登陆注册
25635400000022

第22章

Nicolou's vessel, together with four of the craft which had been left unmanned, broke from her moorings, and all five of the vessels were carried out seaward. The town is on a salient point at the southern side of the bay, so that "that Admiral" was close under the eyes of the inhabitants and the shore-gone sailors when he gallantly drifted out at the head of his little fleet. If Nicolou could not entirely control the manoeuvres of the squadron, there was at least no human power to divide his authority, and thus it was that he took rank as "Admiral." Nicolou cut his cable, and thus for the time saved his vessel; for the rest of the fleet under his command were quickly wrecked, whilst "the Admiral" got away clear to the open sea. The violence of the squall soon passed off, but Nicolou felt that his chance of one day resigning his high duties as an admiral for the enjoyments of private life on the steadfast shore mainly depended upon his success in working the brig with his own hands, so after calling on his namesake, the saint (not for the first time, Itake it), he got up some canvas, and took the helm: he became equal, he told us, to a score of Nicolous, and the vessel, as he said, was "manned with his terrors." For two days, it seems, he cruised at large, but at last, either by his seamanship, or by the natural instinct of the Greek mariners for finding land, he brought his craft close to an unknown shore, that promised well for his purpose of running in the vessel; and he was preparing to give her a good berth on the beach, when he saw a gang of ferocious-looking fellows coming down to the point for which he was ******. Poor Nicolou was a perfectly unlettered and untutored genius, and for that reason, perhaps, a keen listener to tales of terror. His mind had been impressed with some horrible legend of cannibalism, and he now did not doubt for a moment that the men awaiting him on the beach were the monsters at whom he had shuddered in the days of his childhood. The coast on which Nicolou was running his vessel was somewhere, I fancy, at the foot of the Anzairie Mountains, and the fellows who were preparing to give him a reception were probably very rough specimens of humanity. It is likely enough that they might have given themselves the trouble of putting "the Admiral" to death, for the purpose of simplifying their claim to the vessel and preventing litigation, but the notion of their cannibalism was of course utterly unfounded. Nicolou's terror had, however, so graven the idea on his mind, that he could never afterwards dismiss it. Having once determined the character of his expectant hosts, the Admiral naturally thought that it would he better to keep their dinner waiting any length of time than to attend their feast in the character of a roasted Greek, so he put about his vessel, and tempted the deep once more. After a further cruise the lonely commander ran his vessel upon some rocks at another part of the coast, where she was lost with all her treasures, and Nicolou was but too glad to scramble ashore, though without one dollar in his girdle. These adventures seem flat enough as I repeat them, but the hero expressed his terrors by such odd terms of speech, and such strangely humorous gestures, that the story came from his lips with an unfailing zest, so that the crew, who had heard the tale so often, could still enjoy to their hearts' content the rich fright of the Admiral, and still shuddered with unabated horror when he came to the loss of the dollars.

Hanmer.

The power of listening to long stories (for which, by-the-bye, I am giving you large credit) is common, I fancy, to most sailors, and the Greeks have it to a high degree, for they can be perfectly patient under a narrative of two or three hours' duration. These long stories are mostly founded upon Oriental topics, and in one of them I recognised with some alteration an old friend of the "Arabian Nights." Iinquired as to the source from which the story had been derived, and the crew all agreed that it had been handed down unwritten from Greek to Greek. Their account of the matter does not, perhaps, go very far towards showing the real origin of the tale; but when I afterwards took up the "Arabian Nights," I became strongly impressed with a notion that they must have sprung from the brain of a Greek. It seems to me that these stories, whilst they disclose a complete and habitual KNOWLEDGE of things Asiatic, have about them so much of freshness and life, so much of the stirring and volatile European character, that they cannot have owed their conception to a mere Oriental, who for creative purposes is a thing dead and dry - a mental mummy, that may have been a live king just after the Flood, but has since lain balmed in spice. At the time of the Caliphat the Greek race was familiar enough to Baghdad: they were the merchants, the pedlars, the barbers, and intriguers-general of south-western Asia, and therefore the Oriental materials with which the Arabian tales were wrought must have been completely at the command of the inventive people to whom I would attribute their origin.

We were nearing the isle of Cyprus when there arose half a gale of wind, with a heavy chopping sea. My Greek seamen considered that the weather amounted not to a half, but to an integral gale of wind at the very least, so they put up the helm, and scudded for twenty hours. When we neared the mainland of Anadoli the gale ceased, and a favourable breeze sprung up, which brought us off Cyprus once more. Afterwards the wind changed again, but we were still able to lay our course by sailing close-hauled.

We were at length in such a position, that by holding on our course for about half-an-hour we should get under the lee of the island and find ourselves in smooth water, but the wind had been gradually freshening; it now blew hard, and there was a heavy sea running.

As the grounds for alarm arose, the crew gathered together in one close group; they stood pale and grim under their hooded capotes like monks awaiting a massacre, anxiously looking by turns along the pathway of the storm and then upon each other, and then upon the eye of the captain who stood by the helmsman. Presently the Hydriot came aft, more moody than ever, the bearer of fierce remonstrance against the continuing of the struggle; he received a resolute answer, and still we held our course. Soon there came a heavy sea, that caught the bow of the brigantine as she lay jammed in betwixt the waves; she bowed her head low under the waters, and shuddered through all her timbers, then gallantly stood up again over the striving sea, with bowsprit entire. But where were the crew? It was a crew no longer, but rather a gathering of Greek citizens; the shout of the seamen was changed for the murmuring of the people - the spirit of the old Demos was alive. The men came aft in a body, and loudly asked that the vessel should be put about, and that the storm be no longer tempted. Now, then, for speeches. The captain, his eyes flashing fire, his frame all quivering with emotion - wielding his every limb, like another and a louder voice, pours forth the eloquent torrent of his threats and his reasons, his commands and his prayers; he promises, he vows, he swears that there is safety in holding on - safety, IFGREEKS WILL BE BRAVE! The men hear and are moved; but the gale rouses itself once more, and again the raging sea comes trampling over the timbers that are the life of all. The fierce Hydriot advances one step nearer to the captain, and the angry growl of the people goes floating down the wind, but they listen; they waver once more, and once more resolve, then waver again, thus doubtfully hanging between the terrors of the storm and the persuasion of glorious speech, as though it were the Athenian that talked, and Philip of Macedon that thundered on the weather-bow.

Brave thoughts winged on Grecian words gained their natural mastery over terror; the brigantine held on her course, and reached smooth water at last. I landed at Limasol, the westernmost port of Cyprus, leaving the vessel to sail for Larnaka, where she was to remain for some days.

同类推荐
  • 春雪

    春雪

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 栖云真人王志谨盘山语录

    栖云真人王志谨盘山语录

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 玄牝之门赋

    玄牝之门赋

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 砚史

    砚史

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 寄同年封舍人渭

    寄同年封舍人渭

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 张杰:再爱我一次

    张杰:再爱我一次

    再给我一次机会,我依然会选择爱你。因为,你永远都是我的第一夫人
  • 情侠孽缘

    情侠孽缘

    一个叫欧阳灵的绝世美女,武功高强,陷入世家情仇,恩恩怨怨纠结不断......
  • 云印天下

    云印天下

    龙印大陆,分九国而乱。云戈出生于莫干一族,不服天道,擎元印而乱诸侯,争霸九国。与兄弟和自己的部队共创军武神话。
  • 人生思绪随笔

    人生思绪随笔

    对于人生,我只有这几个字送给大家不卑不亢落落大方文明有礼诚实守信勤奋积极团结互助
  • 痞子男友,小娇妻

    痞子男友,小娇妻

    第一次见面,嘿嘿,原来这帅哥是个学渣第二次见面,他居然想上我!?……爱的种子悄然生根发芽喂!我的爱人,你的归期遥遥无望,为什么不把我对你的记忆带走,让我在这儿守候……
  • 女王大人,你站住!

    女王大人,你站住!

    你若不离不弃,我必生死相依。一枚DarryRingのLoveLine钻戒,是永不分离的一生决定!你愿意将它戴在谁的无名指上?
  • 本宫36计:邪皇宠妻很缠绵

    本宫36计:邪皇宠妻很缠绵

    “看你还有什么法宝?”邪魅的男人一把抓住女人,将她压在身下,轻轻地撩起她的秀发。木槿坏笑,“三十六计,美人计!”夙思羽,冷酷邪魅残酷霸道,运筹帷幄,将世人玩弄,却忽略了他身边隐藏的炸弹。木槿在他身边横行游走,铲除挡在她前面的所有敌人,包括他的老娘,大小老婆,还有他儿子......等她想拍拍屁股走人的时候,夙思羽却抓住她的小屁股,邪魅道:“你铲除我身边这么多人,总该赔偿我点什么吧?”木槿笑道:“那又不是你亲娘,你感激我还来不及?你大小老婆没了,再找不就有了吗?至于你儿子嘛......”“那你就为本帝君生一个好了!”木槿,“......”【推荐《皇上去哪儿:回来种田》请加群:363290192】
  • 语文知识小丛书:怎样修改病句

    语文知识小丛书:怎样修改病句

    《语文知识小丛书:怎样修改病句》是以国家正式颁布的语言文字规范为依据,以中学课本经典文章为实例,对常见的语文现象进行明晰透彻的辨析。从字、词、句、段、文,循序渐进、深入浅出地讲析,包含了语文常识的方方面面。
  • 亡灵武神

    亡灵武神

    前世大战中的彭烈陡遇突如其来的天劫,醒来发现重生成了一具亡灵,原来这具亡灵的主人是这个大陆上昔日强盛一时的华族大周王朝的‘孝英武皇帝’,武帝自创功法《武道》被彭烈所得,彭烈照此重新开始新的修炼。走出苍山,百年变迁,改朝换代,北方草原劣牧夷人取代了中原华族的数千年统治,面对新的环境和挑战,彭烈将如何克服万难从一具亡灵修炼成一代传奇武神。※※※※※※※《武道》中的修为境界:筑基、凡武、先天、武婴、破天、武天、天将、天王、武神。【召唤收藏和推荐~~~】
  • 海贼王之雷神雷伊

    海贼王之雷神雷伊

    一名穷屌丝却被神赋予了一个任务:只有把海贼王统一才可以回来。看他用雷神雷伊的身体来统一