My First Cruise | Page 5

W.H.G. Kingston
yard
for a minute till he could recover himself, and then he scrambled in on
to the top. There was a general shout fore and aft when he was safe.
Another man went to the weather earing, and three reefs were taken in
the topsails. I heard the first lieutenant observe to Uncle Tom that he
was very glad to get the ship snug at last; but I cannot say that I thought
her snug, or anything snug about her, for there we were among clouds
of sleet and spray, tumbling and rolling about in that undignified way
in which I had not thought it possible so fine a frigate could have been
tumbled and rolled about. It brought down the ship a peg or two in my
estimation, and took the shine out of many of us, let me tell you. That
fellow Snookes was continually offering me a lump of fat bacon, and at
dinner he contrived to slip all the most greasy bits into my plate. I held
out manfully, and tried to look very heroic, or, at all events, indifferent;
but, oh Harry, I did feel very wretched, and began to reflect that I might
possibly have been rather happier on shore. I suspect that the way my
lips curled, and the yellow look of my eyes, betrayed me. The gale
lasted for three days. I was very glad when it was over; so you
understand it is not all sunshine at sea.

STORY ONE, CHAPTER 3.
THE SLAVER.
It was reported that we were to touch at one or two places on the coast
of Africa, and then to stand across to the Brazils. The first land we
made was that near Sierra Leone. I always thought that negroes lived in
thatched huts, and wore bits of white cloth round their loins. We
brought up before Free Town, the capital of the colony, when what was
my surprise to see really a very handsome place, containing between
fifteen and twenty thousand inhabitants, the greater number black or
brown men, and as well-dressed and comfortable-looking as any white
people could be. What is more, they have schools and colleges where
they are capitally taught, and all the little black children go to school;
so that the truth is, that they are far better educated than are the children
of the working classes in many parts of England, and are all just as
good Christians as we are. Sommers told me all this, and a great deal
more. I haven't spoken about him before. He's a mate--such a
good-natured, kind fellow, and is very merry, though he can be very
serious; and do you know, when he's in the berth, none of the others,
big or little, swear and talk about things they oughtn't to. I like
Sommers, and so even does Snookes and My Lord; and he never lets
anybody bully Polly when he's near. I think that I should have been
bullied a good deal, but I took everything that was said or done in good
part, or pretended to be unconscious of it, and lost no opportunity of
retorting--good-naturedly of course--it would not have done otherwise.
And now, the rest only play the same tricks with me that they do with
each other. No one makes any difference with me because I am the
captain's nephew, any more than Uncle Tom does himself. Uncle Tom
is very kind, but he makes no difference that I can see between the rest
of the midshipmen and me. He does the best that he can for all of us,
that is the truth: he punishes all alike if we do wrong, and has us all into
the cabin and gives us good advice, and talks to us frequently. Still we
do, somehow or other, manage to get into scrapes. I have been
mastheaded twice, and Dickey Snookes five times, since we came to
sea; once for dressing up the sheep in some of the men's clothes just

before the crew were mustered, and then letting them out on the deck;
and another time for cutting poor Polly's hammock down by the head,
and very nearly cracking his skull--luckily it's rather thick. After
leaving Free Town we touched at Monrovia, the capital of Liberia.
Have you ever read about that settlement? It was established by the
people of the United States, and colonised by men of colour, or blacks,
who had been once slaves and had obtained their freedom. It is a
republic, and the chief magistrate as well as all the officers are brown
or black men. It is not nearly so large nor so flourishing a place as
Sierra Leone. In the latter, you see, there are a great many intelligent
white men who set the blacks an
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