with the intention of diverting his
mind from so painful a train of thought, when he interrupted me
eagerly.
"And yet," continued he, "poor as I am, it is in my power to make you
rich--ay, beyond the utmost scope of your imagination. And I will, I
will! Why should I take this secret to the grave with me? In a few hours
I shall be beyond the want of earthly riches, but you, senor, are young,
and look forward to a long life; doubtless, like other men, you have
already indulged in many a bright day-dream which the possession of
wealth would go far to realise. Listen, gentil senor; I must be brief, for I
feel that I have no time to lose. I have been shipwrecked once before. It
is now nearly three years ago since I sailed from Valparaiso for Canton,
whence we were to proceed to Bombay, and so home round the Cape of
Good Hope. I was then chief-mate. We met with nothing but calms for
the first three weeks of our passage, after which the weather changed,
and we had a succession of adverse gales until we were within fifteen
degrees of the line. Here we were worse off than ever, for at one
moment we were lying in a glassy calm, and perhaps in five minutes
afterwards were under close-reefed canvas, or possibly bare poles. At
length a furious squall threw the ship on her beam-ends, and we were
compelled to cut away all three of her masts to save her from
foundering. And then the squall settled down into a perfect hurricane,
and we could do nothing but suffer the ship to drive dead before it.
Near midnight we were flung violently to the deck by a tremendous
shock. The ship was on shore, dashing her bottom out upon the rocks.
And it was so dark, senor, that we were unable to see each other. Oh!
the horror of that night; it is as fresh upon me now as it was at the
moment that it happened."
The poor fellow's face was streaming with perspiration. I begged he
would not distress himself by recalling such painful recollections, but
in spite of my remonstrance he continued his story.
"The ship broke up beneath our feet, and I found myself swimming, I
knew not where, in the midst of a quantity of floating wreck, to a piece
of which I clung. I was surrounded on every side by breakers; but not
far from me I could perceive, by the absence of the phosphorescence,
that the water was smooth. I urged myself, and the plank to which I
clung, in that direction, and soon reached the smooth water; after which
I suffered myself to drift. The water was quite warm, and I experienced
no inconvenience whatever from my immersion. After the lapse of
perhaps an hour, possibly more, I felt the ground beneath my feet, and
staggering out of the water, I flung myself upon the dry land, and,
notwithstanding the howling of the wind and the roar of the breakers, I
fell into a deep and dreamless sleep.
"When I awoke the sun was beating fiercely down upon my uncovered
head; the sky was cloudless; and a calm had succeeded to the gale of
the night before. I rose to my feet, and on looking about me, discovered
that I had been cast upon one of those coral islands which so thickly
stud some portions of the Pacific. I was--as I am now--the only one
who escaped the wreck alive. The bodies of my shipmates lay scattered
along the shore; and a long and arduous day was spent in burying them
where they lay, in such shallow graves as I could scoop in the sand
with the aid of a piece of splintered plank. The beach was strewed with
wreckage which had been washed over the reef and into the smooth
water; and I was overjoyed to find amongst this the long-boat, perfectly
uninjured. In her I visited the scene of the wreck; and there, after
diligent search, I found the means and a sufficiency of appropriate
materials to enable me to fit her for a lengthened voyage.
"I was more than two months on the island before my preparations
were complete, for life was very enjoyable in that delightful spot, and I
felt in no hurry to get away. At length, whilst walking along the beach
one evening, my attention was attracted to three or four pieces of old,
worm-eaten, weather-worn timber, which I had often noticed before,
projecting above the sand; and curiosity now impelled me to walk up to
and examine them. A careful scrutiny revealed to me that they formed
part of the framework of a ship; and I resolved that
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