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The Narrative of Arthur Gordon Pym of Nantucket
By Edgar Allan Poe
Day 8 Audio |
Chapter
XIII
July 24.-
This morning saw us wonderfully recruited in spirits and strength.
Notwithstanding the perilous situation in which we were still placed, ignorant
of our position, although certainly at a great distance from land, without more
food than would last us for a fortnight even with great care, almost entirely
without water, and floating about at the mercy of every wind and wave on the
merest wreck in the world, still the infinitely more terrible distresses and
dangers from which we had so lately and so providentially been delivered caused
us to regard what we now endured as but little more than an ordinary evil- so
strictly comparative is either good or ill.
At sunrise we were preparing to renew our attempts at getting up something
from the storeroom, when, a smart shower coming on, with some lightning, we turn
our attention to the catching of water by means of the sheet we had used before
for this purpose. We had no other means of collecting the rain than by holding
the sheet spread out with one of the forechain-plates in the middle of it. The
water, thus conducted to the centre, was drained through into our jug. We had
nearly filled it in this manner, when, a heavy squall coming on from the
northward, obliged us to desist, as the hulk began once more to roll so
violently that we could no longer keep our feet. We now went forward, and,
lashing ourselves securely to the remnant of the windlass as before, awaited the
event with far more calmness than could have been anticipated or would have been
imagined possible under the circumstances. At noon the wind had freshened into a
two-reef breeze, and by night into a stiff gale, accompanied with a tremendously
heavy swell. Experience having taught us, however, the best method of arranging
our lashings, we weathered this dreary night in tolerable security, although
thoroughly drenched at almost every instant by the sea, and in momentary dread
of being washed off. Fortunately, the weather was so warm as to render the water
rather grateful than otherwise.
July 25.-
This morning the gale had diminished to a mere ten-knot breeze, and the sea had
gone down with it so considerably that we were able to keep ourselves dry upon
the deck. To our great grief, however, we found that two jars of our olives, as
well as the whole of our ham, had been washed overboard, in spite of the careful
manner in which they had been fastened. We determined not to kill the tortoise
as yet, and contented ourselves for the present with a breakfast on a few of the
olives, and a measure of water each, which latter we mixed half and half, with
wine, finding great relief and strength from the mixture, without the
distressing intoxication which had ensued upon drinking the port. The sea was
still far too rough for the renewal of our efforts at getting up provision from
the storeroom. Several articles, of no importance to us in our present
situation, floated up through the opening during the day, and were immediately
washed overboard. We also now observed that the hulk lay more along than ever,
so that we could not stand an instant without lashing ourselves. On this account
we passed a gloomy and uncomfortable day. At noon the sun appeared to be nearly
vertical, and we had no doubt that we had been driven down by the long
succession of northward and northwesterly winds into the near vicinity of the
equator. Toward evening saw several sharks, and were somewhat alarmed by the
audacious manner in which an enormously large one approached us. At one time, a
lurch throwing the deck very far beneath the water, the monster actually swam in
upon us, floundering for some moments just over the companion-hatch, and
striking Peters violently with his tail. A heavy sea at length hurled him
overboard, much to our relief. In moderate weather we might have easily captured
him.
July 26.-
This morning, the wind having greatly abated, and the sea not being very rough,
we determined to renew our exertions in the storeroom. After a great deal of
hard labor during the whole day, we found that nothing further was to be
expected from this quarter, the partitions of the room having been stove during
the night, and its contents swept into the hold. This discovery, as may be
supposed, filled us with despair.
July 27.-
The sea nearly smooth, with a light wind, and still from the northward and
westward. The sun coming out hotly in the afternoon, we occupied ourselves in
drying our clothes. Found great relief from thirst, and much comfort otherwise,
by bathing in the sea; in this, however, we were forced to use great caution,
being afraid of sharks, several of which were seen swimming around the brig
during the day.
July 28.-
Good weather still. The brig now began to lie along so alarmingly that we feared
she would eventually roll bottom up. Prepared ourselves as well as we could for
this emergency, lashing our tortoise, waterjug, and two remaining jars of olives
as far as possible over to the windward, placing them outside the hull below the
main-chains. The sea very smooth all day, with little or no wind.
July 29.-
A continuance of the same weather. Augustus's wounded arm began to evince
symptoms of mortification. He complained of drowsiness and excessive thirst, but
no acute pain. Nothing could be done for his relief beyond rubbing his wounds
with a little of the vinegar from the olives, and from this no benefit seemed to
be experienced. We did every thing in our power for his comfort, and trebled his
allowance of water.
July 30.-
An excessively hot day, with no wind. An enormous shark kept close by the hulk
during the whole of the forenoon. We made several unsuccessful attempts to
capture him by means of a noose. Augustus much worse, and evidently sinking as
much from want of proper nourishment as from the effect of his wounds. He
constantly prayed to be relieved from his sufferings, wishing for nothing but
death. This evening we ate the last of our olives, and found the water in our
jug so putrid that we could not swallow it at all without the addition of wine.
Determined to kill our tortoise in the morning.
July 31.-
After a night of excessive anxiety and fatigue, owing to the position of the
hulk, we set about killing and cutting up our tortoise. He proved to be much
smaller than we had supposed, although in good condition,- the whole meat about
him not amounting to more than ten pounds. With a view of preserving a portion
of this as long as possible, we cut it into fine pieces, and filled with them
our three remaining olive jars and the wine-bottle (all of which had been kept),
pouring in afterward the vinegar from the olives. In this manner we put away
about three pounds of the tortoise, intending not to touch it until we had
consumed the rest. We concluded to restrict ourselves to about four ounces of
the meat per day; the whole would thus last us thirteen days. A brisk shower,
with severe thunder and lightning, came on about dusk, but lasted so short a
time that we only succeeded in catching about half a pint of water. The whole of
this, by common consent, was given to Augustus, who now appeared to be in the
last extremity. He drank the water from the sheet as we caught it (we holding it
above him as he lay so as to let it run into his mouth), for we had now nothing
left capable of holding water, unless we had chosen to empty out our wine from
the carboy, or the stale water from the jug. Either of these expedients would
have been resorted to had the shower lasted.
The sufferer seemed to derive but little benefit from the draught. His arm
was completely black from the wrist to the shoulder, and his feet were like ice.
We expected every moment to see him breathe his last. He was frightfully
emaciated; so much so that, although he weighed a hundred and twenty-seven
pounds upon his leaving Nantucket, he now did not weigh more than forty or
fifty at the farthest. His eyes were sunk far in his head, being scarcely
perceptible, and the skin of his cheeks hung so loosely as to prevent his
masticating any food, or even swallowing any liquid, without great difficulty.
August 1.-
A continuance of the same calm weather, with an oppressively hot sun. Suffered
exceedingly from thirst, the water in the jug being absolutely putrid and
swarming with vermin. We contrived, nevertheless, to swallow a portion of it by
mixing it with wine; our thirst, however, was but little abated. We found more
relief by bathing in the sea, but could not avail ourselves of this expedient
except at long intervals, on account of the continual presence of sharks. We now
saw clearly that Augustus could not be saved; that he was evidently dying. We
could do nothing to relieve his sufferings, which appeared to be great. About
twelve o'clock he expired in strong convulsions, and without having spoken for
several days. His death filled us with the most gloomy forebodings, and had so
great an effect upon our spirits that we sat motionless by the corpse during the
whole day, and never addressed each other except in a whisper. It was not until
some time after dark that we took courage to get up and throw the body
overboard. It was then loathsome beyond expression, and so far decayed that, as
Peters attempted to lift it, an entire leg came off in his grasp. As the mass of
putrefaction slipped over the vessel's side into the water, the glare of
phosphoric light with which it was surrounded plainly discovered to us seven or
eight large sharks, the clashing of whose horrible teeth, as their prey was torn
to pieces among them, might have been heard at the distance of a mile. We shrunk
within ourselves in the extremity of horror at the sound.
August 2.-
The same fearfully calm and hot weather. The dawn found us in a state of
pitiable dejection as well as bodily exhaustion. The water in the jug was now
absolutely useless, being a thick gelatinous mass; nothing but frightful-looking
worms mingled with slime. We threw it out, and washed the jug well in the sea,
afterward pouring a little vinegar in it from our bottles of pickled tortoise.
Our thirst could now scarcely be endured, and we tried in vain to relieve it by
wine, which seemed only to add fuel to the flame, and excited us to a high
degree of intoxication. We afterward endeavoured to relieve our sufferings by
mixing the wine with seawater; but this instantly brought about the most violent
retchings, so that we never again attempted it. During the whole day we
anxiously sought an opportunity of bathing, but to no purpose; for the hulk was
now entirely besieged on all sides with sharks- no doubt the identical monsters
who had devoured our poor companion on the evening before, and who were in
momentary expectation of another similar feast. This circumstance occasioned us
the most bitter regret and filled us with the most depressing and melancholy
forebodings. We had experienced indescribable relief in bathing, and to have
this resource cut off in so frightful a manner was more than we could bear. Nor,
indeed, were we altogether free from the apprehension of immediate danger, for
the least slip or false movement would have thrown us at once within reach of
those voracious fish, who frequently thrust themselves directly upon us,
swimming up to leeward. No shouts or exertions on our part seemed to alarm them.
Even when one of the largest was struck with an axe by Peters and much wounded,
he persisted in his attempts to push in where we were. A cloud came up at dusk,
but, to our extreme anguish, passed over without discharging itself. It is quite
impossible to conceive our sufferings from thirst at this period. We passed a
sleepless night, both on this account and through dread of the sharks.
August 3.-
No prospect of relief, and the brig lying still more and more along, so that now
we could not maintain a footing upon deck at all. Busied ourselves in securing
our wine and tortoise-meat, so that we might not lose them in the event of our
rolling over. Got out two stout spikes from the forechains, and, by means of the
axe, drove them into the hull to windward within a couple of feet of the water,
this not being very far from the keel, as we were nearly upon our beam-ends. To
these spikes we now lashed our provisions, as being more secure than their
former position beneath the chains. Suffered great agony from thirst during the
whole day- no chance of bathing on account of the sharks, which never left us
for a moment. Found it impossible to sleep.
August 4.-
A little before daybreak we perceived that the hulk was heeling over, and
aroused ourselves to prevent being thrown off by the movement. At first the roll
was slow and gradual, and we contrived to clamber over to windward very well,
having taken the precaution to leave ropes hanging from the spikes we had driven
in for the provision. But we had not calculated sufficiently upon the
acceleration of the impetus; for, presently the heel became too violent to allow
of our keeping pace with it; and, before either of us knew what was to happen,
we found ourselves hurled furiously into the sea, and struggling several fathoms
beneath the surface, with the huge hull immediately above us.
In going under the water I had been obliged to let go my hold upon the
rope; and finding that I was completely beneath the vessel, and my strength
nearly exhausted, I scarcely made a struggle for life, and resigned myself, in a
few seconds, to die. But here again I was deceived, not having taken into
consideration the natural rebound of the hull to windward. The whirl of the
water upward, which the vessel occasioned in Tolling partially back, brought me
to the surface still more violently than I had been plunged beneath. Upon coming
up I found myself about twenty yards from the hulk, as near as I could judge.
She was lying keel up, rocking furiously from side to side, and the sea in all
directions around was much agitated, and full of strong whirlpools. I could see
nothing of Peters. An oil-cask was floating within a few feet of me, and various
other articles from the brig were scattered about.
My principal terror was now on account of the sharks, which I knew to be
in my vicinity. In order to deter these, if possible, from approaching me, I
splashed the water vigorously with both hands and feet as I swam towards the
hulk, creating a body of foam. I have no doubt that to this expedient, simple as
it was, I was indebted for my preservation; for the sea all round the brig, just
before her rolling over, was so crowded with these monsters, that I must have
been, and really was, in actual contact with some of them during my progress. By
great good fortune, however, I reached the side of the vessel in safety,
although so utterly weakened by the violent exertion I had used that I should
never have been able to get upon it but for the timely assistance of Peters,
who, now, to my great joy, made his appearance (having scrambled up to the keel
from the opposite side of the hull), and threw me the end of a rope- one of
those which had been attached to the spikes.
Having barely escaped this danger, our attention was now directed to the
dreadful imminency of another- that of absolute starvation. Our whole stock of
provision had been swept overboard in spite of all our care in securing it; and
seeing no longer the remotest possibility of obtaining more, we gave way both of
us to despair, weeping aloud like children, and neither of us attempting to
offer consolation to the other. Such weakness can scarcely be conceived, and to
those who have never been similarly situated will, no doubt, appear unnatural;
but it must be remembered that our intellects were so entirely disordered by the
long course of privation and terror to which we had been subjected, that we
could not justly be considered, at that period, in the light of rational beings.
In subsequent perils, nearly as great, if not greater, I bore up with fortitude
against all the evils of my situation, and Peters, it will be seen, evinced a
stoical philosophy nearly as incredible as his present childlike supineness and
imbecility- the mental condition made the difference.
The overturning of the brig, even with the consequent loss of the wine and
turtle, would not, in fact, have rendered our situation more deplorable than
before, except for the disappearance of the bedclothes by which we had been
hitherto enabled to catch rainwater, and of the jug in which we had kept it when
caught; for we found the whole bottom, from within two or three feet of the
bends as far as the keel, together with the keel itself, thickly covered with
large barnacles, which proved to be excellent and highly nutritious food.
Thus, in two important respects, the accident we had so greatly dreaded proved
to be a benefit rather than an injury; it had opened to us a supply of
provisions which we could not have exhausted, using it moderately, in a month;
and it had greatly contributed to our comfort as regards position, we being much
more at ease, and in infinitely less danger, than before.
The difficulty, however, of now obtaining water blinded us to all the
benefits of the change in our condition. That we might be ready to avail
ourselves, as far as possible, of any shower which might fall we took off our
shirts, to make use of them as we had of the sheets- not hoping, of course, to
get more in this way, even under the most favorable circumstances, than half a
gill at a time. No signs of a cloud appeared during the day, and the agonies of
our thirst were nearly intolerable. At night, Peters obtained about an hour's
disturbed sleep, but my intense sufferings would not permit me to close my eyes
for a single moment.
August 5.-
To-day, a gentle breeze springing up carried us through a vast quantity of
seaweed, among which we were so fortunate as to find eleven small crabs, which
afforded us several delicious meals. Their shells being quite soft, we ate them
entire, and found that they irritated our thirst far less than the barnacles.
Seeing no trace of sharks among the seaweed, we also ventured to bathe, and
remained in the water for four or five hours, during which we experienced a very
sensible diminution of our thirst. Were greatly refreshed, and spent the night
somewhat more comfortably than before, both of us snatching a little sleep.
August 6.-
This day we were blessed by a brisk and continual rain, lasting from about noon
until after dark. Bitterly did we now regret the loss of our jug and carboy;
for, in spite of the little means we had of catching the water, we might have
filled one, if not both of them. As it was, we contrived to satisfy the cravings
of thirst by suffering the shirts to become saturated, and then wringing them so
as to let the grateful fluid trickle into our mouths. In this occupation we
passed the entire day.
August 7.-
Just at daybreak we both at the same instant descried a sail to the eastward,
and evidently coming towards us! We hailed the glorious sight with a
long, although feeble shout of rapture; and began instantly to make every signal
in our power, by flaring the shirts in the air, leaping as high as our weak
condition would permit, and even by hallooing with all the strength of our
lungs, although the vessel could not have been less than fifteen miles distant.
However, she still continued to near our hulk, and we felt that, if she but held
her present course, she must eventually come so close as to perceive us. In
about an hour after we first discovered her, we could clearly see the people on
her decks. She was a long, low, and rakish-looking topsail schooner, with a
black ball in her foretopsail, and had, apparently, a full crew. We now became
alarmed, for we could hardly imagine it possible that she did not observe us,
and were apprehensive that she meant to leave us to perish as we were- an act of
fiendish barbarity, which, however incredible it may appear, has been repeatedly
perpetuated at sea, under circumstances very nearly similar, and by beings who
were regarded as belonging to the human species.
[The case of the brig Polly, of Boston,
is one so much in point, and her fate, in many respects, so remarkably similar
to our own, that I cannot forbear alluding to it here. This vessel, of one
hundred and thirty tons burden, sailed from Boston, with a cargo of lumber and
provisions, for Santa Croix, on the twelfth of December, 1811, under the command
of Captain Casneau. There were eight souls on board besides the captain- the
mate, four seamen, and the cook, together with a Mr. Hunt, and a negro girl
belonging to him. On the fifteenth, having cleared the shoal of Georges, she
sprung a leak in a gale of wind from the southeast, and was finally capsized;
but, the masts going by the board, she afterward righted. They remained in this
situation, without fire, and with very little provision, for the period of
one hundred and ninety-one days (from December the fifteenth to June the
twentieth), when Captain Casneau and Samuel Badger, the only survivors, were
taken off the wreck by the Fame, of Hull, Captain Featherstone, bound home from
Rio Janeiro. When picked up, they were in latitude 28 degrees N., longitude 13
degrees W., having drifted above two thousand miles! On the ninth of July
the Fame fell in with the brig Dromero, Captain Perkins, who landed the two
sufferers in Kennebeck. The narrative from which we gather these details ends in
the following words: "It is natural to inquire how they could float such a vast
distance, upon the most frequented part of the Atlantic, and not be discovered
all this time. They were passed by more than a dozen sail, one of which came
so nigh them that they could distinctly see the people on deck and on the
rigging looking at them; but, to the inexpressible disappointment of the
starving and freezing men, they stifled the dictates of compassion, hoisted
sail, and cruelly abandoned them to their fate." (Poe's note)] In
this instance, however, by the mercy of God, we were destined to be most happily
deceived; for, presently we were aware of a sudden commotion on the deck of the
stranger, who immediately afterward ran up a British flag, and, hauling her
wind, bore up directly upon us. In half an hour more we found ourselves in her
cabin. She proved to be the Jane Guy, of Liverpool, Captain Guy, bound on a
sealing and trading voyage to the South Seas and Pacific.
Chapter XIV
The Jane Guy was a fine-looking topsail schooner of a hundred and eighty
tons burden. She was unusually sharp in the bows, and on a wind, in moderate
weather, the fastest sailer I have ever seen. Her qualities, however, as a rough
sea-boat, were not so good, and her draught of water was by far too great for
the trade to which she was destined. For this peculiar service, a larger vessel,
and one of a light proportionate draught, is desirable- say a vessel of from
three hundred to three hundred and fifty tons. She should be bark-rigged, and in
other respects of a different construction from the usual South Sea ships. It is
absolutely necessary that she should be well armed. She should have, say ten or
twelve twelve-pound carronades, and two or three long twelves, with brass
blunderbusses, and water-tight arm-chests for each top. Her anchors and cables
should be of far greater strength than is required for any other species of
trade, and, above all, her crew should be numerous and efficient- not less, for
such a vessel as I have described, than fifty or sixty able-bodied men. The Jane
Guy had a crew of thirty-five, all able seamen, besides the captain and mate,
but she was not altogether as well armed or otherwise equipped, as a navigator
acquainted with the difficulties and dangers of the trade could have desired.
Captain Guy was a gentleman of great urbanity of manner, and of
considerable experience in the southern traffic, to which he had devoted a great
portion of his life. He was deficient, however, in energy, and, consequently, in
that spirit of enterprise which is here so absolutely requisite. He was part
owner of the vessel in which he sailed, and was invested with discretionary
powers to cruise in the South Seas for any cargo which might come most readily
to hand. He had on board, as usual in such voyages, beads, looking-glasses,
tinder-works, axes, hatchets, saws, adzes, planes, chisels, gouges, gimlets,
files, spokeshaves, rasps, hammers, nails, knives, scissors, razors, needles,
thread, crockery-ware, calico, trinkets, and other similar articles.
The schooner sailed from Liverpool on the tenth of July, crossed the
Tropic of Cancer on the twenty-fifth, in longitude twenty degrees west, and
reached Sal, one of the Cape Verd islands, on the twenty-ninth, where she took
in salt and other necessaries for the voyage. On the third of August, she left
the Cape Verds and steered southwest, stretching over toward the coast of
Brazil, so as to cross the equator between the meridians of twenty-eight and
thirty degrees west longitude. This is the course usually taken by vessels bound
from Europe to the Cape of Good Hope, or by that route to the East Indies. By
proceeding thus they avoid the calms and strong contrary currents which
continually prevail on the coast of Guinea, while, in the end, it is found to be
the shortest track, as westerly winds are never wanting afterward by which to
reach the Cape. It was Captain Guy's intention to make his first stoppage at
Kerguelen's Land- I hardly know for what reason. On the day we were picked up
the schooner was off Cape St. Roque, in longitude thirty-one degrees west; so
that, when found, we had drifted probably, from north to south, not less than
five-and-twenty degrees!
On board the Jane Guy we were treated with all the kindness our distressed
situation demanded. In about a fortnight, during which time we continued
steering to the southeast, with gentle breezes and fine weather, both Peters and
myself recovered entirely from the effects of our late privation and dreadful
sufferings, and we began to remember what had passed rather as a frightful dream
from which we had been happily awakened, than as events which had taken place in
sober and naked reality. I have since found that this species of partial
oblivion is usually brought about by sudden transition, whether from joy to
sorrow or from sorrow to joy- the degree of forgetfulness being proportioned to
the degree of difference in the exchange. Thus, in my own case, I now feel it
impossible to realize the full extent of the misery which I endured during the
days spent upon the hulk. The incidents are remembered, but not the feelings
which the incidents elicited at the time of their occurrence. I only know, that
when they did occur, I then thought human nature could sustain nothing
more of agony.
We continued our voyage for some weeks without any incidents of greater
moment than the occasional meeting with whaling-ships, and more frequently with
the black or right whale, so called in contradistinction to the spermaceti.
These, however, were chiefly found south of the twenty-fifth parallel. On the
sixteenth of September, being in the vicinity of the Cape of Good Hope, the
schooner encountered her first gale of any violence since leaving Liverpool. In
this neighborhood, but more frequently to the south and east of the promontory
(we were to the westward), navigators have often to contend with storms from the
northward, which rage with great fury. They always bring with them a heavy sea,
and one of their most dangerous features is the instantaneous chopping round of
the wind, an occurrence almost certain to take place during the greatest force
of the gale. A perfect hurricane will be blowing at one moment from the
northward or northeast, and in the next not a breath of wind will be felt in
that direction, while from the southwest it will come out all at once with a
violence almost inconceivable. A bright spot to the southward is the sure
forerunner of the change, and vessels are thus enabled to take the proper
precautions.
It was about six in the morning when the blow came on with a white squall,
and, as usual, from the northward. By eight it had increased very much, and
brought down upon us one of the most tremendous seas I had then ever beheld.
Every thing had been made as snug as possible, but the schooner laboured
excessively, and gave evidence of her bad qualities as a seaboat, pitching her
forecastle under at every plunge and with the greatest difficulty struggling up
from one wave before she was buried in another. just before sunset the bright
spot for which we had been on the look-out made its appearance in the southwest,
and in an hour afterward we perceived the little headsail we carried flapping
listlessly against the mast. In two minutes more, in spite of every preparation,
we were hurled on our beam-ends, as if by magic, and a perfect wilderness of
foam made a clear breach over us as we lay. The blow from the southwest,
however, luckily proved to be nothing more than a squall, and we had the good
fortune to right the vessel without the loss of a spar. A heavy cross sea gave
us great trouble for a few hours after this, but toward morning we found
ourselves in nearly as good condition as before the gale. Captain Guy considered
that he had made an escape little less than miraculous.
On the thirteenth of October we came in sight of Prince Edward's Island,
in latitude 46 degrees 53' S., longitude 37 degrees 46' E. Two days afterward we
found ourselves near Possession Island, and presently passed the islands of
Crozet, in latitude 42 degrees 59' S., longitude 48 degrees E. On the eighteenth
we made Kerguelen's or Desolation Island, in the Southern Indian Ocean, and came
to anchor in Christmas Harbour, having four fathoms of water.
This island, or rather group of islands, bears southeast from the Cape of
Good Hope, and is distant therefrom nearly eight hundred leagues. It was first
discovered in 1772, by the Baron de Kergulen, or Kerguelen, a Frenchman, who,
thinking the land to form a portion of an extensive southern continent carried
home information to that effect, which produced much excitement at the time. The
government, taking the matter up, sent the baron back in the following year for
the purpose of giving his new discovery a critical examination, when the mistake
was discovered. In 1777, Captain Cook fell in with the same group, and gave to
the principal one the name of Desolation Island, a title which it certainly well
deserves. Upon approaching the land, however, the navigator might be induced to
suppose otherwise, as the sides of most of the hills, from September to March,
are clothed with very brilliant verdure. This deceitful appearance is caused by
a small plant resembling saxifrage, which is abundant, growing in large patches
on a species of crumbling moss. Besides this plant there is scarcely a sign of
vegetation on the island, if we except some coarse rank grass near the harbor,
some lichen, and a shrub which bears resemblance to a cabbage shooting into
seed, and which has a bitter and acrid taste.
The face of the country is hilly, although none of the hills can be called
lofty. Their tops are perpetually covered with snow. There are several harbors,
of which Christmas Harbour is the most convenient. It is the first to be met
with on the northeast side of the island after passing Cape Francois, which
forms the northern shore, and, by its peculiar shape, serves to distinguish the
harbour. Its projecting point terminates in a high rock, through which is a
large hole, forming a natural arch. The entrance is in latitude 48 degrees 40'
S., longitude 69 degrees 6' E. Passing in here, good anchorage may be found
under the shelter of several small islands, which form a sufficient protection
from all easterly winds. Proceeding on eastwardly from this anchorage you come
to Wasp Bay, at the head of the harbour. This is a small basin, completely
landlocked, into which you can go with four fathoms, and find anchorage in from
ten to three, hard clay bottom. A ship might lie here with her best bower ahead
all the year round without risk. To the westward, at the head of Wasp Bay, is a
small stream of excellent water, easily procured.
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