes of escape. Strapping the jar
and cans securely about me, I thought
that I would try to penetrate the orifice
which I had entered; but, as soon as I
got upon my feet, the slight muscular
effort that I made in walking lifted
me again into the air, and I found
myself once more in equilibrium. At first
this discouraged and perplexed me;
but observing that I could propel
myself with the greatest ease by just
fanning the air, as before, with my
cap, I concluded that this was a very
easy as well as rapid mode of locomotion.
As I advanced farther and
farther into the cavity, I found that the
grating noise, to which I have alluded,
grew louder and more distinct; and
after moving along, perhaps about two
miles, I came in sight of an immense
cylinder, the size of which it was
impossible for me to estimate, as I could
see only a small section of the surface.
Floating on, I laid myself alongside
of the great tube, and, taking my knife
from my pocket, tapped the cylinder
several times, and found that it was
composed of some very hard and
resonant metal, entirely unlike any
thing that I had ever seen before.
It was of a bright vermilion color,
highly polished in certain places, and
somewhat rough and honey-combed
in others. From the vibration that
came when I struck it with my knife,
I inferred that it must be hollow. I
only needed to try one further experiment,
in order to be satisfied that my
suspicions and hopes as to the nature
of this cylinder, and the cause of the
peculiar sound that I had heard, and
which now reverberated loudly on every
side, were correct. Observing, that, at
a point not far off, the cylinder came
almost in contact with the wall that
surrounded it, I approached the spot,
and stuck two red wafers, one on the
cylinder, and the other directly opposite
to it on the wall, with a distance of
not more than an inch between them.
I would here observe, in explanation
of my happening to have these wafers
about me, that they still continued to
be used in China, and I generally
carried half a dozen or more about me
in a stiff envelope. Now came the
crisis of my destiny! If the relative
position of the wafers remained for an
hour unchanged, there was no hope
for poor John Whopper. With my
watch which, by the way, I had
protected against the disturbance of the
magnetic currents by a compensation
balance in my hand, I gazed
earnestly and anxiously upon the two
wafers. Fifteen minutes passed. In
this time, the earth had revolved one
ninety-sixth part of its daily course,
and the inhabitants on the surface had
travelled two hundred and fifty miles.
If my hopes are well founded, it is
hardly time yet for me to perceive any
change in the two red spots upon which
my gaze is fixed. A half hour slowly
passes. I do believe that the wafers
are not directly opposite to each other!
let me wait a little while longer, that
I may be certain. There is no mistake
about it, the right edge of one
wafer just touches the left edge of the
other. Eureka! Hurrah! I am right.
I am right. This big cylinder is the
axis of the earth, fixed and immovable;
and these huge walls are revolving
round it. There's a discovery to
make a man immortal! What fools the
old geographers were that used to say,
"the axis is an imaginary line,
running through," &c., &c. The name
of Whopper will now be heralded to all
coming generations with the names of
Bacon and Newton and La Place and
Humboldt, and all the rest of them!
Fame, with her great silver trumpet
"Stop, my boy," I imagine the
impatient reader is now saying. "You
had better get out into daylight before
you crow so loud: we don't see how
your great discovery is going to help
you to do that." I presume not; but
you will see, if you are only patient.
I now reasoned thus with myself:
"If the axis of the earth is hollow,
about which I have no doubt, and
open at both ends, inasmuch as it is
winter at the south pole when it is
summer at the north, and vice versâ,
there must always be a strong
current of air passing through it, the
cold air of one extreme rushing into
the warmer region at the opposite pole.
I have, then, only to find some way of
introducing my body into the interior
of this axis; and, by taking advantage
of the current, I shall soon be able to
see daylight again."
The next thing, therefore, to be done
was to find out whether it would be
possible for me to get inside the cylinder.
I had observed, that in some
places the metal of which it was
composed showed the appearance of being
honey-combed; and this gave me some
encouragement. I now crawled, or
rather swam, about the surface of this
cylindrical mass of metal, and soon
found an orifice large enough for me
to thrust in my hand and arm up to
the elbow. True enough, there was a
strong draught in there, so strong that it
seemed as if my arm would be wrenched
from the socket. Every doubt and
difficulty were now removed, if I could
only find a hole in the cylinder three
feet in diameter; and, true enough,
after an hour's search, I lighted upon
just what I wanted, a good, smooth
opening, and somewhat larger than
was actually needed to pass my body
through. This, however, was
fortunate, because I must have space
enough to project myself with some
force from the orifice, or I might strike
the side of the cylinder, and be dashed
into fragments.
Every thing was now ready: nerving
my whole system for the terrible
effort and the frightful risk, I sprang
with all my might into the axis of the
earth. After what I had experienced
when I put my arm into the cylinder,
I expected, of course, as soon as my
whole body was thrown in there, that I
should undergo the terrible sensation
of being whirled upward by a tornado.
Instead of this, to my astonishment, the
moment that I had cleared the orifice
through which I jumped, I felt as
though I were floating stationary in
the air. Could it be that I was
deceived in regard to the existence of
the current? This could hardly be:
it was not possible that I was stationary,
for the hole through which I
leaped had vanished in a flash. It
then for the first time occurred to me,
that being in the current, and as it
were a part of the current, moving in
it and with it without any resistance,
it was impossible for me to tell whether
I was advancing or not; and then I
remembered how men that went up in
balloons, after they had lost sight of
the earth, could not perceive whether
they were in motion or at rest; and
how our teacher at the Roxbury school
used to explain the fact that we were
not conscious of the rotation of the
globe on which we stood, upon the
same principle. When I thought of
all this, I broke into a loud laugh; and
for a long time I could hear the echoes
thundering through the cylinder.
I cannot say how glad I felt that my
journey through the axis of the earth
occurred at that period of the year
when the current set from the south
to the north. The prospect of safety,
if I were to be discharged from the
south pole, would be slight indeed;
but familiarity with the writings of
various explorers in the Arctic regions
gave me the very natural feeling that
I should be in a measure at home in
that part of the world.
The absence of any sense of motion,
with the quietness and darkness that
surrounded me, began to induce a feeling
of weariness; and I thought that
I should like to see how it looked
where I was: and so I lighted my
lantern, which I had extinguished
when I leaped into the axis; and the
most dazzling and marvellous sight
burst upon my view. I found that I
was not very far from the side of the
cylinder, which was polished, probably
by the constant friction of the swift
current passing through it, so that it
glistened like a diamond, only it was
of one uniform vermilion hue.
Reflected, as in a fiery mirror, I caught
an occasional glimpse of myself,
magnified to a gigantic size by the
concave form of the cylinder, and elongated
in the most remarkable manner by the
rapidity with which I shot by the
surface; and, after this, I had no
further doubts as to whether I was
moving on or standing still. I next
amused myself by making all sorts of
uproarious sounds, which were repeated
up and down, and back and forth, from
the metallic walls, until I was somewhat
frightened at the cries I made;
for it seemed as if fifty wild demons
were shouting and yelling around me.
There are some of my readers who
will remember the old chemical chimney
in Roxbury, and what strange
sounds were heard there when the
boys stood below, laughing and talking.
What I now heard recalled most
vividly all those experiences. To
soothe my mind a little, I then took a
jews-harp from my pocket, and played
the "Star-spangled Banner." The
effect was beautiful and almost magical,
and I sank at once into a delicious
reverie.
But, as the time drew near when I
supposed that I might expect to
emerge from my present position, I
began to feel anxious as to what would
become of me when I came out.
I anticipated, of course, that, moving
at such a fearful rate, I must expect
to shoot up rather high in the air;
and the question was, where I should
probably land. If, as is generally
supposed, it is a clear, open sea at the
pole, I shall not land at all, but come
down into the water. In this case, I
am inevitably lost: but still my faith
was not shaken; after all that I had
endured, it did not seem likely that
I should be left to perish in the sea.
I could do nothing but trust and
wait.
In process of time, the light began
to steal in upon the darkness, and I
knew that another crisis was approaching,
the most trying and formidable
that I had been called to encounter.
And, shortly, out I went, high
up in the air, higher higher,
until I thought that I should never
come down again. But, after a time,
I felt that I was descending; and the
fear came upon me that I might tumble
back once more into the axis of the
earth. If I had reflected a moment,
I might have perceived that this would
be impossible; for, as soon as I had
sunk from my elevation down to a
point not more than a hundred feet
from the end of the pole, I met the
swift current of air rushing out, and
was once more hoisted up in the clouds.
This was repeated several times over;
and I found myself in the condition
of a cork ball, sustained in the air by
a stream of water from a fountain. It
is a little odd, that at this time there
came to my mind a vivid recollection
of such a cork ball, that I used to see
tossing about in front of the hotel that
formerly stood at the corner of
Tremont and Boylston Streets, in Boston.
At last, it occurred to me, that if at the
time when I had nearly reached the
highest point of my ascent, and therefore
must be moving very slowly, I
should fan the air with my cap, as I
did before, it might waft me out of
the line of the north pole; and that I
might as well come down into the sea
and be drowned, as to keep on bobbing
up and down in this way forever. The
experiment was successful; and the
next time that I descended, I came
gently, not into the water, but into a
soft, yielding drift of snow, which
entirely broke the force of my fall.
I felt sure now that all was right;
and, scrambling out of the snow, I
looked about to see where I was. All
around, in every direction, there was an
open sea extending to the horizon; and
it was evident that I had lighted upon
an iceberg, which had floated northward
from a more southern region.
After I had refreshed myself with a
little food, I proceeded to explore the
frozen island, of which I had so
unexpectedly become the sole
proprietor.
I am afraid that some of my readers
may think that there is a tone of
exaggeration in my story, as I proceed
to narrate what I found there. Thus
far, it must be allowed by all that I
have kept within range of
possibility, if not of probability; I have
been careful to explain minutely and
scientifically just how every thing came
about; and if it should ever become
as familiar a thing to travel through
the earth as it is now to shoot over
its surface on railroads, and send
messages instantaneously from one end
of the world to the other, this
narrative will not sound so very strangely
after all. But in telling what I found
on the iceberg, and what happened to
me there, I may have to tax somewhat
the credulity of my readers.
(To be continued.)
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JOHN WHOPPER THE NEWSBOY.
CHAPTER IV. AND LAST.
HOW JOHN WHOPPER GOT ALONG
AT THE NORTH POLE.
I SHALL
now give the general result
of an exploration of the iceberg,
which occupied me for several days.
I use the word day in the ordinary
sense, as indicating a period of twenty-four
hours; although, during my stay
in the arctic region, the daylight was
perpetual. This frozen island, which
was to be for a time my habitation,
extended, so far as I could judge, over
an area of about five hundred acres;
but there were certain marks about the
surface and cleavages on the sides,
which indicated that it was originally
of much greater size. It was also
very evident that it had assumed its
form, and been detached from the
shore, at some point on the coast many
degrees remote from its present position,
and had then been driven towards
the pole by some extraordinary current
into which it had happened to fall.
At some former period, this iceberg
must have floated, or been stationary,
in a region where game abounded and
birds were plenty, where vessels sailed,
and where vessels were wrecked; and,
when it was launched from the shore,
it carried off with it not less than an
acre of good, rich loam, the effect,
probably, of a land-slide in the vicinity.
It will, I think, be seen that it
is only upon this general supposition,
that we can account for what I found
there. I may here observe, before
proceeding further, that, while on
three sides the walls of the berg rose
almost perpendicularly out of the sea,
yet on the remaining side there was
quite an easy and gradual slope down
to the water; and this may also serve
to explain how some of the things
that I found on the island were
thrown or lifted there.
The food that I had brought with
me from Canton was soon exhausted;
and the first great want that I
experienced was means of keeping my soul
in my body. In the deep crevices of
the ice, I found places where I could
manage in a measure to shelter my
body from the cold while I slept; but
what reasonable prospect had I of
finding food in this forlorn spot? I
now began to feel the pangs of
hunger; but, instead of yielding to
despair, with a stout heart I determined
to search the region thoroughly, and
see if a kind Providence had not made
some provision for my wants. After
roaming about for a while, my foot
struck upon a little keg, partially
embedded in the ice; and, to my joy, I
read the mark on the top, "Bent's
Hard Crackers, Milton, Mass." It
took me hardly a minute to kick it
open; and there the crackers lay,
as sound and sweet as when they
were first packed. I do not know
exactly how many I ate, but I should
say not much over fifteen. The keg
was then put in a safe place, where I
should be certain to find it by and
by. In the course of the forenoon, I
came upon a frozen bear; and I also
found, in the same vicinity, plenty of
old barrel-staves, and broken hoops,
and other pieces of wood, great and
small, which I laid in a heap upon the
earth. "Now," said I, "we will have
a bit of roast meat for dinner, with a
few toasted crackers for dessert."
Before two o'clock, I had a bright fire
burning, and a delicate slice of the
bear roasting before it.
The next thing to be done was to
strip the bear of his skin; but this I
found to be a difficult task. It had
been a tough job to cut out with my
jack-knife the frozen slice of meat upon
which I had just dined; and it was
impossible to strip off the skin without
tearing it in pieces. A bright thought
now occurred to me, and I proceeded
to kindle a fire all around the animal;
and, when the heat had become strong
enough just to loosen the hide from
the carcass, I went to work, and, in an
hour or two, had a nice warm robe to
wrap myself in at night. At the
same time I extinguished the fire, as
I did not care to cook the entire bear
all at once.
My jar of water gave out the day
that I was dropped upon the berg; and
at first I thought that I could quench
my thirst by eating small bits of ice,
but I soon found that this only
increased the difficulty. I then remembered
to have read in a magazine, that
the amount of caloric taken out of the
system in order to melt the ice in one's
mouth was so great as to only increase
the feeling of thirst. All anxiety,
however, on this point was soon at an
end; for the sun was now hot enough,
for an hour or two at noon, to melt a
sufficient quantity of the loose snow in
certain localities to furnish all the
water that I needed.
With my bear-meat and Bent's
crackers for food, and my bearskin
for a blanket, I might now be considered
for the present as above the reach
of absolute want; and still it is not to
be supposed that I was in a very
contented and happy frame of mind. I
was very thankful for all the mercies
that I had received; and, when I looked
back upon all the wonderful deliverances
that I had experienced, I could
not help feeling confident that all
would go well with me hereafter.1
1
It will probably occur to the reader, that some
one of Johnny's adult friends has touched up the
style a little along here. J.W. says that this is true.
2
John informs the editor that he never wrote a
word of the last lines, and that he thinks it about
time for him to take the bellows again.
|
But the great want that I felt was
a home; or at least something, some
hut or hovel, or hole in the ground,
to which I might retire when my
labor was over, where I could eat my
frugal meals, and lie down to slumber
at night. I longed for a place in
which I could feel that I was localized,
around which domestic associations
might gradually intwine themselves,
and where I might sing in the
twilight the songs of my childhood.2
The fifth day of my sojourn on the
iceberg was the great day of discovery.
I determined, that morning, that
I would now make a thorough survey
of the whole island. I knew that it
would be rough work, and somewhat
dangerous; for, in some places, there
were cavities fifty feet deep, and I
should have to climb over some very
steep ice, where it was as smooth as
glass. Before starting, I pulled several
nails out of the hoops that lay
around, and drove them into the soles
of my boots; and I was fortunate
enough to find a good stout stick, into
the end of which I also fastened one
of the nails. Filling my pockets with
crackers, and slinging a slice of cooked
bear's meat over my shoulder, I started
off, having been careful first to pile up
several loose blocks of ice in the form
of a pillar, so that I might be able to
find the place again. I then struck
as it afterwards turned out most
fortunately, for that side of the berg
where the surface shelved off gradually
to the water. About eleven o'clock, I
found myself standing on quite a lofty
peak of ice; and, looking down, my eyes
fell upon a sight that almost took away
my breath. Spread out before me on
a level plain, there lay a large black
patch, which looked as though it must
be earth; and on the farther side, just
where the berg began to slope towards
the sea, I thought that I saw
something that looked like a building!
Could it be that the island was
inhabited? Running, sliding, slipping
down, as fast as I could go, in a short
time I found that I was not mistaken
in supposing that it was earth: for
there lay, stretched out before me, an
acre or so of ground, almost as smooth
and level as a garden; and, at the
farther end of the plot, there stood,
not an ordinary house, not a barn, not
an Esquimaux hut, not a country
store, not a railroad depot, not a
meeting-house, but, what do you
imagine? I will tell you as soon as I
get there. Rushing like mad across
the ground, oh, how pleasant it was
to feel the soft soil under my cold
feet! I came to what looked like a
dismasted ship, imbedded clear up to
the gunwale3 in the ice. There lay
the whole deck of a three-masted
vessel, unbroken and undisturbed; but,
as I soon ascertained, there was no
hull underneath, for the deck had
evidently been broken off from the
lower parts of the ship, and thrown up
the smooth, inclined plane of ice to
the spot where I found it, and then
been frozen in there. What a discovery
this was! I did not know how to
contain or how to express my delight;
and, before beginning to explore the
premises, the very first thing that I
did was to rush up to the bell, that
hung near the bows, and ring it with
all my might. You can't tell how
strange it sounded, up there in that
solitary, silent, arctic sea, to hear the
loud clang of the old bell sounding
out over the waters, as I tugged and
tugged away at the rope. It would
have done the hearts of "Hooper &
Son, Boston, Mass.," whose name I
saw printed on it, it would have
done the whole firm good, to have
heard it. After I had ceased ringing,
and slowly tolled the bell for a few
minutes, so that I might make it seem
as if I were going to meeting in
Roxbury, I sat down on the capstan to
think matters over. Nothing had
happened to me yet that excited me
like this. Jumping through the
earth, and then getting stuck in the
centre; being blown through the axis,
and lighting on an iceberg at the
north pole, and all that sort of thing,
I looked back upon rather as a matter
of course. But to find myself sitting
here on the deck of a three-master,
with the cabins and offices at the stern
all in good order, and the caboose-house
in the centre, with the little
funnel sticking out of the top, and a
big boat close by it, covered with
canvas, and a huge anchor at the bows,
and spare rigging and spare masts
lying all along the sides, and a real
bell to ring, this was a little too
much, even for John Whopper.
3
Pronounced gunnell: "The uppermost bend
which finishes the upper works of the hull, and
from which the upper guns, if the vessel carry any,
are pointed."
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What was I to find in the cabins,
and the offices, and the pantries, and
the caboose-house? The caboose-house
reminded me that I was getting
hungry, and that it was near dinner-time.
I had expected to make my
meal of dry crackers and cold bear-meat;
but it occurred to me, that, on
such an occasion as the present, a
luxurious repast would be more
appropriate, as well as more agreeable, and
that very possibly I might find in the
caboose-house the materials for gratifying
my appetite. I did not as yet
feel quite prepared to visit the cabins
at the stern, for I knew that I must
become very much excited at what
would be found there, and a good dinner
would serve to strengthen my nerves,
and set me up. I went, therefore, at
once to the caboose, and slid back the
door, which required considerable
effort; and, sure enough, there was every
thing at hand that I expected, and a
great deal more. The accident which
lifted the deck from the hull of the
ship must have happened about the
middle of the forenoon; for there was
the fire all ready to be lighted in the
cooking-stove, shavings, kindlings,
and coal in place; and there lay the
cooking utensils quite convenient.
This was not all; the materials for
the dinner had been brought up, a
great deal more than I could consume
in a week. Immediately I took a
match from my pocket, there was a
box of matches hanging on the wall,
but I did not feel sure that they would
be in working order, and lighted
the fire. The next thing that I did
was to go and select a lump of clean,
clear ice, to be melted in the kettle,
that I might be ready to wash up my
dishes properly after dinner. I tell
you that I gave a big shout when I
saw the smoke curling out of the
funnel. I now proceeded very deliberately
to select from the cans and
bottles and jars, that were piled up in
the corner, the various items of which
I would make my dinner. The first
thing that I settled upon was a dish
of "Parker's ox-tail soup," which I
remembered to have eaten some time
ago at the house of a benevolent
gentleman in Washington Street, when
he gave the newsboys a lunch. My
second course should consist of a
potted partridge, with tomato sauce,
desiccated turnips (I didn't know
what the word desiccated meant, but
I took it for granted that it was all
right), and one or two of "Lewis's
pickles." I would then close with
part of a jar of preserved peaches. I
did not need to do much cooking in
getting up this dinner; but I had hot
soup, hot tomatoes, and warm turnips,
which got a little smoked, and didn't
taste very good, perhaps, however,
that was because it was desiccated. I
enjoyed the dinner tremendously; and
after it was over, and my dishes were
all washed and put away, my eye
lighted upon a box, half full of cigars,
on the shelf. My first thought was,
"Now I will have a cigar, as the
gentlemen do that you see at the steps of
the Tremont House in the afternoon,
and that will make it seem more like
home." But, upon second thought, it
occurred to me that this would probably
make me so sick for the remainder
of the day, that I should be unable to
do any thing, and that I couldn't spare
the time. So I decided not to smoke
until I had leisure enough to be ill for
a while.
And now, with a throbbing heart, I
turned my steps towards the cabin-door,
and entered the gangway. There
were two or three doors on the sides of
the narrow passage, which I did not
care to open at present; and so I
passed on to the central door that led
into the main room. I had feared that
I might be startled by the sight of dead
bodies or skeletons here; but there was
nothing repulsive to be seen, nothing
that looked like disorder or confusion.
There stood the centre-table, with a
few books and pamphlets lying on it,
and two or three chairs drawn around,
and a large lamp suspended above.
There was the grate, containing a few
half-consumed embers; there was the
compass, swinging between the
stern-windows. A nice Brussels carpet was
under my feet; and there were three
doors on either side of the cabin, opening into the staterooms. The vessel
appeared to have been a first-class
merchantman, fitted to carry half a dozen
passengers; and how such a vessel as
this ever found its way into these
northern seas was a mystery. I just
glanced for a moment into these rooms,
and saw there trunks and valises, and
all the usual articles of the toilet,
mirrors, beds, and bedding, and all other
things expected in a respectable apartment.
Then I visited the captain's
room and the mate's; the pantry, store-room,
&c; and all the supplies and
utensils seemed to be abundant and of
the best quality. I tried to find the
log-book, but that was mi sing; and
from this I inferred that the captain
had made his escape in safety, taking
it with him. This thought gave me
pleasure.
No danger now of my suffering for
want of the comforts or luxuries of
life; I could dress elegantly, sleep
magnificently, and fare sumptuously.
I selected the captain's room for my
private apartment; and, having no
luggage to transport, it required but little
time for me to take possession.
The sun had now sunk as near the
horizon as it ever did in that region
during the month of July, and what
we called evening at home drew near.
I prepared my cup of tea in the cabin,
and spread my supper on the centre-table;
then went out to take a little
stroll on the deck. I closed the door
of the caboose-house, and, for the sake
of appearances, fastened it; then went
up to the bell, and struck the hour, just
to gratify a sentimental feeling that I
had. Then I retired to the cabin for
the night; and, in order to make it seem
snug and cosey, I dropped the curtains
over the windows, and lighted the
hanging lamp. Kindling a fire in the
grate, I sat down at the table and tried
to read. But, situated as I was, I
found it impossible to fix my mind
upon the book; and so I threw myself
down upon the lounge to think over
what had happened, and speculate as
to the probabilities of the future. It
may seem strange to some persons;
but, with all my comforts about me, I
felt more homesick than I did when
I was lying on the ice in my bearskin,
or when I was poking about in the bowels
of the earth, trying to see how I
could get out. There was nothing to
occupy my body; and that, I suppose,
was one reason why my mind worked
as it did. At about ten o'clock, I went
to bed, and, after tossing about
uneasily for an hour or two, managed to
fall asleep.
When I awoke in the morning, it
took me some time to remember where
I was. I thought, at first, that I was
at home, and could hear the birds singing
by the window; and I believe that
I called out "Bob!" once or twice
before I was fairly roused. But soon the
real state of the case came back to me;
and, going into the staterooms, I
hunted round until I found a suit of
good, clean clothes that would fit me,
and dressed myself for the day. The
clothes that I had worn were now so
dirty and torn that I was very glad to
get rid of them. After breakfasting
heartily, and an excellent cup of
hot coffee I had that morning, I
began to think what I should do with
myself during the day. I had no
longer to go tramping about in search
of food; and so I thought that I would
take a little stroll over my farm, as
I called the acre of loam that lay by
the side of my abode, and see how
the crops were looking. I must
confess that the vegetation was not much
advanced; and yet I could see, here
and there, little green shoots springing
out of the earth, indicating that the
summer sun was beginning to have its
effect upon the soil. It then occurred
to me how pleasant it would be to look
out upon a greensward in that icy
spot; and remembering to have seen
in the storeroom a canvas bag marked
"grass-seed," and a rake standing
there, I went for them, and passed the
forenoon in agricultural pursuits. In
a few hours, I had quite a patch of
ground nicely raked over, and sown for
grass. In less than a fortnight, it had
sprouted beautifully, and I began to
be quite proud of my arctic lawn.
All the time, however, I was
wondering how I should find my way back
to the abodes of man, and how soon I
might expect to start for home. I had
presumed, that, as the season advanced,
I should begin to drift southward;
and I hoped, that, before the winter
closed in again, I might reach those
parts of the sea which are frequented
by vessels, and so find rescue. But
whether I was moving or not, it was
impossible as yet to tell, as there was
no fixed object in sight by which a
movement could be measured. I felt
very certain that the iceberg was
not grounded, because there would be,
occasionally, a quivering of the whole
mass, which showed that it was floating
on the water. It was also growing
warmer and warmer every day,
which was a favorable symptom. If
I had known how to use the sextant
or quadrant, I could have settled the
matter at once.
Before long, I was satisfied, from
the change in the appearance of the
ocean and of the sun, that I was
indeed moving rapidly away from the
north pole; and the fact that I was
afloat was settled conclusively by a
very alarming circumstance. I had
observed for a day or two, that the
hanging-lamp did not appear to be
entirely perpendicular; and, in walking
the deck, I had the sensation that
I was not treading on a perfectly level
surface. Searching the mate's room,
I found a spirit-level, and laid it on
the floor. There was no doubt of the
fact: the berg was undoubtedly tilting
on one side. I then remembered, that,
not unfrequently, these mountains of
ice rolled over, and made a complete
somerset. This was now, sooner or
later, going to happen. What could
I do? What control could I have
over this huge mass of ice? At this
moment, I recalled a sentence in one
of Mr. Emerson's lectures, that I once
heard in Music Hall; and it was
something to this effect: "Every man's
condition is a solution, in hieroglyphic,
to those inquiries he would put."
This gave me hope, and I went out
to investigate the condition of things.
I found that the ice, on the side that
was beginning to incline towards the
sea, was much higher than elsewhere,
and that this superior weight was
gradually destroying the equilibrium of the
berg. I also observed, that, between
this elevation and the more level
region, there was a narrow, deep fissure,
extending almost entirely across the
line of the lofty projection of ice.
A great thought now flashed upon
me. I remembered to have seen on
the deck, the day after my arrival, two
or three casks, labelled "Dangerous!
Handle very carefully!! Nitro-glycerine!!!"
These casks I at once
removed to a safe distance, marking
with an upright stick the place where
they were deposited. Nitro-glycerine!
I said to myself. It was
that that blew up "The European" at
Panama. I remember it because I
sold three hundred and nine papers
by crying "Great Explosion." A
newsboy knows something. And
nitro-glycerine will go off if you hit it
hard enough.
I knew I had seen, in the captain's
room, several large metallic flasks,
made very broad and flat, as I suppose
for the purpose of better stowage in
his room. What they had formerly
contained, I could only judge by the
smell; but they were empty now.
This, then, was the experiment that I
would try, filling these flasks with
nitro-glycerine, I would lower them
into a crevice in the ice. Then, if I
could, I must make a block of ice fall
on them.
In two or three hours, my preparations
were concluded. The flasks
were just large enough to fit snugly
in the chasm. Above them, the precipice
hung over a little. Half-hidden
by the companion on the ship, I fired
three bullets from the captain's gun
into the projecting mass. Nothing
fell. I loaded her again, fired
again, and a great block of ice keeled
over and slid down. As fast did I
leap down stairs into the cabin, as if
I should be safe there. As I landed,
I felt the great iceberg tremble; then
came a sharp, quick, terrible crash, as
if forty thunders had broken all
together right over my head, and the
great hill of ice sank grandly and
slowly into the ocean below. For a
minute or two, I could hear the roar
of the waters as they opened to receive
the huge mass, and the berg rocked
as if in a great storm; then all was
still again. I rushed back to my cabin,
laid the spirit-level on the floor,
and the little bubble stopped right in
the middle of the tube. The danger
was over.
Another week passed; and there was
no longer any room to doubt that I
was moving, and in the right direction.
At the pole, there was never a
breath of wind; but now it blew quite
strong. The compass began to show
signs of vitality; and, at midnight, I
could see some of the brightest of the
stars. The sun dropped nearer and
nearer the horizon every evening, and
it was growing uncomfortably warm
at mid-day. As I was now getting
some information from the sun as to
the points of the compass, I set up
a vane on the deck, in order to find
out, from day to day, the direction of
the wind. This put another idea into
my head. Couldn't I do something
to help the old berg along? Why
couldn't the spare masts and sails,
that lay along the sides of the deck,
be put to some use? The foremast
of the ship was broken off about
fifteen feet from the level of the deck,
and I went to work to splice on a
jury-mast. It was slow and pretty
hard work. I had to arrange the
blocks and tackles in the most scientific
manner, in order to lift the heavy
timber to its place; and it required a
great deal of strength to bring the
ropes around the fore and the jury-mast,
so as to bind them securely
together. I then managed to rig a yard
to the mast, and, in the course of
another day, had quite a respectable sail
set. The day after, I got up a jib,
and then crowned the whole by hoisting
the American flag to the top of
the mast. I did not keep this flying
all the time, but reserved it for great
occasions.
Here, then, was a novel sight, a
great iceberg under sail, and protected
by the stars and stripes. Whether it
helped us along or not, I am unable
to say: but it was a satisfaction for me
to feel that I had done what I could;
and it gave me pleasure to go off a
little distance, and look at the
extraordinary spectacle. I could not help
laughing to think what the old
salts would say, when I got down
amongst the whalers and explorers,
at the sight of an iceberg under sail!
I have nothing more to tell of my
adventures in the arctic seas. About
the middle of September, I had
reached the more frequented parts of
the ocean, and every day was on the
look-out for some friendly barque, to
liberate me from my dreary solitude.
For months I had not heard the sound.
of a human voice, and I began to
long for the society of my fellow-men.
Every morning I posted myself, with
a spy-glass, on the highest peak of
the berg, searching the horizon for a
sail. My situation on the deck
was becoming every hour more and
more precarious. The melting of
the ice underneath had already
caused the stern to incline very
decidedly towards the inclined plane
that led down to the ocean; and
I felt that the slightest jar might,
at any time, precipitate the, whole
concern, myself included, into the sea.
I suppose, indeed, that nothing but
the counteracting influence of the
sails, which filled in the opposite
direction, had prevented this
catastrophe.
At last, after many a long and
weary watch, I descried, in the far-off
distance, a sail; but the vessel moved
off towards the horizon, and was soon
lost to sight. It was a bitter
disappointment; and still I thought that
wherever one ship was sailing, others
would be likely to come in sight
before long. I kept the flag flying now
all the time, and hardly ventured to
sleep at all, lest some vessel might
pass by unnoticed. On the twenty-fifth
of September, as I woke from a
short and broken slumber, I descried,
nor more than two miles off, a ship,
heading directly for the berg. As
soon as she was near enough for the
signal to be observed, I lowered and
hoisted my flag five or six times in
quick succession; and, to my joy, I saw
the signal answered. It was all right
now: the only question to be solved
was, as to the manner in which I
would get on board the vessel. I
anticipated that they would not venture
to bring the ship alongside of the
berg, but would probably put out a
long-boat for my rescue. As soon as
that came within hailing-distance, I
would establish communication with
the crew; and, between us all, I did
not doubt but some way would be
found for me to escape. In a short
time, as I had foreseen, the ship lay
to; and the boat came off, and was
rowed to the foot of the inclined
plane. I never saw a more astonished
set of men in my life. They were
staring at me and my extraordinary
craft, as if their eyes would start from
the sockets; and the coxswain rose
and shouted,
"Ahoy, up there! who are you?"
"John Whopper," I replied, "eldest
son of the Widow Whopper, now
residing in Roxbury, Mass., U. S. of
America."
"Gracious me!" cried one of the
men, "I know Widow Whopper."
"I hope you left her well?"
"Much as usual," the sailor replied.
I was very glad to hear it.
"Where are you from?" shouted
the coxswain again; "and where did
you get your rigging?"
"I will tell you when I get aboard."
"Come aboard, then."
"I don't exactly see how to manage
it."
"Come down the plane, and we
will catch you."
It was too steep and slippery for
me to do that; but, on the instant,
another bright thought arose. "Pull
off a hundred feet or so," I cried,
"and I will be along."
As soon as I saw that they had
rowed to a safe distance, I went to
the mast, and suddenly let the sail go.
In an instant, I felt the deck quiver;
and it began to move, very slowly at
first, and then with a tremendous
rush, right down the inclined plane.
I grasped a rope with all my might,
and steadied myself for the shock
that must come when my craft,
plunged into the sea. But there was
no shock at all; gently as a ship slides
on her cradle, when launched into the
water, the old deck glided off upon
the waves, and in five minutes I found
myself safely on board the long-boat.
No sooner, however, had I left the
strange craft, than it began to sink
slowly into the depths; and the last
thing that I saw was the American
flag floating on the bosom of the
deep.
What was said to me when I
reached the ship, and what I said, I
have not time to relate; only I didn't
tell every thing.
The vessel proved to be a whaler,
bound for New Bedford; where I
arrived in good condition, and took
the cars for Roxbury, viâ the Boston
and Providence Road, passing through
Canton.
I found all well at home, and very
much relieved by my arrival.
THE END.
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