I was so confounded by the shock and the blow that for some moments I sat goggling the object that lay as lead upon my knees like a fool. I then threw it from me, and stood up. It fell where a slant of moonshine lay clear upon the side of the top, and I perceived that it was a big sea-bird, as large as a noddy, white as snow saving the margin of its wings, which were of a velvet black. It had a long, curved beak, and I gathered from the look of one of its pinions, which overlaid the body as though broken, that its width of wing must have come proportionally very near to that of the albatross. I could see by the moonshine that the eyes were closing by the slow drawing I seized the big bird by the legs and found its weight by no means so considerable as I should have supposed from the blow it dealt me. So, tightly binding its webbed feet with my pocket-handkerchief, that they might serve me as a handle, I dropped with this strange, dead sea-messenger through the wide square of the lubber’s hole into the main shrouds, and leisurely descended. The chief mate stood at the head of the starboard poop ladder as I reached the rail. “Hillo!” he called out, “good sport there, Mr. Catesby. What star have A shout of this sort was enough to bring everybody running to look. The music ceased, the dancing abruptly stopped. In a moment I was surrounded by a crowd of ladies and gentlemen shoving and exclaiming as they gathered about the skylight upon which I had laid the big sea-fowl. “What is it, Mr. Catesby? My stars! a handsome bird surely,” exclaimed Captain Bow. “Oh, Captain,” cried a young lady, “is the beautiful creature dead really?” “See!” shouted a military man, “the creature’s breast is decorated with a crucifix. No, damme, it’s a trick of the light. What is it, though?” “A silver pouncebox, I declare,” exclaimed a tall, stout lady, with a knowing nod of the feather in her head. “A sailor’s nickel tobacco-box more like, ma’am,” observed the mate, “with “Let’s have the story of the thing, Mr. Catesby,” said the captain. I briefly stated that I had ascended to the maintop to breathe the cool air up there and that whilst I was nodding the bird had dashed against me and fallen dead across my knees. “Oh, how dreadful!” “Oh, how interesting!” “Oh, I wonder the fright didn’t make you faint, Mr. Catesby!” and so on, and so on from the young ladies. “Shall I cast the seizing of the box adrift, sir?” said the mate. “Ay,” responded the captain. The officer with his knife severed the laniard of sennit and made to lift the lid of the box. But this proved a long job, inexpressibly vexatious to the thirsty expectations of the onlookers, owing to the lid fitting as to resist, as though soldered, the blade of the knife. “Bring a lantern, some one,” roared the mate. Some one held a light close to the officer, who exclaimed, after opening the sheet and gazing at it a little, “Any lady or gentleman here understand Spanish?” “I do,” exclaimed the handsome young “griffin” who had sat next to the colonel’s lady at table. “Will you kindly translate this then?” said the mate, handing him the letter. “It’s French,” said the young fellow; “no matter; I can read French.” He ran his eye over the page, coughed and read aloud as follows:— “The Corsaire, June 12th, 18—. This brig was dismasted in a hurricane ten days since. Three of us survive. At the time of our destruction our latitude was 8° south, and longitude 81° 10´ “Last words illegible,” said the young fellow, holding the paper close to his nose. “Humph!” exclaimed Captain Bow. He hummed over the latitude and longitude, and addressing the mate said, “The wreck should not be far off, Mr. Pike.” “Oh, Captain, will you search for the poor, poor creatures?” cried one of the younger of the married ladies. “Twelfth of June the date is, hey?” said the captain, “and this is the eighteenth. In six days the deluge, madam—at sea. Well, we shall keep a bright look-out, I promise you. D’ye want to keep the bird, Mr. Catesby?” “No,” said I, “the box will suffice as a memorial. “Then, Mr. Pike, let it be hove overboard,” said the captain. “Strike up ‘Tom Bowling’ for its interment,” cried the little Irish colonel, “‘Faithful below he did his duty,’ you know. Nearly knocked poor Catesby overboard, though. What is it, a Booby?” “How can ye be so rude, Desmond?” said his wife. “’Tis the bird I mane, my love,” he answered. The girls would not let it be hove overboard for a good bit. They hung over the snow-white creature caressing its delicate down and strong feathers with fingers whose jewels glittered upon the plumage like raindrops in moonlight. However, ere long the music started anew. The people that still hovered about the bird drew off, and the mate sneaking the noble creature to the side quietly let it fall. |