Wednesday, January 20, 2016
Book
If the book sometimes seems to contradict itself it's because this is a work in progress. For instance, I originally named Joseph's companion Garrett Perrin. Two chapters later in his Autobiography, Bates mentions that his companion was Forbes, no first name given. So I kept hte Garrett and changed the last name to Forbes. I have also made the change in my Document files, but not in the post.
You are my Beta testers, so feel free to post your comments on what I've written.
Enjoy!
KIdnapped!
High Seas Adventures
Chapter 4 –
Kidnapped!
By Ellen Weaver Bailey
This is a slightly fictionalized version of the
biography of early-19th-century seaman Joseph Bates. While all of
the events are strictly true, his Autobiography
often lacks detail, so I have added logical dialogue, names and actions to
fill in the blanks. I have also somewhat modernized the language.
Arriving
safely in Liverpool, Joseph Bates and Garrett Forbes found lodging at a
seaman’s boardinghouse run by Mrs. Whitby, a middle-aged widow. The two young
Americas spent most of each day at the docks, asking about possible berths on a
ship going to New Bedford. One evening shortly after their arrival, they
relaxed in the common room of the boarding house, listening to the talk of the
sailors and Mrs. Whitby’s friendly chatter.
“’Ow
did ye like the scouse tonight” she asked, and she expected an answer. A
positive one. The men murmured appreciatively.
“Is
that what you call that delicious stew?” asked Joseph. Mrs. Whitby appeared
scandalized. The English sailors in the room chuckled and settled down to watch
the show.
“Stew is it?” Mrs. Whitby demanded,
visibly aggrieved. “Why, ‘tis never mere stew
I’d give ye! ‘Tis good Liverpudlian scouse!
“Scouse!”
cheered the grinning Englishmen.
“Scouse,”
said Joseph.
“No,
no! Ye’re sayin’ it wrong. Say “scouse.”’
“Scouse,”
repeated Joseph obediently though he thought he had said it right the first
time. Forbes smirked as Mrs. Whitby shook her head.
“Well
then, you try it!” Joseph exploded at
his friend, embarrassed at being the center of amused attention. But Forbes had
no more success. Although to the Americans, their pronunciation sounded exactly
like the landlady’s, the other men kept laughing, and Mrs. Whitby kept shaking
her head and mourning their bad pronunciation. After making them each try it
several times, she sighed resignedly.
“You
Yanks nivver say it right,” she mourned, then brightened. “Ye’d better work on
learnin’ Eglish!” And with that, she returned, grinning, to her kitchen.
The
rollicking laughter that ensued was cut off by the pounding of boots outside,
and the door was thrown open. A uniformed naval officer stomped inside,
followed by a dozen rough-looking armed men. There was scrambling as English
sailors fled the room. One man was so desperate to get away that he dove right
through the window. Without opening it first.
“Stand
where ye are!” roared the officer. “The first man to move, dies!” And his men’s
pointed weapons proved that he meant it. Mrs. Whitby rushed back into the room,
alarmed by the noise and shouts, and caught sight of the intruders.
“Press
gang!” she breathed, her face whitening. Joseph and Forbes looked around at the
sailors frozen in place, trying to figure out what was going on but too prudent
to call attention to themselves. The officer began making the rounds of the
room.
“Useless,”
he said indicating a man with a wooden leg.
“Too
old,” was his judgment of another.
“Weakling.
Wouldn’t last a month,” he dismissed a third. When he came to where Joseph and
his companion stood, the officer’s eyes widened.
“Well, well, well, a pair of likely lads,”
he said, smiling evilly “What country are you lads from?Scotland? Ireland?”
“We’re American!” Joseph blurted
indignantly. The officer faked a huge laugh, and his press gang echoed him.
“Americans!” he scoffed, looking around at
his gang. “They say they’re
Americans.” His men jeered. Joseph and Forbes pulled out their “protections,”
an early form of passport.
“Here!” Joseph shoved the papers angrily
in the officer’s face. “This proves we’re Americans!” The officer slapped the
papers away without looking at them.
“Obvious fakes,” he said. “Seize them!” The
press gang leaped for the two young men. Joseph’s first instinct was to fight
against the grasping hands, but the officer put an end to that by drawing his
sword. Firelight glinted off the razor edge.
“’Ere!” he commanded. “Come along quietly
if ye don’t want a taste of me blade.” The two young men were frog-marched to a
place called the “rendezvous,” though Joseph was more inclined to call it a
filthy underground hole.
“Why is this happening to us?” Forbes asked
Joseph. “What’s a press gang, anyway?” Joseph hugged himself against the chill
of the concrete cell.
“The navy is in desperate need of sailors
to crew their ships fighting Napoleon,” he explained, “so press gangs stalk the
waterfront and kidnap men, forcing them into the Navy.”
“Why do they have to kidnap men? Can’t
they recruit enough?” wondered Forbes. Joseph snorted in reply.
“Conditions in the Royal Navy are so bad
that no man in his right mind would join voluntarily,” he explained.
“But – but – we’re Americans!” Forbes protested.
“I’ve heard of this – seizing Americans
and making them serve. Sometimes they even board American ships and claim sailors
are deserters from the Royal Navy. It’s disgusting!” said Joseph. “But I never
expected it to happen to me,” he added mournfully.
The next morning, April 27, 1810, Forbes
and 18-year-old Joseph were taken before a naval lieutenant. Their protests
that they were Americans were once again ignored.
“Why, that can’t be,” said the lieutenant
smoothly. “I have a man here who says he knows you to be Irish.”
“That’s ridiculous!” Joseph blurted, “You
can tell by our speech we’re not Irish.” His reward for this clarification was
a punch in the back of the head.
“We will hear what Maguire has to say,”
the lieutenant said. “Private Maguire, you say you know these men?”
“Aye, sor,” said the private in a flat
voice, as though reading from a script. “Both men ‘ave been known to me for
years. Sure an’ this one,” indicating Joseph, “lives roight down the street
from me mither and faither in Dublin.”
“That’s a lie!” shouted Joseph. The punch
this time sent him sprawling.
“It’s clear that you are the ones lying,” the lieutenant stated calmly. He nodded,
and strong hands pressed a shilling into the right palm of each, wrapping the
American’s fingers around the money.
“You have accepted the king’s shilling,”
pronounced the lieutenant in an official voice. “Therefore, you are hereby
ordered to join the Royal Navy.” Four men grabbed them, one holding tightly to each
arm, and with the lieutenant leading with his drawn sword, the two Americans were
marched through the streets of Liverpool. Just
like a couple of condemned criminals thought Joseph in fury at the
humiliation. People stopped to stare at the procession, and there was no sign
of sympathy in their gazes. Joseph held his head up, refusing to act like a
criminal.
When they reached the River Mersey, they
were rowed out to the Princess, a
British warship anchored in the middle of the broad inlet. Here they were locked
into the prison room on the lower deck with 60 other kidnapped Americans. The
men were all of one mind, their attitude expressed by the sailor who seemed to
be the leader.
“The way I sees it,” said the older tar,
“we was taken illegally, with no provocation on our part.”
“Aye! That’s true,” echoed his listeners.
“So, anything we do to regain our liberty
is justified!”
“Here, here!” cried the Americans,
agreeing as one.
“What do you suggest we do?” asked Joseph,
ready to take some action, any action, to be free again.
“We bides our time,” said the old salt,
“and we watches. Sooner or later we’ll get our chance.”
The chance came a few days later, when
most of the ship’s complement went ashore to bury a shipmate who had died of
illness. Several of the Americans had a suggestion.
“While they’re gone, we can break the bars
and bolts out of the porthole,” said one.
“Yeah, and then we can escape out the hole
and swim for it,” added another. “The current is strong here and it’ll take us
out of sight in no time.” Working quickly, they soon had a hole large enough
for a man to slip through. But they weren’t quite quick enough. Just as the
first man was reaching up to the hole, a boatful of returning officers rowed
alongside.
“Hello! What’s this then?” barked an
officer, spotting the open hole.
“Those Yanks are tryin’ to escape!”
declared another.
“We’ll soon cure them of that,” vowed the
captain.
As soon as the officers boarded the ship,
they ordered the Americans up on deck. One by one the prisoners were stripped
to the waist, tied to a grating and lashed with the cat-o-nine-tails, a vicious
whip of nine long, braided and knotted ropes fastened to a handle. All the
prisoners were forced to watch the whippings and listen to the screams the
victims were unable to hold in. Hour after hour, the torture went on, as the
sun sank toward the horizon. About 9:00 o’clock that evening, Joseph was
grabbed and pulled toward the grating.
“Belay that!” the captain ordered. “It’s
too dark. We’ll continue in the morning.”
Joseph breathed a sigh of relief. He had a
reprieve! Of course, that meant he had the whole night to listen to the groans
of the miserable victims and think about
his own turn, coming first thing in the morning. It was a very long night. At
dawn, the prisoners were once again summoned up on deck, but before the
Britiash could resume their vicious work, a message came for the captain.
“Well,” he humphed, “it looks like the
rest of you Yanks will escape your just punishment. I’m ordered to transship the
lot of you to that frigate weighing anchor over there.” The transfer went
quickly, and a few days later the prisoners arrived at the docks in Plymouth. As
the frigate entered the harbor, Joseph could not take is eyes from the vessel
tied up at the wharf. The Salvador del
Mundo, a three-decker Spanish ship of the line of the Santa Ana class, had
been captured by the British at the Battle of Cape St. Vincent, back in 1797, one
of the early conflicts of the French Revolutionary Wars. In England it served as
a harbor, or barracks, ship, and it was now to serve as a prison ship for 1500
kidnapped American sailors.
Here, Joseph and Forbes became friendly
with Silas Lynch, another young sailor from Massachusetts. The bulk of their
conversation was about escape.
“We’ll escape or die in the attempt!”
Lynch declared, and the other two agreed.
They managed to get hold of a rope, and they knotted a blanket to the
end to extend its reach. They hid this contraption and carefully watched the
routines of the ship. On the chosen night, they watched the shift change of the
guards and then went into action.
First, they raised the hanging port, a
hinged shutter that covered the porthole. Opening the shutter provided a sort
of umbrella to help hide their activity.
A friend agreed to close the shutter after they had escaped. They tossed
out the end of the rope and were glad to see that it reached clear to the
water. Forbes went first, pausing at the porthole.
“You’ll follow?” he asked. Joseph assured
him he would. Forbes then slipped down the rope to the water, followed
immediately by Joseph. Before Joseph reached the water, though, the cry rose:
“Man overboard!” cried a British sailor with
sharp ears. At that, their friend dropped the shutter in panic, alerting the
guard to the attempted escape and the location of the escapees. Fearing he
would be fired on, Joseph slipped down into the water and swam to a ladder,
hoping to hide under it and escape detection. Unfortunately, an office chose
that moment to descend the ladder, planning to board a ship’s boat to search
for the escapees. Joseph was holding onto the ladder when the officer’s hand
touched his.
“Here’s one of them!” bellowed the officer
in a voice Joseph was sure could be heard all the way to London. And catching
sight of Forbes a moment later, “And here’s another!” Josph and Forbes were
hauled aboard the ship, where they faced the ship’s angry officers.
“Who are you?” demanded the officer who
had found them.
“An American!” declared Joseph defiantly.
“How dare you try to swim away from the
ship? Didn’t you know you were liable to be shot?”
“I am not a subject of King George!” spat
Joseph. “I was trying to regain my rightful liberty.” He gave the officer glare
for glare.
The two escapees were kept in close
confinement for 30 hours, and then they were separated. Joseph never saw his
friend again.
With 150 other sailors, all strangers,
Joseph was hustled aboard the Rodney,
a 74-gun troop transfer ship with a crew of about 700. The newcomers were
mustered on the quarterdeck, and then they were allowed to go down to their
dinners. Except…
“Bates! You will remain here,” ordered
Captain Bolton, who then handed a piece of paper to First M ate Campbell. Campbell
read it and his face turned dark with anger.
“Scoundrel!” he muttered. Captain Bolton
then mustered all 100 men of the ship’s boat crews on deck.
“You see that fellow?” he demanded,
indicating Joseph.
“Aye!”
“Yessir!”
“If you ever let him get into one of your
boats, I’ll flog every man in the boat’s crew. Is that clear?”
“Aye, aye, Sir!”
“Very well, you may go to your dinners.”
The crews hurried below, but Joseph stood rooted to the spot, wondering what
would come next.
“You, too, Bates,” the captain threw over
his shoulder as he turned away.
A few hours later the Rodney departed the dock under full sail to confront Napoleon’s
forces in the Mediterranean Sea. As Joseph stood on the deck, watching the old
city of Plymouth recede, he wondered if he would ever be free again.
Tuesday, January 5, 2016
The Doomed Voyage
High Seas Adventures
Chapter Three – A Doomed Voyage
By Ellen Weaver Bailey
This is a slightly fictionalized version of the
biography of early-19th-century seaman Joseph Bates. While all of
the events are strictly true, his Autobiography
often lacks detail, so I have added logical dialogue, names and actions to
fill in the blanks. I have also somewhat modernized the language.
When
the Fanny docked again in New Bedford
that November, Joseph felt like a king. For the next several months he lived on
his tales of his first ocean voyage. Prudy, for one, never seemed to tire of
hearing about his adventures, and he swelled with pride at her rapt attention. Eventually,
he needed some new stories. By mid-May, he was at sea again, heading this time
for Archangel, Russia. His dreams were coming true; he was seeing the world!
What
he saw first were icebergs. With the other hands, Joseph gazed in fascination
at these huge “islands of ice,” as they were called, floating on all sides and
dwarfing the ship. A strong westerly gale drove the ship forward as a dense fog
shut down, limiting vision to a mere ten feet or so. At midnight, Joseph’s
shift felt their way to the hatches and retired below to their hammocks.
An
hour later, they were jerked from sleep by the helmsman’s frantic cry of “Iceberg!”
followed immediately by a horrifying crunch and a jarring crash. The impact
threw Joseph across the forecastle, slamming his head against the bulkhead and
knocking him out.
Slowly,
he came to. For the next few seconds he exerted every fiber of his being to
draw a breath. With relief he felt the air rush into his lungs, but he still
couldn’t move or speak. He could see a hand lying on the deck. He assumed it
was his and that it was attached to his arm and shoulder, but he couldn’t prove
it at the moment. He had so sense of physical connection. He heard an urgent
voice and looked up to see Warren Palmer, a shipmate about ten years older, leaning
over him and calling his name.
“Joseph!
Joseph! We’re trapped!” Joseph forced himself to speak, but the words came out
reluctantly and inexpertly.
“What…ya…mean…trapped?”
“The
rest of the crew went up on deck and shut the hatch! I don’t know where the
ladder is!”
“Ladder?”
Joseph’s brain was having trouble processing information.
“Yes!
The ladder! We need to find it so we can get out of here!” Palmer’s voice was
panicky. With his help, Joseph struggled to his feet, and they began to search
for the ladder. Their desperation grew amid the noise of disaster. Timbers
shrieked as though the ship were being torn apart. Men on the deck above
screamed in fear, begging God for mercy. Forgetting their New England reserve,
the two doomed sailors clutched each other around the neck, groaning and crying
in despair.
As
Joseph thought of the teachings of his Christian father, his mental agony was
so crushing he couldn’t speak. I’m about
to die! He thought. I’m going to go
down with the wreck of this ship, to the bottom of the sea, and I am totally
unprepared to meet God. I have no hope of Heaven. I’ll be damned forever!
Palmer’s
thoughts led him in a different direction.
“I
wish I could get my hands on that captain! This is his fault!” he snarled.
“What
do you mean?” asked Joseph, startled out of his spiritual agonizing.
“When
I was at the helm last night, I heard the first mate begging the captain to
round the ship to and wait till morning when we could see where we were going.
But, oh, no! ’Don’t worry, we’re past the ice,’ the captain said. ‘We have to
keep going; we can’t waste time.’
“Can’t
waste time! He threw our lives away because he was in a hurry!” Spittle flew as
Palmer soundly cursed the negligent captain.
Just
then, the hatch flew open and a face peered into the forecastle.
“Anyone
down there?” shouted a sailor.
“Yes!
The two trapped crewmen cried in unison, and within moments they were up on
deck.
Not
that this improved their chances of survival. The bow of the ship was jammed up
under a shelf of ice, and the wind filling the sails pounded the hull against
the berg. Between the roaring gale and the crashing seas, the vessel seemed
about to be smashed to pieces. Picking his way through the wreckage, Joseph
arrived at the quarter deck, where he saw the captain and second mate on their
knees, pleading with God to save them.
“Mercy,
Lord!” cried the captain in panic.
“Have
mercy on us!” echoed the terrified mate.
Meanwhile
the first mate and several crewmen were trying to hoist the longboat. Joseph
snorted. Even with his limited experience, he could see that if the boat were
successfully launched, the pounding waves and ice would reduce it to kindling
in moments. Just then his attention was jerked back to the captain, whose cries
had reached a new level of panic.
“What
are you doing, Palmer?” the captain shrieked, struggling against Palmer’s grip
on his arm.
“Throwing
you overboard!” yelled the furious younger man, dragging his commander toward
the rail.
“Let
me alone!’ howled the captain. “In five minutes we’ll all be in eternity!”
“You
first!” stormed Palmer. “You got us into this!”
“Wait!
Palmer!” Joseph leaped across the tangled debris and grabbed his shipmate by
the shoulder. “We still have a chance! Come help me work the pump!”
It
took a moment for his words to penetrate Palmer’s fury. The young man shook his
head as though to clear it, and then with a sneer he flung the blubbering captain
away from him to follow Joseph. They began working the pump with great energy although
Joseph didn’t really expect it to work; he had just wanted to keep Palmer from
committing murder. To his surprise, though, they were soon rewarded with a
giant sucking sound as the pump began clearing water from the hold. Hearing this
sound of success and seeing the captain still helpless on his knees, the first
mate took command.
“Let
go the tap-gallant and topsail halyards!” he called. “Let go the tacks and
sheets! Haul up the courses! Clew down and clew up the topsails!” Seamen leaped
to obey, the wind spilled from the sails, and the ship backed away from the
cleft in the ice, settling down on an even keel broadside to the berg. The crew
took a cautiously relieved breath and surveyed the damage. There was good news
and bad news.
The
bad news was that everything forward of the foremast was destroyed, and the
mast itself seemed on the brink of toppling. If the yards and mast struck the
ice, the ship would tilt to one side, allowing the heavy seas to wash over the
deck and complete the destruction of ship and crew.
On
the upside, the ship was strongly built. Breathlessly, the sailors watched and
listened in the darkness. Eventually they realized that the waves were pushing
them away from the ice. There was
hope, but because of the darkness and the height of the iceberg, they couldn’t
see if the way ahead was clear, so they were helpless to do anything to guide
their craft.
Through
the night hours, the sailors worked in the dark to clear away the wreckage.
About 4:00 a.m., they heard the lookout’s cry.
“Horizon
sighted -- and there’s daylight!” A
cheer went up from the sailors. They had passed the iceberg! There was light to
see by! The ship could be steered again!
“Hard
up your helm,” shouted the captain, his confidence restored, “and keep the ship
before the wind!”
Fourteen
days later, the damaged craft limped up the Shannon River in Ireland, where she
was refitted for the voyage to Russia, and they were soon on their way again.
As they neared the Baltic Sea, they joined a convoy of three hundred British
merchant ships protected by a fleet of Royal Navy vessels. The warships were
necessary because Napoleon controlled most of Europe, and he had declared that
any ship coming from England or carrying a cargo from England would be stopped
and both ship and cargo confiscated. Denmark vigorously pursued this policy.
But
first, the convoy had to negotiate the dangerous Mooner Passage, known for bad
weather. Sure enough, no sooner had they entered this narrow strait than a
violent storm burst upon them. Darkness closed in as wind and waves battered
the ships, the threat of destruction growing by the minute. Finally, the
commodore hoisted a lighted lantern, the signal to anchor immediately. The
crews anchored their vessels, but the storm was so fierce they could not relax.
It was a long, tense night.
When
morning came, Joseph and his shipmates watched as, one by one, anchor cables
broke and many of the merchant ships, helpless before the gale, were driven disastrously
onto the rocks. Then their own cable parted! Working furiously, the crew
crowded on all the sail they dared and ran before the wind. In this way, they managed
to stay afloat, running before the wind. Within 24 hours, they found themselves
well ahead of the convoy. The captain called a council of all hands.
“We have a decision to make,” he told the
crew. “Do we wait and rejoin the convoy, or do we go on? Joseph was puzzled.
“Why is it a hard decision?” he asked.
“We
have a fast ship, and it’s keeping us ahead of the storm, which is good, of
course,” said the captain. “However, we’re so far ahead of the convoy, the
commodore might think we’re running off to join Napoleon, so he may fire on us.
On the other hand, if we slow down, the storm may do us in.” The vote was
unanimous: sail on!
A few hours later, they rejoiced to hear
the captain’s announcement: “We’re out of reach of the commodore’s guns!” The
sailors cheered. Almost immediately, though, their cheers turned to
exclamations of dismay.
“What’s that?”
“Yow!”
“Hey! A cannonball just splashed right
next to us! I thought we were out of reach!”
“It’s not the commodore,” said the
captain, grimly. “It’s those two ships over there.” Sure enough, two armed
vessels were approaching, with obvious hostile intent. The captain had no
choice; he rounded to, and the whole crew stood silent as their ship was
boarded by Danish-speaking sailors who looked as hostile as the cannonballs.
“Pirates!” spat some members of the crew.
“Nay, not pirates. Privateers,” responded
the Danish captain, who could speak English, after all. “We have letters of
marque from the king, authorizing us to attack and seize any enemy ship.”
“But we aren’t enemies of Denmark,”
protested the first mate.
“We know you were sailing with that
British convoy that piled up on the rocks. That makes you liable to seizure and
confiscation.”
“Confiscation?” echoed the supercargo in a
strained voice. He was part owner; confiscation of the ship and cargo meant
financial ruin for him. “We’re not British, we’re Americans!” he protested.
“You
will appear in court in a few weeks,” went on the privateer, ignoring the
sputtering of the supercargo. “In the meantime, you will be held in jail in
Copenhagen.”
While they waited in jail, the crew
were allowed to move around to each other’s spaces. One day early on, the
supercargo edged up to Joseph.
“Listen, young Bates,” he said in a
low voice, “when you get into court, testify that we came directly from New
York.”
“But
we stopped in Ireland – “ Joseph began.
“Ssst!
Don’t say that!” the supercargo
insisted, looking around furtively. “Tell the court we’ve had nothing to do
with England. We don’t have any English cargo. And above all, we were not part of that convoy!” Joseph was
stunned. He had never told a lie in his life.
“Do
as I ask, and I’ll make it worth your while,” the supercargo promised. “Some of
the others have already agreed. Be a good lad and stick with your shipmates.”
Joseph’s mind was in a whirl. He could certainly use the money, but… How would
he ever face his honest father again if he told this lie? He shook his head.
“You
might as well,” urged the supercargo. “Others already have. You don’t want to be
odd man out, do you?” Joseph took a deep breath.
“I’m
sorry. I can’t do it.”
“Tchah!”
the supercargo turned away in anger.
The
youngest member of the crew, Joseph was called first to testify. There was no
jury. Instead, three judges sat at the high bench. Joseph tried not to show his
nervousness as he took his place in the witness box.
“You
are very young,” intoned the deep voice of the chief justice. Stung, Joseph
stood straighter and tossed his head of long, dark curls. “Are you sure you
understand the nature of an oath?”
“I
certainly do,” Joseph answered with confidence.
“We’ll
see,” continued the judge, unimpressed. “Look at that box next to you.” For the
first time, Joseph noticed the box, about 15 inches long and eight inches high,
with a hole on the side that faced him.
“In
that box is a machine that will cut off the thumb and first two fingers of
anyone who swears falsely in this court. Hold up the thumb and first two
fingers of our right hand.” Joseph did so. “There, you have sworn to tell the
truth,” said the judge. Now, put your right hand in the box.” Carefully, Joseph
did so. He didn’t want to take a chance on tripping whatever mechanism was inside.
As
the judges questioned him, he just as carefully answered with the complete
truth: the refurbishing in Ireland, falling in with the British fleet, the
storm that separated his ship from the convoy and the capture by the
privateers. Each time he spoke, he tensed, afraid that the judges might not
believe him and would activate the slicing machine. At last he was dismissed
and returned to the jail. He lost no time in telling the other crew members
about the threat of the box. As a result, even those who had decided to lie
forgot the supercargo’s promised reward and told the plain truth. Later, they
met a Dutch crew, who showed their hands, minus thumbs and forefingers. The
threat had not been a bluff.
Joseph
and his mates were allowed to return to the ship for the time being, but both
ship and cargo were declared confiscated. They had also lost any chance of
getting paid, so they had to find another berth as quickly as possible. By now
it was nearly winter. Joseph haunted the waterfront until one day he saw a Danish
brig being readied to sail.
“Ahoy
the ship!” he called in English as he walked down the wharf. A face looked over
the railing.
“What
you want?” asked the Dane.
“I’m
looking for a berth,” returned Joseph. “Where are you headed?”
“A
bert’?” asked the seaman in a Danish accent. “We are going to Pillau, Prussia
[now Baltiysk, Russia].You want to go t’ere?”
“Any
port in a storm,” cheerfully answered Joseph, who did not know where Pillau
was, but having been through a stormy trial of his courage, all he wanted right
now was to get out of Denmark. He knew
only a few Danish words, but the Danish captain knew quite a bit of English,
and soon the 16-year-old seaman was aboard the brig as its newest crew member.
His
relief soon faded, however, as the ship proved to be a leaky tub. With shifts
of sailors operating the pump 24 hours a day, they were barely able to keep it
afloat. An exhausted Joseph was glad to say goodbye when they finally limped
into the harbor of Pillau.
There
he signed on with an American brig coming from Russia. The brig would head back
down the Baltic Sea – at least the Danish privateers would leave this ship
alone, since it came from Russia, which was an ally -- through the Scottish islands in the North Sea
to Belfast, Ireland. But it was a winter voyage, on a ship that proved to be
just as leaky as the last.
Worse,
the captain was stingy, cruel and addicted to hard liquor. Continuous
intoxication only worsened his temperament. Again, the crew pumped continuously
in shifts to rid the ship of enough water to keep it barely afloat. This was
especially hard since all they had to eat were scanty rations of ship’s
biscuit, or hardtack. Inevitably, there were complaints, but these merely
infuriated the drunken captain.
“Do
what I tell ye, ye filthy varmints!” he raged. Any more complaints and ye’ll
work with no rations at all! See how long ye can keep it up then!” Too drunk to
realize that if the sailors became too weak to operate the pump the ship would
take him down along with them, he grew ever more threatening to the shivering,
exhausted men. “Faster on that pump! Harder! Or I’ll keelhaul the lot of ye!”
At
last they reached Dublin, where Joseph and Garrett Perrin, another young
American, immediately crossed the Irish Sea as passengers to Liverpool, where
they planned to get a berth that would take them back to New Bedford. Joseph
hoped they would be able to find a berth without delay. He could hardly wait to
tell Prudy all about his adventures!
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