The Children of the King | Page 2

F. Marion Crawford
and the breeze is gone again. While she is still forging
ahead out go the sweeps, six or eight of them, and the men throw
themselves forward over the long slender loom, as they stand. Half an
hour to row, or more perhaps. Down helm, as you meet the next puff,
and the good felucca heels over a little. And so through the night, the
breeze freshening before the rising sun to die away in the first hot
morning hours, just as you are abreast of Camerota. L'Infresco Point is
ahead, not three miles away. It is of no use to row, for the breeze will
come up before long and save you the trouble. But the sea is white and
motionless. Far in the offing a Sicilian schooner and a couple of clumsy
"martinganes"--there is no proper English name for the craft--are lying
becalmed, with hanging sails. The men on board the felucca watch
them and the sea. There is a shadow on the white, hazy horizon, then a
streak, then a broad dark blue band. The schooner braces her top-sail
yard and gets her main sheet aft. The martinganes flatten in their jibs
along their high steeving bowsprits and jib-booms. Shift your sheets,
too, now, for the wind is coming. Past L'Infresco with its lovely
harbour of refuge, lonely as a bay in a desert island, its silent shade and
its ancient spring. The wind is south by west at first, but it will go
round in an hour or two, and before noon you will make Scalea--stand
out for the reef, the only one in Calabria--with a stern breeze. You have
passed the most beautiful spot on the beautiful Italian coast, without

seeing it. There, between the island of Dino and the cape lies San
Nicola, with its grand deserted tower, its mighty cliffs, its deep, safe
bay and its velvet sand. What matter? The wind is fair and you are for
Calabria with twenty tons of macaroni from Amalfi. There is no time to
be lost, either, for you will probably come home in ballast. Past Scalea,
then, where tradition says that Judas Iscariot was born and bred and did
his first murder. Right ahead is the sharp point of the Diamante, beyond
that low shore where the cane brake grows to within fifty yards of the
sea. Now you have run past the little cape, and are abreast of the beach.
Down mainsail--down jib--down foresail. Let go the anchor while she
forges, eight to nine lengths from the land, and let her swing round,
stern to the sand. Clear away the dingy and launch her from amidships,
and send a line ashore. Overboard with everything now, for beaching,
capstan, chocks and all--the swell will wash them in. As the keel grates
on the pebbles, the men jump into the water from the high stern and
catch the drifting wood. Some plant the capstan, others pass the long
hemp cable and reeve it through the fiddle block. A hand forward to
slack out the cable as the heavy boat slowly creeps up out of the water.
The men from other craft, already beached, lend a hand too and a score
of stout fellows breast the long oars which serve for capstan bars. A
little higher still. Now prop her securely and make all snug and
ship-shape, and make fast the blade of an oar to one of the forward
tholes, with the loom on the ground, for a ladder. You are safe in
Calabria.
To-morrow at early dawn you must go into the hills, for you cannot sell
a tenth of your cargo in the little village. Away you trudge on foot,
across the rocky point, along the low flat beach by the cane brake, up
the bed of the rivulet, where the wet green blades of the canes brush
your face at every step. Shoes and stockings in hand you ford the
shallow river, then, shod again, you begin the long ascent. You will
need four good hours, or five, for you are not a landsman, your shoes
hurt you, and you would rather reef top-sails--aye, and take the lee
earing, too, in any gale and a score of times, than breast that mountain.
It cannot be helped. It is a hard life, though there are lazy days in the
summer months, when the wind will do your work for you. You must
live, and earn your share; though they call you the master, neither boat

nor cargo are yours, and you have to earn that share by harder work and
with greater anxiety than the rest. But the world is green to-day. You
remember a certain night last March--off Cape Orso in the gulf, when
the wind they call the Punti di Salerno was raging down
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