The sailor boy : Or, Jack Somers in the navy

By Oliver Optic

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Title: The sailor boy
        Or, Jack Somers in the navy

Author: Oliver Optic

Release date: July 22, 2025 [eBook #76545]

Language: English

Original publication: Chicago: M. A. Donohue & Company, 1915

Credits: Aaron Adrignola, David E. Brown, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was produced from images generously made available by The Internet Archive)


*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK THE SAILOR BOY ***


[Illustration]




  SAILOR BOY

  OR

  Jack Somers in the Navy

  _By_
  OLIVER OPTIC

  [Illustration]

  CHICAGO
  M. A. DONOHUE & COMPANY




CONTENTS.


  CHAPTER                                       PAGE

       I. The Victory at Port Royal                9

      II. The Dashaway in a November Gale         17

     III. The Sailor and the Soldier              25

      IV. The Naval Rendezvous                    32

       V. On Board the Ohio                       41

      VI. Jack Takes a Lesson in Discipline       50

     VII. The Harrisburg                          58

    VIII. “All Hands, Up Anchor!”                 66

      IX. “All Hands, Make Sail!”                 74

       X. “Man Overboard!”                        82

      XI. The Cockswain of the Captain’s Gig      89

     XII. Ship Island                             97

    XIII. The Boat-Expedition                    106

     XIV. Jack on the Lookout                    115

      XV. The C. S. Steamer Wizard               123

     XVI. The Shore Battery                      132

    XVII. Return of the Expedition               140

   XVIII. Forts Jackson and St. Philip           147

     XIX. Quartermaster Somers                   154

      XX. The Steamer Middy                      162

     XXI. Up the River                           170

    XXII. Jack Ashore                            177

   XXIII. The Planter’s Mansion                  186

    XXIV. A Night-Expedition                     193

     XXV. The Capture of the Kenshaw             201

    XXVI. The Union Refugees                     209

   XXVII. The Conspiracy on Board the Middy      217

  XXVIII. The Middy on the Blockade              225

    XXIX. The Blockade Runner                    233

     XXX. On the Suwannee River                  241

    XXXI. Homeward Bound                         251




THE SAILOR BOY;

OR

JACK SOMERS IN THE NAVY.




CHAPTER I.

THE VICTORY AT PORT ROYAL.


“Hurrah for the navy!” shouted John Somers, as he rushed into the
house, threw his cap upon the floor in the entry, and bolted into the
room where the family were just sitting down to supper. “Hurrah for the
navy!”

“What is the matter now, John?” demanded Mrs. Somers, placing the
teapot on the table, and suspending all further proceedings till the
excited young man had told the news.

“‘The army and navy forever! Three cheers for the red, white, and
blue!’” added John, swinging his handkerchief, and singing lustily the
words of the patriotic song.

“Why don’t you tell us what the news is, John? You act just like a
madman when anything has happened.”

“Fort Walker and Fort Beauregard captured! The navy gave ’em fits down
there,” replied John, pulling the “Boston Journal” from his pocket, and
tossing it upon the table, to the imminent peril of the milk pitcher,
which, however, maintained this gravity, in spite of the rude assault.

“Massy sake! I thought the whole Southern consarn had broke down,”
added Gran’ther Greene.

“It will break down and cave in now. Our folks have got a footing in
South Carolina now, and they’ll soon bring the rebels to terms,” said
John, who was fully imbued with the enthusiasm, as well as the spirit
of prophecy, which pervaded the earlier period of the great American
Rebellion. “Let me tell you, gran’ther, the navy has done a big
thing down there. Commodore Dupont will bring ’em to their senses in
double-quick time. Charleston will have to take it next.”

“Eat your supper, John, and talk about it afterwards,” interposed Mrs.
Somers.

“Supper!” exclaimed John: “who can eat with such news as this? Let me
read it to you.”

Mrs. Somers and the rest of the family were quite willing to hear what
the navy had done at Port Royal; and John was permitted to read the
stirring account of the action, which he interpolated with comments
of his own, expressive of his admiration of the flag-officer and the
blue-jackets generally, who had achieved the glorious victory.

“I wish I had been there!” exclaimed John, when he had completed the
reading of the narrative. “How I wish I had been there!”

“You had better eat your supper now,” quietly remarked Mrs. Somers, who
did not seem to relish the turn which the conversation had taken.

“Here I am rotting on the stocks, lying round like a lubber, when the
ship’s in a gale of wind,” said John, as he stuffed half a hot biscuit
into his mouth, apparently to mollify the dissatisfaction with which
he regarded his position.

“Have some apple-sauce, John?” added Mrs. Somers.

The young aspirant for distinction took some apple-sauce, and continued
to eat, for a few moments, with a desperation dangerous to the
well-being of his digestive organs, and which might reasonably have
awakened a fear in the mind of his anxious mother that he would choke
himself to death, instead of being killed by a splinter or a shell
on board a man-of-war. John was silent for a time; but he kept up a
vigorous thinking, and it is doubtful if he could have told whether
he was eating hot biscuit or “salt-horse.” It would not have required
a conjurer, either, to tell what he was thinking about; and the poor
mother, with her husband far away in the rebel country (if, indeed,
he was still living), and one son exposed to the perils of battle
and march, walked mechanically from the table to the closet, as she
proceeded to clear off the table, looking as sad as a vision of sorrow;
and it needed no conjurer to tell what she was thinking about.

She was a patriotic woman; but no doubt she wished the glowing news
from Port Royal had never reached the ears of her son. She had endured
all the agonizing suspense which only the wife of an absent husband
and the mother of an absent soldier-boy can comprehend; and she would
fain keep this remaining son by her side to sustain and soothe her
by his presence. She hoped he was not needed; she tried to persuade
herself that John belonged to her, now that his twin-brother had joined
the army: yet the New England blood in her veins would not let her be
selfish, if the country needed his services.

She knew what John was thinking about, and she knew that the
oft-repeated question was about to be proposed with more emphasis than
ever before: Would she consent to his entering the navy? He had asked
her permission twenty times during the summer and autumn, and she had
as often silenced him by pointing to the work required to be done upon
the little farm. But now the corn and cabbages, the potatoes and the
apples, had all been harvested, and she could no longer detain him upon
the plea that his services were needed at home; for there was hardly
work enough about the place to give Gran’ther Greene, who was now in
better health than usual, the exercise which was needed to keep him
alive.

“Mother, aren’t you ashamed of me?” said John, suddenly dropping
his knife and biscuit, and looking steadily at Mrs. Somers, who was
gathering up the dishes on the other side of the table.

“Ashamed of you, my son? What ails the boy?” exclaimed she, pausing in
her occupation, and gazing at him with all a mother’s pride visible in
her expression.

“Aren’t you ashamed to have a son loafing about home when the navy
is short of sailors? I can hand, reef, and steer, and I know the
mainmast from the jolly-boat. I’ve been one voyage with father in a
square-rigged vessel, and two in a ‘fore-and-after.’ I can make a long
splice, a short splice, an eye-splice, a Turk’s head, or a Jacob’s
ladder. I know where to find the halyards and braces, the clewlines,
buntlines, and gowlines. I know all about it, mother. Now, aren’t you
ashamed to have me lubbering round here like a dandy in a hay-field?”

“No: I’m sure I am not,” replied Mrs. Somers with emphasis. “You have
been a good boy, and worked hard all summer.”

“But I haven’t had anything to do for a week but stow my grub and pick
my teeth.”

“It won’t hurt you to lie still for a week or two.”

“Well, mother, I want to go into the navy; and I think I shall be just
as safe there as I shall at home, and be earning something all the
time, too.”

“I should think you’d rather be at home than off to sea this winter.
Don’t you hear the wind howl outdoors?”

John did hear the wind howl, and he had heard it before, and it did
not disturb his bright vision of life on the wave: on the contrary,
he rather liked its music. He suggested, in reply, that the coast
of South Carolina or the mouth of the Mississippi would be a warmer
and pleasanter place to spend the winter than the cold hills of New
England. While they were debating the question, a loud knock at the
front door interrupted the discussion; and John bolted the balance of
his supper, while his mother went to answer the summons.

“Does Captain Somers live here?” inquired a gentleman at the door.

“Yes, sir, he does; but he is away from home now,” replied Mrs. Somers.
“Won’t you walk in, sir?”

“Thank you: I wish to see his son, John Somers,” added the stranger, as
he followed Mrs. Somers into the little front parlor.

“Yes, sir: I’ll call him,” said she, as she glanced nervously at the
shoulder-straps which the gentleman wore; for the “foul anchor” on them
indicated that he was an officer in the navy.

Leaving the lamp in the parlor, she returned to the kitchen, where
John had just swallowed his second cup of tea, and was at that moment
thinking, that, on board a man-of-war, he should drink his “slops” out
of a tin cup, and not indulge in the luxury of plates, knives, and
forks.

“There’s a gentleman wants to see you, John,” said his mother; and her
heart was full of misgivings, and that foul anchor still haunted her
imagination; and she could not persuade herself that the officer had
not come to carry off her boy, and ship him in the navy.

“Wants to see me?” exclaimed John, who was not in the habit of
receiving many visitors through the front door.

“Yes, and he is an officer in the navy.”

“What can he want of me?”

“Don’t you know who he is, John?” asked the anxious mother, who had
more than half suspected that there was a plot to rob her of her
remaining son.

“I don’t; I haven’t the least idea, mother.”

“Well, don’t keep him waiting, John, whatever he wants; but I hope you
won’t do anything without consulting me?”

“Of course not, mother,” replied John, as he left the room.

Mrs. Somers sat down in a chair near the parlor-door, and tried to hear
what the stranger said; for she was very nervous and uneasy. She could
not make out what the gentleman wanted: so she concluded that the small
lamp she had left in the parlor would not afford sufficient light on
the subject of the meeting; and she lighted a large kerosene lamp, and
carried it into the apartment herself. The conversation did not seem to
be interrupted by her appearance; and she therefore concluded that the
officer and her son were not engaged in any plot or conspiracy against
the peace and comfort of the present head of the Somers Family.

“Madam, perhaps I ought to speak to you as well as to your son about
the object of my visit,” said the officer, as Mrs. Somers deposited the
lamp on the mantel-piece.

“Well, I don’t know, sir,” replied she, fully expecting to hear a
proposition for John to go into the navy that very night.

“Captain Barney sent me after your son,” he continued.

“That was not very kind of Captain Barney,” thought the poor mother,
now fully convinced that John was doomed to the navy; but she did not
say anything.

“I reside in the next town to this, and am at home for a short time on
a furlough. My father was suddenly taken very ill this forenoon; and
about an hour ago, the doctor declared he could not live till to-morrow
morning.”

“I am very sorry,” said Mrs. Somers, beginning to be deeply interested
in the sad story of the stranger; “and, if I can do anything to help
you, I’ll go right over.”

“Thank you: we do not need any assistance at home. My brother is
a captain in the garrison down at Fort Warren, and my father has
expressed a very strong desire to see him. I hastened over to
Pinchbrook to take the cars for Boston; but I was too late. All I could
do then was to take a boat, and go down to the fort. Captain Barney,
who is a friend of mine, offered to let me have his boat; but I don’t
know anything about Pinchbrook Harbor, and must have a skipper. I am
informed that your son is one of the best boatmen in the place, and
knows every rock and shoal in the bay.”

“I think I do, sir,” replied John quietly.

“But it is an awful night to go upon the water,” added Mrs. Somers, as
she glanced at the windows, the loose sashes of which were beating a
tattoo against the frame.

“I know it is a bad night, Mrs. Somers; but I have been afloat in many
a worse one. It is not a pleasure excursion; and I would not ask such
a favor with a less reasonable excuse than that which I have offered.”

“John knows best about such things; and, if he is willing to go, I
shall not object,” added Mrs. Somers.

“Of course I am willing to go, mother. But you are not going yourself,
are you, sir?”

“I feel that I must.”

“I thought you would want to go back to your father.”

“I do; but I am afraid you would not be able to gain admission to the
fort without me.”

“I guess they would let me in.”

“I am afraid not; and if my brother should fail to reach home in time
to see my father, through any neglect of mine, I should never cease to
reproach myself. I will go with you.”

“Dress yourself warm, John, before you go: it is an awful night on the
sea,” added his mother.

Leaving Mrs. Somers with the stranger, John hastened to put on his
“sea-rig,” and in a few moments returned to the parlor, with an
oil-cloth coat on his arm, and a fisherman’s hat in his hand.

“All ready, sir,” said he.

“Ay, ay, my lad,” replied Lieutenant Bankhead, as he rose, and bade
adieu to Mrs. Somers.

“Now be careful, John,” added Mrs. Somers, as she followed them to the
door.

“I’m always careful, mother. Don’t be a bit scared about me,” replied
the young salt confidently.

“I wish that man didn’t belong to the navy,” said Mrs. Somers to
herself as she closed the door: “he will be certain to fill the boy’s
head full of notions afore he gits back, and he’ll be more’n ever for
going. Well, well, it can’t be helped. I hope the poor soldier will
see his father afore it’s too late;” and she resumed her household
duties in the kitchen.




CHAPTER II.

THE DASHAWAY IN A NOVEMBER GALE.


John Somers had been as uneasy as a fish out of water ever since his
brother went into the army; an event which had occurred the preceding
spring. He was quite as patriotic as Thomas, and was just as desirous
of doing something to help his struggling country in the hour of her
peril. His tastes were for the sea; though he would rather have joined
the army than not had a part in the glorious work of putting down the
Rebellion. But his mother had steadily resisted his importunity, and
the month of November found him still at home, an unwilling resident
beneath the parental roof, discontented and unhappy even in the midst
of those hallowed associations which make home the dearest spot on
earth.

If the summoning voice of his country was powerful, the gentle tones of
his mother were more potent. Though he did not reason and philosophize
on the subject, he felt that his mother was nearer to him than his
country; yet he hoped that she would yet give her consent to his going
into the navy.

Pinchbrook was situated a few miles from Boston; and its port, which
was dignified by the title of Pinchbrook Harbor, was located upon one
of the arms of the sea connected with Boston Bay. It was a thriving
little place; and, during the summer, John, besides taking care of
his father’s little farm, had contrived to earn a few dollars by doing
odd jobs in the village, and especially by acting as skipper, cook, or
foremast-hand, on board the sail-boats and yachts of the place. He was
a skillful boatman, and was thoroughly proficient in the science of
nautical cooking. His chowders, fries, and battered-clams were entirely
unexceptionable; and, at a pinch, he could bake a bluefish or make a
batch of biscuit.

But John was not satisfied with his achievements at Pinchbrook Harbor,
and in the bay, nor with the proceeds of his labors. His wages in the
navy, not to mention sundry huge expectations which he entertained of
pocketing some enormously large dividends of prize-money, would yield
a far better return for his labor. He was satisfied that he could
do more for the support of his family away from home than he could
by “loafing about Pinchbrook,” as he modestly designated his humble
operations; and, when he left the cottage with Lieutenant Bankhead, he
fully believed that the something had turned up for which he had so
impatiently waited for months.

To make the acquaintance of a lieutenant in the navy was a piece of
good fortune which he had not anticipated, and he was convinced that
he should make a favorable impression upon the mind of his passenger
before they returned from the fort. It was, as his mother had remarked,
an awful night to go upon the sea; but he had weathered some heavy
gales in a fore-and-aft schooner, and he was satisfied that he could
keep Captain Barney’s little yacht right side up in anything short of a
West-Indian hurricane.

As they walked down to the harbor, Lieutenant Bankhead questioned his
young skipper in regard to the boat in which they were to venture upon
the stormy bay, and the dangers they would encounter on the passage.
These inquiries, however, were only intended to “bring out” the young
salt, and develop his knowledge of the business he had undertaken. His
replies were so satisfactory, that the officer soon became as confident
as his skipper; and, moreover, he began to entertain a very high
respect for the character and ability of his new companion.

“You’ll do, Jack,” said Mr. Bankhead, after he had fully tested the
knowledge of the boy, and the peculiar seamanship necessary for the
safe management of a sail-boat; “you’ll do. I can handle a ship: but
I never attempted to work a boat under sail; that is, I never made
a business of it. If you put me through all right, I’ll give you a
ten-dollar bill, and be much obliged to you besides.”

“I’ll do the best I can; but it blows pretty heavy, and there’s an ugly
sea running.”

“I know it, my boy; and so much the more credit to you if you take me
through handsomely.”

“I don’t think there’ll be any trouble about it, sir. Captain Barney’s
boat’s as stiff as oak and iron can make her, and she works like a lady
in a sea. Here is the wharf. I don’t know your name sir.”

“Lieutenant Bankhead, of the navy. Yours is Jack Somers; at least,
everybody calls you so.”

“Yes, sir; and it’s a good name enough for me. I wish it was written on
the shipping-papers in the navy.”

“Perhaps it may be yet. We want all the likely lads of your build and
spirit that we can get.”

“I should like to go in,” added Jack, as he cast off the painter of
a small dory, in which they were to pull out to the moorings of the
sail-boat.

“Why don’t you, then?”

“My mother don’t want me to leave home. If you will step into this
dory, sir, I will pull you off to the Dashaway.”

“Dashaway! is that the name of the captain’s boat?”

“Yes, sir: he christened her himself.”

“Well, it’s a smashing name. By the by, I will speak to your mother
about your going into the navy, if you wish,” added Mr. Bankhead, as he
stepped into the dory, and seated himself at the stern.

“Thank you sir; but I don’t think she will let me go.”

“Perhaps she will. I am ordered to the Harrisburg, and very likely I
can induce your mother to let you ship in her. Well, this comes heavy,”
added Mr. Bankhead, as a wave dashed its spray all over him.

But the passage from the wharf to the Dashaway occupied but a few
moments: and John soon placed his passenger upon the half-deck; and
after making fast the dory to the moorings, he joined him. The skipper
opened the cuddy, which was large enough to contain two berths and
other conveniences, and invited him to enter, and thus protect himself
from the cold wind and the dashing spray: but Mr. Bankhead was too much
of a sailor to shun his own peculiar element; and, enveloping himself
in a heavy pea-jacket he found in the cuddy, he offered his services to
assist in getting the boat under way.

“You are the skipper, Jack, and I will obey your orders,” said he.
“What shall I do?”

“You may knot these reef-points in the foresail, if you please, sir,
and I will put a couple of reefs in the mainsail. It will help us get
off the quicker.”

“But you don’t intend to carry a reefed foresail and a reefed mainsail,
do you?” asked the officer.

“No, sir: we will try it under jib, and mainsail with two reefs. I
think she will carry it; but, if she won’t, we shall be all ready to
put her under a reefed foresail.”

“Just so; I understand you; and your calculation is a very good one.”

In a few moments these preparations were completed, and the mainsail
was hoisted. The wind blew even fresher than John had supposed; but he
still believed that the Dashaway would carry her jib and double-reefed
mainsail.

“Now, sir, if you will stand by the helm, I will let go the moorings
and hoist the jib,” said the skipper, when everything was in readiness
for a start.

“Ay, ay, my lad. The jib-sheet leads aft, don’t it?”

“Yes, sir.”

John then cast off the moorings, and, seizing the halyard, ran up the
jib in the twinkling of an eye. Mr. Bankhead then made fast the sheets,
and the Dashaway, catching a heavy flaw, heeled over till her washboard
was nearly submerged,--an antic which caused the lieutenant at the helm
to cast loose the mainsheet, under the impression that she was going
over.

“She can stand it, sir,” shouted John, as he hauled in the sheet again,
and took his place at the helm.

“She makes cantering work of it, anyhow,” added Mr. Bankhead, whose
nerves were somewhat shaken by the heeling-over of the boat.

“She’s good for a bigger blow than this. Now, if you will take a seat
on the weather-side, or lie down in the cuddy, we shall soon get our
bearings. There, sir, she jumps over the waves like a feather.”

Captain Barney was too much of a sailor himself to own any other
than a stiff, weatherly boat; and such was eminently the character
of the Dashaway. She breasted the big waves like a mass of solid
oak; and though the spray dashed furiously over her, as she leaped
over the angry billows, John Somers felt as safe in her as he would
in the kitchen of his mother’s cottage. The wind was east, and the
sky overcast, which made the night exceedingly gloomy and dark. The
intrepid young skipper could only discern the sombre outlines of the
islands and the headlands of the main shore; but these were sufficient
to enable him to lay his course.

Lieutenant Bankhead, though an older and perhaps a better sailor, did
not feel so much confidence in the weatherly qualities of the Dashaway.
He was accustomed to large vessels, and he could not help realizing
that his life was in the keeping of the bold youth at the helm. He was
silent and thoughtful. His father was dying at home; and, without this
solemn fact, a man with a soul could not but be impressed and awed by
the wild war of the elements, within the circle of whose contending
forces the little bark that bore him on his mission of parental
affection was struggling on her course.

He was silent and anxious; and John, full alive to the responsibility
which rested upon him, was too busy and too earnest to talk. The
roaring of the wind, the surging of the waves, and the thumping of the
boat against the sturdy sea, were the only sounds to be heard; and they
were enough to occupy the whole mind of a thinking being, and idle
words seemed to be an insult to the majesty of the storm.

On flew the Dashaway, till the dark form of Fort Warren appeared like a
gloomy shadow upon the eastern sky. They were soon sheltered from the
fierceness of the blast by the high walls of the fortification, and
the boat came into comparatively still water. The spell seemed to be
broken; and the lieutenant, who had hardly spoken a word since the boat
got under way, uttered some hearty commendations of the skill of the
boatman.

By the exercise of the same good judgment which had enabled him to
bring his little craft in safety through the darkness and the storm to
her destination, John, with the assistance of his passenger, laid her
alongside the wharf which forms the only landing-place at the island.
Here, as Mr. Bankhead had anticipated, a serious difficulty presented
itself. The fort was at that time, as it is at present, used as a place
of confinement for political prisoners. Messrs. Mason and Slidell had
just been placed within its strong walls, to meditate upon the folly
and crime of rebellion against the best government on earth; and the
military regulations, which excluded the curious and the lawless, were
necessarily very stringent.

“Keep off, keep off!” shouted the sentinel on the wharf, as the boat
rounded up by the pier,--“keep off, or I’ll fire into you!”

“I am Lieutenant Bankhead, of the United States navy; and I come on
business of pressing importance.”

“Show your pass,” replied the guard hoarsely.

“I have no pass.”

“Keep off, then, or I will fire! My orders are very strict.”

“Will you pass the word for the officer of the guard?”

“I can’t do it. Keep off, or I must fire!”

“One word, and I will go. Who is the officer of the day?” demanded the
lieutenant.

“Captain Bankhead.”

“He is my brother. His father is dying. You can put the boatman and
myself under guard.”

This statement seemed to produce an effect upon the sentinel, and
he ordered both John and his passenger to come upon the wharf. The
corporal of the guard was sent for, and soon appeared with a lantern in
his hand, which enabled him to see the shoulder-straps of Mr. Bankhead.
He directed him to get into the boat again, while he despatched a man
for Captain Bankhead. It was some time before the latter appeared; and
then half an hour was consumed in seeing the commandant of the fort and
obtaining the necessary furlough.

It was after ten o’clock when the two brothers were embarked on the
Dashaway for the return trip. If there was any change in the weather,
it was for the worse. The rain had begun to fall, and the gale had not
decreased in violence.

“Now, my lad, you have two lives besides your own, instead of one,
in your keeping, and you must have a sharp eye to windward,” said
Lieutenant Bankhead.

“I shall do the best I know how. We will run up under the reefed
foresail; but a small boat going before the wind makes worse weather
than on any other tack. She will shake you up a good deal; but she
will land you at Pinchbrook Harbor in two hours from now, if nothing
happens,” added John, as he cast off the painter, and pushed off from
the wharf.

“This is an awful night,” said Captain Bankhead, who, being no sailor,
began to be filled with doubts and fears as the Dashaway leaped forward
upon her course.

But, notwithstanding the doubts of the sailor and the fears of the
soldier, the brave little bark bore them safely over the stormy waves,
till in mid-channel, just below Fort Independence, a dark object on the
water, dead ahead, attracted the attention of the watchful skipper.

“Sail ahead!” said Lieutenant Bankhead.

“I see it, sir.”

“I will go forward, and see how she heads.”

The naval officer went out to the heel of the bowsprit to determine the
course of the approaching vessel.

“Steady,” said he.

“Steady,” replied John.




CHAPTER III.

THE SAILOR AND THE SOLDIER.


The approaching vessel which appeared to be a pilot-boat, was
close-hauled, and was beating down the harbor. Her course, at the time
she was discovered on board the Dashaway, was at a sharp angle across
that of the little schooner. She was going off on the port-side of
the Dashaway; and all danger of a collision seemed to be over, though
Lieutenant Bankhead still retained his position on the forecastle.

“Hard a-port the helm!” shouted the naval officer suddenly: “she is
going in stays!”

“Keep her away, keep her away! Up with your helm!” screamed Mr.
Bankhead, as the stranger came about, with her sharp bows close aboard
of the Dashaway.

John had obeyed the order of the lieutenant: but, at the instant he
did so, he realized that it was a mistake, which, if executed, would
be likely to swamp the boat; and, the moment the foresail began to
shake he jammed the helm hard down, at the same time hauling on the
foresheet, thus bringing her up to the wind. The Dashaway began to draw
again, and swept round in a graceful curve: but the stranger was upon
them; and, to the eye of the officer at the heel of the bowsprit, a
collision was inevitable.

“Jump for your lives!” shouted he, as he sprang from the forecastle of
the Dashaway, intending to grasp the bobstay of the pilot-boat; but he
missed his mark, and went into the water.

Captain Bankhead was about to follow the example of his brother, and
save himself from the impending wreck of the Dashaway.

“Stay where you are!” exclaimed John, seizing him by the arm, as the
Dashaway swept round, barely grazing the bows of the stranger. “We are
safe!”

“But my brother is lost!” replied he in an agony of suspense.

“He leaped aboard the vessel.”

“No: he fell into the water,” gasped the captain.

The pilot-boat had swept by on her course; but, on discovering the
accident, she came up with the wind.

“Boat ahoy!” cried a voice from the rolling waves.

John put the Dashaway about, and came up again before the wind, heading
for the spot, as nearly as he could judge whence the sound proceeded.

“Go forward, and haul him in, if you see him!” said John, sharply, to
the soldier.

“Boat ahoy!” again cried the lieutenant.

“I hear him!” replied the captain, as he sprang forward. “I see him!”

A huge wave bore the struggling sailor upon its crest, and his brother
attempted to grasp his extended hand, but the boat swayed off, placing
him out of reach of the willing soldier. But, fortunately, John saw the
poor fellow, as the wave lifted him up; and, putting the helm down,
he rushed to the side, and succeeded in grasping the lieutenant by
the arm. With the aid of the brother, he was hauled on board, nearly
exhausted by his struggles with the angry billows.

John sprang to the helm again; for the boat had nearly swamped by
getting into the trough of the sea. Without loss of time, he put her
upon her course again. The Dashaway had shipped a great deal of water;
and the young skipper, without regarding the dignity of his passengers,
ordered the captain to take the bucket, and bale out the standing-room.

“Do it, Fred,” said the lieutenant. “I can take care of myself now.”

“We are all right now. How do you feel?” asked John of the sailor.

“I am almost used up; but I shall be better in a few moments,” he
answered feebly.

In a short time he had recovered his breath, and was able to assist
the soldier in the labor of clearing the standing-room of the water.
When this work was completed, the boat rode easier over the seas, and
confidence was in a measure restored in the minds of the passengers,
who had seated themselves by the side of the skipper.

“I have been overboard twice before; but I was never so near being
drowned as I have been to-night. My lad, you have saved my life, and I
shall never forget it as long as I live,” said Lieutenant Bankhead.

“I did the best I could for you, and I am sorry you had such hard luck.”

“If it had been I, that would have been the end of me,” added Captain
Bankhead: “I should have gone to the bottom like a stone.”

“So should I, if Jack hadn’t hauled me in just as he did. My wind was
about gone, and I should have given up in half a minute more. Fred,
do you know that minutes seem like years when a man is overboard in a
heavy sea?”

“I never tried it.”

“When you missed your grasp, I gave up for lost; for I knew I couldn’t
hold out till the boat went round and came up again. Jack, you are the
pluckiest little fellow I ever saw in my life.”

“I tried to do what I could,” replied John modestly.

“No one could have done more or better; but, my lad, why didn’t you put
the helm hard a-port, as I told you?”

“It would have gybed the boat, and she would have filled and gone down
if I had.”

“Perhaps you are right. You know your boat better than I do.”

“Besides, I was satisfied she would go clear if I brought her up to the
wind,” added John. “If you had stuck by the Dashaway, you would have
been all right.”

“But I was sure the schooner would come aboard of us.”

“It was a close shave: we only escaped by the skin of our teeth. I
wouldn’t try it again for a hundred dollars.”

“I wouldn’t for a thousand.”

“We may well thank God that we are still alive,” said the captain.

“With all my heart I do thank him,” replied the sailor reverently. “I
shudder when I think of our poor mother: what a blow it would have been
to her in the midst of her woe if only one of us had returned to close
the eyes of our dying father!”

The brothers were silent during the rest of the passage; for thoughts
too solemn and holy for utterance were stirring their souls. Without
further incident or accident, the Dashaway reached her moorings.
Lieutenant Bankhead assisted John in making all snug on board of her,
after which they pulled ashore in the dory.

“I never was so glad to set my foot on land before,” said Captain
Bankhead, as he stepped upon the wharf. “I am half frozen, as well as
frightened out of my wits.”

“I don’t feel very comfortable; but we have no time to spare.”

“I suppose not: it must be two o’clock in the morning,” added the
captain, whose teeth were chattering with the cold.

As they walked up from the wharf, they discovered a person approaching
them. It was Captain Barney, at whose stable Lieutenant Bankhead had
left his horse. He had been anxiously awaiting the return of the boat;
for the howling wind and the cutting rain had raised some doubts in his
mind concerning the prudence of his action in permitting Mr. Bankhead
and John to venture upon the bay on such a night. He had not expected
to see them yet, and was merely walking down to the wharf to take an
old sailor’s glance at the sea and the weather.

“Is that you, Jack Somers?” said he, as he approached the party, for it
was too dark to make them out with his eye.

“Yes, sir: we have come back safe and sound,” replied the young
skipper, proud and happy that he had succeeded in executing the duty
imposed upon him.

“I am glad to see you, Bankhead; for I’ve been worrying about you. It
has blowed heavy ever since you went away, and I began to be afraid
that I had made a mistake in letting you go. Well, I see there are
three of you: so I suppose you found your brother.”

“Yes, sir,--Captain Barney, my brother,” added the lieutenant,
introducing the parties, who were strangers to each other.

“Happy to know you,” replied the old gentleman. “You are not a sailor,
and I suppose you don’t take this kind of a night as kindly as your
brother.”

“It’s a terrible night to go to sea, and I’m thankful to be once more
on the solid earth.”

“So am I,” added Lieutenant Bankhead. “But captain, we have no time to
lose.”

“Come into the house and warm you, while I get your horse ready,” said
Captain Barney, as they reached the hospitable mansion of the old
shipmaster.

John volunteered to get the horse; and the two officers went into the
house, where their kind host insisted upon providing them with dry
clothing. By the time the horse was ready, they had not only put on dry
garments, but they had related the history of their perilous cruise,
and given John Somers the highest commendation for the skill, coolness,
and energy with which he had discharged his duty.

“He saved my life, and I shall never forget him,” said Lieutenant
Bankhead in conclusion.

“He’s a smart fellow,” added Captain Barney.

“He wants to go into the navy: and, if I can have any influence with
his mother, he shall go; for we want as many such fellows as we can
get.”

The two brothers shook hands with Captain Barney and John, and the
lieutenant promised to visit Pinchbrook again as soon as he could.
Though it was only half-past twelve o’clock, instead of two, the sad
mission which had induced him to venture upon the water in such a night
urged him to the utmost haste, and he drove off at a rapid pace.

“Jack, you are a smart boy!” said the captain bluntly, as the vehicle
disappeared in the gloom. “You have done a big thing to-night, and it
may be the making of you. Come into the house and warm yourself now.
I’ve got some hot coffee and a lunch on the table.”

“Thank you, sir; but mother will be worrying about me, and I think I
had better go home as soon as I can.”

“That’s right, Jack: you are a good boy. Always look out for your
mother. But you must have a cup of coffee and a bite before you go.”

The old gentleman insisted; and John concluded that the coffee and
eatables would enable him to walk enough faster to make up for lost
time: so he followed Captain Barney into the house, and consumed a
marvellously large quantity of bread and ham in a marvellously short
space of time, very much to his own satisfaction, and not less to that
of his bountiful host.

“Jack!” said Captain Barney, who sat in his arm-chair, watching the
busy jaws of his young friend.

“Sir,” replied he, not in a very clear tone; for his mouth was too full
for a favorable exhibition of the human voice.

“You have made a good friend to-night.”

“Yes, sir; but I only did my duty.”

“Did your duty, you dog!” roared the captain, laughing heartily.
“That’s just what I’ve been saying. It’s every man’s duty to do the
best he can, blow high or blow low; but blow me, Jack, if there’s one
man in a thousand that does it. Why, Jack, if every man did his duty,
we should all be angels, and every rogue would be fit to make a parson
of.”

“I couldn’t do any less than I did; but I thought the lieutenant had
piped down for the last time when I saw him go overboard,” replied the
happy boy, as he finished his lunch. “Now I must go home, sir. I will
come down in the morning, and put the boat in order.”

“Well, go home, Jack, and quiet your mother; and within a month you
will be a reefer on board a man-of-war. Good-night, Jack.”

“Good-night, sir.”

John walked home as fast as his legs would carry him; for he knew
his mother was worrying about him, and would not go to bed till he
returned. I need not tell my readers how gladly she welcomed him
home after the dangers through which he had passed, nor with what a
motherly interest she listened to the story of the cruise, nor record
the exclamations of wonder and alarm with which she interlarded the
exciting narrative. But, before two o’clock, John was sound asleep,
dreaming of batteries and broadsides, bob-stays and bowlines, great
guns, cutlasses, and boarding-pikes.




CHAPTER IV.

THE NAVAL RENDEZVOUS.


About a week after the events recorded in the preceding chapters,
Lieutenant Bankhead paid another visit to Pinchbrook; but the way had
already been prepared for him. Mrs. Somers, finding that she should be
compelled to yield to the tremendous pressure which would be brought
to bear upon her, had already decided to yield gracefully and without
a struggle. Captain Barney had used his eloquence to some purpose; but
the strong desire of John to serve his country was the most powerful
influence acting upon her mind.

On the morning after the captain’s visit, John was somewhat surprised
to hear her open the subject herself, without any prompting on his part.

“I have been thinking about your going into the navy, John, ever since
I waked up this morning.”

“Have you? Well, what do you think about it, mother?” replied John.

“I have come to the conclusion that you had better go, if you want to.”

“Of course, I want to go; but I don’t want to go if you are not
willing. I shouldn’t have a moment’s comfort if I thought you were
worrying about me all the time.”

“I don’t think I should worry any more if you were gone than I have for
the last two or three months.”

“Well, I didn’t mean to drive you into letting me go.”

“You haven’t. I’ve made up my mind that you will be just as well off
in the navy as you will be at home. You always was a good boy; and I
expect you will behave yourself wherever you go.”

“I always mean to do that, mother. A fellow can’t be a very bad boy in
the navy, they are so strict.”

So it was decided that John should go into the navy; and there wasn’t
half so much friction about the matter as he thought there would be
when the final action should come. His mother seemed to be entirely
satisfied to have him go; and she was more cheerful for the few days
following the decision than she had been before. All doubt and anxiety
on the subject were removed, and she was disposed to look on the bright
side of the case.

When Lieutenant Bankhead appeared, there was no occasion for the array
of excellent and convincing arguments which he had provided to overcome
the mother’s repugnance to the proposed step.

“Is your son at home, madam?” said he, after the introductory remarks
were concluded.

“Yes, sir: he is out in the garden. I have sent Jenny after him, and he
will be here in a few moments.”

“I suppose you know what kind of a time we had upon the water the other
night,” continued the visitor.

“Yes, sir: John told me all about it.”

“And, of course, he told you how deeply I am indebted to him for the
service he rendered me?”

“He didn’t say much about that,” replied Mrs. Somers, who did not know
but that he might think her son had criticised the conduct of his
passenger on that eventful night.

“He is a brave little fellow, and I owe him a debt I shall never be
able to repay.”

“Oh, well! John don’t mind that.”

“But I mind it; and I should have been here before to repeat my thanks,
if the death of my father had not prevented.”

“John thought ever so much of you; and I rather think he is much
obliged to you for falling overboard, and giving him the chance to pull
you into the boat. But you are not the first man that John has pulled
out of the water,” added the mother proudly.

“I am very glad to have obliged him, though it is not every young man
whom I should be willing to oblige in that manner. But, madam, your son
wishes to go into the navy.”

“Yes, sir; he has been wanting to go ever since the war broke out: but
I couldn’t make up my mind to let him go before; and John isn’t a boy
that would go without his mother’s leave.”

“Good boys always love and respect their mothers.”

“But I’ve made up my mind to let him go just as soon as he has a mind
to. He wanted to go off and sign the papers yesterday; but I told him
he had better wait till he saw you.”

“Indeed! I am very glad you have consented.”

“Yes, sir; I thought it would not do any good to hold out any longer:
and John is a good boy, and will behave himself wherever he goes. Here
he comes: he can speak for himself.”

Lieutenant Bankhead rose, and grasped the hand of John as he entered
the room; and, after they had talked a while about their trip to Fort
Warren, the subject nearest to the young man’s heart was again brought
up for consideration. His grateful friend gave him all the information
necessary for his guidance in the important step he was about to take.
It was decided that John should enter the navy on the following day;
but, as the ship to which Mr. Bankhead had been ordered would not
be ready for sea for a few weeks, it was thought best, for several
reasons, that the young sailor should enlist in Boston, and spend the
period of his probation on board the receiving-ship at Charlestown. The
arrangements having been completed, and an appointment made for John to
meet his friend in the city at noon the next day, Mr. Bankhead rose to
take his leave.

“Jack, I dare say you may think I am a very forgetful man,” continued
the lieutenant, with a smile upon his handsome face.

“Forgetful? I don’t understand you, sir. I’m sure I never thought
anything of the kind,” replied John, blushing up to his eyes.

“You know, I promised to give you ten dollars if you brought me back
safely from the fort the other night.”

“I never thought of it, sir.”

“Well, I did; though the illness of my father drove it out of my head
for the time,” added the officer, taking out his porte-monnaie.

“Really, sir, I don’t want you to give me a cent. I don’t ask anything
for what I did.”

“I don’t care what you want, Jack. My conscience wouldn’t let me sleep
at night, if I didn’t keep my promise. Oh! you needn’t blush, my boy:
I’m not going to pay you; but I want to make you a small present, and
my brother insisted upon adding something to my little gift. Here is
mine, and here is my brother’s;” and Mr. Bankhead handed him first a
hundred-dollar bill, and then a fifty-dollar bill.

“Why, sir, I----”

“Take them, Jack, just to oblige me,” added the lieutenant.

“No sir: I can’t take all this money. It will burn my fingers if I keep
it.”

“If you feel afraid of it, just hand it to your mother, who, I dare
say, will find a good use for it.”

John protested, and Mrs. Somers protested; they protested singly and
together: but the officer was resolute, and positively refused to take
back the bills.

“If I thought I could pay you, Jack, in money, I should have given you
a thousand dollars. There is an elderly lady, who lives only seven
miles from here, who is just as grateful to you as I am; and, when she
feels able to leave home, she is coming over to see your mother; and I
know they will be the best friends in the world.”

“Who, sir?”

“My mother, Jack. She already thinks a great deal of you, my boy; and,
when she sees you, she will not think the less of you.”

Lieutenant Bankhead took his leave; and John and his mother were so
bewildered when he had gone, that they hardly knew what had happened
during his visit. But there were the two bank-bills to attest the
reality of what had occurred; and the rest of the day was spent in
making preparations for the sailor-boy’s departure. The question
of what should be done with the hundred and fifty dollars caused
considerable discussion; for Mrs. Somers thought it should be placed
to John’s credit in the Savings Bank, and he declared she must use
it to make herself comfortable until he could get some money to send
home. John was the stronger party in the argument; and the money
was carefully deposited in the bureau-drawer, to be expended as the
necessities of the family might require.

The next morning, John rose very early, and did his “chores” about the
house as usual. These were his last hours at home; and, though he was
not a very sentimental lad, he couldn’t help visiting all the familiar
spots in the vicinity, and recalling all the pleasant little incidents
of the past. He might never see them again; and, when he left the
little chamber which Thomas and himself had occupied since they were
old enough to leave the trundle-bed, he was weak enough to shed a few
tears. He compared his comfortable bed with a hammock on the berth-deck
of a sloop-of-war; but, when he thought that he was going forth to
fight for the glorious stripes and stars, he was reconciled to any
privations which he might be called upon to endure.

The hour for his departure came; and after his mother had given him a
few words of counsel, and a blessing warm from her heart, he kissed
his sisters, shook hands with Gran’ther Greene, and rushed out of the
house before anyone had an opportunity to shed many tears. At the
railroad station he found many of his young friends who had come to see
him off: but the train was approaching; and after Captain Barney had
wrung his hand, and his friends had given him a hearty God-speed, he
stepped into a car, and, as it seemed to him, actually entered upon his
career as a sailor-boy.

If our space would permit, we could, no doubt, tell what Jack Somers
was thinking about as the train hurled him along into the arms of
his future destiny. He was a good boy, and I suppose he thought of
everything that would be likely to occur to the mind of a good boy
leaving home to take a part in the most momentous war in which a nation
ever engaged. But, of whatever else he thought, I am sure that his
mother was uppermost in his mind. For her sake he was resolved to be
true to his God, his country, and himself.

At the appointed time, he met Lieutenant Bankhead at the hotel where he
was boarding while in the city; and after dinner they repaired to the
naval rendezvous, where John was duly presented for examination under
the auspices of his influential friend.

“Your name, my lad?” demanded the recruiting agent.

“John Somers,” replied our hero with a promptness which was part of his
nature.

“How old are you?”

“Seventeen, sir.”

“Have you been to sea?”

“Yes, sir.”

“How long?”

“One voyage to the West Indies, and two to Charlestown. I have been
about boats ever since I was a baby.”

“I can vouch for him that he is every inch a sailor,” added Lieutenant
Bankhead; “and the smartest lad in a small craft I ever came across in
my life.”

“Looks like it,” said the agent. “What can you do, my lad?”

“Hand, reef, and steer. I know something about rigging; but I don’t
want to ship as an able seaman.”

“Good: ordinary seaman, then; though you are rather young.”

“Better than half of them in the service,” said Jack’s friend.

“All right, Mr. Bankhead. We will take your word for it.”

“I ought to know: I have sailed with him when I wouldn’t trust myself
in the hands of many a skipper that I have known.”

John was then taken into another room, where he was ordered to “strip,”
and was thoroughly examined with regard to his physical condition. A
minute description of his person was then written out, including his
height, complexion, color of his eyes, and other distinguishing marks,
which would enable his officers to identify him if occasion should
require. He was pronounced sound in every respect, and fit to serve the
United States Government in the capacity of an ordinary seaman.

The men on board a ship-of-war are shipped in three classes: landsmen,
who know nothing about a ship; ordinary seamen, who can “hand, reef,
and steer,” and who are sent aloft to perform the ordinary work of a
sailor; and seamen, sometimes called “able seamen,” who are competent
to do everything required in fitting out and working the ship; who
know all about rigging, splicing ropes, making and mending sails; who
can rig and unrig any spar; and who understand the lead.

Landsmen, at the time of which we write, received twelve dollars a
month. They remain on deck, haul the halyards, braces, and other ropes
which are worked on deck, clean up, and do general work. The pay of
an ordinary seaman was fourteen dollars a month; and of a seaman,
eighteen. There are also three classes of boys, called first, second,
and third-class boys,--according to their knowledge and physical
ability,--who received, respectively, nine, eight, and seven dollars a
month.

When a sailor ships for the navy, he is supplied with clothing, and
other articles of comfort and luxury, upon credit; that is, the value
of the goods is charged to him, to be deducted from his future wages.
As my readers may be curious to know the contents of Jack Somers’s bag,
I shall add a list of the articles with which he was supplied, and the
prices of them:--

  1 Pea Jacket                         $12 00
  1 Blue Cloth Jacket                   10 00
  1 pair Blue Cloth Pants                4 00
  1 pair Blue Cloth Satinet Pants        3 00
  1 Blue Cap                             1 00
  2 Blue Flannel Shirts                  4 00
  2 White Frocks                         3 00
  2 White Inside Shirts                  3 00
  2 pairs Drawers                        3 00
  2 pairs Duck Pants                     3 00
  2 pairs Stockings                      1 00
  1 pair Shoes                           2 00
  1 Neck Hankderchief                    1 50
  1 Tin Pot and Pan                        75
  1 Jack-knife and Spoon                   50
  1 Bar Soap and Scrubbing-Brush         1 00
  1 Shoe-brush and Blacking                50
  1 Razor, Shaving-box, and Soap         2 15
                                       ------
                                       $55 40

Jack blushed when the last-named articles were handed to him; but,
as he had already made some efforts to coax a little feathery down
upon his upper lip to vegetate more rapidly than Nature was disposed,
he determined to persevere, in the hope that he might surprise his
friends, at the expiration of his term, by presenting himself before
them with a full-grown beard.

Men may draw two pounds of tobacco; but it is not allowed if the sailor
is under twenty.

Our hero was appalled at the extent of his wardrobe: but Mr. Bankhead
assured him he would find a use for everything he had, unless it was
the shaving implements; which made Jack blush again, as though it were
wicked to shave.




CHAPTER V.

ON BOARD THE OHIO.


On board the receiving-ship Ohio, to which all naval recruits in the
vicinity of Boston are sent, Jack reported to the officer of the deck;
and after his name had been registered, and sundry particulars in
regard to him entered upon the ship’s books, he was sent forward. A
number for his hammock, and another for his clothes-bag, were given
him; and he was assigned to a mess. Mr. Bankhead, having done all
he could for his _protégé_, and stated his intentions in regard to
him, took his leave; and Jack found himself alone, though there were
hundreds of men on board the ship.

Though Jack was alone so far as acquaintances were concerned, there was
no opportunity to be lonesome; for the gun-deck was thronged with men.
There were old sailors who had been fifty years in the navy, and “green
hands” who had just come from the country, and had never seen a ship
till within a few days. There were rough, hard-visaged men, and those
with no small pretensions to gentility. There were men of all colors
and of every nation.

It was a lively scene, whichever way he turned; and Jack sat down upon
a mess-chest to observe the strange sights, and listen to the strange
sounds. Some of the men were walking up and down the deck for exercise;
some were playing cards, dominoes, and similar games; some were
reading, and some were mending their clothes. It was an interesting
prospect to a young man full of life; but he could not help thinking
of the happy home in Pinchbrook, and the devoted mother who was the
central figure in the picture. On the whole, he did not like his
surroundings very well. The place did not seem much like a ship, and he
hoped he should not have to be confined a great while on board the old
hulk.

While he was thinking of home and friends, and trying to bring his
imagination to bear upon the future, a ringing blow on the top of his
head confused his ideas, and completely upset the air castles which he
had erected in his vivid fancy.

“Heave up, my hearty!” exclaimed the author of this wanton mischief, as
he brought the large tin pan he carried in his hand down upon Jack’s
head a second time.

“What are you about?” demanded the contemplative young man, springing
to his feet.

“Get off the mess-chest, then, so I can get at the grub,” replied the
man in a surly tone.

“Why didn’t you say so, then?”

“I did say so.”

“Well, you had better not hit me in just that style again,” added Jack
angrily.

“Shut up, you young monkey! Do you think I’m going to bow and scrape to
every lubber that chooses to moor his carcass on the mess-chest? Now
sheer off, and keep out of the way.”

Jack did not move, and, withal, wore so dignified and independent an
air, that the man, who had charge of the mess to which the recruit was
ordered, struck him once more, on the side of the head, with the tin
pan. This was rather more than Jack’s warm blood could endure, and
more than his philosophy was proof against. Regardless of the rigid
discipline of a man-of-war, he instantly squared off, and planted a
smart blow of his fist upon the face of the surly fellow. With a volley
of heavy oaths, the cook of the mess sprang at him with the ferocity
of a tiger. Jack, who was cooler, defended himself on scientific
principles, and repeated his “practice” upon the physiognomy of his
antagonist with such effect, that either because his blows were
tremendous, or because there was a spot of grease on the deck, his
assailant went down.

“Avast there, Spriggs!” shouted an old and dignified salt, who was
mending his pants near the scene,--“avast there, and let the youngster
alone!”

For a moment, the blue-jackets on the gun-deck revelled in the
anticipation of a fight. A crowd began to gather; but the sport was
quickly nipped in the bud by the appearance of a couple of marines with
cutlasses in their hands, each of whom seized one of the beliggerents.

“What’s all this about?” asked one of the marines.

“What’s it about?” replied Spriggs. “Why, that young lubber hit me
side of the head; and I don’t let any man this side of Gibraltar do
that.”

“He struck me three times on the head with the tin pan,” added Jack;
“and no man this side of Gibraltar, or the other side either, can do
that.”

“I shall report you to the officer of the deck,” said the marine, as a
couple of ship’s corporals appeared, and were left to enforce a strict
neutrality between the parties.

In a few moments the master-at-arms presented himself, and Jack and
Spriggs were ordered to the spar-deck for examination. The parties were
conducted into the awful presence of the officer of the deck, before
whom all of them, including the master-at-arms, and Tom Longstone, the
old seaman, who had witnessed the affray, reverently touched their
hats; which is the usual token of respect to an officer on board a
ship-of-war.

“Well, my lad, you have made a bad beginning,” began the officer of
the deck, who was no doubt pained to see the _protégé_ of Lieutenant
Bankhead thus early implicated in a disturbance.

“It was not my fault, sir,” replied Jack.

“I beg your honor’s pardon: but the youngster hit me side of the head;
and what I did, yer honor, was in self-defence,” said Spriggs.

“How’s that, my lad?” demanded the officer.

“It is not true, sir. I was sitting on the chest, when he came up
behind me, and struck me over the head with a tin pan.”

“Yes, yer honor: he was sodgering on the mess-chest, and wouldn’t get
out of the way, so I could get the hard-tack out for supper.”

“Then you struck him first?” asked the officer sternly.

“He wouldn’t move till I did,” added Spriggs sourly.

“He didn’t ask me to move, and I did not know he was near me till he
struck me.”

“That’s a fact, yer honor,” interposed Tom Longstone. “The youngster
was peaceable enough till Spriggs hit him, and he did not strike back
till he was hit three times.”

The two marines fully confirmed this testimony, though they had not
witnessed the scene which preceded the affray. Spriggs was immediately
ordered to the place of confinement on the orlop-deck, there to subsist
for twenty-four hours on bread and water, with irons on his ankles.

“Now, my lad, you are a green hand on board of a man-of-war,” said
the officer of the deck, when the guilty party had been conducted
below. “You must learn that fighting is never tolerated under any
circumstances. This is your first offence, and I shall let you off.”

“I beg pardon, sir,” stammered Jack, his face as red as the crimson
bunting in the ensign at the peak,--“I beg pardon, sir; but I could not
help it.”

“Yes, you could help it. We don’t tolerate fighting. If you have any
complaints to make, you will have a chance to be heard. Now go to your
mess, and remember what I have said.”

Jack touched his hat as he saw the others do, and went below. He was
perfectly willing to remember what the officer had told him: but it did
not exactly accord with his ideas; and he was very much afraid, that,
under the same temptation, he should be likely to repeat the offence.

“There, youngster, you’ve larned a lesson,” said Tom Longstone, as he
settled himself upon the mess-bench, and resumed his labors at the
dilapidated trousers he was attempting to restore to their former state
of usefulness.

“I’m much obliged to you for what you said for me,” replied Jack, as
he took a seat by the side of the old salt.

“You’re welcome, my hearty. I hope you won’t need a word from me
again to keep you out of the ‘brig,’ which is the prison on board a
man-of-war.”

“I hope not; but I can’t stand it to be thumped round, as Spriggs began
with me.”

“You are smart and spunky, my lad; and I like you for’t: but, when one
of them ere flunkies strikes you foul, you must sarve ’im out some
other way.”

“I don’t know any better way to serve out a bully than to give him as
good as he sends, on the spot.”

“Nor I neither, my lad; but ’twon’t do board a man-o’-war. That’s
beatin’ to wind’ard for the sake o’ runnin’ on the rocks. Sheer off,
and sarve ’im out some other way.”

“A fellow will be bullied and trodden upon by every petty tyrant in the
ship, if he submits to it.”

“No, he won’t youngster. A man finds his level board a man-o’-war
just as he does everywhere else. If a man behaves himself,
everybody--officers and all--will treat him with respect. I’ve been in
the navy thirty years, and I know it’s a fact.”

“What could I do, when that man struck me? If I had submitted, he and
others around would have repeated the insult.”

“Sarve him out some other way,” replied old Tom mysteriously.

“I don’t understand what you mean.”

“You’ll larn, my fightin’-cock,” added Tom with a cunning smile.

“What would you have done if Spriggs had struck you on the head with a
tin pan?”

“He wouldn’t have done that to Tom Longstone, nor any other man board
this ‘guardo.’”

“Perhaps not; but suppose he had?”

“I should have knocked him over, just as you did, my spunky one.”

“But then you would have gone into a fight.”

“Not I, my lad. I should have sheered off as soon as I had a done
it; and left the ship’s corporals to take care of him, if he wasn’t
satisfied. I might have cut down his hammock arter he turned in, or
dropped a belayin’-pin on his toes, or something of that sort; but I
shouldn’t get up a fight with him. The fact is, my crank little one,
an ill-tempered fellow is sarved out so many ways, board a man-o’-war,
that he soon larns to mind his own business.”

“Well, I dare say I shall soon learn the ways of my new shipmates; but
I don’t half like the fashion of hitting a fellow in the dark.”

“You can’t fight it out board the ship, and you won’t stand it to be
bullied by a flunky. As to hitting ’im in the dark, my little breezer,
that’s all in your eye. Your flunky knows who does it, and so does
every man in the ship. That’s our way of sarvin’ ’im out.”

“Very likely I shall get used to it in a short time: at any rate,
I mean to do my duty faithfully, obey orders, and keep up to the
discipline of the ship.”

“That’s right, my jolly bantam: that’s the way to get along in the
navy.”

Tom Longstone was a veteran in the navy, and knew every rope in the
ship, as well as every quirk in its discipline, and was thoroughly
posted in all the superstitions and traditions of the service. For
some reason or other,--perhaps because he had displayed the spirit
of a man,--the old salt was strongly prejudiced in Jack’s favor at
the first interview, and proceeded, in due form, to take him under
his protection. Tom pumped him dry in regard to his parents, his
native place, his antecedents upon the sea and the land. He examined
him in seamanship, inquired carefully into his moral and religious
principles,--as carefully as though Jack had been a candidate for the
situation of chaplain instead of ordinary seaman,--and was particularly
nice in his inquiries into the incipient hero’s patriotism.

“You see, my jolly little clipper, I believe in two things: one of ’em
is the Bible, and t’other the ’Meriken flag. I never throwed a vote in
my life, and never had nothin’ to do with politics; but the man that
says anything agin the ’Meriken flag, why, smash my cutwater, but he’s
my enemy! Them’s my sentiments, Jack. I haven’t got no other creed,
in politics or religion. Stand by the Bible and the ’Meriken flag, my
hearty, and it’ll be all right with you in this world and t’other one
too. Steady! there’s the boatswain’s whistle piping to supper. Here, my
jolly biscuit-nibbler, stow your little carcass in here, and I’ll see
that the sharks don’t gnaw your walking-timbers off.”

Tom Longstone seated himself at the mess-table, upon which the grub had
been placed, during the conversation, by a steward _pro tem._, who had
been deputed to serve in the place of Spriggs. They did not have hot
biscuits and baked apples for supper; but the fare was good, wholesome,
and abundant in quantity. Jack was introduced to his mess-mates, in
man-of-war style, by Tom; and very soon the conversation turned upon
the events which had occurred before supper, and our hero was duly
commended and admired for his manliness.

“He’ll larn better how to sarve out a flunky one of these days,” said
Tom, who was proud of his _protégé_. “That’s just the way you’ll sarve
out the rebels, my lad: lay ’em aboard, and carry ’em all standing.”

“I hope I shall behave myself on such an occasion,” replied Jack
modestly. “I came into the navy to fight for my country, and I intend
to do my duty.”

“That’s the idea, my merry little piper. Stand by the stars and stripes
as long as there’s a plank left.”

“I reckon some of us will be drafted before long,” added Ben Blinks,
a weatherly old tar, who had just returned from a foreign cruise, and
shipped again for three years.

“The sooner the better,” said Jack with enthusiasm.

“I’ve been aboard the guardo about as long as I want to be,” continued
Bob Rushington, a man-of-war dandy, who wore ear-rings, and had shining
black curls.

“I say, Jack, who’s the officer that convoyed you aboard?” demanded Tom
Longstone.

“Lieutenant Bankhead.”

“Bankhead? He is a gentleman and a scholar. I’ve heard good things of
him.”

“He promised to have me drafted into his ship,” added Jack.

“Good, my little honey-bee; and, if he takes you, he must take me,”
said Tom, bringing his fist down upon the mess-table.

“I think he would be very glad to have you.”

“Suppose you put in a word for me.”

“I will, with pleasure.”

“And for me,” added Blinks.

“Likewise for me,” suggested Rushington.

Half a dozen others made a like request; and Jack did not know but he
should have the pleasure of drafting the whole crew for Mr. Bankhead’s
ship. But, after consultation with Tom, he decided to use his influence
only for Blinks and Rushington: first, because he liked them; and,
second, because Tom said they were first-rate seamen.




CHAPTER VI.

JACK TAKES A LESSON IN DISCIPLINE.


On the following day, Spriggs was released from confinement; having
served out his twenty-four hours upon bread and water. He was ordered
to resume his duties as cook of the mess. He looked at Jack with an
evil eye: but, as our hero was under the powerful protection of three
old men-of-war’s men, he behaved tolerably well; and Jack, willing to
forgive him, treated him as handsomely as though nothing had happened
to disturb their friendly relations.

“Just keep an eye to windward, my lad,” said Blinks after supper.
“Spriggs looks as though he meant mischief.”

“Thank you, I will,” replied Jack; “though I am willing to let by-gones
go for nothing.”

“Spriggs isn’t: so just keep your weather-eye wide open.”

“Do you think he will attempt to whip me?”

“Not he; he has got enough of that: but he’ll upset a pot of hot tea in
your lap, or do some dirty trick of that sort.”

“I’ll look out for him.”

“Just keep right up stiff into the wind, and we’ll see you through if
he attempts to fool you.”

Jack paid no apparent attention to Spriggs, though he kept a close
watch upon all his movements. When the hammocks were piped down at
night, he observed that his enemy kept a sharp eye upon him, and he had
no doubt he intended mischief. He mentioned his suspicions to Blinks,
whose hammock was slung next to his own.

“All right: he’s got your bearings, and he means to cut you down.”

“I don’t see that I can help myself, unless I keep awake all night.”

“Yes, you can: we’ll rig a dummy for you.”

Blinks explained his plan; and, with the assistance of his other
friends, they deposited four twenty-four-pound shot in Jack’s hammock.
Another shot was slung over the hook, in such a manner that the
ropeyarn which held it in position would be severed when the revengeful
villain cut the lanyard of the hammock. Bob Rushington then stowed
himself away under the lee of the mainmast, and Jack occupied his
hammock. All these preparations had been very carefully conducted, so
as to avoid the keen scrutiny of the master-at-arms and the ship’s
corporals, who form the active police of a man-of-war; but it is more
than probable that one of the latter officers knew all about the
proceedings, and was quite willing that Spriggs should be “sarved out”
in his own coin.

The conspirators kept themselves wide awake, though they were careful
to avoid an open breach of discipline. The lights were all put out,
so that nothing could be seen; and silence reigned upon the decks of
the Ohio, on which were berthed not less than a thousand men. Jack
was nervous and expectant. Four bells--ten o’clock--struck; and he
began to be very sleepy, and impatient for the trap to be sprung. At
five bells, he began to think that he had mistaken the purpose of his
malignant enemy; and he was just going to sleep, when down thundered
the cannon-balls upon the deck, rolling off into the scuppers with a
noise like the mutterings of a distant tempest. At the same time, a
heavy groan saluted the ears of the aroused sleepers, as well as of the
ingenious conspirators who had plotted and executed the mischief.

“What’s the row?” demanded Blinks, as innocently as though he had just
awakened from the slumber of innocence itself. “Who’s hurt?”

“Oh, my foot!” groaned the sufferer, who appeared to be unable to
retreat from his position.

“What’s the matter with your foot?” asked Rushington, who had come
forward from the mainmast to ascertain the issue of the plot.

“It’s smashed to a jelly!” groaned Spriggs, whose tones were readily
recognized by the occupants of the hammocks in the vicinity.

“How did you do it? Did you roll out of your hammock? I heard an awful
fall of something out here just now,” added Rushington, whose voice
seemed to melt with sympathy for the afflicted cook of the mess.

Spriggs made no reply to these direct questions; for we doubt not his
conscience was as sore as his foot. One of the ship’s corporals on duty
upon the berth-deck presently appeared, and demanded the cause of the
disturbance.

“Spriggs has tumbled out of his hammock,” replied Rushington. “The ship
gave a lee-lurch, and pitched him out.”

“Oh, my foot!” groaned Spriggs.

“I don’t exactly see how you could smash your foot tumbling out of a
hammock,” added the ship’s corporal. “There aren’t a very heavy sea
runnin’ just here alongside the wharf, nuther.”

“I didn’t fall out of the hammock,” said Spriggs in savage tones.

“Didn’t you? Then maybe you can tell how it happened.”

“I don’t know what it was: somebody dropped a shot on my foot.”

“What were you doing here?” demanded the officer of police.

Spriggs declined to answer this question; and the unpitying official,
for some reason or other, did not press the question, but ordered the
sufferer to come with him to the hospital, and have the injured member
examined.

“I can’t walk,” sighed Spriggs, as he attempted to rise. “My foot is
smashed to a jelly, I tell you!”

“If that’s so, Spriggs, I reckon you’d better stick to your hammock
another time, and not go skylarking about decks at this hour of the
night,” added Rushington, whose advice was certainly good and well
meant. “If you can’t walk, we will carry you to the sick-bay.”

The ship’s corporal and the seamen picked up the discomfited
conspirator, and bore him to the hospital. As soon as they had
disappeared, Blinks carefully concealed the ropeyarn by which the
cannon-ball had been suspended; and, having repaired as well as he
could the damage to Jack’s hammock, they all turned in, and slept
without further disturbance.

Spriggs was confined to the sick-bay for a week; and it was a month
before he could walk without limping. On his return to the mess, he
seemed to be satisfied, and treated his companions with proper respect
and consideration. When he came back, Jack was taking his turn as
cook of the mess; a position in which each man in succession serves
for one week. He felt that his predecessor in office had been amply
“sarved out;” and, though he did not like the man, he wished to be at
peace with him. He treated him respectfully and kindly, and used every
means in his power to conciliate him. His efforts were not in vain;
for, before our hero left the receiving-ship, Spriggs had forgiven, and
perhaps forgotten, the past: at any rate, they were on as good terms as
two persons not mutually respecting each other could be.

Jack had not seen Mr. Bankhead since they had parted on the deck of
the Ohio; for the latter had gone to Philadelphia, where his ship was
fitting out: but our sailor-boy had written to him in regard to his
future prospects, and, in his letter, had taken occasion to mention
his three friends who had desired him to intercede for them. He had
received a favorable reply, and for several weeks had been impatiently
waiting to be summoned to a more active field of labor.

At the time of which we write, there was a deficiency of seamen at the
navy-yards of Philadelphia and Washington, and drafts were occasionally
made on those at Charlestown and Portsmouth. After Jack and his
friends had waited till their patience was nearly exhausted, they
were delighted to hear that Lieutenant Bankhead, first-lieutenant and
executive officer of the United States steam sloop-of-war Harrisburg,
was upon the spar-deck, and would immediately draft a number of seamen
for his ship.

“Now, my breezy little reefer, your time has come,” said Tom Longstone,
as the word was passed along among the men: “Mr. Bankhead is on deck.”

“I will run up and see him,” replied Jack hastily, as he started to
execute his purpose.

“Avast, there, avast! Belay everything!” exclaimed Tom, as he grasped
his _protégé_ by the arm, and detained him.

“What’s the matter, Tom!” demanded Jack, rather surprised at the
conduct of his friend.

“Don’t be in a hurry: just moor your hulk alongside of Old Tom on this
mess-chest, my sentimental little skipper, and let us overhaul this
matter a little.”

“But Mr. Bankhead is on deck, Tom; and I want to see him.”

“All right, Jack: so he is. If he wasn’t, I wouldn’t say a word. Mr.
Bankhead is first-lieutenant and executive officer of the sloop-of-war
Harrisburg. Now, my lively little pap-consumer, what are you?”

“What am I? What am I? Why, I’m an ordinary seaman in the navy, and
hope soon to be drafted into the Harrisburg.”

“Precisely so; but you don’t know no more nor a marine. Are you goin’
for to go for to throw yourself into the arms of Mr. Bankhead, just as
though he was your fust cousin, and you’d been off on a long v’y’ge?”

“He will be very glad to take me by the hand,” said Jack, rather
mystified at this representation of his own insignificance.

“Jack, don’t you stick your flipper out to Mr. Bankhead any more’n
you’d put your leg into the maw of a ground shark,” continued Tom
earnestly.

“Why not?” demanded Jack, who thought Tom’s suspicions were an insult
to his friend, and a reflection upon his sincerity.

“Why, you little monkey, you are as green as a horse-mackerel! You
don’t know no more nor a land-lubber!”

“Mr. Bankhead has seen the time when he was glad to obey my orders,”
replied Jack smartly.

“Ha, ha, ha!” laughed Tom, taking off his cap, and pitching it down
upon the mess-table; while Blinks and Rushington roared till their
sides ached at the self-sufficiency of the young sailor.

“Well, you may laugh as much as you please; but says he, ‘Jack, you are
skipper, and I will obey your orders. What shall I do?’ says he. ‘Knot
these reef-points in the foresail,’ says I; and he did it.”

“All that may be, my noisy little boatman; but things is changed since
you and Mr. Bankhead went on your last cruise. I s’pose you think he’ll
take you into the cabin, rig you out in long togs, and mess you with
the wardroom officers.”

“I don’t expect anything of that sort, Tom: I don’t want him to do
anything of that kind. I am willing to do my duty like any other fellow
on board.”

“So much the better, my darling; for Mr. Bankhead is too sensible a
man for to make a baby of you. He aren’t a-going to feed you with warm
milk. If he’s your friend, he’s going to make a man of you.”

“I expect to fare just like my mess-mates,--no better, no worse; but I
expect he will treat me like a Christian.”

“He’ll do that, my jolly little beef-eater; but if you go sticking
your flipper out to him, just like as if you was a wardroom officer,
I’ll bet a month’s wages he won’t know you. Don’t you do it, Jack. You
hain’t been thirty years in the navy, my precious little infant: you
never saw Cape Horn; you never went up the Mediterranean; you never
walked around a capstan board a man-o’-war. You don’t know no more
about discipline nor a heathen do about Watts’s Hymns.”

“What shall I do?” asked Jack, not a little puzzled by this
exemplification of man-of-war discipline; and perhaps he was disposed
to inquire if there was any use in having a friend in the wardroom, if
he was not to be permitted to know him.

“What shall you do? There, now my sweet little bone-cracker, them’s
the most sensible words you’ve spoken for half an hour. What shall you
do? That’s just what the publiken wanted to know when he smote his
breast. He smote his breast bekase he wanted to know. He didn’t spile
his shirt-bosom for nothin’, Jack. What shall you do, my blating little
lamb?”

“Yes, Tom; what shall I do?” asked Jack, highly amused as well as
deeply edified by the profound remarks of the old blue-jacket. “And, if
you don’t answer me pretty soon, I shall begin to think you are nothing
but an old blower.”

“Vast heavin’, Jack: respect my bald head, and never let that little
tongue of yourn unkile anything that sounds like a nick-name. It’s
a bad practice, and nothin’ but lubbers and marines ever does such
things,” replied Tom sagely.

Jack had his doubts upon this point, though he did not venture to
express them, but again pressed his question.

“What shall you do, my little snivelling milksop?--what shall you do?”

“Yes; what shall I do, Tom? That’s what I want to know; and, if you
don’t answer pretty soon, the boatswain’s whistle will cut short your
yarn, as it did yesterday.”

“I’ll tell you, Jack. Just throw your ear-ports wide open, and belay
that frisky little tongue of yourn, and I’ll tell you in less time than
it would take a monkey to run up the main-to-gallant-mast backstay.”

“Blaze away, Tom!” replied Jack impatiently.

“Ay, ay, my lad: here goes. When you’re mustered, and Mr. Bankhead goes
round lookin’ at every man from keel to truck, and gazin’ down into
his peepers as though he’d lost his jack-knife down them,--I say, my
oily little butter-chops, don’t you do so much as wink at him. I say,
Jack, you mustn’t know Mr. Bankhead from Adam’s great-grandfather. If
he wants to know you, he’ll tell you on’t. If he wants to shake hands
with you, he will send the ship’s cook to let you know it three weeks
aforehand, so’t you can be all ready for the honor that’s in store for
you. Mind that, Jack; and you’ve larnt a lesson that’ll make a seaman
of you.”

And just then the “people” were mustered, and Jack and his friends
tumbled up on the spar-deck to undergo the scrutiny of the executive
officer of the Harrisburg.




CHAPTER VII.

THE HARRISBURG.


It was fortunate for Jack Somers, that, when the crew were mustered
to enable the officer to make his selection, he was prepared by the
lesson of Tom Longstone for his interview with Mr. Bankhead. As the
old man-of-war’s man had suspected, our sailor had fully anticipated
a very cordial greeting from his friend, the first-lieutenant of the
Harrisburg; and, without the explanation he had received upon the
gun-deck, he would have been very much hurt by the cold and stiff
manners of that gentleman. As it was, he expected nothing in the nature
of a courteous acknowledgment of their former acquaintance. But in this
he was happily disappointed; for though Mr. Bankhead did not indulge
in anything like familiarity with him, and did not even shake hands
with him, he was greeted with a pleasant smile, which was sufficiently
significant to him.

“I am glad to see you again, Jack,” said he, in addition to the
condescending smile which made our sailor-boy the envy of a score of
blue-jackets who noticed it. “Of course you will go with me.”

“Thank you, sir,” promptly replied Jack, as he touched his cap to the
lieutenant with a degree of respect which exhibited the remarkable
progress he had made in discipline.

“Where are your friends, Jack?” added Mr. Bankhead.

“This is Tom Longstone, your honor,” answered Jack, giving an extra
flourish of discipline to his reply.

Tom was accepted, and so were Blinks and Rushington, very much to the
satisfaction of all these worthies; for the Harrisburg was a crack
ship, and to be drafted into her was a stroke of good fortune worthy
the highest appreciation of the gallant tars. That evening, those who
were selected by Mr. Bankhead were sent to Philadelphia in charge of an
officer, where they arrived on the following day. Jack wrote a letter
to his mother before his departure; but he had no opportunity to see
her. His friends, including Captain Barney, had been to see him once
on the regular visiting-day; and he had hoped that they would come
again before his departure. He was disappointed in not being permitted
to look once more upon the face of his mother, though he rejoiced in
the prospect of soon engaging in active duty. The affectionate letter
which Jack wrote to her no doubt assured her that he was still the
same loving son; that the new life upon which he was entering had not
blotted from his remembrance the hallowed associations of home.

Jack had but little chance to see either New York or Philadelphia on
his journey: but he was more desirous of fighting for his country than
he was of seeing its great cities; more inclined to think of the active
career before him, than of the vanities and pleasures of a large town.
The draft of seamen was duly transferred to the receiving-ship at the
navy-yard, and our hero again found himself subjected to the discipline
of the “guardo.”

Fortunately for his peace of mind, he was not long condemned to this
idle and distasteful life. The Harrisburg lay at anchor near the
receiving-ship,--a beautiful vessel, exhibiting every element of
strength and endurance; and, as Jack occasionally glanced through the
open port at his future home, he admired her fair lines, and longed for
the time when he should be transferred to her. The welcome order came
in due time, and the crew of the gallant ship were sent on board.

Jack and his friends were disposed to give three cheers when they
reached the deck of the Harrisburg; but, as this would have been a
breach of discipline, it was not attempted. Our hero soon had enough to
think of; for the executive officer immediately mustered the men, to
give them their stations, and assign them to their messes.

On board a man-of-war, everything is arranged with the nicest
precision. A thorough system pervades the ship, and everything is done
by rule. The Harrisburg had a hundred and twenty men crowded upon her
spar-deck at this muster: but in a short time, under the efficient
and methodical arrangement of Mr. Bankhead, order came out of chaos;
and, when he had finished his work, every man knew where he belonged
during each hour of the day and night; where he was to go when the ship
went into action; when she was to tack or wear; when the sails were to
be set, furled, or reefed; where he was to take position if the ship
caught fire, or was boarded by an enemy. Every one knew where he was to
eat and sleep, where he was to stow his hammock and clothes-bag, and
everything else which was to enable him to discharge his duty as one of
the wheels in the complicated machine of which he was an essential part.

If our readers are not familiar with ships, we shall find it very
difficult to make them comprehend Jack Somers’s position and duties on
board the Harrisburg; but we shall endeavor to give them some ideas
upon the subject. A ship, and especially a man-of-war, is a complicated
structure; and our young friends must not expect any more than a
partial view in these pages, for the whole volume would be no more than
sufficient to do justice to the subject.[A]

The Harrisburg was a screw-steamer of about two thousand tons burden,
and usually denominated a sloop-of-war. She was a full-rigged ship;
that is, she had square sails on her fore, main, and mizzen mast,
and could be worked under sail or steam, as occasion or necessity
might require. She carried twenty-eight guns, all of which were
placed upon her upper or spar deck. Some large men-of-war, called
ships-of-the-line, have four decks. The Ohio, in which Jack had spent
several weeks, was of this class. The upper deck is then called the
spar-deck; the next below it, the gun-deck; the third, the berth-deck;
and the fourth, or lowest one, the orlop-deck.

The decks, which in a house would be called floors or stories, are not
divided off into rooms; so that, forward of the officers’ cabins, they
look like long halls. The square holes, or windows, through which the
muzzles of the cannon are pointed, are called port-holes, or ports.
They are closed by two doors,--one swinging up, and the other down.

The Harrisburg had two decks, properly so called,--the spar-deck
and the berth-deck. On the former, where the guns were placed, all
the working of the ship is done, as well as the fighting. There is
no house or other structure upon it, as is generally seen on board
a merchant-ship. Upon the berth-deck the men eat and sleep. The
after-part of this deck contains the cabins of the officers. The
captain occupies a cabin by himself in the aftermost part of the ship.
Next forward of this is a large apartment, having small staterooms on
each side of it, called the wardroom, which belongs to the commissioned
officers of the ship. Next to the wardroom is an apartment called the
steerage, divided into two parts, the port and starboard steerage, in
which live the midshipmen and master’s mates, the assistant-engineers
in a steamer, and the “forward officers,”--viz., the boatswain, gunner,
carpenter, and sailmaker. Down in the bottom of the ship are placed the
boilers and engines.

The hold, or place under the berth-deck, is divided into a great
number of rooms; such as the paintroom, the storeroom, the breadroom,
shot-locker, shellroom, sloproom, magazine, lightroom, coal-bunkers,
chain-lockers, tier-gratings, and other cells and holes. The magazine
contains the powder, and is lined with copper. It is so constructed
that it can be filled with water--flooding the magazine--when the ship
takes fire. No man is allowed to enter it unless clothed in a dress
prescribed for this duty, with no nails in his shoes, or metal buttons
upon his garments. The lightroom adjoins the magazine, and is simply
a small room to hold the powerful reflecting lamp, which throws its
light into the magazine through a large pane of heavy glass. This
arrangement is intended to prevent the necessity of taking a lantern
into the magazine, where the slightest spark might doom the noble ship
to instant destruction, and her gallant crew to an untimely death.

The principal officer of the Harrisburg was the captain, whose rank in
the navy, at the time of which we write, was that of commander. Under
the old system, the highest grade in the navy was captain, who, when he
commanded a squadron (two or more vessels) was called a commodore; but
this title was not authoritatively recognized in the Navy Department. A
captain who had been in command of a fleet or squadron was thereafter
called “commodore,” as a mark of distinction, in the same manner that
a member of Congress keeps his “Hon.” after he has ceased to hold his
office.

Whatever the nominal rank of the chief officer of a ship-of-war, he is
called the captain. He is supreme in his command, being subject only
to his orders and the naval regulations. Everybody on board must obey
his orders, and without asking any questions. Being “monarch of all he
surveys,” he does not give his orders to the men who are to execute
them, but to the first-lieutenant; who is also called the executive
officer, because it is his duty to execute all orders from the
captain. For example: If the captain wants the ship put upon the other
tack, he does not give the order, “Ready about,” to the seamen; “Put
your helm down,” to the quartermaster who cons the helm: but he simply
directs the first-lieutenant to “Come instays;” and this functionary
gives the various orders to the officers and men who are to execute
them.

The first-lieutenant is the _working_ commander of the ship. The other
wardroom officers of the Harrisburg were the second, third, and fourth
lieutenants, the sailing-master, the surgeon, the paymaster, lieutenant
of marines, and chief engineer.

The ship’s company are divided into two watches, each of which serves
alternately on deck for four hours during the day and night. At all
times, the deck is in charge of an officer; and the period that he
serves is called his watch. He is then the officer of the deck. The
first-lieutenant does not keep a watch: this duty is performed in
turn by the second, third, and fourth lieutenants, and the master.
For ordinary ship’s duty, each watch-officer serves four hours on
deck, and twelve below; but, when all hands are called, every officer
must be at his station, and the first-lieutenant take command of the
deck. The master, who has charge of the navigation of the ship, is not
necessarily a watch-officer.

The surgeon, besides the obvious duty of such an officer, has the
entire charge of the sanitary condition of the ship. He not only
prescribes for the “people” when they are sick, and dresses their
wounds in battle, but he must inspect the ship at times, and report
anything which may tend to injure the health of the crew.

The paymaster--formerly called the purser--not only performs the duties
which his title implies, but he has the charge of all stores and
goods, clothing and provisions, belonging to the Government, on board
the ship. He has a clerk to assist him; for he must keep all accounts
with the officers and men, charging them with clothing or other stores
with which they may be supplied, that it may be deducted from their
wages when they are paid.

The lieutenant of marines has the command of the marines, or soldiers,
on board the ship, of whom there were twenty in the Harrisburg. These
men are employed as sentinels in various parts of the ship. One is
always stationed at the wardroom door, one at the “brig,” and one at
the scuttle-butt, or pump. At anchor, one is on duty at the gangway,
or place where the ship is entered; and one on the forecastle. Between
sailors and marines there is a mortal antipathy, which the officers do
not seek to abate; for the soldiers are depended upon in case of mutiny
and insubordination.

The chief engineer has the sole charge of the engines and boilers, and
the subordinate engineers are under his command. On board our ship
there were one first, two second, and four third assistant-engineers;
these officers having the actual charge of the engines, keeping watch
like the other officers: but their chief does not keep a watch.

Master’s mates and midshipmen, who occupy the steerage, are aids to the
various officers, and have miscellaneous duties.

The forward officers are, the boatswain, who has charge of the rigging
and cordage; the gunner, who has charge of the guns and ammunition; the
carpenter, who does the joinery-work; and the sailmaker, who makes and
mends sails. The boatswain has four mates, one of whom is called chief.
The gunner has one mate, and one quarter-gunner for each division of
three guns on a side. The carpenter and sailmaker have each one mate,
and each his gang, selected from the crew.

All ranking below the forward officers are called petty-officers, of
whom there is a host: such as captain of the fore, main, or mizzen
top; captain of the hold, of the forecastle, of the after-guard;
quartermaster, master-at-arms, ship’s corporal, yeoman, armorer, etc.

Quartermasters have charge of the wheel, or steering-apparatus, of the
signals, and of the lead. The master-at-arms is the chief of police,
assisted by the ship’s corporals. The yeoman has charge of the ordnance
and stores. Each of the boats is in charge of a petty-officer called a
cockswain. The duties of the other petty-officers will be understood
from their names.




CHAPTER VIII.

“ALL HANDS, UP ANCHOR!”


Jack Somers had a very correct idea of the interior of a man-of-war,
and of the various officers and their duties, when he went on board the
Harrisburg; but he was not a little confused by the many numbers he had
to remember, which were used to indicate his various stations at the
guns and the mess, on deck, in the top, in the boat, and in his hammock.

He was placed in the starboard watch, stationed in the mizzen-top,
belonged to the third division of the battery, attached to gun No. 9,
was first-loader, and second-boarder. In furling sails, he belonged
on the starboard yard-arm of the mizzen-top-gallant yard. In reefing
topsails, his place was on the port yard-arm of the mizzen-topsail
yard. In tacking or wearing ship, his position was at the lee
main-brace. In loosing sails, his place was the same as in furling. In
getting up anchor, his duty was at the capstan. In boat, he pulled the
bow-oar of the captain’s gig.

Jack Somers was a good boy, and was determined to know and do his
duty. As soon, therefore, as he had a chance to sit down by himself,
he began to think over and fix in his mind his various stations,
and to rehearse all that had been said to him. But he found that he
had already forgotten some of his numbers; yet, by the grace of the
first-lieutenant, he was permitted to consult the station-bill, a
document in which the position of every man in the ship is recorded.
As perseverance always overcomes every obstacle, he soon made himself
proficient in all his numbers.

While the ship remained at her moorings in the river, the crew
were daily exercised in their various duties, and Jack soon became
practically familiar with everything required of him. After he had been
on board about a week, the proper signal was hoisted, every fire and
light in the ship were extinguished, and the powder was taken in, and
stowed in the magazine.

“Now, my little roisterer, we shall soon be in blue water,” said Tom
Longstone, as they gathered around the mess-table that afternoon.

“The sooner the better,” replied Jack. “I want to stand by that gun No.
9 when she pours shot and shell into the rebels.”

“You will have a chance one of these days, my bantam, if you are
patient.”

“We may be sent off on blockade duty,” said Ben Blinks, who, by some
contrivance of interested parties, was in the same mess.

“Then we shall have a chance to gather up some prize-money,” added Bob
Rushington, who, by the same contrivance, was a member of mess No. 4.

“I should like the prize-money very well,” continued Jack; “but I don’t
like the idea of hugging a sand-bar for the next six months.”

“Well, my hearties, old Tom ain’t no prophet: but I really don’t think
this ship is going on the blockade; and, if she don’t have some rebel
shot through her in less than three months, I’m content to give half my
grub to the jollies.”

“Where do you suppose we are bound?” asked Ben.

“Don’t know; don’t care: but this ship ain’t a-going to burrow in the
mud, no how. Now, mind what old Tom says, and write it down in your
log-book.”

It was quite impossible to tell whether Tom was right or wrong: but
his words were accepted for all and more than they were worth; for
the speaker was a kind of oracle among the seamen, on account of his
long experience in the service. The next morning, the engineers and
firemen were observed to be very busy; and soon the smoke was seen to
issue from the smoke-stack. The fires roared for several hours in the
furnaces, and the steam hissed in accord with the impatience of the
crew to be off.

After Jack’s patience had been sorely tried by the long delay, he
welcomed with a thrill of delight the pipe of the boatswain.

“All hands, up anchor!”

It seemed to him just as though the beginning of all things had come,
and he sprang to his station at the capstan. The first-lieutenant
was now in charge of the deck: he had received his orders from the
captain, and was proceeding to the systematic execution of the details.
The second-lieutenant was on the forecastle, with the boatswain near
him. The third-lieutenant was in the waist, and the fourth on the
quarter-deck, near the mizzen-mast. These were the stations which these
officers took when any manœuvre which required all hands was to be
executed.

“Ship the capstan-bars!” said the first-lieutenant.

The order was repeated by his subordinates; and all the sailors
assigned to this duty seized the bars, and inserted them in the drum of
the capstan.

“Bring-to, forward!” continued the executive officer; which order was
repeated by his juniors as before.

Our non-nautical readers will not, perhaps, understand this command;
and we will try to render it into English. The cable to which the
anchor is attached, and which holds the ship to the bottom, is a very
large iron chain. A rope, called the “messenger,” is attached to this
chain by a contrivance called a “selvagee.” The messenger extends from
the cable to the capstan, around which it is passed several times. When
the capstan is turned by the men, of course it winds up the messenger,
and hauls in the chain fastened to the anchor. “Bring-to, forward,” was
the order requiring the men to attach the messenger to the cable, and
pass it around the capstan.

“Are you ready forward?” shouted the first-lieutenant, after he had
waited a sufficient time for his former order to be executed.

“All ready forward, sir!” responded the second-lieutenant.

“Walk round with the capstan!” added the first-lieutenant.

The men went round with a will; and Jack would fain have sung his
“Yo-heave-oh!” as he had been accustomed to do at the windlass on board
his father’s vessel: but the “people” of a man-of-war are required
to execute their duties in silence. The music of a fife, playing
Yankee Doodle, as an accompaniment to the movement, was, however, some
consolation, and assisted him very much in keeping the needed “stopper
on his jaw-tackle.”

“Anchor away, sir!” said the boatswain, who was on the forecastle,
ready to report what progress the cumbrous anchor was making in its
passage upward to the regions of daylight.

“Anchor away, sir!” repeated the second-lieutenant.

“Strike one bell!” continued the first-lieutenant, addressing the
quartermaster, who was stationed at the wheel.

Old Tom Longstone, who was in charge of the wheel, struck one bell,
which was the signal for the engineer on duty to “go ahead slowly.”

“Anchor’s up, sir!” added the boatswain, after the men had walked round
the capstan a while longer.

“Anchor’s up, sir!” repeated the second-lieutenant.

“Pawl the capstan!” ordered the first-lieutenant; which meant that it
was to be secured, so as to keep the anchor where it was. “Unship the
capstan-bars!”

This order was repeated by the under-officers, and executed in good
order by the men. There was no crowding or treading upon each other’s
corns; but everyone knew his place, and did not get in anybody’s way.

“Cat the anchor!” said the first-lieutenant.

The ponderous anchor was now hanging at the hawse-hole; and the
execution of the order last given would secure it upon the top of the
bulwarks, ready to be dropped overboard when occasion should again
require its use.

“Lay forward to the cat-falls!” said the boatswain; and those whose
duty it was to do this work attached a purchase-block to the anchor,
for the purpose of hoisting it up to the cat-head, which is a timber
projecting out over the bow of the ship.

“All ready with the cat, sir!” reported the second-lieutenant.

“Walk away with the cat!” replied the executive officer.

On board a man-of-war, the ropes are not pulled hand over hand; but the
men walk away with them: that is, they run along the deck with them as
firemen do with the engine.

“Strike four bells!” continued the first-lieutenant to the
quartermaster at the wheel; which meant, “Go ahead at full speed!”

The Harrisburg was now actually in motion, and gliding down the
Delaware upon her mission of destruction among the rebels; if, indeed,
such was her mission: for none of the crew had the remotest idea where
the good ship was bound, or upon what kind of duty she was ordered. If
the officers knew, they did not condescend to inform the men; for the
“people” are as far removed from their superiors in social rank in the
ship, as though they were not all equals before the democratic law of
our land.

“Here we are!” said Jack enthusiastically, as he placed himself by the
side of Bob Rushington, who was gazing through one of the open ports
into the water.

“Yes, my lad, we are off,” replied the dandy sailor, who looked very
sad and sentimental for the moment. “Has it occurred to you that not
everyone who is full of life and hope to-day will return alive and well
from this cruise?”

“Well, I hadn’t thought anything about it,” replied Jack with a smile,
as he glanced at the wry face of his friend; “and, what’s more, I don’t
mean to think anything about it.”

“You are a thoughtless boy,” sighed Bob. “Some of us will lose the
number of our mess before many weeks have passed by.”

“Very likely, Bob: but we are going out to fight for our country; and,
if we are not ready to die for her, we have no business here.”

“Very true, my lad; but the future is dark and uncommunicative.”

“Come, Bob, you splice too many syllables on your words. You are a
brave fellow, and ready to do your duty.”

“I trust I am; but sad thoughts come like the autumn of the year.”

“Avast there, Bob!” said Ben Blinks. “Don’t frighten the lad.”

“He doesn’t frighten me,” added Jack. “I put my trust in God; and, come
what may, I know it will be all right with me as long as I do my duty
to my God and my country.”

“Why, darken my top-lights, if the lad don’t talk like a parson!” said
Ben.

But, while they were laughing at Jack for his pious expression of
faith, the drum beat to quarters; and, in a moment more, the great guns
were belching forth the customary salute. This was a new experience to
our sailor-boy; for, though he had been through with all the forms of
firing the guns, he had not before heard them “speak.” The sound was
perfectly stunning: but Jack was a lad of too much spirit to exhibit
any signs of dislike; and, though he could not hear himself speak, he
worked like an old man-of-war’s man at his post.

The Harrisburg continued on her course down the river under steam
alone. The strict discipline of sea service commenced, and everything
went along on board like clockwork. The regular watches were set; and
the second-lieutenant, who was the officer of the deck, walked up and
down on the weather-side, upon which no idlers, and no officers or men
not on duty, were permitted to intrude.

In a ship-of-war, as in a merchant-vessel, the twenty-four hours are
divided into watches of four hours each. Commencing at eight o’clock in
the evening, the starboard watch is on duty till twelve. At half-past
eight, one bell is struck; at nine, two bells; and so on till the end
of the watch, when eight bells indicate the time for the port watch to
relieve the other.

The port watch is then on duty till eight bells, or four o’clock in
the morning. From four till eight is the morning watch; from eight
till twelve is the forenoon watch; from twelve till four is the
afternoon watch. From four till eight are the “dog-watches;” that is,
the four hours are divided into two watches of two hours each. By
this arrangement, the watch which came on duty at eight o’clock the
preceding night will be below during the first part of the night. If
it were not for the dog-watches, the starboard watch would be on duty
every night during the cruise from eight till twelve, and again from
four till eight in the morning, thus obtaining but four hours’ sleep
each night; while the port watch would sleep every night from eight
till twelve, and from four till seven in the morning. By the change
which the half-watches introduce, every man obtains four hours’ sleep
on watch-nights, and seven hours on other nights.

At four o’clock, when the hands were piped to supper, the Harrisburg
was off Cape Henlopen, and standing out to sea.




CHAPTER IX.

“ALL HANDS, MAKE SAIL!”


Supper comes at four o’clock, in the dog-watches: rather an early hour,
when it is remembered that Jack pipes to breakfast at eight bells,
or eight o’clock in the morning. The three meals are taken within
the space of eight hours; leaving sixteen hours between supper and
breakfast. Jack Somers did not like the arrangement very well; but
custom adapts us to every emergency, and he soon learned to lay in a
stock of grub which would last him two-thirds of a day.

“All hands make sail, ahoy!” shouted the boatswain, as his shrill
whistle rang through the ship after the men had concluded their evening
meal.

“Lay aloft, topmen!” was the first order given by Mr. Bankhead, which
was repeated by other officers at their stations. “Lower-yard men in
the chains!”

The topmen ran up the shrouds, while the lower-yard men placed
themselves in position to do so when the order should be given.

“Aloft, lower-yard men!” added the executive officer at the right time.
“Man the boom tricing-lines!”

The studding-sail booms are spars which extend out beyond the
yard-arms, when used; but, when the sails are furled, they lie upon the
top of them. The boom tricing-lines are attached to the inner ends of
these spars, by which they may be hauled up so as to get them out of
the way, and enable the men to work upon the sail.

“Trice up!” continued Mr. Bankhead; which order, as usual, was repeated
by the proper officers.

“Lay out!” he added, when the studding-sail booms were out of the men’s
way; and, in obedience to the command, they extended themselves along
the whole length of the several yards, standing upon the foot-ropes,
and holding on to the sail or ropes with the hands.

Jack Somers, as we have before stated, in loosing sails, belonged upon
the mizzen-top-gallant yard, which is the third cross-spar from the
deck; and, further, his place was at the starboard yard-arm, which
is the end of the spar, on the right-hand side of the ship, looking
forward. He was as much interested in the operation as though he had
been in command of the ship; for it was the first time he had performed
the duty when it really meant something.

“Loose!” said Mr. Bankhead; and, at the word, the men “passed the
gasket,” which is a rope wound round the sail, to confine it to the
yard when furled.

“All ready in the mizzen-top!” added the captain of the top, when the
operation was performed; and the men stood holding the sails in place
upon the yard.

The captains of the main-top and of the fore-top indicated, in like
manner, that they were all ready for the next order; and, when the
lieutenants upon deck had reported the fact to the executive officer,
he proceeded with the manœuvre.

“Let fall!” and, at the word, all the sails to be set were shaken out
at the same moment, and dropped down from the yards.

“Overhaul your rigging aloft!” proceeded Mr. Bankhead; and his order,
translated into the shore vernacular, meant that the men on the yards
were to arrange the sheets, buntlines, clewlines, and other ropes, so
that they would work freely, or not impede the progress of the sail
when it should be hoisted up.

“Man your sheets and halyards!” was the next command.

The sheets are the ropes on the topsails, by which they are hauled down
to the yards. For example,--the mizzen-top-gallant sail was fastened
to the mizzen-top-gallant yard, upon which our hero was stationed.
Attached to the lower corners of this sail were two ropes, passing over
a sheave, or pulley, in the mizzen-topsail yard. These two ropes were
the sheets; and, when the sail is set, they are drawn tight, to keep it
in place.

All the yards of the ship, except the lower one on each mast, slide up
and down. When the sails were loosed, the yards were _down_. The rope
attached to the yard, passing over a sheave set in the mast, by which
the spar is hoisted up, is called a halyard. Any rope by which a sail
is hoisted is called a halyard.

When the men appointed for the purpose had taken hold of the sheets and
halyards, the various officers reported that they were ready.

“Haul well taut!” said Mr. Bankhead.

The effect of the execution of this order was to bring everything to
its bearings.

“Let go, and overhaul your rigging aloft!” continued the
first-lieutenant.

“Sheet home, and hoist away!”

At this order the yards were hoisted up, and the sheets hauled down to
their places. The operation was thus completed; the ropes, with a whole
vocabulary of cabalistic names to designate them, were belayed and
flemished down; and everything was in apple-pie order.

At eight bells in the evening, the starboard watch went on duty; and
Jack, muffled up in his pea-jacket, came on deck. The wind was blowing
a stiff breeze; and the Harrisburg, under sail and steam, was driving
through the great waves of the Atlantic at the rate of twelve knots
an hour. On board a man-of-war, men are stationed at all times in the
tops; which are the platforms on the masts, just above the lower yards.
In large ships, they are capacious enough to hold quite a squad of men,
who are on duty there in readiness to perform any service that may be
required of them.

The topmen of the starboard and port watches are each divided into
first and second parts, called “quarter-watches,” one of which relieves
the other in the tops at the appointed time. When Jack came on deck
at eight bells,--as he belonged to the first part of the starboard
watch of mizzen-topmen,--his place was in this airy perch above the
deck. It was a very safe and comfortable position, notwithstanding any
prejudice which our shore friends might have against such an elevated
roosting-place, in a dark night, and in a rolling sea, when the ship
pitches so that a landsman would hardly be able to keep his feet on
deck, much less in the tops, where the motion of the vessel is more
sensibly experienced.

Jack Somers had his sea-legs on, and felt perfectly at home on the
topgallant yard-arm, in the tops, and in his close quarters on the
berth-deck. In fact, he had made up his mind to be a good seaman, and
to conduct himself like a true patriot. The honor and glory of the
American flag on board the Harrisburg had been intrusted to him, in
common with about a hundred and fifty others; and he was fully alive
to the responsibility which this trust imposed upon him. He had braced
himself up to endure any discomforts and hardships which this new
position might impose upon him; and he was not likely to be dismayed by
a gale of wind or a sharp set-to with a rebel battery, much less by the
ordinary life of a man-of-war’s man.

Jack took his place in the mizzen-top: and, as he ascended the rigging,
he began to think of home; for this was his first night at sea, and
his thoughts naturally reverted to his mother’s cottage in Pinchbrook.
He often thought, in his leisure moments, of the blessed associations
which cluster around the abiding-place of parents and brothers and
sisters. It was a blessed influence which these reflections exerted
upon his mind and heart. They preserved him pure and unsullied from the
contaminations which surrounded him; for, with many true and good men
in the ship, there were those of low and vile tastes, who lived only
for the joys of the present moment. Thus far, our sailor-boy had set
his face and his heart against the vices and sins of his more debased
shipmates.

Of the friends that Jack had made on board the receiving-ship, there
was only one among his top-mates,--Bob Rushington. All three of them
had been rated as petty-officers; for they were really superior hands.
Bob was a captain of the mizzen-top, Ben Blinks was a captain of the
main-top, and Tom Longstone was a quartermaster.

“What are you thinking about, Jack?” said Bob, when they had been in
the top about half an hour, during which time his companions had been
carrying on a conversation in a low tone.

“I was thinking of home,” replied Jack.

“Wishing you were there,” added Bob.

“No: not exactly.”

“You ought to brought your ma with you,” added Sam Becket with a low,
chuckling laugh.

“I’m not homesick,--I hope, not yet,” said Jack; “but it is pleasant to
think of home.”

“So it is--to babies,” sneered Sam. “You haven’t got larn’t yet, my
lad.”

“I never shall learn to forget my home.”

“Yes, you will; just clew down your ideas, and be a man-of-war’s man.
Milk for babies, rum for men, my lad. Have you got any coppers in your
pocket, my boy?”

“I have three,” answered Jack, thrusting his hand down into the depths
of his trousers-pocket. “Do you want them?”

“Perhaps I do: that will depend upon circumstances. Do you see my hand,
Jack,” said Sam Becket; “if you can’t, you can feel it: there it is.”

“Well, what of it?”

“Odd or even?” continued Sam.

“Odd,” replied Jack, not understanding the purpose of his companion.

“Odd it is: there are three of ’em, and they are yours;” and Sam took
Jack’s hand, and attempted to place the cents in it.

“What do you mean by that?” demanded our hero.

“What do I mean? Don’t you know a boom from a bobstay? You said odd,
and the coppers are yours. You won them.”

“Won them!” exclaimed Jack: “I don’t want to gamble.”

“Hush up! Do you want to tell the officer of the deck what we are
about!” protested Sam in an energetic whisper.

“I’m perfectly willing to tell him what I’m about.”

“Well, you young monkey, I should think you were hailing a frigate in
a nor’-wester. You are as green as a yaller squash-bug. Here take the
coppers: they belong to you; you won them.”

“I never gamble,” repeated Jack resolutely, but in a lower tone than
before.

“Take ’em, Jack, or you’re my enemy.”

“I cannot take them. I’d rather go into the brig for a week than gamble
for a single cent.”

“Silence in the mizzen-top!” said Mr. Midshipman Dickey, who had
been pacing the lee side of the quarter-deck, in the capacity of
aide-de-camp to Mr. Granger, the officer of the deck.

“There, you young milksop!” said Sam in an angry whisper. “Do you see
what you have done?”

“Avast there, Becket!” interposed the captain of the top. “Don’t get up
a quarrel with the lad. He means right.”

“I won’t have no quarrel with him; but he won the money, and he must
take it, or he is my enemy.”

“Friend or enemy, I won’t take your money,” added Jack firmly, as he
settled his back against the mizzen-top-mast rigging, and folded his
arms as if to prevent the coppers which he had inadvertently won from
being thrust upon him by force.

“Won’t take ’em: won’t ye, my hearty?”

“No, I will not: I did not mean to win them.”

“Didn’t meant to? Don’t you know what odd and even means?”

“I didn’t know it meant gambling.”

“All I got to say is, that I take it as an insult.”

“I did not mean to insult you.”

“Then take the coppers.”

“I can’t do that.”

“Take the coppers, and give me a chance to win ’em back, and then we’ll
call it square. After that, if you want to go about on the other tack,
all right.”

“I will not gamble to please you or any other man.”

“Very well, my hearty: I’ll sarve you out for this. There’s two ways
to insult a seaman: one is not to drink his grog when he axes you; and
t’other is not to take his money when you’ve won it. You insulted me,
Jack Somers; and I’ll sarve you out the first time the wind comes from
the right quarter. D’ye hear, ye little sniveling rat-catcher? Why
didn’t you bring your ma with you to keep you from falling overboard?”

“Because I can take care of myself, and because I want to keep my
mother out of bad company,” replied Jack sharply.

“Bad company! What do you mean by that, you little splatterbrains? Did
you mean me?”

“I didn’t mean anybody else in the mizzen-top,” answered Jack in a low
but stiff tone.

“Did ye? Then I’ll smash your top-lights!” said Sam, springing forward,
apparently with the intention of inflicting summary vengeance upon his
topmate.

“Avast there, Becket! Now, batten down your gabport, and don’t say
another word. The lad has the rights of it. If he don’t want to play,
he needn’t. It’s agin all orders to play on board. Now let him alone,”
interposed Bob Rushington, taking the angry seaman by the arm.

“I’ll be----”

“Belay all!” said the captain of the top firmly. “If you say another
word about it, I’ll report you to the officer of the deck.”

Becket, in the face of this threat, did not dare to pursue his
vindictive measures any further; and, during the remainder of the
watch in the top, Jack was permitted to consider without interruption
the enormity of the vice of gambling, and the results to which it
inevitably leads.




CHAPTER X.

“MAN OVERBOARD!”


“All the starboard watch, ahoy!” shouted the boatswain’s chief mate, at
eight bells, on the following morning.

Jack rubbed his eyes open as quick as he could, and slipped out of his
hammock; for the first thing that came to his mind was his resolution
always to be prompt and faithful in the discharge of his duties. As he
tumbled up the ladder, and made his way aft to the mizzen-rigging to
relieve the quarter-watch in the top, he saw that Sam Becket was the
next man before him. This circumstance recalled the incident of the
preceding evening, especially as he saw the man who had promised to be
his enemy glancing over his shoulder at him. It was still quite dark;
but Jack saw, or thought he saw, a very malignant expression in the
countenance of his topmate.

He was determined not to give Becket any cause of offence, and
therefore kept well away from him. He permitted his enemy to mount the
rail, and go up several ratlins, before he ventured to follow him,
fearful that the gambler would attempt to “sarve him out” by treading
upon his hands as he went aloft, or kicking him in the head.

“Lively, Jack, lively!” said Bob Rushington, who was next behind him.

“Ay, ay, Bob; but I mean to give my enemy a wide berth.”

“Heave ahead, Jack! Don’t stop there!” added the captain of the top;
for our sailor-boy had halted for a moment till his dangerous companion
should get out of his way.

At that instant, Jack felt the whole weight of Becket come down upon
him, and his hold upon the shrouds was wrenched off. The instinct of
self-preservation prompted him to seize the nearest object, which
happened to be the long legs of Sam Becket. The additional strain upon
the hands of that worthy was more than he was competent to sustain; and
Jack, realizing that he had grasped an insecure substance, released his
hold, and, recovering his balance, leaped down upon the quarter-deck of
the ship.

Sam Becket, unable to obtain a new hold upon the rigging, was pitched
over backwards into the sea. Jack saw with horror the catastrophe which
had overtaken the gambler, and jumped upon the rail to ascertain his
fate.

“Man overboard!” shouted several of the watch.

The officer of the deck gave the orders to the quartermaster at the
wheel necessary for stopping and backing the engines, while the man
stationed at the taffrail for the purpose detached the life-buoy.

Jack Somers stood on the rail, gazing down into the dark and
treacherous sea where his topmate had disappeared. He was a courageous
lad; and, without thinking of the consequences to himself or of his
own weakness, plunged into the water just as Becket rose to the
surface. The latter was but an indifferent swimmer, if he could swim
at all; and, instead of taking his misfortune like a reasonable man,
he commenced kicking and struggling in the most unaccountable manner,
evidently having no control over himself in the agonies of fear.

The steamer went ahead some distance before she stopped; and Jack and
his struggling enemy were left far astern in the rolling waves. Our
hero, as heroes always are, was cool and self-possessed. He could not
help wondering at the stupidity of his topmate in making such a fuss
at such a momentous time, when his safety absolutely depended upon
a careful husbanding of all his strength. But Sam continued to kick
and struggle till his wind gave out; and then, when he could kick and
struggle no more, he began to take the thing more coolly: in other
words, he was on the point of going to the bottom, mystically rendered
in the seamen’s vernacular as “Davy Jones’s locker.”

Jack, who had all the time behaved himself in a very orderly and
circumspect manner, kept his eye on the burning fuze of the life-buoy,
which had been ignited by the act of being detached from its beckets at
the stern of the vessel. It was quite near him; for it had been dropped
into the water the instant the cry which indicated the accident had
sounded through the ship. When Sam showed signs of the exhaustion which
rendered it safe for his topmate to approach him, Jack swam up to him,
and seized him by one of his hands.

The convulsive clutch with which the drowning man closed his hand upon
his enterprising deliverer assured the latter that the danger of being
carried down with him was not yet over. Jack was compelled to “pay out”
well to avoid this peril: but, after one more desperate struggle, the
unfortunate man was quiet again; and Jack succeeded by the exercise
of a great deal of well-expended strength in towing Becket to the
life-buoy, to the supporters of which he secured him as well as he
could.

Jack Somers was not made of iron, though he is the hero of our story;
and, by the time he had placed Becket in a position of comparative
safety, he began to think it was about time for a boat to come to
his relief. He was thoroughly worn out by his exertions; and when
her glanced over the tops of the waves, which were tumbling the
life-buoy about in a very unceremonious manner, he was appalled to see
the steamer apparently a mile off. To add to his consternation, the
pyrotechnic apparatus on the life-buoy had been extinguished, either by
the spray or by the limitation of its material.

The prospect was exceedingly dark and gloomy, and there were some
strong indications that the career of Jack Somers in the navy would be
completed with the close of the tenth chapter. Our sailor-boy could not
help thinking of his mother, and the assurance he had given her that he
was just as safe on board a man-of-war as in the cottage at Pinchbrook;
and perhaps he might have been if he had had the worldly-minded
prudence to remain on the deck of the Harrisburg, instead of trusting
his carcass to the uncertain mercies of an Atlantic sea to save the
life of a worthless fellow who had taken the trouble to publish himself
as his enemy.

It is true, it was a sublime and Christian act to attempt to save
the life of an enemy: but we are quite sure that Jack did not think
of his religion, or reason upon the subject, before he dashed into
the water; though a soul influenced by the pure gospel of love does
not have to consider in an emergency which requires an act of prompt
self-sacrifice. The atmosphere of love with which the Christian
heart surrounds itself inspires the thoughts, words, and deeds; so
that self-sacrifice, like a heavenly impulse, requires no cold and
calculating reflection.

It was a rash act, unquestionably, however noble and sublime it may
appear. It had been performed from impulse. Our sailor-boy had done,
at this time, no more than he had on three similar occasions in his
previous experience, though never under circumstances of so great
peril. To save a boy from a watery grave by jumping over the stern of
a yacht in Pinchbrook Harbor, and leaping from the rail of a ship far
out to sea in the sombre shades of a winter morning, were two entirely
different affairs, as Jack was now fully assured while clinging to the
life-buoy exhausted and chilled.

We might transcribe some of the great thoughts which rushed through the
mind of our hero, or give words to the simple prayer which his heart
rather than his lips breathed to Him who holds the waters in the hollow
of his hand; but, while every moment seemed a week, he saw the lights
of the ship moving on the rolling ocean. The sight gave him hope; and
he watched them with an intensity of feeling which no one, not clinging
to a life-buoy in mid-ocean, can appreciate or comprehend.

But the lights moved not towards him. Those on board had lost his
bearings, or he had drifted far from the spot where he had first
committed himself to the waves. He was chilled by the cold, and
exhausted by the violence of his exertions; and when he saw the steamer
backing by him, and too distant to be hailed, he felt a sinking
sensation of despair creep into his soul, which began to drive the
life from his body. When all hope seemed to have departed, a sound,
welcome as the music of the flowing rill to the thirsty, dying pilgrim,
attracted his attention, and gave him strength for one more struggle
for life. It was the measured thump of oars in the rowlocks of a boat.
He looked in the direction from which the sound came, and discovered a
blue light, which had just been fired, casting a lurid glare upon the
rolling billows.

“Boat ahoy!” he shouted with all the strength of his lungs; but his
voice sounded to him like that of a pygmy. He repeated the call several
times, and his heart was gladdened by the answering hail of his friends.

“Where--away!” came in hoarse tones across the long, sweeping surges of
the ocean.

“Boat ahoy!” repeated Jack with desperate earnestness; and he continued
to shout, while the gleams of rapidly expanding hope seemed to shoot
warmth and life through his chilled veins.

“I see him!” shouted the bow-oarsman, as the boat approached the buoy,
still bravely bearing up its freight of human life and hope. “Steady,
cockswain! Lay on your oars! Avast pulling! Back her! You will run ’em
down!”

By this time the boat-hook of the bowman was made fast to the buoy, and
in another moment Jack and his companion in misery were dragged into
the boat.

“God bless you. Jack, my boy!” exclaimed Ben Blinks, folding our hero
in his arms as a mother does her child.

“Give way!” said the cockswain; and the boat came about, and pulled to
the ship.

On the passage, Ben worked vigorously upon the benumbed limbs of Jack,
while two others performed a similar service for Beckett. When the boat
reached the gangway, our sailor-boy was able to grasp the manropes,
and ascend to the deck with the assistance of Ben Blinks; but Sam was
hoisted up in slings just like a barrel of hard-tack. The sufferers
were both handed over to the care of Dr. Sawsett; while the boats were
recalled, hoisted up to the davits again, and the ship went on her
course as though nothing had happened.

In a couple of hours, Jack Somers was as good as new; and Beckett, when
“the water was pumped out of him,” as Ben Blinks expressed it, began to
improve, and, after “general quarters,” was able to give an account of
his cruise.

It had been whispered about among the people that there was some foul
play connected with the affair; and, the report having reached Mr.
Bankhead through the officer of the deck, he proceeded to examine into
the case at the first practicable moment.

“How came you to fall overboard, my man?” demanded the executive
officer. “You are an ordinary seaman, and you ought to be able to go
aloft without accident.”

“Foul play, sir!” replied Beckett in surly tones.

“What do you mean?”

“The topman below me pulled me off the rigging, sir.”

“Who was he?”

“Somers, sir,” replied Beckett with the most unblushing effrontery.

“Somers!” exclaimed Mr. Bankhead, astonished at the charge against his
_protégé_.

“Yes, sir: he caught hold of my legs, and pulled me off the rigging,”
added he, looking up from the hammock in the sick-bay, where the
examination was in progress.

“Do you know who saved your life?--who jumped overboard after you?”

“No, sir. Who was it?”

“No matter who it was. Did Somers pull you off by accident?”

“No, sir; I think not. We had some trouble in the mizzen-top last
night, and I think he has a grudge against me. He was sarvin’ me out,
sir.”

“Marine, pass the word for Somers,” added Mr. Bankhead.

Jack presently appeared, and had no difficulty in divining the occasion
of the summons. The first-lieutenant stated the charge, which Jack
promptly denied, giving a full explanation of the affair as it was.

“Pass the word for Rushington,” said Mr. Bankhead; and the captain of
the mizzen-top appeared, and substantiated Jack’s story. The trouble in
the top was also ventilated.

“They are lying on me, sir!” said Beckett.

“You black-hearted scoundrel!” exclaimed Mr. Bankhead warmly; for his
indignation could be no longer controlled. “Would Somers push you
overboard one minute, and dive after you the next?”

The wretch was taken all aback when he learned that his injured topmate
had saved his life at the peril of his own; and, having convicted the
culprit, Mr. Bankhead went on deck, followed by Jack and Rushington;
for the ship was now approaching the capes of Virginia.




CHAPTER XI.

THE COCKSWAIN OF THE CAPTAIN’S GIG.


The Harrisburg stood in between the capes, and, in the course of the
forenoon, dropped her anchor off Fortress Monroe. Jack, from his lofty
perch in the mizzen-top, obtained a fine view of that celebrated
fortification, of which he had heard and read so much. As he gazed
upon the “sacred soil” of Virginia, now consecrated by the ashes of
heroic martyrs who had fallen in defence of the glorious old flag, his
thoughts reverted to his soldier-brother; for there had occurred the
stirring events in which Tom Somers had been an actor.

Jack was proud of his brother, and thankful that he had done his duty
bravely and faithfully in the army. He hoped he should soon have an
opportunity to do something for the old flag; and, as he glanced at the
ensign floating at the peak of the Harrisburg, he felt more than ever
devoted to the good cause, and ready to die in defence of the cherished
emblem.

There was Virginia; and Tom could not be a great way off. He longed to
see him; and he could not help thinking how smart he should feel in
presenting himself before his soldier-brother in the uniform of the
navy. But everything was very uncertain in time of war; and a bullet
might kill Tom, a splinter or a round-shot place the gloomy “D. D.”[B]
against his own name on the ships books. What would his poor mother do
if either of them should be killed? His eye grew dim at the thought.
His father, too, if living, was probably somewhere in Virginia; and
these reflections had a very strong tendency to give him a fit of the
blues. He felt like crying a little,--just as though a few tears would
do him good.

“What’s the matter, Jack?” demanded Bob Rushington. “You are foggy
about the top-lights.”

“I was thinking of my father and my brother,” replied Jack.

“Well, aren’t it pleasant to think of, my lad?”

“I haven’t seen my father for nearly a year. I suppose he is in the
hands of the rebels, if he is alive.”

“Don’t cry about it, Jack! The old gentleman will turn up all right one
of these days,” added Bob in sympathizing tones.

Just then, the boatswain’s whistle piped away the crew of the captain’s
gig; and Jack, who was one of them, ran down the mizzen-rigging, and
was one of the first to report on the quarter-deck. In anticipation
of this duty, the oarsmen of the gig had been ordered to dress in
clean clothes. They were young, fine-looking, athletic men, who had
been selected, on account of their personal appearance, to pull the
commander of the Harrisburg wherever his duty or his inclination should
lead him.

While the men were waiting for orders, Jack saw Lieutenant Bankhead
point to him; and the captain seemed to be very anxious to have
him carefully designated, so that he could identify him. Now, our
hero, like all brave and noble-hearted young men, was as modest and
bashful as a school-girl. His cheek glowed with blushes when he
became conscious that he was the subject of the officer’s remarks. He
wished himself at that moment on the mizzen-top-gallant yard-arm, or
surrounded by the favoring darkness of the fore-hold.

The idea of being looked at and particularly noticed by so magnificent
a person as Captain Mainwright, commander of the United States steamer
Harrisburg, was rather too much for Jack’s susceptible nature; but
I am happy to inform my sympathizing readers that he did not faint,
or commit any other foolish act. It wasn’t his fault that he was a
handsome young man; that he was well-formed, and had an exceedingly
pleasant countenance, with bright blue eyes, through which his soul,
as the novelists would say, proclaimed its own nobility. I am not
quite sure it was his fault that he blushed; but, considering his
youth and inexperience, he may well be pardoned for this display of
feminine weakness. Jack was opposed to blushing on principle, and he
felt exceedingly awkward while his cheek tingled with the warm blood
that did not belong there; and, in his efforts to appear indifferent,
he was on the point of committing a breach of discipline, and of
sinning against the immaculate stainlessness of the quarter-deck, by
whistling,--an expedient to which people on shore as well as on board
ship resort to make their looks belie their actions.

If it was a sin to blush, the captain and the first-lieutenant of the
Harrisburg had determined not to see it, or not to punish it on the
present occasion; for they continued their remarks, without the least
regard to the agony they were causing our sailor-boy. They were even
cruel enough to utter some very flattering commendations upon the
conduct of Jack that morning, in a tone so loud, that the whole gig’s
crew couldn’t help hearing them.

“Bully for you, Jack Somers!” said the stroke-oarsman in a whisper.

“Poh!” replied Jack contemptuously; but, at the same time, his cheeks
glowed with a ruddier tint, and his heart beat a more lively tattoo
against his ribs.

The first and second cutter and the captain’s gig were already moored
to the swinging-boom, to which the boats of a man-of-war are fastened
when she lies in port. Jack wished the order would be given to pipe
over the side into the gig; for he felt just as though he should sink
through the deck-planks, if this scene continued much longer. But there
stood the captain and Mr. Bankhead, talking about him, just as though
he had been some great man. The executive officer was evidently giving
his superior a history of Jack’s cruise on the life-buoy; and our hero
thought he was spinning out the yarn to a very unnecessary length.

At last the story came to an end. The two great men of the ship wheeled
round upon their heels, and walked aft. They paused a few moments at
the taffrail, and continued the conversation in a more earnest manner.
Suddenly the captain wheeled round again,--just as naval officers do
who have spent years of their valuable lives in pacing the weather-side
of the quarter-deck,--and walked briskly towards the boat’s crew, who
were--all but Jack Somers--patiently waiting for a further expression
of his mighty will and pleasure.

“Cockswain!” said Captain Mainwright sharply; for he was an officer who
always spoke quick and to the point.

“He’s on the sick-list, your honor,” replied the stroke-oarsman,
touching his cap.

“Sick!” exclaimed the captain with well-feigned astonishment; for
everyone of the gig’s crew was perfectly well aware that the captain
knew where his cockswain was at that particular moment, and also what
had occasioned his sudden illness.

“He’s very bad, your honor,” added the stroke-oarsman, touching his hat
again with a smile which indicated that he was presumptuous enough to
understand and appreciate the joke that the majesty of the quarter-deck
was engaged in perpetrating.

“What business has my cockswain to be sick?” added he, turning to the
executive officer; for the captain of a man-of-war never jests with the
denizens of the berth-deck.

“Mutiny!” replied Mr. Bankhead, with a smile.

“What’s his name?” asked the captain, who could not be expected to
know the cognomen of so humble an individual as the cockswain of his
own gig, especially as the ship had been in commission less than a
fortnight.

“Becket,” replied the first-lieutenant, who might possibly have
consulted the station-bill within half an hour. At any rate, his
information was sufficiently accurate to enable him to answer the
question without any embarrassing hesitation.

“That’s the man that fell overboard, and was saved by Somers!” added
Captain Mainwright with apparent astonishment; but it is more than
probable that he was not half so much astonished as he appeared to be.

“The same, sir.”

“He had no business to fall overboard, and I shall disrate him for
doing so.”

Mr. Bankhead bowed with becoming reverence to the fiat of his superior.

“I want a new cockswain,” continued the captain.

“Bully for you, Jack Somers!” said the stroke-oarsman in an awful
whisper.

“Somers!” said the captain in a tone which seemed to be fearfully
majestic to our blushing, trembling sailor-boy.

Jack stepped forward, and touched his cap, as much awed as though he
had stood in the sublime presence of the Autocrat of all the Russias.

“Somers, I am told you did a foolish thing this morning.”

Jack touched his cap again, as deferentially as before; and the
captain’s view of the act, at least as he expressed it in his remark,
was really a relief to him; for he was one of that sort, who, if it
were not for the name of the thing, had rather be blamed than praised.

“Never jump overboard after a man again, if he is the best friend you
have in the world,” added the captain, in a tone so decided, that the
gig’s crew began to pity poor Jack, and to think that the captain was
using him very harshly after he had behaved so handsomely.

It is true, Tom Longstone and Ben Blinks had told him the same thing;
and their advice must certainly have been good, since it was enforced
by such high authority as the captain. Jack touched his cap before the
admonition of his commander, and really began to think that he had done
a mean thing, instead of a noble and magnanimous deed.

“Never do it again, Somers,” continued the captain. “We can’t afford
to lose a man like you, especially for such a fellow as Beckett.
Henceforth you will be rated as cockswain of my gig. Pipe away your
crew, Somers!”

Jack would not have been more astonished if the Minnesota, which lay at
anchor near the Harrisburg, had poured a broadside into the ship, than
he was to find himself so suddenly and unexpectedly promoted to the
elegant and dignified office of cockswain of the captain’s gig. He was
amazed, confounded, bewildered, at the magnificent position to which he
had been elevated.

“Thank your honor!” stammered Jack, pulling off his cap, and bowing as
low as though he had been in the presence of the Sultan of Turkey.

Captain Mainwright turned, and walked aft; leaving Jack standing like a
statue, as immovable as the mainmast of the ship.

“Away with you, Jack,” said Mr. Bankhead in a low tone, as he walked by
him towards the waist.

“Gig-men, away!” added Jack, giving his first order in virtue of his
new position.

He was perfectly familiar with the duties of a cockswain, though he
had never performed them, or even, in his wildest dreams of future
distinction, aspired to such a splendid position. In a moment more,
he was over the side with his crew, and the gig was brought up to the
gangway, ready to receive its distinguished passenger. While he was
waiting, the new hand appointed to fill his place entered the boat.

“Bully for you, Jack!” said the stroke-oarsman, while the new cockswain
was adjusting the cushions in the stern-sheets of the gig.

“Good on your head, Jack!” added another. “You deserved it; and there
is not a man in the ship that won’t be glad of it.”

“That’s so.”

“Except Becket.”

“Becket’s only fit for shark’s meat,” added the first speaker.

Jack was very glad to find that there was no ill feeling towards him
among his shipmates on account of what had been done, which added
very much to his satisfaction. He was as happy as a boy of seventeen
could be; and he longed for the time when he could sit down on the
mess-bench, and hear Tom Longstone’s comments on the matter. And what
a topic for a letter to his mother! Wouldn’t she feel good when she
heard all about it! He intended to write that letter as soon as he
returned from the shore; but in it he intended to promise his mother
never to jump overboard after a shipmate again, in accordance with the
injunction of the captain and the advice of his best friends. He should
have a word to say about the increased pay he would receive in his new
capacity.

While he was thinking over the bright prospects which had suddenly
dawned upon him, Mr. Dickey, midshipman,--the elegant and accomplished
bantam of the quarter-deck,--came over the gangway, and installed
himself in the stern-sheets as the officer of the boat. Jack paid him
the homage due to so important a personage, and the distinguished Mr.
Dickey subsided upon the cushions in languid consciousness of his own
magnificence. On ordinary occasions, our hero could not look upon this
notable young gentleman without a strong tendency to exercise his
risibles: but at this time he actually felt a profound respect for him;
probably because his own position, being a peg higher, placed himself
so much nearer to the ineffable grandeur of that held by Mr. Midshipman
Dickey.

The captain came over the side next, and was received with due honor by
all in the boat.

“Toss!” said Jack. “Let fall! Give way!” and the gig was dashing over
the waves towards the sallyport of the fortress.

Our innocent readers must not suppose, from the elevated position to
which our hero had been exalted, that he was admitted to the counsels
of the captain. Not even the magnificent Mr. Dickey could aspire to
this honor; and both of them had to wait in the boat till Captain
Mainwright had finished his business on shore.




CHAPTER XII.

SHIP ISLAND.


Captain Mainwright remained so long in the fort, that it is quite
probable he forgot that Mr. Midshipman Dickey was waiting for him at
the pier. Perhaps it would have made no difference with him, if he had
thought of it: at any rate, he stopped a long time; and, when he came
down to the boat, he did not apologize to Mr. Dickey for detaining him
so long. Mr. Dickey did not seem to be offended with him for his want
of consideration; for he touched his cap as politely, when the captain
stepped into the boat, as though his patience had not been sorely tried.

Jack Somers touched his cap very reverently; for he was so grateful to
the commander of the Harrisburg for his kindness to him, that he would
willingly have waited all day and all night in the boat for him. As
Captain Mainwright was engaged in the business of the nation, it is
likely that he did not care whether Mr. Dickey was satisfied or not.
In fact, officers in the navy are not in the habit of consulting the
wishes of their inferiors: and we are inclined to think that they are
perfectly right in doing so; for, if they attempted to please all who
chose to differ from them, the old flag would be the greatest sufferer
by the operation.

Jack wanted very much to know how long the ship was to remain at
Fortress Monroe: but he did not think it prudent to ask the question
even of Mr. Bankhead, much less of the captain; for, even if these
gentlemen had known themselves, they had a provoking habit of keeping
things to themselves. It is not certain that any officer below the
captain knew when or where the ship was going; and it was a fact, that
not a man outside of the cabin and wardroom had the remotest idea
whether they were going to Gibraltar or the South. This may seem very
strange to our readers; but the destination of a ship-of-war is seldom
made public in time of war. Sometimes the seamen can form a tolerably
correct idea from the amount and kind of stores put on board, and
other circumstances. Vessels often sail with sealed orders, which the
captain is permitted to open only when the ship reaches a certain
position. The information is not often communicated to the people,
though they sometimes obtain it by accident.

On board the Harrisburg, everybody wondered where they were going; but
the whole subject was a sealed book to them, and Jack was obliged to
content himself without knowing anything at all about the matter. As he
stood behind Captain Mainwright, with the tiller-ropes in his hands,
he tried to read the expression of his face; yet, when he gave the
order to “toss oars,” he made no headway whatever in the operation. The
captain’s face was as uncommunicative as his lips.

The side was manned when the monarch of the quarter-deck went over
the gangway, and was received in due form by the officer of the deck,
and others who were present. The commander of a man-of-war is always
received with a great deal of ceremony when he comes on board of the
ship, though he may not have been absent fifteen minutes. The “side
boys” form a double line, and touch their caps as he passes through the
lines. He is treated with a great deal of respect at all times. Every
man, from the first-lieutenant to the third-class boys, touches his
cap to him, as every officer and man must do when he approaches his
superior.

Boat-keepers at the swinging-boom stand up, and salute officers
arriving or departing in boats. If Captain Mainwright’s gig, in
going to or coming from the shore, had met a boat containing a
flag-officer,--that is, the commander of a squadron,--etiquette would
require that his crew should toss oars (hold them up, perpendicularly),
and the captain would touch his cap to his superior. Commissioned
officers, in passing him, would lie on their oars, and warrant-officers
would toss oars to him. These are tokens of respect which every
inferior must yield to his superior. Custom or particular regulations
adjust all these matters with the most punctilious care.

When Captain Mainwright had gone up the side, and the accomplished
Mr. Dickey had also disappeared over the bulwarks, Jack secured his
boat, and went on deck. As he passed along the crowd of idlers, he was
roughly congratulated upon his good fortune. He made his way down to
the berth-deck, where he found Tom Livingstone.

“Give us your flipper, Jack!” said the veteran, as he rose from the
mess-bench. “I give ye joy, Jack! It’s a good thing to have someone in
the wardroom to speak a good word for you.”

“Then you think I owe my promotion to the favor of Mr. Bankhead?”
replied Jack, as Tom wrung his hand.

“Sartin of it, my pretty piper.”

“Then I would rather throw up my new rating,” added our hero.

“Why, you lollipop! I don’t say you didn’t desarve it; for every
man aboard knows as how you did. It is not every man that desarves
promotion as gets it.”

“I don’t ask any favors,” continued Jack.

“Yes, you do, my lively gigsman. You want your desarts, and you’ll find
that’s the greatest favor you can get.”

“I don’t see it in that light.”

“Are you going for to kick because you’ve got a good friend in the
wardroom?” demanded Tom sternly.

“No; but I don’t want any favors not bestowed upon the rest of the men.”

“It’s all right: no mistake about that. The whole crew would like to
give you three cheers for what you did; and every mother’s son on ’em
would vote to make you boatswain this minute, if they could.”

“Doubted!”

“Yes, they would: we’ll except that piratical Becket, or such car’on as
he is. For all that, my merry to’gallant-man, kissin’ goes by favor.
There’s a score of old sheet-anchor men for’ad that has weathered Cape
Horn a dozen times; melted the grease out of their bodies in the East
Indies, and been froze up in the arctic; and what are they now? Able
seamen, Jack,--that’s all. They don’t get so much pay as you do, that
never went out of sight of land in a man-of-war. You’re lucky, Jack,
and you ought to be thankful for what you’ve got.”

“I am thankful Tom. But why didn’t the captain choose a cockswain from
these sheet-anchor men?”

“’Cause kissin’ goes by favor, my breezy little topman. But bless
your heart, Jack, them old fellows aren’t good for cockswains. They
want lively, brisk, handsome little fellers like you for cockswains
of the commodore’s barge and the cap’n’s gig. Besides, them fellers
are gettin’ old and stiff, and stow away grog enough to float a
seventy-four. You’ve got what you desarve, Jack; and you ought to be
satisfied.”

“So I am; but I don’t want any man to think that I was promoted when I
didn’t deserve it.”

“You did desarve it.”

“That’s so!” added Bob Rushington with emphasis.

And so said the rest of the mess: for, while the argument was in
progress, the crew had been piped to supper; and Jack had no reason to
complain of a want of sympathy among his mess-mates.

The Harrisburg remained at Fortress Monroe five days; at the end of
which time, she went to sea again. Though the prophets and wise men of
the berth-deck indulged in all sorts of speculations in regard to the
destination of the ship, nothing was known in regard to the future,
except that she was headed to the southward. Whether she was going to
serve as a blockader, or to engage in more active work, was as much a
mystery as ever. If the quarter-deck was any wiser than the berth-deck,
it preserved its own secrets with religious care.

Three days after she sailed, the ship approached the land again; and
Jack learned that she was going into Port-Royal Harbor. A little later,
he saw the forts, on either side of the bay, which had been captured by
the squadron of Commodore Dupont. From the mizzen-top he saw the stars
and stripes floating over them; and his heart beat a livelier pulsation
as he recalled the glorious events of that heroic day.

The ship came to anchor in the harbor, and the captain’s gig was again
in demand. Jack saw a great many things which interested and instructed
him; but no events of sufficient importance to be recorded in these
pages occurred during his stay.

From Port Royal, the Harrisburg went to Key West on the following
day; thence to Havana, where she exchanged salutes with the English,
French, and Spanish men-of-war lying in the harbor; and Jack had a
fine opportunity to observe the perfection of ceremonial observances
which prevail in the navy. Admirals and commodores were as thick as
snow-flakes at Christmas; and such a banging of great guns, such a
dipping of ensigns; such a tossing of oars, even the old salts had
never seen before. Every other man he met seemed to be an admiral; and
he had nearly worn out his cap in touching it to the foul anchors that
glittered upon the shoulders of those who passed his station.

The last time he pulled the captain off from the shore, he heard him
tell a gentleman with him that the Harrisburg was ordered to Ship
Island to relieve the flag-ship Niagara; and, the same day, she got
under weigh again.

“We are in for’t now, Jack. We shall have some music afore long,”
said Tom Longstone, when Jack reported his information to the old
quartermaster. “I’ll bet a month’s pay we pitch into Mobile afore April
Fool’s Day.”

“I hope so,” replied Jack.

“Perhaps you won’t feel so good about it when the time comes. You don’t
know what ’tis, Jack, to see round-shot smashin’ through the sides of
the ship, tearing off splinters, and scatterin’ ’em like kindlin’-wood
all over the decks, knocking over the best men at the guns. We don’t
any on us know much about it.”

“I’m ready for it, if we can only knock Mobile, or any other rebel
place, in pieces. I hoped I should be in when Charleston was taken.”

“Time enough yet, Jack.”

If our hero could have known in what bloody and exciting scenes he was
soon to engage, he would have been satisfied to spend the intervening
time in preparing for the future. Every day the men were drilled at the
guns, and in the use of the cutlass and boarding-pike; so that, the
longer the trying ordeal of battle was deferred, the better prepared
were the crew to meet it.

After a passage of four days, the Harrisburg arrived at Ship Island;
which my young readers are aware is little more than a sand-bar off
the eastern coast of Louisiana. She was now nearer the rebels than
she had been before; and certain little steamers, flaunting the
Confederate flag, were occasionally seen near the land, as they came
out to ascertain what Uncle Sam was doing at the island. They were very
prudent, however; and seldom placed themselves within range of the
heavy guns on board the ships-of-war.

After the ship had been at this station about ten days, a
boat-expedition was organized; though its object, as usual, was a
profound secret to all except the officers. From various indications,
the enterprise promised to be an exciting affair. The first, second,
and third cutters were to compose the boat-party; and, besides the
regular crews, a limited number of seamen were to engage in the
expedition. Forthwith there was a great struggle among the men to
obtain places in the boats; for there was hardly a man on board who
did not wish to be counted in. The men had all been selected by Mr.
Bankhead; and Jack Somers was terribly disappointed when he found that
he was “left out in the cold.”

Tom Longstone was to go in the first cutter, and our hero bemoaned to
him his sad fate in being compelled to stay behind.

“Never mind, Jack; plenty of time yet. It will be your turn next,”
replied Tom in soothing tones.

“Let me go in your place, Tom,” asked Jack, half in jest, and half in
earnest.

“Can’t do that,” replied the veteran, shaking his head. “If there’s
any chance for a fight, I mustn’t lose it. Besides, you may lose your
number in the mess if you go.”

“I’ll risk that. Don’t you think I can get a chance to go?”

“Perhaps you can find someone that will give you his chance, my little
piper.”

“Who wants to go?” said a voice at the mess-table behind them.

“I do,” answered Jack promptly, and before he saw who asked the
question.

“Jack Somers?”

“Yes.”

Jack now found that the speaker was Sam Becket, his topmate, who had
been disrated on account of the affair off the capes of Virginia. He
had fully recovered from the effects of his involuntary bath on that
eventful morning. Popular opinion on board the Harrisburg had set hard
against him; and he had found that the way of the transgressor is hard.
Since his recovery, he had performed his duty in surly silence. If he
felt any gratitude towards his topmate for saving his life, he never
manifested it by word or look; and Jack and his friends had hardly
noticed him.

“You can have my place, Jack, if you want it bad,” added Becket,
without looking at the person he addressed.

“Thank you: I’m very much obliged to you, Becket,” said Jack,
astonished at this self-sacrifice on the part of his enemy.

“I owe you one for what you did that morning,” continued the
ex-cockswain of the captain’s gig.

“That’s handsome!” said Tom Longstone.

“I’d like to go myself,” added Becket; “but I’ll give way to Somers. He
did better nor that by me.”

“That’s a fact, Becket. If it hadn’t been for the lad, you’d ’a been
fish-bait in twenty minutes.”

“Nobody knows it better nor I do. I was wrong that night in the top,
and I axes his pardon.”

“There’s my hand, Becket,” said Jack heartily.

“You haven’t anything agin me, have you, Jack?” asked Becket, as he
took the proffered hand.

“Not a thing.”

“You are welcome to my chance in the first cutter.”

“Thank you, Becket.”

“But you must get leave of the first-lieutenant,” added Tom. “How do
you know but he has something for you to do? ’Spose the cap’n wants
to go ashore: then where’s his cockswain? Perhaps he kept you back on
purpose.”

Jack’s ardor was a little dampened by this suggestion: but he
determined to adopt it; for Tom’s view seemed to be correct. Though
the ship was at anchor, her fires were banked, and her regular watches
were kept. The boat-expedition was to start very early in the morning;
and Jack was fearful that he should have no opportunity to obtain the
desired permission.

When the starboard watch was called at eight bells, he was so fortunate
as to find Mr. Bankhead on deck; and he respectfully presented his
petition. The first-lieutenant promised to consult the captain; and the
result was, that the permission was granted; and Jack was as happy as
though he were going to a feast, instead of to a work which might be
bloody and fatal.




CHAPTER XIII.

THE BOAT-EXPEDITION.


“All the starboard watch, ahoy!” piped the boatswain’s mate at eight
bells on the following morning.

Jack turned out of his hammock, eager to engage in the expedition which
was to start at this time. Hastening to the spar-deck, he heard the
order given to clear away the cutters. The men and material for the
enterprise were ready. Boat-howitzers were placed in the bows of the
cutters; a supply of ammunition, provisions, and water, was taken on
board of them; and the men embarked.

Mr. Granger, the second-lieutenant, was to command the expedition,
with the fourth-lieutenant in the third cutter, and a master’s mate in
the fourth. It was the first active service in which either officers
or men had been engaged during the cruise; and everyone, from the
second-lieutenant down to the powder-boys, was anxious to distinguish
himself, and each one felt competent to whip two or three rebels in
any fair encounter. There was pluck enough in the expedition to have
supplied three times as large a company: and it was fortunate for them
and for the Government that Mr. Granger was a prudent and sensible man;
otherwise the expedition might have taken it into its head to attack
the city of New Orleans or Mobile, or pitched into Fort Pike, Fort
Gaines, or some other rebel stronghold in the vicinity.

When the boats were ready to start, Mr. Granger ordered the second and
third cutters alongside the first, in which he was seated himself. The
officers in command of the other boats had already been instructed in
regard to their duties; and Mr. Granger proceeded to give a few general
directions for the conduct of the men. The oars had been “tossed,”
and the crews listened in respectful silence to the remarks of the
commander of the expedition.

“Cast off!” said the cockswains of the cutters; and the three boats
separated, so as to permit each to use its oars.

“Let fall!” added the cockswains. “Give way!”

The cutters dashed away, the men pulling with a will. As yet, they
knew not where they were going; and, aside from the natural curiosity
all men feel, it is not probable that they cared, provided they were
introduced to some stirring scene which would enable them to do
something for the old flag, and furnish an opportunity for the daring
spirits to distinguish themselves in a hand-to-hand fight.

Jack Somers stowed himself away under the lee of Tom Longstone, who
was in the same boat with him; partly because the old quartermaster
wished “to keep an eye on him;” and partly because the veteran was a
sage and a prophet, and Jack wanted the benefit of his observations and
instructions.

“Do you know where we are going, Tom?” asked Jack in a low voice; for
loud talking was not permitted.

“Haven’t the least idea, my lad,” replied Tom in a whisper.

“Where do you suppose?”

“The likes of you and me, my darling, are not to know anything about
it. Bless you, Jack, Mr. Granger hasn’t asked my opinion about
anything, and hasn’t even told me where we are going!”

“Can’t you tell in what direction we are pulling?”

“As to the matter of that, my honey-bee, we are heading due north.”

“What do you _think_ we are going to do?”

“I have not the leastest idee in natur’. May be we are goin’ to capter
Mobile; that lays off here away somewhere: but I don’t think we are,
Jack.”

“Of course we are not,” replied Jack impatiently.

“May be, Fort Pike: I heard one of the jollies say there was such a
battery or fort in here somewhere. I don’t think we are, though.”

“You know we are not, Tom.”

“May be we are going across the country to strike New Orleans,”
chuckled Tom; “but I don’t believe we are.”

“You know very well we are not going to do anything of the kind. You
are an old seaman. I didn’t know but you could tell, from the arms and
other things in the boat, what kind of work we are to perform.”

“Well, my baby, seein’ as how you want to know so bad, I’ll give you my
opinion. ’Taint worth much; but old Tom’s always ready to give the best
he’s got.”

The veteran spoke in low tones; and the seamen near him gathered closer
around him, so as to hear the opinion of the sage of the first cutter.
Tom took off his cap, scratched his bald head as if to stimulate his
intellectual powers, and sharpen his judgment up to the requisite pitch
for the important decision he was about to render.

“I don’t know where we’re goin’, or what we’re goin’ to do, as I
said before,” continued Tom, when all heads were bent down to catch
the words of wisdom when they should fall from his venerated lips.
“Howsomever, in my opinion, we’re goin’ to take a look at the rebels,
or else to attack some shore-battery, or else some steamboat or sailing
vessel. Now, my lads, you’ve got my opinion: so don’t pester me no
more.”

Old Tom indulged in a low chuckle as he settled back on the thwart, and
glanced around him to discover in the darkness how his opinion had been
received.

“Bully for you, Tom! I thought you knowed all about this work,” laughed
an old sheet-anchor man.

Jack gave up in despair, and was obliged to content himself with
knowing no more than the law allows. The men at the oars were relieved
every hour; for it was a long pull before they reached the scene of
operations. At eight o’clock, the expedition came into a broad bay
extending into the mainland. The boats were passing between two
headlands about two miles apart, when a cannon-shot dropped into the
water a short distance ahead of the first cutter.

“There’s music for you!” said Tom Longstone.

“There’s some more!” added the sheet-anchor man.

This was the first time that Jack Somers had ever listened to the
whizzing of a cannon-ball; and the sensation was decidedly novel,
if not agreeable. It was different from what our sailor-boy had
anticipated. One of the ugly missiles might hit the first cutter, and
smash her in pieces, killing half her human freight. There was no
chance to strike a blow in self-defence, or even to fire a shot in
return from the howitzers; for the battery from which the shot came was
situated on the headland on the port-hand, and more than a mile distant.

Mr. Granger being a prudent man, and unwilling to expose the boats’
crews to the fire of the battery, gave orders for them to pull up into
the favoring shelter of a small island, several of which appeared near
the entrance to the bay. The fort then opened with shell; to whose
hideous screaming, Jack and a majority of the party listened for the
first time. The second-lieutenant landed upon the island, and with his
glass made a careful examination of the battery and the shores of the
bay.

“We’re in the stocks!” said Tom Longstone with the peculiar low chuckle
with which he often delivered himself.

“We shall not stay here long!” added Jack nervously; for the shells did
not sound pleasantly to his ear.

“You aren’t afraid, are you, my little lamb?” demanded Tom.

“Of course I’m not afraid,” replied Jack with a deep blush; “but I
don’t like to lie here, and be shot at, without a chance of paying off
the rebels in their own coin.”

“It aren’t pleasant to lay still under fire, my boy; but that’s a part
of a good seaman’s duty, and he must take things as they come. Don’t be
alarmed, Jack; they won’t hit you.”

“They are just as likely to hit me as they are anyone else. I should
like something to do, if it’s nothing more than pulling an oar.”

“That’s cause you’re narvous, Jack.”

Perhaps there were not many in the boats who were not nervous as they
listened to the screaming shells.

It was a new experience to them; and it is not in the nature of man to
stand in the presence of death, without being moved by the peril. Some
of the crew laughed, and made fun of the dangerous missiles as they
screeched through the air, or burst at very inconvenient distances from
them; but it is probable that those who laughed the loudest were the
most afraid, and therefore struggled the hardest to avoid making an
exhibition of their real feelings.

Tom Longstone and a few others had been under fire before; and they
were as cool and self-possessed as though they had been on board a
receiving-ship in a peaceful port. Mr. Granger, who had recently been
promoted for gallant conduct, seemed to be perfectly calm, paying no
attention to the shells which were dropping around him. The rebels in
the fort had not yet got the range of the island; and their firing was
not accurate, though it was rapidly improving. At last, the commander
of the expedition finished his examination, and walked toward the boats.

The crews of the cutters watched him with eager interest: and most
of them believed, perhaps some hoped, that the expedition was to be
abandoned; for they did not see what three boats could do while exposed
to the fire of the rebel battery, whose guns commanded the waters of
the bay. Mr. Granger, Mr. McBride, and the master’s mate from the third
cutter, held a short consultation on the shore, out of the hearing of
the men. When it was ended, each returned to his boat, and orders were
given to cast off. It was a moment of deep anxiety to all the men; for
the question of success or failure rested upon the decision of the
officers.

The boats shoved off from the land; and, when the men gave way, instead
of going about, they were headed up the bay. There was a strong
inclination to give three cheers manifested by the more ardent spirits;
but it was quickly repressed by a sharp word from the second-lieutenant.

The boats were kept as much as possible within the shelter of the range
of islands on the easterly side of the bay, and in a few moments they
had passed out of reach of the shells; for the gunners in the fort,
probably enveloped in their own smoke, had not discovered the change of
position made by the boats.

“Steamer on the port-quarter, sir!” shouted Mr. McBride from the second
cutter.

“I see her!” replied Mr. Granger.

“Now look out for squalls, my hearties!” said Tom Longstone in a low
voice, as he glanced at the new enemy, which was just emerging from
behind a headland in the direction indicated by the fourth-lieutenant.

“We shall have a fight yet!” added Jack uneasily; for, on a nearer
approach, a hand-to-hand fight with the rebels was not quite so
sentimental an affair as it had seemed to be at a distance.

We do not mean to accuse our hero of being afraid; but the terrible
inactivity of the moment was almost insupportable. He wanted to pitch
right in, and do “a big thing.” He wanted something to do, so that he
could prove to himself and his companions that he was no coward. To sit
in the boat like a block of wood, and be shot at by the rebels, was
wretched business; and he hoped Mr. Granger would pull out, and order
the boats’ crews to board the steamer, and not permit her to stand off
and pelt them with shot and shell.

“It will be a smart fight, too,” added Tom.

“Ay, ay; that it will. The steamer’s cut us off! I’ll tell you what,
Tom: Mr. Granger has got us into a tight place!” replied Grummet, the
sheet-anchor man.

“Let him alone; he knows what he’s about,” answered the veteran.

“Don’t ye see, Tom, the steamer can stand off, and whittle us up into
inch-pieces; and we can’t board, nor nothin’?”

“Leave all that to Mr. Granger,” persisted Tom, whose long experience
had begotten confidence in his officers.

Under the lee of one of the islands which rose higher above the water
than the others, the men were ordered to lie on their oars. The fort
still kept banging away at the island behind which the boats had first
taken refuge. The steamer, which was a small river-boat, drawing no
more water than the first cutter, came puffing across the bay, like a
man with the asthma, towards the first island. She was a slow affair,
and it took her some time to come within hailing distance of the
expedition. As she approached the man-of-war’s boats, the fort, out of
regard for her safety, ceased firing; which might have been done half
an hour before, so far as any injury to the cutters was concerned.

“I tell you, Tom Longstone, we are booked for a rebel prison, as sure
as you was born,” said Grummet.

“Stopper your jaw!” replied Tom impatiently. “What are your officers
for, if they are going for to send you to a rebel prison?”

“Don’t you see that old snorter astern of us, Tom? Are you goin’ for to
run away from a steamboat?”

“We aren’t goin’ for to run away from anything that shows a rebel rag
at its peak,--mind that, you old croaker!” added Tom. “You aren’t
afraid, are you, Jack?” continued he, putting his arm around his
_protégé_, and hugging him like a baby.

“Of course I’m not afraid; only--only”--

“What, my bleating little lamb?”

“I wish the fun would commence.”

“See that, Tom!” continued the sheet-anchor man. “D’ye see that gun on
the t’gallant fo’castle? She is swinging it round.”

“Let her swing it round,” snarled Tom. “Now batten down your jaw-port
and don’t groan any more.”

At this moment, an order was heard for the men to give way; and, before
the gun of the steamer was ready, the boats had doubled the island, and
the men were lying upon their oars, with the high land between them and
the steamer.

“See that!” said Tom triumphantly. “Mr. Granger knows all about it.”

“Perhaps he do,” replied Grummet doubtfully, as a shot from the steamer
whizzed harmlessly over their heads.




CHAPTER XIV.

JACK ON THE LOOKOUT.


The armament of the rebel steamer consisted of two guns, placed on the
main-deck, forward of the boilers. The hull set so low in the water,
that, while the island lay between the steamer and the boats of the
expedition, she was powerless to do them any injury. Those in the first
cutter could see the smoke-stack of the Wizard--which was the name of
the steamer--over the island, while the crew of the latter could not
even determine the position of the boats.

The battle--if the affair could be dignified by such a title--promised
to be nothing but a game of hide-and-seek; for, when the Wizard moved,
the boats dodged round the island, so as to escape her fire. It was
“pull,” and “lie on your oars,” for half an hour. The rebel battery on
shore could not interfere with the game, lest the steamer should suffer
from its fire.

Tom Longstone sat upon the thwart, occasionally indulging in his inward
chuckle, and apparently enjoying the sport as keenly as a live boy
relishes a game of “ball” or “high-spy.” Old Grummet was not at all
satisfied with the position of affairs. He was a brave man, and ready
to fight his gun while there was a plank to stand on; but he was an
inveterate croaker. He was always afraid that the officers had made
some mistake, or that they did not see the whole of the ground. Once
in a while, he was kind enough to suggest the manner in which all
three boats were to be blown up, sunk, or captured. He could see a
hundred ways to get into a bad scrape; but he never troubled himself to
consider how to get out of them.

“S’posin’ another rebel steamer should come down upon us,” growled
Grummet: “where should we be then?”

“I reckon we should be just where we are now,” replied Tom, who was the
only man that ventured to confront the grim sheet-anchor man, as he
doled out his dismal notes of foreboding.

“S’posin’ a company of rebel infantry should show themselves on the
main shore there, not twenty fathoms from where we were just now?”

“We’d have to give ’em a few charges of grape from that ’ere howitzer.”

“There wouldn’t be a man left of us if that should happen, Tom
Longstone; and you knows it.”

“I should like to p’int that ’ere howitzer in among ’em, Grummet.”

“Silence, forward!” said Mr. Granger in a low, stern tone.

Tom’s body shook with his inward chuckle as he thought what an awful
deprivation it would be for Grummet if he had to refrain from grumbling.

“Forward, there!” said the lieutenant. “I want a man who is light and
smart.”

“I sir!” exclaimed Jack, springing up from his position under the lee
of the old quartermaster, and touching his cap.

Half a dozen others, answering to the description, sprang up at the
same time, eager to perform any service which might be required of them.

“Somers, you’ll do,” replied Mr. Granger. “Come aft.”

Jack passed along between the rowers to the stern-sheets, and again
touched his cap to the commander of the expedition.

“Do you see the steamer?” asked Mr. Granger.

“Yes, sir,” replied Jack, glancing at the Wizard’s smoke-stack, which
could still be seen over the little island.

“I will land you on the island; and you must creep on your face up to
the highest part of the ground, and see if you can make out how many
men there are on the steamer. Do you understand me, Somers?”

“I do, sir.”

“Now mind your eye, and don’t let them see you.”

“Ay, ay, sir: I will be very careful.”

“Now go forward, and be ready to jump ashore when the boat touches.”

Jack saluted the lieutenant, and sprang forward to the bow of the
cutter, proud and happy to be selected even for the humble duty to
which he had been ordered.

“Good boy, Jack!” said Tom Longstone, as our sailor-boy passed him on
his way to the bow.

“What may that ’ere mean?” queried Grummet.

“Fight!” replied Tom.

“He’s goin’ to board that steamer, as sure as I’m a Yankee,” added
Grummet, pulling out his cutlass from under the thwart, and passing his
thumb along the edge.

“That’s it: there’s a hole in that millstone, leastwise,” chuckled Tom.

“I s’pose he’d board a frigate if he fell foul of one.”

“No doubt on’t,” laughed Tom.

“Give way,--easy!” said Mr. Granger; and the boat swung in so that Jack
Somers could jump ashore.

“Did you say good-by to the lad afore he went ashore?” continued
Grummet: “’cause that’s the last you’ll see of him.”

Tom Longstone sprang to his feet at these words, and gazed earnestly at
Jack and at all the surroundings on the island.

“Grummet, you’re an old fool!” exclaimed Tom angrily. “You frighten me
more’n a whole frigate’s broadside would. I thought the lad was killed
for sartin.”

“He will be, soon.”

“Avast there! If you don’t stop growling, I’ll heave you overboard.”

“Silence forward!” said Mr. Granger.

The command was obeyed, and the sheet-anchor man’s savage reply was
nipped in the bud. Tom was too much interested in the movements of his
young friend on the island to give any further attention to his unhappy
shipmate in the boat. Jack, as directed, crept on his stomach up the
ascent of the island till his head had reached the highest point, from
which he could look down on the low deck of the Wizard.

Our sailor-boy was a very good scholar for one who had enjoyed only
the privileges of a district school; but it did not require a very
profound knowledge of arithmetic to solve the problem which had been
imposed upon him. The men in the rebel steamer were all gathered upon
the forward-deck; and, according to our mathematician’s estimate, they
numbered about thirty. They would not stand still long enough to be
counted with entire accuracy; but Jack satisfied himself that this was
very nearly her force.

He was about to retire from his position, and report the result of
the examination, when certain movements on board the Wizard decided
him to remain a few moments longer. The steamer had run up close to
the island; and her deck-hands were now in the act of passing the
gang-planks to the shore, evidently with the intention of landing
her men. Jack did not want to see any more; but, retreating from his
position with all haste, he leaped into the boat.

“Well, Somers?” demanded Mr. Granger in sharp, quick tones; for the
speed which the scout had used in his return conveyed the impression
that the whole expedition was in imminent danger.

“They have run the gang-planks ashore, sir; and I suppose they are
going to land.”

“How many men have they?”

“About thirty, sir.”

“Did you count them?”

“As well as I could, sir.”

“Are there a hundred of them?” asked Mr. Granger sharply.

“No, sir: the number won’t vary half a dozen from what I said.”

“Very well, Somers. Are you willing to go up again?”

“I am, sir,” promptly replied Jack.

“Go, then. Are your pistols loaded?”

“Yes, sir.”

“If the boats are in immediate danger, fire your pistol, and make your
way back as fast as you can.”

Jack touched his cap, adjusted his pistol in his belt and sprang
forward to perform the important service intrusted to him.

“Keep your weather-eye wide open, Jack, my darling,” said Tom Longstone
as he passed the old seaman.

“Ay, ay, Tom!” replied the sailor-boy as he sprang to the stem of the
cutter, and leaped ashore again.

He had not been absent more than five minutes from the crest of the
island: but the rebels had been industrious during that short period;
and one of the Wizard’s guns, which was an ordinary field-piece, was
on the gang-planks, ready to be rolled on shore.

Jack Somers was not a brigadier-general, nor was he a proficient
in naval or military tactics; but the plan of the rebels was as
transparent to him as though he had been a graduate of Annapolis or
West Point. The information he had obtained was very important; and
without waiting to make any further observations, he hastened back to
the boat, and reported the operations of the enemy.

He tried to keep cool, and not appear to be excited by the revelation
he made. He thought he had something astounding to tell; and so he had,
perhaps: but, to his intense astonishment, Mr. Granger did not appear
to be alarmed. He did not rattle off any hasty orders such as he had
read in naval romances.

In Jack’s opinion, it was time something was done, but Mr. Granger
seemed to be provokingly indifferent to the importance of the
announcement he had just made to him.

“You have done well, Somers,” said the commander of the expedition;
whereat Jack touched his cap, and would have blushed if he had not
fully expected to see the rebels pitch into them the next minute. “Are
you willing to go again?”

“I am, sir!” replied Jack as readily as before though he was utterly
confounded at the question.

“Go up once more, and see whether they are landing the other gun,
Somers.”

Our hero touched his cap again; for, in spite of the excitement of
the moment, he did not forget his manners, and sprang ashore for the
third time. Cautiously ascending the slope of the little hill, he again
reached his position at its summit. The other gun had not been landed;
the gang-planks had been hauled on board; and a squad of men had been
sent on shore to work the field-piece already on the island. Jack
wanted to know what the Wizard was going to do before he reported this
time; and he determined to wait a moment longer, when this question
would be decided.

The gunners on the island were only a few yards distant from him,
crouching upon the ground; and none of them spoke above a whisper,
lest their movements would be betrayed to the boats on the other side
of the island. Jack thought he was in a very ticklish situation; and,
for his greater personal security, he drew back a few feet, so that no
inquisitive rebel should get the range of his blue cap. As he did so,
he glanced at the navy revolver which he carried in his right hand to
assure himself that it was in readiness to give the required signal if
the occasion demanded it.

The pistol was all right; and, after waiting a moment he heard the
splash of the Wizard’s paddle. Advancing again to the crest of the
hillock, he raised his head to obtain his final glance at the scene of
operations. The steamer was certainly moving off; but a more prominent
object, nearer to him, claimed all his attention at this moment.
Directly in front of him, and not three feet distant, was a pair of
rebel eyes, each of which seemed to be as big as the rebel steamer.

The enemy, knowing and appreciating the value of correct and seasonable
information, had sent a man to the crest of the hill to perform a
service identical with that which had devolved upon our hero. It would
not be of any use to stop and consider which of these scouts was the
most astonished as he gazed into the eager orbs of the other; for the
question presents too many difficulties for a just settlement. Both
of them were astonished, but, fortunately for Jack, he was in a better
state of preparation for the unexpected event than his adversary.

The rebels below were rolling up the field-piece where it could be
brought to bear upon the boats, and Jack considered himself fully
justified in giving the signal for imminent danger; and his pistol
being loaded with patent metallic cartridges, each of which contained
its adjusted allowance of cold lead, he concluded to fire a shotted
salute, as Lieutenant-General Grant has since done on several eminently
proper occasions.

Jack was prompt and decided,--traits of character which he and his
brother Tom inherited in common from three generations of shipmasters.
He saw the pair of rebel eyes glaring upon him the first instant; and
he raised his revolver, and fired the second. The cold lead, before
mentioned, passed between the glowing orbs in front of him, crushing
through the brain of their owner.

The sailor-boy felt a cold tremor creep through his veins as the rebel
gunner convulsively sprang upward, and then dropped dead upon the
ground. His self-possession did not forsake him; and, without stopping
for further developments, he rushed down to the boat with all the speed
he could command.

His face was almost as pale as that of the dead rebel on the hill when
he leaped into the boat. His lip trembled; but it was with an emotion
other than fear. He had slain a human being. He had seen his bullet
enter the brain of a fellow-creature. His first experience of the awful
solemnity of war was too minute in detail to be pleasant, or even
exhilarating.

“Report, Somers, at once!” said Mr. Granger earnestly.

“The steamer is moving off, sir. There are twelve men and one gun on
the island. They are moving up the gun to the top of the hill. I killed
one of the men.”

“Give way!” said Mr. Granger; and the boats moved out from the island.




CHAPTER XV.

THE C. S. STEAMER WIZARD.


Successful strategy owes as much to the stupidity and inertness of one
party as it does to the shrewdness and activity of the other. If Mr.
Granger had not been shrewd in discovering the purpose of the rebels,
and active in defeating it, in a few minutes more they would probably
have fired into the boats, and either sunk them or driven them from
their hiding-place under the lee of the island. Whoever commanded the
rebels must have seen that the man-of-war boats could keep out of the
way of the Wizard’s gun by dodging round the island, and that the game
of “hide-and-seek” would be prolonged till his Southern patience was
entirely exhausted.

By landing the gun on the island, he expected to drive the boats
away from their covert, and enable the steamer to destroy or capture
them. From the information that Jack Somers had procured, it was
further evident that the rebels indulged the hope of surprising
the boat-expedition. The gunners whom he had seen were rolling the
field-piece up the slope with the utmost caution. Not one of them spoke
a word; and all of them crouched down, so that not a head should be
seen over the crest of the island. The stealthy movements of the man
whose eager eyes Jack had confronted furnished additional testimony on
this point.

It is plain, then, that, if Mr. Granger had not thought to send a
lookout-man to the high ground, he would have been caught in the trap
which the enemy set for him. He had discovered the plan; and he could
now see the smoke-stack of the steamer receding from the island. She
was to obtain a position so that she could open upon the boats the
moment they were driven away from the shore by the piece she had
landed. Mr. Granger did not become a victim of the enemy’s strategy.
His prudence and forethought had defeated it.

Almost all strategic operations are attended with more or less risk.
The movements uncover some assailable point. Mr. Granger was actually
pleased with the strategy of the rebels on this occasion. He and his
opponent had commenced a new game to determine which was the abler
strategist. Thus far, he had exhibited neither the stupidity nor the
inertness that belongs to the victim of successful strategy.

“Give way!” said Mr. Granger, glancing at the smoke-stack of the Wizard.

The men pulled the steady man-of-war stroke which discipline had
rendered so familiar to them. There was no hurry or nervousness in
their movements. Not a man “crabbed his oar,” or lost his stroke,
though the race appeared to be for life, certainly for success. Mr.
Granger sat in the stern-sheets as calm as a block of marble. His
demeanor impressed the men with the belief that he knew what he was
about. They had confidence in him, and were ready to run or fight as
ordered, without asking a question or suggesting a doubt. If this
was not time of all the blue-jackets, it certainly was of all but
Grummet; and he growled more from the force of habit than from want of
confidence in his officers.

After the boats had pulled a short distance, the order was given for
the rowers to lie on their oars. The commander of the expedition kept
one eye on the smoke-stack of the steamer; and as soon as she swung
round, and headed towards the north side of the island, he was ready to
develop his next movement.

“Give way with a will!” said he, as he gave orders to his cockswain in
what direction to steer.

The boats were headed round the south end of the island, while the
Wizard was going round the north end.

“Clear away your guns forward!” said Mr. Granger.

Old Grummet sprang to the howitzer in the first cutter. A grim smile
lighted up his face as he adjusted the tackle, and put the piece
in condition for instant use. Tom Longstone was with him, and the
most perfect harmony now subsisted between them. While they were
thus engaged, the officer in each boat detailed seven men to act as
“boarders.”

“Now, Jack, my beauty, you are goin’ to see some fightin’,” said Tom,
when the gun was ready for use.

“That’s so, Tom; and I’m in for my share of it.”

“So you be, Jack. I see you’ve got a cutlash.”

“I’m one of the boarding-party.”

“Now, stand right up to it, Jack, like a man.”

“Oh! you needn’t be afraid of me. I’ve got my hand in already,” replied
Jack, as he glanced at the weapon he carried.

“Yes, and you’ll be butchered like a young pig,” sneered old Grummet.
“It’s worse nor murder to send little boys like that to board the
lubbers on the island. Why don’t he send men as is fit for such work?”

“You needn’t have any fears about me, Grummet. I’ll do my share of the
work: if I don’t, you may call me a marine.”

“You’re a good boy enough, my lad; but you aren’t no more fit for such
work than the Evil Sperit is for a missionary,” added Grummet more
graciously.

“All ready forward?” said Mr. Granger.

“All ready, sir!” answered Grummet, who was acting as captain of the
gun.

The boats were now rounding the end of the island; and a few more
strokes of the oars brought them to a point where the officers could
see the gun on shore, and the men who were putting it in position for
use.

“Give way with a will!” shouted Mr. Granger, as he passed forward to
the howitzer in the bow of the cutter.

The men redoubled their efforts at the oars, till they bent like reeds
in their hands.

While they were making these preparations for the bold assault, the
rebels on shore were not idle. They dragged the gun to a place where it
commanded the boats; and, when the first cutter was within ten rods of
the shore, a solid shot whizzed over her, and plunged into the water
between the second and third cutters, which were only a short distance
astern of her.

At this moment, Mr. Granger sighted the howitzer in the bow of his
boat, and ordered the man at the lanyard to fire. At the same time, the
second and third cutters followed the example of the first. The rebels,
discovering the intention of the boats in season, threw themselves flat
on the ground behind the crest of the island, and thus escaped all
injury. The fire of neither party was effectual; and the gunners on the
island, perhaps appreciating the celerity with which old man-of-war’s
men handle a gun, instead of loading up their piece, and firing again,
busied themselves in dragging it over the top of the island, where they
could work it without being exposed to the fire of the boats.

While the rebels were tugging away at their gun, the three cutters
dashed up to the shore; for it was no part of Mr. Granger’s plan to
remain in the boats, and let the gunners knock them to pieces at their
leisure. As the first cutter touched the island, he drew his sword, and
put on a very business-like air, which Jack could not help admiring. He
seemed to be as much at ease as though the success of his strategy had
already been demonstrated, and his work actually accomplished.

“Boarders, away!” said he in his quick, sharp tones, as he leaped on
shore, followed by the seven men from the first cutter who had been
detailed for the purpose.

His party was immediately re-enforced by the fourteen men from the
other boats; and, starting off at a run, they advanced towards the gun
at the summit of the hill. Probably at this time the commander of the
rebels discovered what an awful blunder he had made; and, very likely,
visions of a court-martial began to dance before his vision. But, if no
one made blunders in war, it would be a more trying and difficult game
than it is at present.

The boarding-party rushed upon their prey; for, with two to one of the
rebels, they could hardly be regarded in any other light. They saw the
gleaming cutlasses of the blue-jackets, and the dash and fury with
which they advanced. A few pistols were fired: but the resistance was
brief and feeble; and, in less time than it would take to describe the
operation, the rebels were borne down and captured. Two of the gunners
were wounded, and one of the boarding-party had a pistol-ball through
his right arm.

Twelve of the men were ordered to drag the gun down to the water,
while six more marched the prisoners in the same direction. The latter
were disarmed, and the ammunition for the field-piece thrown into the
water. Four men, doubly armed, were detailed to guard the rebels; the
assistant-surgeon was sent on shore to dress the wounds of the injured
men; and the rest of the party returned to their places in the boats.

As soon as Mr. Granger had given his orders for the disposition of
the prisoners and the wounded,--for he did not deem it advisable to
encumber the boats with them in the more difficult and dangerous work
yet to be performed by the expedition,--he returned to the first
cutter. He had carefully watched the movements of the Wizard during
these exciting moments. She was now sweeping round the south end of the
island.

Mr. Granger had now a double duty to perform in protecting his party,
and preventing the recapture of his prisoners on shore. There was
apparently no opportunity for the practice of strategy; and it looked
very much like a hand-to-hand fight for the possession of the steamer.
The cool lieutenant in command gave his orders to Mr. McBride and the
master’s mate in charge of the third cutter, and in a few energetic
words informed the men what he intended to do, and urged them to do
their duty as American seamen.

His address was received with a lusty cheer, and the boats were ordered
to cast off. The steamer continued on her course towards the place
where the cutters had landed; her people probably being not yet fully
aware of the extent of the catastrophe which had overtaken their
auxiliary force on shore.

“Give way, my lads!” said Mr. Granger, when the boats had shoved off;
and on they dashed towards the Wizard, which was now only a few rods
distant.

Twelve men from each boat were ordered to act as boarders, and the guns
in the bows were in readiness to open on the steamer. At the right
time, the command was given to fire, and the howitzers sent their
charges of grape into the Wizard. Before the people in the boats could
ascertain the effect of the shot, the steamer returned the fire with
solid shot. The ball struck the second cutter on the quarter; glancing
off, however, so as to inflict but little damage.

“Give way lively, my lads!” shouted Mr. Granger.

“Now, my baby, don’t you let ’em hurt you,” said Tom Longstone. “We
shall be aboard of ’em in half a minute more.”

“I’ll do my duty, Tom. If anything happens to me, you will ask Mr.
Bankhead to write to my mother, won’t you?”

“Sartin, my lad; but you mustn’t let ’em hurt you, my little infant.
Keep your cutlash flying; and have your pistol handy for use, if you
git in a tight place.”

“Steady! Lie on your oars!” said Mr. Granger, whose boat was a little
in advance of the others.

“See him!” added Tom, glancing at the officer in command. “Isn’t he
a darling? See how he does it! That man ought to be a commodore.
See that! There comes the second cutter; and there goes the third
cutter,--she is going to board her over the starn, while we take her on
for’ard.”

“Give way, my men!” said Mr. Granger in a deep, energetic tone, which
seemed to electrify the muscles of the oarsmen. “All ready there,
forward! Steady! Avast pulling!” he added, as the first cutter darted
in under the port-bow of the steamer.

“All ready, my darling!” said Tom Longstone in a low, encouraging tone;
for he seemed to feel that it was part of his duty to keep up Jack’s
courage during this trying ordeal.

Our sailor-boy, however, needed no such stimulus. He was fully alive
to the duty of the hour,--anxious to honor his flag, and distinguish
himself. He had been in one slight brush with the rebels, and was fully
prepared for the desperate work before him.

“Boarders away!” cried Mr. Granger.

“Boarders away!” shouted Mr. McBride, in the second cutter on the
starboard bow, at the same instant.

The rebels on the deck of the Wizard were in readiness to repel
boarders; and the first gallant tar who leaped on board fell back with
a ball through his heart. The second was pierced with a bayonet; but
he was followed by Tom Longstone, whose cutlass cleft the skull of the
rebel who disputed his passage.

“Lay ’em aboard, my lads! Sweep the decks!” shouted Mr. Granger, as he
gained a footing upon the forecastle of the Wizard.

Jack Somers was by the side of Tom; but he had scarcely reached the
deck before he saw a rebel bayonet darting towards his heart. Turning
it aside with a blow of his cutlass, he fired his pistol, and the man
dropped.

“No pistols! Don’t fire a pistol!” exclaimed Mr. Granger, turning round
to see who had done so. “You will hit our own men on the starboard
side!”

When the commander turned, a rebel soldier rushed upon him. He had lost
his gun in the affray; and he sprang at the throat of Mr. Granger,
evidently with the intention of wrenching his sword from his grasp.
Jack saw the movement, and received the soldier upon the point of his
cutlass, and beat him back.

The soldiers on board fought with desperate energy; but the
determination of the seamen drove them back towards the stern of the
steamer, where, by this time, the boarding-party from the third cutter
had gained the deck. They saw their fate, if they persisted; and one by
one they surrendered to the victors, and the Wizard was in possession
of the cutters’ men.

“Are you hurt, my dear?” demanded Tom Longstone when the fighting was
finished.

“Not a bit, Tom. How is it with you?”

“Nothing to speak of, my lad: only a slash in the hand with a bayonet.
The bloody rebel had near-a’most harpooned me like a dolphin, when I
caught the tool in my hand,” replied Tom, as he exhibited the wounded
member. “Got a handkercher, Jack?”

The article was furnished; and Tom wrapped up his wound, and then
seemed to forget all about it.

“The steamer is ours!” said Mr. Granger, after the last soldier and
deck-hand had been secured.

“Hurrah!” yelled the blue-jackets; and the cry was taken up by the men
in the boats, who had not been permitted to have an active part in the
encounter.




CHAPTER XVI.

THE SHORE BATTERY.


The engineer of the Wizard had stopped her when the combat commenced;
for she was headed directly for the shore. During the fight, she had
drifted up within a few feet of the island. Among the volunteers in the
second cutter was one of the third assistant-engineers, to whom the
charge of the machinery was immediately committed. The negro firemen of
the steamer were not sorry for the change which had taken place in the
ownership of the craft; and all of them, having no love for the rebel
Confederacy, promptly offered to continue their labors in the firing
department.

The intense exertions and excitement of the men had fatigued them very
much; and, when the struggle was ended, they sat down wherever they
could find a place to rest themselves and recover their breath. The men
in the boats attended to the wounded of both parties. The first cutter
brought off the assistant-surgeon from the island, and everything was
done that their condition required. The sufferers were placed in the
cabin, and included five sailors and eight rebels. Of the boats’ crews,
only one had been killed; and the bodies of three of the enemy lay upon
the forward-deck of the Wizard.

“Somers, you did me a good turn in the action, which I shall not soon
forget,” said Mr. Granger, when the excitement had subsided.

Jack touched his cap, blushed, and stammered out that he hoped he had
done his duty. He had tried to do the best he could.

“You have done nobly, my lad; and I shall have a good report of you for
the captain, and a gentleman in the wardroom, who has a strong interest
in your welfare.”

“Thank you, sir!” replied Jack, blushing more deeply as he touched his
cap again.

“The men all did well,--behaved admirably; but no one better than
yourself, my lad,” said he, turning to the seamen, who were seated
in little groups on the deck of the steamer. “Our real work hasn’t
commenced yet.”

“Hurrah!” shouted the blue-jackets, jumping to their feet, and
displaying their readiness to engage the enemy wherever occasion might
require.

“We came off to do a certain work; and we should have done it before
this time, if this steamer hadn’t come athwart our hawse. But I intend
to do it before we return to the ship.”

“Hurrah!” repeated the blue-jackets.

“I perceive you are all ready to stand by me, and see it through.”

“Ay, ay, sir!” responded the men in prompt and hearty tones.

“Then we will go to work at once.”

The Wizard was run up to the island, the wounded men on shore
conveyed to the cabin, and the field-piece placed in position on the
forward-deck. In addition to this armament, two of the boat-howitzers
were hoisted on board, and other preparations made, which indicated
sharp work, and that Mr. Granger intended the steamer should be
used for fighting purposes. The expedition was, to some extent,
re-organized. Gun-crews were placed at the battery, and men detailed
to serve in the boats, which were to be towed by the steamer.

Mr. Granger had noticed the strong friendship subsisting between Tom
Longstone and Jack; and, when he made the former captain of one of the
captured guns, he ordered Jack to serve as first train-tackleman, which
gave him a position alongside the veteran.

“You’ll do, quartermaster,” said the commander. “I know I can trust
you.”

“Thank you, sir,” replied Tom, reverently. “I beg your honor’s pardon;
but I must ax permission to go and see the doctor for a couple of
seconds.”

“Are you wounded, my man?”

“Nothing to speak of, your honor: only a slash in the hand with a
soger’s bagonet. But I could work better if the doctor would put a bit
of plaster on it.”

“Go: we can spare you for an hour or more.”

“Thank your honor; but I won’t be gone above two minutes,” answered
Tom, saluting the officer, and running up the stairs to the cabin-deck.

“Goin’ to lose this here steamer now we’ve got it,” said the inevitable
Grummet, who was captain of one of the howitzers, when Mr. Granger went
up to the wheel-house to superintend the steering of the Wizard. “Well,
he aren’t fit for nothin’ else,” he added, as he glanced round him at
the build of the steamer.

“She’s a good enough boat, isn’t she?” asked Jack.

“What’s she good for? What was the lubber thinkin’ of when he built
such a top-heavy, top-sided consarn as this? I wouldn’t trust the
cap’n’s monkey in her.”

“She is a fresh-water steamer, built to run on the rivers and lakes
about here.”

“I wouldn’t cross a mud-puddle in her. A five-knot breeze would blow
her over. She looks more like a grocery-store nor she do like a wessel.”

“This is the kind of steamer they use on all the Western rivers,”
added Jack, who had often seen pictures of this kind of craft in the
illustrated newspapers; which, by the way, have done an important work
in making up the history of this war.

“I don’t care where they use ’em: they aren’t shipshape. They may do
for sogers and marines, and such lubbers; but they aren’t fit for
sailors. Howsomever, there won’t be much left of her in half an hour
from now.”

“Why not, Mr. Grummet?” asked Jack.

“Avast there! Don’t you go for to _mistering_ me. I aren’t a dandy nor
an officer,” said Grummet fretfully.

“I meant no harm.”

“I know you didn’t, my lad; and, if you did, we can’t afford to
quarrel. Some of us will wake up in eternity in less nor an hour from
now; and this crazy old craft will go to the bottom!”

“What makes you think so?”

“Think so? I knows it. Do you see that ’ere battery over there?”

“I’ve seen it before to-day.”

“Do you expect this piece of shingle-work to stand up afore them guns?”

“I don’t know; but I think Mr. Granger wouldn’t take us in where there
isn’t a fair chance for us.”

“The leftenant’s a brave man; but he’s hot-headed. Now, you mark my
words, not one in five of us will ever get back to the ship; and the
cap’n of the Harrisburg never’ll set eyes on this ugly hulk of a
steamboat.”

“You forget that you told us once before to-day we should come to a bad
end.”

“Didn’t I tell you the truth? There’s Graves a-layin’ there: his pipe’s
out.”

“But he’s the only man killed.”

“Avast growling, Grummet!” said Tom, joining his crew at the gun. “The
worse you makes it, Old Blower, the better it’ll be for us. When you
says anything’s goin’ wrong, it always goes right.”

“How’s your hand, Tom?” asked Jack.

“Good as new: the doctor patched it up, and it’s all right now.”

“I’m glad to hear it. How are our poor fellows in the cabin?”

“All doing well but Jones, and the doctor says he’ll die, in spite of
all he can do, poor fellow.”

“Didn’t I tell you so?” exclaimed Grummet.

“No, you didn’t,--you old bruiser! You aren’t a goin’ for to frighten
the boy with your ghost-yarns. I tell you----”

At that moment, a twenty-four-pound shot from the battery, which the
steamer was rapidly approaching, dropped into the water on one side of
her, and interrupted the conversation. All the steam that the Wizard’s
boilers would bear was now crowded upon her; and, when she had advanced
a quarter of a mile farther, the order was given for the battery on the
forward-deck to open upon the fort, which was an earthwork, mounting
four guns.

The firing was vigorously kept up on both sides. Two of the shots
from the shore-battery struck the steamer, but without inflicting any
serious injury. As each party had an equal number of guns, it was a
fair thing; but the gunners in the fort were evidently not accustomed
to their work, while the old man-of-war’s men on the deck of the Wizard
were perfectly at home at this business.

As the steamer approached nearer to the land, the fire from the fort
was sensibly diminished; and Mr. Granger was confident that two of its
guns had been disabled. The Wizard’s course had been made by various
angles, so as to disturb as much as possible the calculations of the
gunners, and to prevent any chance shot from raking her. The two balls
that had struck her, therefore, passed across her, instead of through
her from end to end. Both went under the cabin, abaft the paddle-boxes;
one of them crushing through the pine-wood partitions, and the other
knocking off one of the quarter-pieces at the stern.

While the men were still busy at the guns, Mr. Granger came down from
the wheel-house.

“Give it to them, my men!” said he with a smile, as he observed the
vigor with which they worked. “We must hoist the stars and stripes on
that battery.”

“Hurrah!” shouted the gun-crews.

“Ready with the gang-planks!” added the commander; and, at the same
time, the bell from the wheel-house stopped the engine, and the boat
struck the shore.

“Boarders, away!” shouted Mr. Granger, as the steamer touched the shore.

“Hurrah!” yelled the seamen, as they leaped ashore, and dashed up the
hill to the spot where the battery was located.

On they flew, up the slope, and over the breast-works; when, after
a short and decisive struggle, the victory was won. There were but
few men in the fort,--only enough to man the guns,--and there was
nothing very brilliant in the achievement. Jack Somers hardly found an
opportunity to strike a blow. The rebel flag was pulled down, and the
stars and stripes were run up in its place.

“Not so bad as it might be,--is it?” said Jack, with a smile, to
Grummet.

“You haven’t seen the end of it yet,” persisted the grumbler.

“We’ve seen the end of this battery, at any rate.”

It was quite true that they had not yet seen the end of the expedition;
for, after a working-party had been detailed to transport the guns
to the steamer, Mr. Granger ordered the first cutter to be manned,
and immediately started up the bay in her. After pulling a short
distance, they discovered the town which was known to be there; and,
at a convenient place, the commander landed. Taking twenty men with
him, he proceeded to examine the locality. On the road, which they soon
reached, they captured two men, whom Mr. Granger questioned, and from
whom, in spite of themselves, he obtained some valuable information.

Crossing the neck of land, they came to the water on the other side;
and here Mr. Granger discovered that of which he had evidently been in
search. It was a nondescript craft, which the rebels were converting
into a ram; probably for the purpose of making a raid among the
men-of-war at Ship Island. At the approach of the party, the mechanics
who were at work upon her fled, as though the whole Federal army was
sweeping down upon them. Mr. Granger gave directions for setting fire
to the ram; and the seamen piled up heaps of chips and shavings in
various parts of her, and applied the match.

The party remained long enough to insure the destruction of the clumsy
contrivance; and then hastened back to the boat, which was about two
miles distant.

When they reached the road which they had before crossed, a new and
startling state of things menaced them. Rushing down the road, on
the double-quick, was a company of infantry. They had just come in
sight from behind a hotel used in summer for pleasure-seekers from
New Orleans: and it was impossible to elude their observation; for
the country was flat and open, and afforded no place for defense or
concealment.

Jack could not help glancing at Mr. Granger to observe the effect of
this discovery upon him; but he looked calm and unmoved, as he had all
the morning.

“It’s lucky old Grummet isn’t here,” said Tom.

“He told me we hadn’t seen the end of it yet,” replied Jack. “What are
we going to do?”

“Dunno, my darling.”

“Shall we fight, or surrender?”

“Jest look at the leftenant afore you say surrender.”

“They are three to our one.”

“No matter, my boy, if they were ten to our one. Never say die!”

Jack couldn’t exactly see how they were to proceed, with a company of
fifty or sixty men in the very act of charging upon them; but he had
unlimited confidence in his commander, and he was resolved to take
things as they came.

“Halt!” shouted the captain of the rebel company.

Mr. Granger declined to obey, and ordered the men to move on towards
the boat. The muskets of the soldiers were raised to their shoulders.

“Fall flat on the ground!” said the commander suddenly.

“Fire!” shouted the rebel officer at the moment, when all the seamen
dropped as though they had been shot.

The bullets whistled over their heads; but not a man was injured. They
jumped, and ran again with all their might towards the place where
they had landed, closely pursued by the rebels.

Old Tom Longstone and some others of the party were more accustomed to
fighting than they were to running; and the consequence was, that the
rebels gained rapidly upon them. But, in the midst of the race, Jack
Somers, agile and fleet as he was, happened to be tripped by one of
his companions, who was looking over his shoulder to see the pursuers.
Before he could pick himself up, his party had left him, and the rebels
were upon him.




CHAPTER XVII.

RETURN OF THE EXPEDITION.


Precisely what Jack’s feeling were when he saw his friends pass on
without him, and the rebels drawing near, it would be difficult to say.
They were not pleasant; and it may have occurred to him that all the
dismal forebodings of old Grummet were to be realized.

“Stand by that man!” said the rebel captain as he passed him.

The soldier to whom this order was given, was, no doubt, very glad to
obey it; for Jack looked like a puny opponent, and there was a prospect
of a sharp fight with the blue-jackets when they reached their boat.
But the soldier made a slight mistake; for Jack had no intention of
being made a prisoner by any single rebel in the Confederacy. He had a
cutlass and a pistol; and he knew that his enemy’s gun was not loaded.

Jack jumped up, and confronted the soldier as soon as he reached the
spot; the main body still pursuing the sailors. He was a tall, stout
fellow, and looked as ugly as a human being could look.

“Drop that cutlass!” said the rebel soldier as he placed himself in the
attitude of “charge bayonets.”

“Drop that gun!” replied Jack, elevating his large naval revolver.

“That’s your game, is it, Yank?” added the rebel, retreating a few
paces, evidently not pleased with the situation.

“That’s my game, reb. I say, drop that gun, or there’ll be a dead man
round here somewhere.”

“That’s rather sharp, Yank!” replied the crest-fallen soldier, too
proud to obey the order.

“I see you’re not going to do what I told you: so we may as well finish
this business before it gets any later, especially as I’ve got some
tall running to do.”

The soldier threw down the gun, and Jack picked it up. As he did so,
he heard the report of fire-arms in the direction of the boat, and saw
that the sailors, being hard pressed by their pursuers, had turned upon
them.

“Take off that cartridge-box and the rest of your traps!” continued
Jack.

The man obeyed; and Jack proceeded to load the musket, the rebel
watching the operation in surly silence.

“Now, reb,” said he, when he had returned the ramrod and capped the
piece, “I want to see you run. Make tracks towards that hotel. If you
turn to the right or the left, or look behind you, I shall just put
this bullet through you. Now, double-quick, forward, march!”

The rebel could not do otherwise than obey; and, to do him full
justice, he did obey the orders of his captor to the letter. As soon as
a reasonable distance lay between him and the soldier, Jack turned his
attention to the exciting events which were transpiring in the vicinity
of the first cutter.

The party had driven back the soldiers by an impetuous charge upon them
with cutlass and revolver, and the rebels had taken time to reload
their muskets. They were now in line, firing upon the boat-party.
Jack’s chance of escape was not yet first-rate; for the rebels were
between him and his friends. He could not move in that direction, and
it was not prudent to remain where he was. The only line of retreat
open to him was the road to the point on which the captured redoubt was
situated.

With the musket on his shoulder, and the cutlass and pistol in his
belt, he moved off in this direction, and soon reached the road. While
he was retreating with due diligence, he heard the report of the first
cutter’s howitzer, which assured him that his party had reached the
boat. He was exceedingly gratified at this result; though it might
provoke the soldiers to pursue him, when they were released from duty.
To prevent any such catastrophe as being recaptured, he quickened his
pace to a run, which soon brought him in sight of the fort.

Out of breath, and very much fatigued, he reached the battery, and
reported himself to Mr. McBride. He told his story in full to the
lieutenant, who, fearing that the first cutter’s people might still be
hard pressed by the rebels, immediately ordered the third cutter to
pull up the bay to their assistance. Jack was sent in her as pilot, and
to report himself to Mr. Granger. With the musket in his hand to verify
his report, he stepped into the boat.

The third cutter reached the place where the party had landed. Mr.
Granger’s boat was there in charge of four men. The cockswain reported
that the soldiers had been beaten off, and that the rest of the crew
had gone upon shore again; where, or for what, he could not answer. Mr.
Light, the master’s mate, with most of his men, landed at once, and
hastened towards the road to find them. They had proceeded but a short
distance before they met the party returning to the boat.

“Why are you here, Mr. Light?” demanded Mr. Granger.

“We heard you were in trouble; and Mr. McBride sent me up to render
assistance, if any were needed.”

“We are all right now, though we have had two men killed, three
wounded, and one captured. Young Somers was taken prisoner.”

“I beg pardon, your honor,” said Jack, stepping forward and touching
his hat: “that’s a mistake!”

“Somers!” exclaimed Mr. Granger.

“My darling!” exclaimed Tom Longstone, springing forward, and throwing
his arms around him.

“Hurrah!” shouted the men, with whom Jack was a great favorite.

“How’s this, Somers?” asked Mr. Granger, whose pleasant smile indicated
the satisfaction which Jack’s reappearance afforded him. “I thought you
were taken by the rebels.”

“No, sir; I wasn’t taken. I took the rebel who was sent to capture me.”

“How was that?”

“He ordered me to drop my cutlass; and I ordered him to drop his
musket. As I had a loaded pistol in my hand, he had the worst of it.
I picked up the gun, and loaded it. Then I told him to run up to the
hotel yonder, or I would shoot him. He did so; and that’s the last I
saw of him. Here is the musket, sir.”

“Why didn’t you come down to the boat then?”

“Because the rebels were between you and me, sir. I was afraid I
couldn’t whip the whole of them: so I ran down to the fort.”

“Bravo, Somers!” said Mr. Granger, laughing at the manner the story was
told, no less than at the story itself.

The commander of the expedition then ordered the dead and the wounded
men to be conveyed to the first cutter; and the boats returned to the
steamer. The men were sad for the loss of their companions, and little
was said on the passage. On their arrival at the point, all the brave
fellows who had fallen during the day were reverently committed to the
earth, prayers being said by Mr. Granger; while all who could be spared
stood uncovered around the grave.

The work for the day was finished. The ram had been destroyed, an armed
steamer captured, and some valuable information had been obtained by
Mr. Granger. The result was entirely satisfactory to all, except old
Grummet; and the expedition started on its return to the ship. The
boats were all towed astern of the steamer, and the men had nothing to
do but to talk over the events of the day.

It was three bells in the dog-watches, when the people on the deck of
the Harrisburg discovered a steamer, with the stars and stripes over
the stars and bars at her stern, approaching them. The arrival caused
some excitement on board; and three stunning cheers welcomed the
victors back to the ship. Captain Mainwright took Mr. Granger by the
hand, and congratulated him upon the success of the expedition. That
night there was such a spinning of yarns on board the Harrisburg as had
never been known before. Every man who had been with the expedition
was a hero; but Jack Somers was regarded as something better than a
hero. He was commended by the officers, and lauded by the crew; and,
if he had not been a very sensible young man, his head would have been
turned by the lavish praise which was bestowed upon him.

Jack had a strong friend in the wardroom,--one who could command
the ear of the captain; and, if our hero could have heard what was
said about him by these distinguished persons in the cabin, he might
well have been dazzled by the prospects in store for him. They were
discussing a plan for his future advancement; which, in due time, will
be revealed to our readers.

Our sailor-boy bore his honors with tolerable self-possession. His
fame had extended beyond his own ship, and his position as cockswain
of the captain’s gig frequently brought him to the notice of the naval
and military officers on the station. His modesty, however, prevented
him from making a fool of himself; and, wherever he went, he was a
universal favorite.

My readers must not suppose that there was no one else at Ship Island
but Jack Somers, because he happens to be the central figure of our
picture; or that the rest of the people there had nothing to do but
to praise him. There was, at this time, a mighty expedition gathering
there, which was destined to achieve one of the grandest and most
brilliant operations recorded in the annals of war. Jack was only a
very humble individual in the vast throng; and we doubt whether General
Butler or Flag-officer Farragut ever heard that there was such a person.

It was fortunate for Jack that he did not consider himself the greatest
man in the fleet; as any self-sufficiency of that kind would have
placed him in a very unpleasant position. He was still content to touch
his cap to Mr. Midshipman Dickey, and to discharge all his duties
on board with promptness and fidelity. In his letters to his mother,
he related his adventures with the expedition: but Mr. Bankhead, in
writing to his friends, gave a more glowing account of the affair;
which, in due time, was conveyed to Pinchbrook.

“All hands up anchor, ahoy!” piped the boatswain, one morning, about a
week after the boat-expedition.

Jack sprang to his place at the capstan, buoyant with hope that the day
of action had again arrived. Every man at Ship Island knew that some
stupendous enterprise was about to be undertaken; though none but a few
of the higher officers of the army and navy knew what it was.

“Where do you suppose we are going now, Tom?” asked Jack when the ship
was fairly under way.

“Don’t know, my bantling; but you may be sure, if there’s any big thing
to be done, this ship will be there,” replied Tom. “We’re headed to the
south’ard.”

“Perhaps we are going down to the Mississippi.”

“Maybe we be, Jack.”

That evening, the Harrisburg arrived at Pass à l’Outre; and, on the
two following days, she made several attempts to cross the bar, and
enter the Mississippi, but without success. She then went round to the
South-west Pass; where she crossed the bar, and proceeded up the river
to Pilot Town.

At this place, Jack learned that the seamen in the navy have something
to do besides drawing their pay and eating their “grub.” The topmasts
were sent down, and the ship stripped for action. Everything not
required for immediate service was sent on shore, and a guard of
marines stationed there to protect the property. It was a hard day’s
work; and Jack’s hammock never felt so good as it did that night when
he was permitted to “turn in.”

The guns were all shotted, in readiness for an attack; for the rebels
had a fleet of rams and ironclads up the river, with which they had
already made one demonstration against the blockading-fleet. After
these preparations were completed, the Harrisburg steamed up to the
head of the Passes. But here she again mocked the eager expectations of
the seamen; for no forward movement was made for a month.

There was occasionally an incident to vary the monotony of the scene.
The arrival of the mortar-fleet, the discovery and destruction of a
telegraph-wire extending across the river, afforded brief periods of
excitement; but all were anxious to pour a few broadsides into Forts
Jackson and St. Philip; for there was no longer any doubt that the
reduction of these fortifications was the object of the expedition.

On the 16th of April, another fever of expectation was produced by the
ship getting under way again, and going up to the head of the fleet,
consisting of fifty-one men-of-war; where she anchored, much to the
disappointment of the gallant tars. But the next week realized all
their anticipations, and immortalized every man of them.




CHAPTER XVIII.

FORTS JACKSON AND ST. PHILIP.


Undoubtedly the hero of our story was a brave, smart, and patriotic
young man; a good seaman, and fully devoted to his duty; but we do
not wish any of our enthusiastic readers to suppose he captured
Fort Jackson and Fort St. Philip alone, or even that he did any more
than his fair share of the work. The river was full of ships, brigs,
schooners, gunboats, and mortar-vessels. There were thousands of men,
and hundreds of guns; and the history of those tremendous events would
require a whole volume: so that we can only describe the part which our
sailor-boy acted in the memorable scenes of that glorious occasion.

For nearly a week, the mortar-fleet shook the very earth with the
roar of their ordnance; and the ponderous shells screamed through the
atmosphere like “fiends in upper air.” But no sensible impression
seemed to be produced upon the forts. They still held out; and the
intrepid flag-officer in command of the squadron prepared for more
decided measures. The ships had been made ready for the severe work
before them; and every heart in the fleet burned to meet the foe at
closer quarters.

On the afternoon before the great battle, the flag-officer visited
every ship in the squadron: and Jack Somers came to the conclusion
that this act meant something; which was the unanimous opinion of all
his top-mates. Every man on board the Harrisburg was in earnest, and
longing for the decisive moment; but though there was a great deal of
moving about in the fleet, a great many boats passing and repassing
during the rest of the day, the men were piped to supper as usual, and
the starboard watch turned in at the proper time.

At three bells in the morning, all hands were called; and, shortly
afterwards, the signal to get under way was made on board the
flag-ship: but it was half-past three before the fleet was under
way, owing to the difficulty which some of the ships experienced in
“purchasing” their anchors. The drum beat to quarters; and the ships,
in two lines, moved up the river. The chain which the rebels had
extended across the river, supporting it upon hulks of vessels, had
been partially removed, and the two lines of ships passed through. The
“column of the Red” was commanded by Captain Bailey; and the “column of
the Blue,” by Farragut himself,--the former occupying the right and the
latter the left.

It was night; but the scene was illuminated by the immense fires
which the enemy had kindled on shore to assist the aim of the gunners
in the forts, and by the fire-ships which were hurled down by the
rebel squadron with the intention of destroying the Federal fleet by
conflagration. The boat-brigade, which had been organized by Commodore
Porter, fought these fire-fiends both obstinately and successfully, and
not a ship was destroyed by them.

Before the Harrisburg reached the hulks, the forts opened fire upon
the fleet. Shot and shell rained down upon the devoted vessels. The
grandest and most terrible scene which the eye of man ever looked upon
succeeded. The river seemed to be a molten sea of fire; while the roar
of the cannon, the hissing of shot, and the screaming of shell, were
enough to appall the stoutest heart.

When the order was given, the Harrisburg poured her broadside into
Fort Jackson, which lay on the port-hand. The ship was shaken down
to her keel by the tremendous explosion, and Jack felt sure that the
rebel works were blown to pieces; for it seemed to him that nothing
which human hands had made could stand before such a tornado of iron
hail. He attempted to look through the port, to observe the destruction
which the broadside had caused; but the ship was enveloped in such
a dense volume of smoke, that nothing could be seen. The sulphurous
cloud rolled in at the port, and blinded him so that he could not even
discern the man on the opposite side of the gun.

There was no time to look around him; for the gun-crew sprang to their
duty with an energy which showed their zeal in the work before them.
Almost in the twinkling of an eye, the ponderous piece was ready for
a second discharge, and another broadside was poured into the fort.
Again Jack tried to obtain a view of the fortification. His position as
first-loader and second-boarder at the muzzle of the gun, when it was
drawn in, placed him near the port, where he had an opportunity to see
when there was anything to be seen.

“Somers, ahoy!” shouted the first-captain of the gun. “Stand by, and
take the cartridge!”

“Ay, ay!” replied Jack as he sprang to his duty.

“What are you star-gazing out the port for? Keep both eyes peeled!”

Jack was reminded by these remarks that it was his duty to assist in
knocking down the fort, and not to take notes for the future historian.
But the scene was different from what he had anticipated; and it
seemed hard to stand at the guns without the privilege of beholding
the mischief they were doing. It was nothing but smoke, however, in
every direction; and he might as well have been in the gloom of the
fore-hold, so far as seeing anything was concerned. He was nearly
stunned by the awful roar of the broadside; and, when the captain of
gun No. 9 shouted to him at the top of his lungs, his voice sounded
like that of a pygmy in the distance. The words which he spoke himself
did not seem to come from his own mouth.

In spite of the rebuke he had received, Jack Somers was thoroughly
alive to his duty; and he worked with so much zeal, that he soon wiped
out any imputation which his momentary neglect had produced.

At such a time as this, the splendid and punctilious discipline of the
navy is exhibited to the best advantage. What to the casual observer,
in the still waters of a peaceful harbor, may seem terribly formal and
ridiculously precise, is the foundation of success in the ordeal of a
mighty naval conflict. Every man knows his place, and has a definite
duty assigned to him in case of any emergency that can happen. Every
one of the gallant tars at gun No. 9 had a double, and some a triple,
duty assigned to him. Every manœuvre of the piece was performed in
order, with the utmost promptness and precision.

At quarters, the men are stationed on each side of the gun; and the
same crew handle the gun on the opposite side of the ship,--a division
consisting of three guns on the starboard, and three on the port-side.
As the Harrisburg went up the river on this momentous occasion, her
port-battery first engaged Fort Jackson; but when she reached Fort St.
Philip, on the other side of the river, her starboard battery delivered
the terrible broadside. The second-captain of gun No. 9, with his crew,
went over to the other side, and manned the other gun No. 9.

Jack Somers, as we have before stated, was first-loader and
second-boarder. The man opposite to him was first-boarder and
second-loader. The next was a shot-and-wad-man, who was also a pumpman
and pikeman. The third was a sponger, who was also a boarder. The
fourth was a crow-and-handspike-man, who was also a fireman and
sail-trimmer. The fifth was a train-tackleman, and also a boarder.
The sixth was a captain of the gun. The men on the opposite side had
corresponding duties; and each is designated by his proper ordinal, as
first-boarder, second-boarder, etc.

The gun is secured by three classes of ropes. The breeching is the
heavy piece of cable passing through an eye at the breech of the gun,
with each end fastened to the side of the ship, which prevents the
recoil from throwing the piece out of position. The train-tackle is a
rope with double blocks, attached at one end to the carriage, and at
the other to a ring in the deck, by which the gun is hauled back from
the port, or secured for loading. The side-tackles are the purchases
attached to the side of the carriage, by which the gun is drawn up to
the port.

Modern gun-carriages have but two wheels, the aftermost part resting
on the deck. A handspike with rollers on the end, called a rolling
handspike, by which the carriage is pried up and made to bear upon the
rollers, is now used when the gun is to be run out at the port. The
cartridges are brought up from below, one at a time, in a leathern
bucket having a cover, which removes the liability to accident.
Shot-stands are placed near the breech of the gun, to hold the
balls,--five in each,--which are replenished as occasion requires.

The perfect discipline which prevailed on board the Harrisburg inspired
every man with zeal and courage for he knew that he was one wheel in
the vast machine whose action was essential to the operation of the
whole. Every one supported every other one, and was in turn supported
by them; and entire confidence reigned throughout the ship.

The Harrisburg passed Fort Jackson, and poured her broadside into St.
Philip. It was the same scene over again, but intensified by the hopes
of success, and by the continued tension upon the nervous systems of
its actors. But hardly had the ship passed the second fort before she
got aground; and, at the same instant, the vessel seemed to be wrapped
in flames. It was an awful moment to the devoted tars, who could not
yet comprehend the nature or the extent of the calamity which had
overtaken the ship; but, to their honor and glory, not one of them
deserted his station. The port-battery still roared, as it poured its
destructive missiles into the enemy.

An immense fire-raft had been pushed forward by one of the rebel rams;
and the Harrisburg, in attempting to avoid it, had been run into shoal
water, and grounded. The ship was on fire, the flames leaping up to
her tops; and her destruction seemed to be inevitable. The firemen
were called away; and, after exertions almost superhuman, the fire was
extinguished, and the noble ship was then backed off from the shoal.

The severest part of the day’s work was yet to come. What the officer
saw was soon patent to all the crew,--that the river was swarming with
rebel gunboats and ironclads. The roar of battle increased; and the
shot and shell crushed through the sides of the Harrisburg, scattering
splinters and other missiles in every direction. Wounded men were borne
down to the cockpit, where Dr. Sawsett was busily discharging the
duties of his profession; and the dead lay silent and calm amid the
awful din.

Still our noble ship continued to pour a terrible fire into the rebel
vessels; and still her men, nerved to desperation by the thunder
and crash of battle, worked like heroes. Now she butted against a
rebel ram, and now she poured her death-dealing broadsides into the
iron-mailed vessels that assailed her.

Jack Somers was only a hero among heroes. Stunned by the roar, blinded
by the smoke, he maintained his position at gun No. 9, without knowing
what was transpiring even a few feet from him. As the ship changed her
place, he obtained an occasional glance at a rebel gunboat; and he saw
one of them crushed like a paper-box by the great guns of the Pensacola.

Still he exerted himself to the utmost. When he saw a solid shot crush
the head of poor Lawrence,--one of his top-mates,--he felt dizzy for an
instant; but, even from this shock, he recovered under the stimulus of
the awful excitement.

Such a furious and destructive action could not long continue. The roar
began to diminish; for the guns of the rebel fleet had been silenced.
Of the fifteen which had appeared, eleven had been destroyed, driven
ashore in a sinking condition, or sent to the bottom of the great river.

The columns of the Federal squadron moved on. Three or four vessels
were missing. The Varuna had been sunk, after she had done deeds which
immortalized her name and that of her heroic commander. The smoke
cleared away, and the fleet steamed up the river. Silence reigned when
the storm of battle had spent itself. The victory was complete; and
cheer on cheer rent the air, and gave a thrill of inspiration to the
poor fellows who had been wounded, as the grateful sounds reached their
ears.




CHAPTER XIX.

QUARTERMASTER SOMERS.


After passing the forts, the Harrisburg proceeded on her way up the
river. On the following day, after many difficulties and delays, the
fleet arrived at English Turn. Some of the light gunboats had been
sent forward to cut the telegraph wires, and otherwise prepare the way
for the more formidable squadron which was to follow. The intelligence
of the approach of the terrible gunboats had already been conveyed
to the city of New Orleans; and that reckless desperation which
had so often characterized the movements of the rebels in times of
extreme peril began to manifest itself in the wholesale destruction
of property. Large cotton-ships, which had been freighted with the
precious staple of the South to run the blockade, were set on fire,
and came careering down the river, converting the mighty stream into a
moving panorama of leaping flames.

The Mississippi was covered with burning vessels, and other valuable
property, which the fiery sons of the South had made haste to destroy.
The Harrisburg threaded her perilous path through these floating
chariots of flame, till the roar of cannon was heard ahead of her. The
ship had proceeded but a short distance farther, before the Cayuga, in
which Captain Bailey was leading the way up the river, was discovered
engaging the rebel earthworks on both shores.

The Harrisburg, being one of the fast ships, immediately crowded on
all steam to assist the spunky little Cayuga in the unequal battle
into which she had ventured. The ship was now within a mile of the
batteries, which opened fire upon her, as well as upon the Brooklyn and
Pensacola. As she approached the forts in a direct line, only the two
guns on her topgallant-forecastle could be used; while the batteries
were enabled to meet her with a raking fire during her approach.

The crew were at quarters; and the broadside guns had been loaded with
shell, shrapnel, and grape, which are used only at short ranges. When
the ship had approached sufficiently near, the order was given to keep
her away. She rounded to, and her port-battery poured into one of the
forts a broadside which could not but be fearfully destructive among
the gunners in the fort.

At the same time, the starboard battery of the Pensacola gave the
fort on the other side of the river a broadside of the same material.
The Brooklyn then passed between these two ships, and delivered her
broadside; which, being followed by others from the remaining vessels
of the fleet, entirely silenced the guns in the earthworks. The action
was short, but brilliant,--what Admiral Farragut has styled “one of the
elegances of the profession.” Not all of the fleet could obtain a “pop”
at the batteries, so quickly were they silenced.

The Harrisburg continued on her course, the crew still at quarters,
in readiness to make the daylight shine through any rebel works which
should have the temerity to dispute her advance. As she approached
the city, the artistic eye of Mr. Bankhead, who was standing in the
mizzen-rigging, giving directions to the quartermaster at the wheel, so
as to avoid the burning wrecks which were borne down by the current of
the mighty river, discerned a beautiful little steamer, which had been
set on fire, and was drifting down with its fellows. It was not one
of those ungainly, top-heavy Western steamers, whose build had called
forth the criticisms of old Grummet; but she was evidently a sea-going
steamer, whose graceful lines and symmetrical proportions would have
filled the eye of a professional yachtman.

The executive officer of the Harrisburg was a gentleman of exquisite
taste in nautical affairs; and the destruction of so fine a craft
greatly disturbed his equanimity. In fact, he was disposed to rescue
the little steamer from the “manifest destiny” which appeared to have
overtaken her, especially as the fire had made but little progress. He
immediately communicated the suggestion to Captain Mainwright, pointing
out the value which the fine craft might be in the future operations of
the fleet. Mr. Bankhead was satisfied that he could save the steamer;
and the order was at once given for the attempt to be made.

“Strike two bells, quartermaster!” said the first-lieutenant. “Clear
away the second cutter!”

“Two bells, sir!” repeated Tom Longstone, who was conning the wheel.

“Three bells, quartermaster!” continued Mr. Bankhead: the first signal
being to stop her; the second, to back her.

“Three bells, sir!”

By the time the little steamer had drifted down to the ship, the second
cutter was in the water, manned by her regular crew. A dozen more men,
with axes and buckets, were ordered into the boat. Mr. Bankhead, having
a peculiar interest in the rescue of this elegant specimen of naval
architecture, took charge of the expedition himself.

“Somers!” said he as he sprang upon the gangway.

“Ay, ay, sir!” shouted Jack in reply, as he sprang forward to answer
the welcome summons.

“Take a bucket, and come into the boat.”

“Ay, ay, sir!” answered our sailor-boy, pleased to be remembered when
there was any difficult duty to be performed.

The boat dashed after the burning steamer; and, as she was now only a
few fathoms astern of the ship, the bowman had his boat-hook fast to
her before the oarsmen had pulled a dozen strokes. Jack, who had stowed
himself in the bow of the cutter, was the first to leap on board.
Rushing into the engine-room, he seized a shovel, and began to throw
overboard the combustibles which had been piled up near the wood-work.
There were a dozen pairs of ready hands to assist him.

The work of firing the steamer had been done in haste, and the
chips and shavings were damp. The flames had therefore hardly been
communicated to the wood-work; and, after a few moments of vigorous
exertion with the buckets and the axes, the fire was completely subdued.

“Clear away that hawser on the forecastle!” said Mr. Bankhead. “Pass it
into the boat.”

“Ay, ay, sir!” answered Sam Becket, who happened to be nearest to him
when the order was given, as he seized the end of the rope.

“Carry it over to the port-side,” added the officer.

The cockswain in charge of the cutter was ordered to pull round to the
other side of the steamer. By this time, half a dozen men had hold of
the hawser, and were hauling it over as directed. Mr. Bankhead, who
was now making signals with his hands for the ship to back down to the
prize, incautiously stepped within the bight of the hawser, a portion
of which had fallen into the water. He was standing on the plank-shear
at the time; and, there being no railing for protection, he was
suddenly and violently tripped up when the men hauled the rope over to
the other side. By the operation, his legs were pulled out from under
him; and, obeying the law of gravitation, he dropped head first into
the river.

Unfortunately for Jack Somers, he was at this critical moment engaged
in extinguishing the last remnants of fire in the cabin of the steamer,
and lost this glorious opportunity of practising his favorite diversion
of leaping overboard. We doubt not he would have done it, if he had
witnessed the catastrophe; but, as he did not, an interesting and
exciting incident for this chapter was thereby effectually spoiled.

Sam Becket, who had lost caste by falling overboard, was the nearest
man to Mr. Bankhead when the accident happened; being at that moment
engaged in clearing away the coils of the hawser in the middle of
the deck. As the reader has a very indifferent opinion of Becket’s
Christian impulses, it is not to be supposed that he was moved by any
lofty motives at this crisis in the affairs of the executive officer of
the Harrisburg. It is reasonable to believe that he remembered how Jack
had behaved on a similar occasion, and how much credit he had obtained
by his promptness and courage. Be this as it may, Sam Becket plunged
into the river, and swam towards Mr. Bankhead.

Though Becket was not an expert swimmer, he succeeded in reaching Mr.
Bankhead as he rose, and grasped him by the collar, regardless of the
dignity of his high office. It is quite probable, however, if a charred
timber had not floated near him at this critical period, that both of
them would have gone to the bottom together. Becket was clumsy in his
operations; but he kept a firm hold upon the sufferer till the boat
came up and rescued them.

Then it appeared that the first-lieutenant of the Harrisburg had struck
his head in falling, which had inflicted a serious injury, and deprived
him of consciousness. The ship had now backed down to the little
steamer. A heave-line was thrown upon her deck, and the hawser hauled
on board. The second cutter pulled immediately to the gangway; and Mr.
Bankhead, still insensible, was conveyed to the deck, and thence to the
wardroom, where Dr. Sawsett, full of interest and sympathy, hastened to
his assistance. The hawser was secured, and the ship proceeded on her
course with her prize in tow.

The Harrisburg, shortly after this accident, arrived before New
Orleans, and anchored. The events connected with the surrender of the
city are matters of history; and we shall confine our attention to the
personages who have already been presented to the reader. Mr. Bankhead
was not dangerously injured, though he was confined to his bed a few
days; and Jack Somers was relieved of a heavy load of anxiety, when he
saw him return to duty at the expiration of a week.

It need scarcely be said that Sam Becket had suddenly become a hero;
that, from the neglect induced by his lost reputation, he had at once
risen to the pinnacle of popularity. Men began to understand and
appreciate him. They gave him due credit for the noble deed he had
performed, without scrutinizing his motives. Mr. Bankhead had sent for
him as soon as he was able to see him, and thanked him for the service
he had rendered, besides giving him an intimation that he should be
suitably rewarded in the future. The first time that the executive
officer appeared on deck, Jack Somers began to edge this way and that
way, beating up towards the quarter-deck, till he found himself under
the lee of the mainmast. It would have been quite evident, to anyone
who had watched our hero, that he desired to communicate with Mr.
Bankhead; but he was very shy and sheepish in his movements. He was
too familiar with the requisites of navy discipline to approach, and
congratulate his powerful friend upon his recovery, as he would gladly
have done. It was not to do any stupid thing of this kind which caused
him to edge up to the mainmast: it was a purely business matter.

At last, when he had mustered the requisite degree of boldness, he
dashed briskly up to the first-lieutenant, and touched his cap. His
face was covered with blushes, and he was as confused as a school-girl
when she reads her first composition in public.

“Well, Somers?” said Mr. Bankhead kindly, as he smiled at the
difficulties with which Jack was beset.

“I beg your honor’s pardon!” stammered Jack, taking off his cap; “but I
wanted to speak a word to you about Becket.”

“What, Somers?”

“If you please, sir, I would like to see him rated as he was before
that affair,” added Jack, after a deal of stumbling and blundering.

“Cockswain of the captain’s gig? Impossible! You would be disrated if
that were done.”

“Don’t mind me, if you please, sir; and I would thank your honor more
than any other man in the ship if it could be done.”

“We may do something else for him; but I object to disrating you,”
replied Mr. Bankhead. “You are a good-hearted fellow, Somers; and you
shall not suffer for it.”

Jack argued like a lawyer; alleging that it would be peculiarly
grateful to the feelings of his topmate to be restored to his old
rating. It would wipe out the stain upon his character, and be better
than anything else that could possibly be done for him. At last, moved
by all these arguments, Mr. Bankhead promised to submit the matter to
Captain Mainwright.

Half an hour afterwards, the word was passed for Somers to appear at
the mainmast; which is the high court of equity on board a man-of-war.
The captain was there, and heard our sailor-boy repeat his request.

“Somers, why didn’t you jump over after Mr. Bankhead?” said he in a
quizzing tone.

“Because your honor told me not to jump overboard even after the best
friend I had in the world. Besides, sir, I was not present when the
accident happened.”

“I grant his request, Mr. Bankhead; but Somers shall be rated as a
quartermaster hereafter.”

“Thank your honor!” exclaimed Jack, who, though happy to have Becket
receive his due, was not at all anxious to lose his own rating as a
petty-officer.

Becket was sent for, and made as happy as a man could be by the
restoration of his rating as cockswain of the captain’s gig.




CHAPTER XX.

THE STEAMER MIDDY.


“I’m much obleeged to you, Jack Somers, for what you done,” said
Becket, as they sat down in the mizzen-top, on the evening after the
conference at the mainmast.

“I knew, after what had happened, that the first-luff would want you
to have your old place; and I thought I’d help him out a bit,” replied
Jack.

“It was handsome of you, Jack; and, with all my faults, I’m not mean
enough to keep still after what you’ve done for me. You’ve been
unanimous--no, that’s not what the shore lubbers call it.”

“Magnanimous,” added Rushington, whose vocabulary was more extensive
than that of the mass of man-of-war’s men.

“Ay, ay: that’s the word. It’s as long as a frigate’s cable; but it’s
just what I meant. You saved my life, and you have always treated me
handsomely, Somers. Now you’ve put me back just where I was before. I
don’t want to be foolish, Jack; but I’d do anything in the world for
you.”

“Thank you, Becket. I’m glad I had a chance to do you a good turn.”

“I’ve been a rough fellow, in my day; but you’ve taught me a lesson
that all the parsons in the country couldn’t have got into my nuddle.
By the way, Jack, do you know what I thought of you when we first come
aboard the ship?”

“I haven’t the least idea.”

“Well, Jack, I thought you was one of them pious sort of lubbers that
say long prayers, and go canting up and down the rigging, and shirk
their duty whenever they get a chance,--one of them chaps that’s always
preaching what they don’t practice.”

“I don’t see where you got such an idea as that of me.”

“Nor I nuther, Jack; but I did get it: and I was determined to make you
show your hand, or pick a quarrel with you. We had some talk about you
in mess No. 2, and I told the boys I meant to show you up. I was rather
taken aback when you wouldn’t odd-and-even. You got the laugh on me,
and I meant to sarve you out for it. You’re a good fellow, Jack; and,
what’s more’n that, you’re just my idee of a good Christian.”

“I’m glad your opinion of me has changed,” laughed Jack. “I’m sure
I haven’t lost anything by being fair and just towards you. I’m a
quartermaster now, and shall still wear my ‘eagle, anchor, and star.’”

“Silence in the main-top!” shouted the officer of the deck at this
interesting point in the conversation.

The sharp rebuke of the officer of the deck was called forth by a
disturbance in the main-top, where some extraordinary event appeared
to have transpired. Some of the topmen were laughing, and some were
swearing; and the aspect of the matter was, that a practical joke had
just been perpetrated. The mizzen-top was at once deeply interested in
the affairs of the main-top; and the quarter-watch were exceedingly
curious to learn the particulars. Jack Somers, whose new rating had
relieved him from duty as a topman, came down to learn the facts, which
were communicated to him by Ben Blinks.

The captain of the after-guard was an epicure, and had prepared, for
his own especial use, a dish of dunderfunk,--a man-of-war delicacy
which comes the nearest to what the Tremont House would serve up
under the more pretentious title of “cracker-pudding” than any other
dish that can be mentioned. It is made of “hard-tack,” pounded up,
with “slush” and molasses stirred in, and baked brown in a tin dish.
The captain of the after-guard had no relish for the gross viands of
the mess-table; for he was a very nice young man. Indeed, all the
after-guard are nice young men; being selected for their trim and
dandy appearance, because their duty lies on the quarter-deck, to
haul the main-braces, to handle the spanker-sheet, brails, and vangs,
and similar work in that part of the ship where the officers “most do
congregate.”

Spear, the captain of the after-guard, had duly prepared his dish of
dunderfunk, and bribed the ship’s cook to bake it for him. At the
galley, or cooking-stove, of a large man-of-war, a marine is usually
stationed, in busy times, to prevent any evil-disposed persons in
the crew from indulging forbidden appetites. In other words, a roast
chicken, duck, or goose, has been known to disappear from the galley in
the most mysterious manner; but, of course, appropriated by some hungry
tars who had not the spirit of the eighth commandment in their hearts.
In this manner had Spear’s dunderfunk taken to itself wings; and none
better than he knew how vain a thing it would be to find the guilty
purloiner of the delicious mess.

The captain of the after-guard was exceedingly wroth at first; but,
when his anger had spent itself, he determined to wreak upon the thief
or thieves a sweet revenge. The surgeon’s steward kindly provided him
with a quantity of ipecacuanha, which the malicious conspirator mixed
up with pounded ship-biscuit, and put the dough in a baking-pan. The
mess was duly slushed and sweetened, and committed to the care of the
ship’s cook, who, with half a dozen others, had been intrusted with the
secret.

When the dunderfunk was properly cooked, it was placed in a tempting
position; and the cook and marine cunningly afforded the victims
abundant opportunity to pilfer the pudding. The half-dozen pairs of
eyes that were watching for the issue of the plot presently saw a
main-topman slyly appropriate the dish, and carry it to the spar-deck.
The fellow hung around the fife-rail of the mainmast for a time; but,
as no one seemed to be watching him, he attached to it a small cord
which had been dropped down from the main-top for the purpose. It
was then hoisted up by the accomplices of the thief, who immediately
hastened up to share in the spoil.

The main-topmen partook greedily of the pudding; and, as the medicinal
ingredient had been liberally supplied, the victims of the joke were
soon in a suffering condition. Spear’s interests were represented in
the main-top by a friend; and, as soon as the thief and his accomplices
began to be sick, he began to laugh so immoderately, that the joke had
to be explained. Not only the stomachs but the tempers of the victims
rebelled. They were mad with everybody, and disgusted with themselves;
and, while they swore and vowed vengeance upon the authors of the joke,
those who had not partaken laughed, till the din from the main-top
constituted a breach of discipline, which called forth the sharp rebuke
from the officer of the deck.

The history of the joke spread through the ship, and undoubtedly
penetrated the sacred recesses of the cabin and wardroom. Every
man on board was in a broad grin for the next twenty-four hours;
and the victims of the plot became livid with rage when anyone
ventured to mention “dunderfunk emetics.” We sincerely hope that
the moral influence of the conspiracy was not lost upon them, and
that it inspired in them a deep and lasting reverence for the eighth
commandment.

We beg the reader’s pardon for the intrusion of this nauseous incident
in our story, which nothing but fidelity to the truth of history would
have induced us to narrate. It is only a specimen of the practical
jokes which men-of-war’s men play off upon each other, and which afford
an agreeable, but not always salutary, relief from the monotony of life
on board ship, especially in seasons of inactivity.

The Harrisburg had been somewhat injured by the shot and shell of
the rebels in the two actions in which she had been engaged; and,
while she remained at anchor opposite the city, her repairs were in
progress. At the same time, by order of the flag-officer, the little
steamer which had been rescued from the flames by the crew of the
Harrisburg was refitted for service. A thirty-two-pounder was placed
upon her forecastle, and a twenty-four-pounder on each side abaft the
paddle-boxes; and she was suitably prepared for the accommodation
of her future officers and crew. Her name was changed, and she was
henceforth to be known as the Middy. Giving her this undignified
appellative was a freak of the naval officers in charge of the
difficult task of finding a suitable title for the new-born gunboat:
but there was no small degree of fitness in the name; for the steamer
was both small and smart, which are supposed to be the representative
characteristics of the young gentlemen whose official position is
designated by the word.

The Middy made a trial trip when her repairs were completed, and proved
herself to be even more than had been anticipated by her sanguine
projector. She went down to Fort Jackson, and returned, making splendid
time, and working to the entire satisfaction of Mr. Bankhead, who had
superintended her alterations. On her arrival from below, she came to
anchor under the quarter of the Harrisburg.

On the following day, great was the astonishment of the crew when it
was whispered through the ship that Mr. Bankhead, at his own request,
had been appointed to the command of the little gunboat. But the report
was received with incredulity.

“Don’t you believe one word of it, my darling,” said Tom Longstone, to
whom Jack had carried the astounding news.

“I hope it isn’t true,” added Jack, who was sorely troubled at the idea
of losing his wardroom friend.

“Not one word of it, my dear. Do you suppose Mr. Bankhead is goin’ for
to let himself down into such a little craft as that? Why, Jack, my
boy, he ought to have the command of a sloop-of-war.”

“But the Middy is a fine little vessel.”

“No matter for that, my lad: she aren’t big enough to hold a man like
Mr. Bankhead. If they should send off Mr. Dickey, or even Mr. McBride,
I shouldn’t so much wonder. But to send off the fust-luff in a
cockle-shell like that,--why, it aren’t reasonable.”

“But if he should go----”

“I tell you, my darling, he aren’t goin’. Why, I’d almost as soon think
of the commodore’s goin’ in her himself!”

“But the officers are selected according to the service they have to
perform, as well as to the size of the vessel. The Middy may be ordered
to duty which requires one of the best officers in the fleet.”

“That may be, Jack,” said Tom, taking off his cap, and rubbing his bald
head.

“Suppose he should go, what will become of me?”

“He aren’t goin’, I tell ye, my dear,” persisted Tom. “You mought as
well talk of the cap’n’s goin’ cockswain of the dingy!”

Notwithstanding the very decided opinions of Quartermaster Longstone,
Mr. Bankhead was detached from the Harrisburg, and ordered to the
Middy. The report passed from the wardroom to the steerage, and thence,
through Mr. Bobstock, the boatswain, to Cheeks, sergeant of marines,
who conveyed it to a ship’s corporal, by whom it was disseminated
through the ship, clothed with such an air of authority, that even
Longstone and Grummet were compelled to believe.

“It may be so, Jack,” said Tom.

“There can no longer be a doubt,” added Jack.

“All I got to say is, if it is so, then the Middy’s goin’ to do a big
thing somewhere.”

“I wouldn’t care, if I were only sure of going in her,” continued Jack.

“Do you want to go off in the Middy, and leave me here, my darling?
Haven’t I watched over you like a baby? Haven’t I mended your trousers,
like your grandmother? Didn’t I put that ‘eagle, anchor, and star’
in your blue frock? Haven’t I nussed ye, and tended ye, and made a
man-o’-war’s man of ye? And now you want to go for to leave me!”

“No, I don’t want to leave you, Tom. I want you to go with me.”

“You’d sartinly git killed in the fust action, if I w’a’nt there to
take care of ye.”

“You shall be there, Tom. I won’t leave the Harrisburg without you, if
I can help it.”

“Give us your flipper, my dear. I hain’t got nobody in this world but
you, Jack; and, if you cast off and leave me, I won’t keer much what
becomes of this old hulk.”

“I will not leave you, if I can help it, Tom,” replied Jack, much moved
by the tenderness of the old man.

“I know you won’t, Jack. I allus took you for an honest lad; and, if
you desart me, I shall be disappointed,--that’s all. Now read me a
chapter in your mother’s Testament, my darling.”

Jack took the Testament from its place of concealment under the
mess-table, and read--as he had often done before to the old
quartermaster--a portion of a chapter. Tom, as was his habit, commented
upon the text in man-of-war style. Our sailor-boy listened, but with
only half his attention; for the Middy was still an anxious topic in
his mind.

A week elapsed before any decided steps were taken in manning the
Middy; and Jack was full of doubts and fears. In the meantime, the
little steamer had taken in her ammunition, small-arms, provisions, and
stores, and seemed to be entirely ready for a cruise.

We have continually spoken of the Middy as a little steamer; and so
she was, when compared with the larger steamers of the fleet: but she
was extensive enough to require the services of forty men, including
petty-officers and marines, besides her officers and the engineers and
firemen. Her crew was selected with great care from the squadron; and
we are happy to inform our anxious readers that both Jack Somers and
Tom Longstone were drafted into her, to their intense satisfaction.

Passed-midshipman Hayswell was appointed first-lieutenant, and Mr.
Midshipman Dickey was ordered to the little gunboat in the capacity of
second-lieutenant,--a promotion which added three inches to his height
in a single instant.

The officers and crew of the Middy went on board, and at once made
themselves comfortable in their new quarters.




CHAPTER XXI.

UP THE RIVER.


Jack Somers was delighted with the change which had been made in his
position: not that he was dissatisfied with his duties on board the
Harrisburg; but there was a prospect of being ordered to more active
duty. The Middy was small and fast; and he was confident that her
services would be in continual demand. Besides, Mr. Bankhead was now
his captain; and he hoped he should have a better opportunity to
distinguish himself.

Jack had hardly become accustomed to his new quarters in the Middy
before a new character appeared on board, and one with whom the
quartermasters were to become particularly intimate. He was a
rough-looking man, and swore ever so much more than there was any
need of; but he was not much worse than many of the crew. Jack Somers
had not yet learned to swear. He was strongly tempted, sometimes,
to use big words; but, when he observed that Mr. Bankhead and Mr.
Granger never uttered an oath, he came to the conclusion that he could
better afford to imitate them than the seamen who were less careful
of their speech. Tom Longstone never used a profane word: and a long
conversation with him, while the Harrisburg lay at anchor below the
city, had fully confirmed all his previous resolutions.

Mr. Lunsley did swear; and his nose was very red, and his manners
very coarse. Jack did not like him at all when he appeared at the
wheel-house, where the two quartermasters were engaged in making things
snug and orderly. He was the very antipodes of Mr. Bankhead, who was a
perfect gentleman in all his relations both with his inferiors and his
superiors in rank. There was only one thing about him which Jack did
like; and that was the rosette of “red, white, and blue,” which he wore
upon the lapel of his coat, indicating that he was a loyal man. In the
midst of so many traitors, this was no small recommendation in a man
who knew every bend and shoal of the Mississippi River.

“All hands, up anchor, ahoy!” passed through the Middy shortly after
the appearance of Mr. Lunsley.

Tom Longstone and Jack were in the wheel-house with the pilot, who was
smoking his cigar, and watching the operations of the sailors on the
forecastle.

“Anchor’s away, sir!” said the man who officiated in the capacity of
boatswain, to Mr. Hayswell, who stood upon the hurricane-deck.

“Strike one bell, Jack!” added the lieutenant.

“One bell, sir!”

The Middy went ahead slowly; and, when the anchor had been placed on
the forecastle, the four bells were struck, and she went ahead rapidly
up the river. Jack had the wheel, and received his directions from Mr.
Lunsley, who continued to smoke his cigar and to swear, though he had
nothing particular to swear at.

At the time of which we write, the country on both sides of the river
was in possession of the enemy, who closely watched the stream, though
they were very careful not to demonstrate upon any of the gunboats
which passed up and down after the capture of New Orleans. Though the
rebels could not successfully contest the possession of the river with
the powerful naval armaments of the Government, it was their policy
to impede the navigation as much as possible. Masked batteries had
been planted at various points, and companies of light-artillery and
sharp-shooters were employed to annoy any steamers which had not the
means of returning the fire.

Even the gunboats and larger vessels were annoyed by riflemen
attempting to pick off any man who showed his head above the bulwarks,
or appeared in the rigging. The Middy had been prepared for duty with a
full knowledge of this state of things. Her wheel-house had been plated
with iron sufficiently thick to resist a rifleball. Iron screens had
been prepared to protect the men while working the guns.

The Middy continued on her course up the river, bearing the stars and
stripes through the very midst of the discomfited rebels. The men were
piped to dinner as usual; and no one on board seemed to consider that
he was in the enemy’s country, and surrounded by enterprising and
spiteful foes. Tom was at dinner; and Jack was alone with Mr. Lunsley,
who declared that he could not leave till the steamer had passed a
certain difficult bend which he described.

“I think I can get along alone, after what you have said,” added Jack,
who had a great deal of confidence in his own ability.

“Perhaps you can, my little joker; but I don’t trust this craft out of
sight when there’s a shoal ahead,” replied the pilot; and of course he
could not utter a remark of this length without interlarding it with
half a dozen Mississippi oaths.

“Your directions are very plain, and I thought I understood them.”

“But I have some pride in this business. I’ve run up and down this
brook for ten years, and always had good luck. Now, if this steamer
should get aground, some of your folks would call me a traitor, or some
other pretty name of that sort.”

“I think not, sir.”

“I won’t trust ’em, little joker. If you----”

The loyal philosophy which was contained in the thought Mr. Lunsley
was about to utter was forever lost upon our hero; for a cannon-shot
at this instant whistled through the air, unpleasantly near the
wheel-house.

“I know’d it!” said he, changing his tone and manner.

“Knew what?”

“I know’d there was a battery here.”

“What did you ran us upon it for, then?”

“We must go in the channel, any way, my joker. But maybe you ain’t
afraid of cannon-balls?”

“Not particularly; though I have a wholesome respect for them when they
are properly projected,” replied Jack.

Another shot followed the first, and then a third. The crew were called
to quarters, and Tom Longstone returned to the wheel-house. Captain
Bankhead took his station on the hurricane-deck, by the side of the
pilot; and Mr. Hayswell was on the forward-deck.

“Strike two bells, quartermaster,” said the captain.

“Two bells, sir.”

The boat stopped; for it was no part of Captain Bankhead’s plan to
have his vessel knocked to pieces without an adequate compensation.
By his order, the thirty-two-pounder on the forecastle was discharged
in the direction from which the shot came. Old Grummet was captain of
this piece; and there was not a better gunner in the navy. The old man
growled all the time; but he worked with an alacrity which spoke better
for his zeal and courage than his words did. After half a dozen shells
had been thrown into the thicket from which the firing had proceeded,
the guns of the enemy appeared to be silenced; and the Middy again
proceeded on her way.

She had been backed down the stream some distance; and, during
the firing, the engine had worked just enough to keep her head
up the river, and give her steerage-way. As she advanced, the
thirty-two-pounder continued to discourse with the unseen rebels.

“We are all right now, Tom!” said Jack.

“Not yet, my darling. The rebel guns is short range; and, when we come
up, they’ll give us some more.”

“You may depend on that,” added Mr. Lunsley. “Starboard! quartermaster.”

“Starboard, sir!” replied Tom.

“Steady!”

“Steady, sir!”

“Now we catch it again!” continued the pilot. “Starboard!”

“Starboard, sir!” replied Tom, as another shot passed over the
forward-deck, so that the “wind” could be felt in the pilot-house.

Just then, Tom was called to assist in working one of the quarter-guns,
and Jack was left alone at the wheel. The pilot kept well back behind
the iron plates which shielded the helmsman.

“Hard-a-starboard!” said the pilot.

“You don’t see where you are going, sir!” replied Jack.

The sun, which had been behind a cloud, at this moment came out, and
the helmsman could distinctly see the bottom on the bow of the Middy.
There was not four feet of water in the direction the pilot had ordered
him to steer.

“Hard-a-starboard!” repeated the pilot sharply. “Do you think I don’t
know this river better than you do?”

“But look, sir! I can see the bottom!”

At this moment, the thirty-two-pounder sent another shell into the
thicket, the noise of which seemed to startle Lunsley, and he crouched
back into his former position. He had risen with the intention of
taking the wheel from the hands of the refractory quartermaster. Three
or four more shots from the shore passed near the Middy: but she was
still untouched; for her motion prevented the rebel gunners from
obtaining the correct range.

“Hard-a-starboard the helm!” shouted Lunsley again, when he had quieted
his nerves.

This time he did not wait for Jack to execute the order, but rose,
and seized the spokes of the wheel, rolling it over in the direction
indicated.

“Better mind what I say!” growled he with a volley of oaths, which made
Jack’s blood run cold.

“There’s no water there!” exclaimed Tom, glancing over the port-bow at
the long shoal, which could be distinctly seen.

At the same time, mustering all the strength and nerve of his slender
frame, he heaved the wheel over to port again, and thus prevented the
Middy from grounding while under the fire of the enemy’s guns.

“Let go that wheel, you villain!” cried the pilot, attempting to grasp
him by the throat.

“What’s the matter here?” demanded Captain Bankhead, opening the door
of the pilot-house.

“This man is a traitor! He’s trying to get the boat aground!” replied
Jack with energy.

“He lies!”

“Mind your helm, Somers!” said Captain Bankhead, unable to comprehend
the merits of the question.

“Shall I put her hard-a-starboard as he orders me?” asked Jack. “You
can see the bottom there, sir.”

The captain glanced over the port-bow, and was satisfied that the
quartermaster had spoken the truth.

“Steady!” said he.

“Steady, sir!” repeated Jack; which is the order when the helm is to be
kept as it is.

He looked at Lunsley, as he spoke, with a triumphant expression upon
his face. The pilot’s face was as dark as a thunder-cloud. The captain
stepped out, apparently satisfied that he could trust Jack, though he
did not know anything about the river, better than the pilot, who knew
all about it.

He had scarcely closed the door after he had withdrawn, when Lunsley
sprang to the wheel again, and made a vigorous effort to throw it over
as he had directed the wheelman to do. Jack braced his feet against
the spokes underneath, and for a moment prevented the scoundrel from
accomplishing his purpose. But the pilot was a powerful man, and Jack
found himself defeated in his attempt by main strength to prevent the
Middy from being thrown ashore. He did not give up the ship: and this
was precisely what it would have amounted to, if she had got aground
there; for the rebels could have knocked her to pieces in five minutes
if she would only “hold still” long enough.

When he found he was not a match in physical strength for the burly
pilot, he had the presence of mind to strike two bells, followed by
three; which were the signals respectively to stop and back her.
The traitor, finding the steamer was receding from the shoal sprang
forward towards the bell-pulls. There was a heavy hard-wood stick in
the wheel-house, which had been used to pry up the iron screens into
position. Jack grasped this weapon; and, as the pilot placed his hand
upon the pull, he struck him a heavy blow upon the back of the head,
which felled him to the deck.

Jack then rang two bells,--stop her; one bell,--ahead slow; four
bells,--ahead, full speed.




CHAPTER XXII.

JACK ASHORE.


The roar of the guns, and the busy scenes in every part of the steamer,
had prevented anyone from noticing the affair which had just transpired
in the wheel-house. The Middy was completely enveloped in the smoke of
her own guns; and, though Captain Bankhead was on the hurricane-deck,
he had no knowledge of the important event which had saved his vessel
from destruction. The stopping, backing, and going ahead again, had
been noticed, of course; but they were supposed to have been occasioned
by some difficulty in the navigation.

The battery which had opened upon the Middy was situated upon a point
of land at a bend in the river, and on the port-hand. Near the land,
there was a broad shoal; for the current, in turning this curve,
would, by its natural law, sweep round to the opposite shore. As soon,
therefore, as Jack found himself his own master in the wheel-house, he
put the helm well a-port, and kept the steamer away from the dangerous
ground.

Captain Bankhead, who was directing the action on deck, had passed the
word for Tom Longstone as soon as he was conscious of any treachery on
the part of Lunsley. Before Tom came up from below, he again opened the
door of the wheel-house, where he discovered the prostrate form of the
traitor.

“What’s this, Somers?” demanded Captain Bankhead.

“He is a traitor, sir! He tried to take the wheel out of my hands, and
throw the steamer on that shoal!” replied Jack in high excitement. “I
knocked him down with this club, and kept her off.”

“Good Heaven!” exclaimed the captain, who could not but be impressed by
the danger he had just escaped. “You have done well, Jack. Here comes
Longstone. Keep her off short a few minutes longer, and we shall be
clear of the battery.”

“Ay, ay, sir. There is water enough for us anywhere on the starboard
hand. We are all right now, sir.”

“Keep her steady, Jack, and be very careful. Don’t stop her again if
you can help it.”

“I will not, sir.”

“Here, Longstone: roll this traitor out of the wheel-house, and then
stand by with Somers.”

“Ay, ay, sir;” and Tom pitched the carcass of the pilot out of the
wheel-house, very much as though it had been the body of a dead dog.

“What’s the matter, my darling?” asked Tom as he joined Jack at the
wheel.

“Nothing particular, Tom. I’ll tell you all about it, by and by,”
replied Jack, still keeping his eyes fixed upon the water ahead.

The clouds of smoke obstructed his vision; but he made the most of the
brief intervals when the wind opened a clear space for him. He felt
that the safety of the Middy depended as much upon him as upon the
captain; for, if she got aground, it would insure her destruction in
a very few moments. The rebels were improving in their practice, and
two or three shots had struck the steamer. One had passed through the
cabin on the main-deck; and another had ploughed up several feet of the
hurricane-deck, abaft the smoke-stack.

The Middy soon passed the most dangerous point, and the guns of the
rebels had begun to fall short of the mark. Only the port quarter-gun
of the steamer could be brought to bear upon the battery; and the
action seemed to be over, unless Captain Bankhead chose to renew it.

“Where is the pilot?” asked the captain, opening the door of the
wheel-house.

“I dunno, sir: I pitched him out on the hurricane-deck,” replied Tom,
stepping out to look for his victim.

“He is not here now.”

“I dropped him down there,” added Tom, pointing to the place where he
had deposited the senseless form of the pilot.

“We must find him before he has a chance to do any further mischief.”

The captain and quartermaster walked aft to ascertain what had become
of Lunsley, who had evidently come to his senses, and taken himself
off. He was not on the hurricane-deck; and they were about to descend
to the main-deck, when the pilot’s canoe, which had been towing
astern, was discovered some distance down the river, pulling towards
the battery. The villain, who had in some measure recovered from
the effects of Jack’s blow, had crept down from the hurricane-deck
during the excitement of the action, and taken to his canoe. A
twenty-four-pound shot from one of the quarter-guns was sent after him;
but the object was so small, and the distance so great, that the gunner
failed to hit it.

The Middy was then put about, so as to bring the thirty-two-pounder
to bear upon the battery, and again opened fire upon the rebels; for
Captain Bankhead expressed his purpose to clean out the enemy from
their position. As the battery did not reply, she was moved up nearer,
so that one of the twenty-four-pounders could also command the spot.
After firing for half an hour without eliciting any response from the
rebels, the Middy went down the river again, and placed herself in
different positions to tempt the enemy to renew the action; but the
battery was still silent.

The quarter-boat on the starboard side was then cleared away; and Mr.
Hayswell, the first-lieutenant, was ordered on shore to examine the
position.

“Somers, you will go in the boat. Mr. Hayswell may want such a person
as you are to assist him,” said Captain Bankhead.

“Thank you, sir.”

“Take a pistol and cutlass with you, and don’t be reckless.”

“Ay, ay, sir.”

The boat contained twelve men besides the officer, and pulled to the
nearest point of land, just below the battery, where it could be
covered in case of necessity by the guns of the steamer. Mr. Hayswell
with eight of the men landed, and cautiously made their way up to the
battery. They found a rude earthwork; but there was not a gun to be
seen: and it was evident that the fort had been manned by a battery of
light-artillery, which had decamped when the fire became too warm for
the gunners.

A short distance from the thicket in which the gunners had been
concealed, there was the mansion-house of a plantation, with its
village of negro-huts in the vicinity. It was important to know in what
direction the battery had gone; for Mr. Hayswell concluded that it
had gone farther up the river, to open upon the steamer from another
position. The party, therefore, advanced towards the mansion, but with
the utmost care, to avoid falling into an ambush or any other trap
which the rebels might have set for them.

“Bress de Lord, massa! De jubilee am come!” shouted a negro, stepping
out from a cabin as the party approached the negro-huts.

Mr. Hayswell at once proceeded to question the negro in regard to the
battery which had occupied the earthwork. The man was very willing to
give any information in his power; but unfortunately he knew nothing,
except that the rebels had taken the road which he pointed out. It was
a cross-road leading from the main highway; and the battery might
have gone up or down the river,--he could not tell which. Mr. Hayswell
then decided to visit the mansion-house, leaving the negro very much
depressed in spirits because “de jubilee” had not yet come, and five
hundred slaves were not to be carried off by the little Middy.

The people at the mansion-house were very uncommunicative. They did not
know where the battery had gone; did not know there was any battery;
had heard firing, but did not know what it meant; thought it best not
to interfere with matters that did not concern them. Mr. Hayswell did
not deem it prudent to continue his investigation any farther, and left
the house. He had scarcely stepped off the veranda before a dense smoke
was discovered some distance up the river. The cotton-burners, alarmed
at the approach of the Union force, had probably set fire to a pile
of the precious commodity. The smoke indicated in what direction the
battery had gone; and Mr. Hayswell decided to reconnoitre that way: for
it was the military force of the Confederacy which destroyed cotton;
and there could be hardly a doubt that the party which had fired upon
the Middy was the same that performed this work of destruction.

The boat-crew had advanced but a short distance before the lieutenant
was startled by the roar of artillery in the direction of the
earthwork, near the spot where he had landed. It did not proceed from
the Middy’s thirty-two-pounder.

“What does that mean?” said Mr. Hayswell as the party halted.

“I think the battery of artillery has got back to its old position,
sir,” replied Jack, who was the person addressed.

“If it has, we are in a bad situation.”

“I’m afraid we are, sir!” added Jack, who wanted to ask Mr. Hayswell
why he had wandered so far from his boat, since it did not make much
difference where the battery had gone: but he was too well trained to
ask an impertinent question.

“We must get back, if we can,” added Mr. Hayswell, who seemed to be
very much perplexed at the difficulty of his situation, as well he
might have been.

He led his party down to the shore of the river, which Jack thought was
the stupidest thing he could possibly do; for the earthwork was now
between them and the boat. The Middy could not even be seen around the
bend of the river. At last, when the situation seemed to be utterly
hopeless, Jack ventured to suggest that they might pass round the
battery, and reach the boat below, or at least escape capture till the
Middy had time to shell out the rebels a second time.

Mr. Hayswell adopted the suggestion; and the party succeeded, with the
help of the negro who was waiting for the jubilee, in making their
way as far as the cross-road, which led from the principal highway to
a landing-place on the river. While the boat-expedition were looking
for the cotton-burners half a mile above, the rebel artillery company
had returned by this road to their original position. Of course the
enemy had a motive in leaving the earthwork, and a motive in returning
to it. The subject was rather dark to Mr. Hayswell; but the fact was
undeniable.

Meanwhile, the shells from the Middy were dropping into the earthwork,
and doing terrible execution among the rebels. About the time our
party reached the road, they had got about enough of it, and were on
the point of retiring again, probably satisfied that they had “waked
up the wrong customer” when they attacked the little Middy. Now, it
was very unfortunate for our people on shore that this result had
been reached at this particular moment; for the retreating graybacks
instantly discovered the blue-jackets, and, with a whoop and a yell,
dashed forward for the purpose of capturing them.

Resistance was useless; and Mr. Hayswell ordered the men to run for
their lives; of which permission they promptly availed themselves. Most
of them attempted to make a sweep round the road, and reach the boats,
where the rebels followed them. Jack prudently retreated in another
direction; and, reaching a gin-house, crawled in, and stowed himself
away among the machinery.

The guns of the Middy still played a lively tune, and Jack was in
hope that his companions had escaped. He remained in his concealment
until he thought the rebels must have retired, and then crept out. No
firing had been heard for some time; and he stealthily moved towards
the river, confident that his progress would not be interrupted.
But this was a day of mistakes; and our hero soon found that he had
miscalculated his chances. The rebels had ceased firing, because their
twelve-pounders only drew the steamer’s fire, which they found too much
for them, without injuring her.

While he was slowly and cautiously making his way toward the river, he
was suddenly and very unexpectedly accosted by a couple of graybacks.

“Halt!” said one of them, stepping in front of our sailor-boy.

Jack did halt: he could not well help halting, unless he concluded to
step over the rebels in his path. They had been concealed behind a
mound of earth, and were either watching for him, or observing the
movements of the Middy.

“Lay down your arms!” added the rebel speaker, elevating a musket, and
taking aim at him.

Perhaps Jack was reckless; on the whole, we rather think he was: for,
instead of obeying the order, he drew his revolver, and fired at the
soldier who addressed him. Of course, the grayback discharged his
musket; and Jack felt something on his left shoulder very much like
a saw drawn along the skin. But he was not killed,--he was sure of
this,--and immediately fired another barrel of the revolver, which
caused the assiduous rebel to drop. Yet Jack was sure he was not
killed; for he heard him swear after he fell.

There was no time just then to balance probabilities: and our
blue-jacket, concluding that the rebels were in force at the earthwork,
decided to change his base; which is always considered a very difficult
operation in the midst of an engagement. In the present instance, it
consisted only of wheeling about, and running away in the opposite
direction; which has often been the sum and substance of the same
manœuvre when conducted on a larger scale.

Jack ran till he came to the mansion, being chased by the uninjured
rebel of the couple. He dodged several times, and at last threw his
pursuer off the track. As he doubled up under the lee of the big house,
he saw a cellar-door open; through which, as the place looked inviting,
he entered without asking permission.




CHAPTER XXIII.

THE PLANTER’S MANSION.


The cellar into which Jack had entered appeared to be the storehouse of
the plantation; for it was half filled with boxes and barrels, crates
and cases, with demijohns, jugs, and canisters. In one corner, there
was a small room partitioned off from the rest of the space, which our
hero concluded was the depository for eatables, and for which reason
he was very desirous of exploring it; for it will be remembered that
the action had been commenced on board the Middy just as the hands were
piped to dinner. Jack had eaten nothing since morning; and, as boys at
his age are constitutionally predisposed to be hungry, he was now, in
the middle of the afternoon, almost in a suffering condition.

He tried the door of the room in the corner of the cellar; but, to his
grief, it was locked. Jack could not help thinking what a villainously
bad practice it was to keep the pantry locked; but if he had considered
the number of working negroes on the place, whose diet consisted of a
peck of corn and a small allowance of bacon per week, he would have
been satisfied with the wisdom of the arrangement, and, for the sake
of the negroes aforesaid, have been content to remain hungry for the
present.

As he could not find anything to eat, or even to drink,--for
the demijohns and jugs were either empty or filled with oil and
vinegar,--he was obliged to stow himself away among the boxes and
barrels, to wait for a more convenient season to emerge from the gloom
of his hiding-place. He was alone, and there was nothing to disturb
his meditations. Of course, he could not help reviewing the incidents
of the afternoon, and wondering how many of his companions had been
killed, wounded, and captured. As he had no data upon which to base
his calculations, his conclusions were not particularly satisfactory.
He was almost certain, however, that Mr. Hayswell was a prisoner; but
he contented himself with the thought that he was no great loss to the
Government, after his mismanagement of the affair of the boat-party.

For the want of something better to do, in the gloom and silence of
the cellar, he went to sleep; as almost any sailor is apt to do, when
he has nothing to busy his hands or occupy his mind. He is “broke of
his rest,” as the elderly ladies in the country say; and it is just
as natural for him to go to sleep as it is for him to “splice the
main-brace.” Jack went to sleep. He had not eaten anything to give
him the nightmare, and his bed was hard, cold, and uncomfortable. His
position was rather cramped; and these things, combined, caused him to
dream.

An old horse, thin, spavined, and afflicted with the heaves, covered
all over with stars and bars, slowly came round, and began making
stern-way till his heels were within reach of the dreamer. He thought
it was about time to retire, but found himself unable to move. The
old horse deliberately raised his heels, and kicked him in the head.
He tried to cry out, and tried to beat a retreat; both of which, for
some mysterious reason, he was unable to do. The dilapidated old nag
continued to pound away till his head seemed to be mashed to a jelly,
and, when it appeared to him that the end of all things had come, he
waked up in a violent perspiration, trembling from head to foot with
the agony he had endured during his slumbers.

It was dark as Egypt; but there was no old horse present. He felt
around him, and the boxes and barrels among which he had stowed himself
recalled his bewildered senses, and informed him where he was. He
rubbed his eyes, and renewed the vision which had just faded from
his consciousness. The old horse was, without doubt, the Southern
Confederacy; a fact sufficiently certified by the stars and bars he
wore. Jack could not help laughing at the sorry figure of the miserable
creature; but, when he thought what awful blows the typical beast
had given him, he concluded that the Confederacy, though a one-horse
affair, was not to be despised.

Jack had seen a dream-book on board the Harrisburg; but what the
significance of dreaming about horses, and especially about such a
miserable beast as that which had occupied his slumbering mind, might
be, he could not tell. In truth, he had not much faith in dreams; yet
he could hardly escape the conclusion, that such a remarkable vision
must mean something. If not actually a captive in the hands of the
rebels, he was certainly in a fair way of becoming such; and he was
afraid the dream foreshadowed his own fate in the hands of the enemy:
but he hoped, if he was doomed to a rebel prison, that the old horse
would not kick quite so hard as he had in his dream.

It was very dark in the cellar now; and Jack groped his way out from
the boxes and barrels which had concealed him, and felt his way in the
direction of the door by which he had entered. It was closed, locked,
and the key removed. He could not open it by any art or device of his
fertile ingenuity; and it was patent to him that his retreat by the
door was cut off. But there must be, according to the natural rule
of architecture, some means of getting into the cellar other than the
outside of the house. This was a comfortable reflection; and he groped
about the dark place till he found the stairs leading to the entry
above.

As a matter of precaution, he seated himself on the first step, and,
while he was listening for any sounds which might reach him from the
rooms above, loaded the two barrels of his pistol which had been
discharged at the rebels. There were footsteps to be heard in one of
the rooms over him; but the entry was apparently unoccupied. When the
pistol had been prepared for use, he cautiously ascended the steps,
opened the door, and passed into the principal hall of the mansion.

The front door was now before him. On each side of it, there was a room
opening into the hall. Jack’s intention was to pass out of the house by
the main entrance; but, unfortunately, one of the doors at the side of
it was open. The room was lighted, and there were persons in it engaged
in conversation. It was not safe to run the gauntlet of this open door;
and Jack was obliged to seek a passage in some other direction, or wait
till the parlor-door should be closed.

To facilitate the ease and silence of his movements, our hero slipped
off his shoes; and, tying them together by the strings, secured them
in his belt. Thus prepared, he commenced exploring the premises. There
was a door in the rear of the house; but this was locked, and the key
removed. Adjoining the two front rooms, there were two other rooms; one
of which Jack concluded, from the pleasant odors saluting him in that
direction, was the dining-room. He looked in at the key-hole. The room
was lighted, and the table seemed to be in readiness for the family.
There were no servants present; and Jack concluded that they had gone
to the cook-house, which in the Southern States, our readers are aware,
is usually located at some little distance from the mansion.

The hungry intruder ventured to open the door, using extreme care in
the operation. On the table, there were a pair of cold roast chickens,
ham, bread, cake, and other nice things, which proved to be an
unconquerable temptation to the unwelcome visitor. Without ceremony, he
confiscated one of the chickens and a quantity of bread,--soft-tack,
in the vernacular of the blue-jackets; and, his mouth watering at
the savory anticipations the feast excited, he beat a hasty but
well-conducted retreat.

As the hall was an exposed place, he thought of returning to the
cellar to discuss this supply of viands; but, as he passed the door
of the apartment opposite the dining-room, he glanced through the
key-hole. It was not lighted; and, with the same care he had before
used, he opened the door. It was a starlight evening, and sufficient
light came through the windows to enable him to see that the room
was the planter’s library. But he had hardly entered the apartment
before he heard footsteps in the hall. Darting towards a door which he
descried in the dim light, he opened it, and shut himself in, just as
a person entered from the hall. It was as dark as Erebus in his new
quarters; but Jack, after placing his pistols in a position for instant
service, felt around him, and ascertained that he had taken refuge in
a large closet, which contained stacks of old papers, pamphlets, and
books. Hanging on one side were sundry articles of clothing; but our
hero hoped they would not be wanted till he had departed. He had not
dared to latch the door behind him, lest the noise should attract the
attention of the person who had entered. Pushing it open a little,
he found that the library had been lighted; and the servant who had
performed this service was seated in an easy-chair, occupied with
his own reflections. He was a sleek, well-fed negro, dressed like a
gentleman; and apparently had no interest whatever in the “jubilee” for
which the field-hands in the huts were impatiently praying.

The fellow was evidently waiting for the planter to finish his supper
and take possession of the library. He sat there as composed and
contented as though he had been the owner of the library. He was
certainly unconscious that he was, just at that moment, very much in
Jack’s way; for the latter wanted a chance to open the window, and jump
out. Jack was provoked at the indifference of the gentlemanly servant,
and even considered the propriety of giving him one of the bullets in
his revolver: but he rejected this suggestion, as it would have been
nothing less than murder; for the fellow was as harmless as he was fat
and lazy.

Then he thought he would “appear” to the negro, and, in the confusion
which ensued, escape by the front door; but, as this would subject him
to a pursuit, he decided to remain quiet, even at the risk of having
to stay in the closet till the planter had retired for the night. He
concluded, after mature deliberation, that this would not be a very
terrible calamity; for the old horse of his dreams could hardly reach
him in that comfortable position. One thing, however, he regarded in
the light of a calamity; and that was his empty, gnawing, rebellious
stomach, which was protesting in its own eloquent language against the
deprivations to which it had been cruelly subjected since seven-bells
in the morning watch. Whatever happened, he was determined to attend to
the claims of this discomfited organ.

Carefully pulling the door to, he detached a wing from the carcass of
the chicken, and devoured it. The drumstick and second joint were next
depleted of every edible particle; and, in due time, the disintegrated
skeleton of the fowl lay in a heap upon a pile of pamphlets, stripped
as clean as the buzzards could have picked it. The three large slices
of bread also disappeared, and Jack felt better. Nothing was needed
but a cup of tea or coffee to complete the feast. Perhaps the negro
exquisite in the easy-chair thought there were rats in the planter’s
closet when he heard the chicken-bones crack; but, luckily for Jack, he
was too indolent to investigate the cause of the strange noises.

Our hero felt perfectly contented at this point of our narrative. I
don’t think he would have cared a straw if the servant, or even the
master, had opened the closet door when he had finished his supper; for
there is something in a full stomach which inspires confidence. If it
should ever be our lot to become a brigadier-general, we should never
take our brigade into battle except upon a full stomach. Jack again
pushed the door open a little, so that he could see into the library.
Suddenly the sleek black rose from the easy-chair as though he had
received a charge of electricity through his back-bone, and the planter
with another gentleman entered the apartment. Of course, the colored
gentleman retired.

“Have a cigar, Litchfield,” said the planter.

“Thank’e,” replied the guest; for such he appeared to be. “I always
smoke when I get a chance.”

“Eh, Mr. Litchfield?” thought Jack, when he heard that voice, and
recognized it as belonging to Lunsley, the pilot. “So you change your
name as well as your colors.”

The gentlemen in the library talked about the Rebellion, and
especially about the affair of the Middy: and Jack learned that the
first-lieutenant and four of the men had been captured; that the others
had escaped to the boat, and reached the steamer, which still lay at
anchor off the earthwork.

“Well, I suppose it’s about time for me to start,” said Litchfield,
_alias_ Lunsley, after they had conversed about the event for half an
hour. “But I don’t quite understand the cotton matter yet.”

The planter then proceeded, after closing the hall-door, and declaring
that no negro must hear a word about the business, to describe the
place where a large steamer, loaded with cotton, was concealed in
a bayou some miles above. He was afraid the Union gunboats would
discover and appropriate the valuable cargo, or that the Confederate
cotton-burners would destroy it. Between these two fires, he was
terribly perplexed. He had chartered a steamer, and intended to run
his cotton up the Red River, where it would be safe for the present.
Lunsley agreed to pilot the boat up, and manage the enterprise.

“But it must be done to-night. That Yankee gunboat will have it in the
morning, if you don’t,” said the planter.

“It shall be forty miles up the river before daylight,” replied the
pilot.

“Perhaps not!” said Jack to himself, as the two gentlemen left the
study.




CHAPTER XXIV.

A NIGHT-EXPEDITION.


Jack Somers was troubled with a strong desire to get his hands upon
that Mr. Litchfield, _alias_ Lunsley; or, failing in that, to bring
his pistol to bear upon some vital part of his corporeal being. The
wretch was a traitor, and had worn Union colors to obtain the favor
of the naval officers, that he might betray his trust into the hands
of his employers. It was evident to him now that Litchfield had never
intended to take the Middy above this point; for he knew of the
existence of the earthwork. It was his purpose to get her aground,
where the battery could knock her to pieces. It also looked very much
as though he had come up for the purpose of taking charge of the
cotton-steamer which the planter had intrusted to his care.

Jack waited but a moment, after the gentlemen had left the room, before
he emerged from his hiding-place; and, carefully opening the window,
jumped out upon the veranda. He took the precaution to close the
window, that no suspicions might be awakened. He was now free: the old
horse had not yet hit him on the head; and he was disposed to believe
the old adage, that dreams go by contraries. But Jack was too wise a
lad to crow before he had got out of the woods.

The conversation between the pilot and the planter, to which he had
listened, placed in his possession some valuable information, of which
he now purposed to avail himself. The light-battery was still in the
vicinity, and a squad of rebels was at the earthwork watching the
Middy. Instead, therefore, of going to the point where he had landed,
he made his way directly to the river, hoping that he should be able to
find a boat. He could discover no craft of any sort; and was compelled
to resort to a log, upon which he boldly put off.

The current carried him down the stream, after he had pushed out from
the shore; and, when he had rounded the bend, he discovered the Middy
at anchor on the edge of the shoal. By a vigorous application of the
board he used as a paddle, he contrived to navigate the log so as to
bring it up under the bow of the steamer. The watch hailed him; but his
well-known voice was all that was needed to secure him assistance in
getting on board.

“Why, Jack, my darling!” cried Tom Longstone, as the veteran threw his
arms around him, “I guv you up for lost!”

“I’m all right, Tom. Who’s officer of the deck?”

“Mr. Dickey, up there,” replied Tom, pointing to the hurricane-deck.

“Come on board, sir,” added Jack, touching his cap to Mr. Dickey. “If
you please, sir, I would like to see the captain.”

“Come up, then.”

“Where away now, Jack, my dear? Can’t you tell us anything about it?”

“Not now, Tom; there’ll be more fun by and by: but don’t say a word,”
whispered Jack as he ascended to the hurricane-deck.

“So you got off, Somers!” said Mr. Dickey with a degree of
condescension which was indeed quite remarkable.

“Yes, sir: I stowed myself away in a dark place till night, and then
came off.”

“Have you seen Mr. Hayswell?”

“No, sir: he was taken, and they have sent him off somewhere. If you
please, sir, I would like to see the captain about something of great
importance.”

“The captain! I’m acting first-lieutenant of this ship; and you are
aware that all communications must pass through me,” added Mr. Dickey
with sublime importance.

“I beg your honor’s pardon,” added Jack with a clever stroke of
policy. “There’s something to be done right off; and I only wanted to
save time.”

“State your business to me at once, then,” continued the acting
first-lieutenant of the Middy.

Fortunately, however, Mr. Dickey’s high flight was disturbed by the
appearance of Captain Bankhead himself, who at once recognized Jack,
dark as it was.

“Somers!” exclaimed he, greatly astonished.

“Come on board, sir,” answered Jack, touching his cap.

“But you were captured?”

“No, sir: not quite. I came very near it.”

“Come into the wheel-house, and tell me all about it,” added Captain
Bankhead, leading the way.

Jack told his story as rapidly as possible, including that part
relating to the cotton-steamer. The latter portion of the narrative was
particularly interesting to Captain Bankhead, who was much dispirited
by the loss of his first-lieutenant and five men; for it now appeared
that one had been killed in the boat. The capture of the steamer, laden
with cotton, would heal his wounded pride, and enable him to return to
the fleet with flying colors.

Mr. Dickey was called in; and Jack stated with great care all the
particulars in relation to the cotton-steamer. The captain proposed at
once to get up his anchor, and hasten to the mouth of the bayou where
the boat was concealed.

“I beg your honor’s pardon,” interposed Jack very reverently; “but
the battery is on duty somewhere about here, and men are watching the
steamer from the earthwork.”

“Very good, Jack,” said the captain with a smile. “You are right. If
you have any suggestions to make, I will hear them; for I find you have
got a long head for so small a body.”

“I think the first cutter, with a howitzer and twenty men, would do the
business in first-rate style,” replied Jack.

“But, Somers, you must be used up after such a hard day’s work.”

“Not at all, sir: I am as fresh as though I had just come out of my
hammock.”

“Because you must go in the boat, if we conclude to take the steamer in
that manner.”

“I am ready, sir.”

“Mr. Dickey, clear away the first cutter, and have a howitzer ready for
her!” added the captain.

The commander of the Middy seemed to be much troubled when his little
first-lieutenant had gone to execute the order. He did not speak
for some time; and, as it was not proper to submit his doubts to a
quartermaster, we must add that the want of a suitable officer to
conduct the expedition was the occasion of his perplexity. Mr. Dickey
was the only officer who was available for the important duty, and it
was not proper that the captain should go himself.

Mr. Dickey was young, brave and smart in double sense; but he was
hardly qualified to execute so difficult an undertaking. Captain
Bankhead had seen one expedition fail for want of discretion on the
part of an officer; and he was very much inclined to leave Mr. Dickey
in charge of the Middy, and perform the duty himself. This plan was
rejected; for the steamer herself might be captured in his absence.
There was no alternative but to commit the charge of the expedition to
Mr. Dickey; and accordingly that little officer was duly instructed for
the purpose.

The best men on board were detailed to form his crew, all of them armed
to the teeth. Mr. Dickey was solemnly charged to be prudent, and to
act with vigor and determination. The chief engineer was ordered to go
in the boat, as his services would be required in case the enterprise
should be successful. Mr. Dickey was directed to consult with him in
any emergency.

Captain Bankhead had decided to make a demonstration with the Middy
in order to cover up the movements of the boat-party. The anchor was
weighed, and she stood over to the other side of the river, where,
under the shadow of the high bank, the boat cast off, and pulled up the
river with muffled oars. The Middy was then headed down the river; and
those who were watching no doubt congratulated themselves that they had
driven her off.

Curled up in the bow of the cutter, Jack Somers related his adventures
to Tom Longstone, who was one of the party. He spoke in whispers; and
Tom did not speak at all, so deeply was he absorbed in the exciting
story.

The oarsmen pulled for two hours against the current, when she was in
the vicinity of the bayou where the cotton-steamer lay. Of course,
none of the party knew precisely where to find the mouth of the stream
they were to ascend. Jack Somers was in the bow of the cutter, on the
lookout for anything like an opening in the bank of the river. The
boat still kept under the shadow of the left bank of the river; and
Mr. Dickey had carefully observed his instructions to preserve entire
silence.

While Jack was on the watch, straining his eyes to find the bayou,
he discovered a light on the opposite shore; and, when the boat had
advanced a little farther, he clearly discerned the opening for which
he had been in search. But the light was ominous. It was clearly a
lantern in the hands of a man, as its occasional motion plainly showed.

Jack Somers promptly concluded that the light meant something, and
that it was some kind of a signal for the cotton-steamer. As the man
who carried it could not possibly have seen the cutter, the meaning
of the light was easily read. The signal-man had, of course, been
instructed to show the light if there was nothing to interfere with the
passage of the cotton-boat.

Our hero saw that this was delicate business to manage, and he was
very much afraid that Mr. Dickey would spoil everything by his
self-sufficiency. He had a suggestion; but he hardly dared to offer it,
lest it should be rejected; but there was no time to spare; for the
cutter was now passing the bayou.

Creeping aft between the oarsmen, he touched his cap in the darkness,
and “begged his honor’s pardon; but there was a light on the bank.”

“What of it?” demanded Mr. Dickey.

“Here’s the place, your honor,” added Jack in a whisper. “There is a
man with a light on the bank. If your honor will please to order the
men to lie on their oars.”

Mr. Dickey did give the order; for he had been submissively addressed
as “your honor”; and nothing more than that could possibly be expected
of a quartermaster. Jack then explained the probable meaning of the
light, and hinted, in a very respectful but roundabout way, that the
man who carried it must be disposed of before the boat entered the
bayou. He did not say this in so many words; and, happily, Mr. Dickey
did not take offense at the suggestion.

“We will pull over to the other side and land a couple of men, who can
silence him, and keep the signal flying,” said Mr. Dickey, who fully
believed that he had given utterance to an original idea, so carefully
had Jack worded his hint.

The boat dropped down stream about half a mile, and then crossed over.
Jack begged permission to be one of the two men who were to execute
the important duty of capturing the signal-man; adding that it would
enable him to verify some of the information he had obtained on shore.
Mr. Dickey was graciously pleased to grant his request, for the reason
stated; and, when a signal for the boat to approach had been agreed
upon, he landed with his companion.

“Have you got your pipe with you, Raymond?” asked Jack as they touched
the bank.

“Of course I’ve got my pipe. D’ye want to smoke, Jack?”

“No, I never smoke.” And Jack proceeded to explain his plan to his
shipmate.

A fifteen-minutes’ walk brought them to the junction of the bayou with
the main river, where they found the signal-man.

“Has that boat come down yet?” demanded Jack, pointing up the bayou.

“What boat?” replied the man.

“That cotton-boat; we are going up in her.”

“She hain’t come down yet. Why don’t you go up where she is, if you are
goin’ in her?”

“Didn’t know where to find her. Come along, Raymond: we shall find her
now easy enough,” added Jack as he moved off.

“Avast a minute till I light my pipe by this ’ere lantern,” replied
Raymond as he had been instructed: “Lend us your glim a moment.”

“You’ll put it out.”

“No, I won’t.”

The signal-man permitted him to take the lantern: whereupon Jack
sprang upon him, and bore him to the ground. The movement was so
sudden, that he had no chance to resist. Raymond came to Jack’s
assistance; placing his pistol at the fellow’s temple, which caused him
to beg for his life. With a rope which had been brought for the purpose
they tied him hand and foot, and fastened him to a tree.

Jack assured the unfortunate rebel that he should not be harmed, if he
made no noise; but he instructed Raymond to shoot him if he opened his
mouth or attempted to escape. Our hero then took the lantern, and waved
it three times,--which was the signal for the boat to advance; then
giving it to his companion, who was to remain, he hastened down to the
water to board the cutter as she entered the bayou.




CHAPTER XXV.

THE CAPTURE OF THE KENSHAW.


Jack Somers sat down on a log at the mouth of the bayou to await the
arrival of the cutter. He was entirely satisfied with what had been
done thus far, and everything was certainly working right; but he would
have felt much safer in regard to the future if such a man as Mr.
Granger had been in command of the expedition. Mr. Dickey was no older
than himself, and had a higher respect for his own personal dignity
than for anything else. And indiscretion might ruin the whole affair,
and return the party to the Middy empty-handed and crest-fallen. Jack
hoped for the best; and, when the boat appeared, he jumped on board,
and reported to Mr. Dickey the success of his mission.

“Very well, Somers. You have behaved yourself with great gallantry,
and I shall take occasion to report your good conduct to the captain,”
replied Mr. Dickey.

“Thank your honor,” added Jack, removing his cap, though he could not
help laughing in his sleeve at the magnificent bearing of the young
officer.

“It is a great satisfaction to an officer to have men upon whom he
can rely, when difficulty and dangerous service is to be performed,”
continued Mr. Dickey, addressing the engineer.

“Yes, sir,” responded that officer,--a man of forty, who had seen more
service before Mr. Dickey was born than the latter had ever performed.

Jack Somers resumed his position in the bow of the boat, on the lookout
now for the cotton-steamer. After the expedition had proceeded a couple
of miles or more, a second lantern was discovered on shore, which was
evidently another signal for the pilot. Jack reported the fact to Mr.
Dickey; and that gentleman was by this time so well trained, that he
knew exactly what to do. Our hero and another man were ordered to land,
and secure the signal-man. The work was accomplished, and the lantern
hung upon a branch of a tree; for Jack concluded that another man could
not be spared for such inactivity as simply holding a lantern.

This signal was displayed at a bend in the bayou; and, when the cutter
came up to the curve, the blazing fires of the cotton-steamer were
discovered at the distance of less than half a mile. Mr. Dickey at once
became excited by the brilliant prospect before him. A smart dash, and
the valuable prize would be his own; and what a joy it would be to
report the success of his mission!

“Give way, my lads!” said Mr. Dickey, warming up with the enthusiasm of
the moment.

“He’ll spoil the whole of it!” groaned Jack in the ear of Tom
Longstone. “We shall have to sneak back like whipped chickens!”

“Why, no, my darling. We can board her, and carry her decks at one
pull,” whispered Tom.

“We may do that; but the rebels will set the prize on fire, disable her
engine, and run her aground, or something of that sort, as soon as they
see us coming. We ought to pounce upon them like cats, when they are
not thinking.”

“Here comes the engineer,” added Tom as Mr. Gordon came forward to
obtain a better view of the scene of operations.

Jack ventured to suggest to him what he had just said to Tom; and the
engineer volunteered to open the subject to Mr. Dickey. The result was
that the men were ordered to lie on their oars. The boat was then moved
into a recess in the bank, where it was concealed by overhanging bushes.

“Now, my lads,” said Mr. Dickey, when he had placed the boat to his
satisfaction. “I expect every man to do his duty. We shall board that
steamer as she comes down, and carry her in the twinkling of an eye.”

“Ay, ay, sir!” replied the crew in a low tone.

“Silence, men!”

The cotton-steamer was now in motion. The signal-lantern at the bend
below assured her pilot that everything was ready; and she came forward
very slowly. Her great furnaces, which were opened occasionally when
the firemen threw in wood, cast a broad glare upon the dark waters of
the bayou. Every heart in the cutter was beating wild with expectation
as she advanced. She was now within a few rods of the boat. Her
forward-deck was but a few inches above the surface of the water,
presenting a most inviting prospect for a boarding-party.

“All ready, my lads!” said Mr. Dickey in a low tone. “Give way!”

The boat dashed forward; and Jack, with the painter in his hand,
leaped on board, and made it fast to a cleat on the forecastle. Tom
Longstone was by his side; and, as Mr. Dickey had not thought to make
a particular distribution of his characters for the exciting drama
which was now acting, the two quartermasters, animated probably by the
instinct of their profession, rushed up the stairs to the boiler-deck,
and thence to the hurricane-deck, from which Jack, outstripping his
companion, bounded into the wheel-house, where, with pistol in hand, he
confronted the astonished Litchfield, _alias_ Lunsley.

“Surrender, or you are a dead man!” shouted Jack.

“Who are you?” demanded the pilot with a horrid oath.

“Do you surrender? or shall I blow your brains out?” yelled Jack, as
Tom Longstone tumbled into the wheel-house.

At this moment, the boat stopped; for Mr. Gordon, the engineer, had
prudently taken possession of the machinery as soon as he came on
board, to prevent the pilot from running the boat aground.

“Mind the helm, Jack, and I’ll settle this ’ere chap,” said Tom, as he
approached the pilot, and thrust his pistol in his face.

“Who are you?” growled Lunsley, retreating into the corner of the
wheel-house.

“I’ll larn ye who I am, you black-hearted traitor!” added Tom, as he
seized him by the collar.

“Hands off, my old joker!” replied the pilot, shaking off his grasp;
for he was a powerful man.

“All right, my hearty! If you don’t surrender like a Christian, I’ll
send you down to Davy Jones!”

Tom evidently intended to put a pistol-ball through his head; but Jack
begged him not to cheat the gallows of its due. After some further
parley, Lunsley concluded to surrender, and gave up his pistols, which
he had had no opportunity to take from his pockets. He was handed over
to a couple of marines, and secured in a safe place.

The cotton-steamer had now come to a dead stand. All the white men on
board had been secured, including the captain, mate, clerk, engineers,
and two pilots. The firemen were negroes; and, being by nature loyal,
they were not molested.

“Our victory is complete,” said Mr. Dickey, who had now made his way to
the wheel-house.

“I beg your honor’s pardon,” said Jack; “but there’s a battery of
artillery on shore, and we had better not stay up here too long.”

“I don’t ask your advice, quartermaster,” replied the commander of the
expedition.

“I beg your honor’s pardon,” added Jack with becoming humility.

Mr. Dickey walked down the hurricane-deck, and back, and then returned
to the wheel-house.

“Strike one bell, quartermaster!” added he.

Jack obeyed the order, and the steamer started.

“Will your honor please to give me the course I am to steer?” asked
Jack meekly.

“Down the stream, of course!” replied Mr. Dickey.

“I am no pilot, sir, for these waters; and she may stick hard and fast
before we go ahead five fathoms.”

“Strike two bells, quartermaster!”

“Two bells, sir!” repeated Jack.

“We have no pilot, certainly,” said Mr. Dickey, more nervously; “but we
must go ahead.”

“If your honor would send the boat ahead to sound, we could work her
down very well,” suggested Jack, when he saw that the accomplished Mr.
Dickey was absolutely at his wits’ end for an expedient.

The commander was graciously pleased to adopt this plan; and Tom
Longstone was ordered to take one of the steamer’s lanterns, and sound
out the channel in the boat. The veteran quartermaster took the lead
from the forecastle, and proceeded to execute the order.

Mr. Dickey placed himself at Jack’s side at the wheel, and the steamer
went ahead again. Her progress was necessarily very slow: but the
lantern in the cutter was a safe guide; and, in due time, she reached
the mouth of the bayou. The boat was then recalled, Raymond taken on
board, and the steamer emerged into the great river. The commander
was relieved from his nervous anxiety, and his remarks became more
brilliant, though he displayed less of the self-sufficiency of his
nature than might have been expected under the circumstances. The
events of the night had inspired him with no small degree of respect
for Quartermaster Somers, and he was less haughty than on former
occasions.

The cotton-steamer had proceeded but a short distance down the river
before the Middy was discovered steaming up. It is quite likely that
Captain Bankhead suffered a great deal during the absence of the
expedition, from anxiety for the safety of his men. The appearance of
the prize must have been a great relief to him: for it removed from
his mind a burden equal in weight to the whole cargo of cotton.

The Middy ran up alongside the Kenshaw,--which was the cotton-steamer’s
name,--after hailing her, and learned that she was indeed the expected
prize.

“Captain Bankhead. I have the honor to report the entire success of the
expedition,” said Mr. Dickey, as he stepped on board the Middy.

“I congratulate you upon your success, Mr. Dickey,” replied the
captain, grasping the hand of the proud and happy young officer. “I
have been trembling for you every moment since your departure.”

“I am happy to say, sir, that everything has worked to my entire
satisfaction. The men behaved themselves with great discretion and
gallantry; and I would particularly recommend Quartermaster Somers to
your favor.”

“Somers again!” laughed Captain Bankhead.

“He conducted himself with remarkable skill and gallantry, sir; and
his conduct merits my entire approbation. I take great pleasure in
reporting his excellent conduct to you, sir; and trust that his merit
will not be overlooked.”

“It shall not be, Mr. Dickey. He shall be particularly mentioned in my
despatch to the flag-officer,” replied the captain, who could hardly
help laughing at the high-flown speech of Mr. Dickey.

The Kenshaw was run up to the bank of the river, and moored to a tree;
for Captain Bankhead did not think it prudent to start for New Orleans
without a pilot. The Middy came to anchor in a position where she could
defend her from any attack from the shore.

Litchfield, the pilot, had been put in irons, and conveyed on board the
Middy. He was silent and sullen, refusing to answer any questions put
to him by the captain. In the morning, however, he appeared to be more
tractable, and expressed his regret for his past conduct.

“I’m true to the Gover’ment, cap’n, and have been from the beginning,”
said he.

“And for that reason you attempted to destroy my vessel!”

“No, sir: I only wanted to get that steamer out, and take her down to
New Orleans. You haven’t any pilot on board now, cap’n; and, if you
will only trust me, I’ll take the Kenshaw down for you, and prove that
I’m a true man.”

“Very well: I will trust you,” replied Captain Bankhead.

“You will find that I’m all right.”

The pilot’s irons were taken off, and he was ordered into the boat. Mr.
Dickey was appointed to the command of the Kenshaw as prize-master, and
Jack was to go in her as wheelman. Captain Bankhead accompanied the
party to the steamer; and, on boarding her, proceeded at once to the
wheel-house, followed by Lunsley. Two marines, armed with muskets and
pistols, were placed in the apartment.

“Somers,” said the captain, “you will remain at the wheel during the
passage down. The pilot will give you steering directions. If the boat
gets aground, you will immediately order the marines to shoot him!”

“Ay, ay, sir,” replied Jack.

“You needn’t take all that trouble, cap’n. I shall do my duty, honor
bright,” added Lunsley.

“You have a strong inducement for doing it,” answered the captain as he
left the wheel-house.

Mr. Dickey gave his orders, and the great furnaces of the Kenshaw
blazed with renewed vigor. The fasts were cast off, and the steamer
commenced her downward trip to New Orleans. The Middy kept close astern
of her, with her guns shotted in readiness to defend her in case of an
attack.

Jack Somers kept his station at the wheel-house for seven long hours,
his breakfast and dinner being brought up to him. Lunsley said very
little on the passage. He was apparently studying his chances to escape
from the strong grip which held him in abeyance: but there sat the
marines, pistol in hand, during the entire trip; and certain death was
the penalty of even a suspicion of treachery.

At one o’clock, the Kenshaw made her landing at the Levee in New
Orleans. The pilot was immediately delivered over to General Butler for
safe keeping; and Jack, who had not slept a wink during the preceding
night, appropriated the captain’s stateroom to his own use, and turned
in.




CHAPTER XXVI.

THE UNION REFUGEES.


A four-hours’ nap renovated Jack’s exhausted frame; and he was ready to
take another job of piloting, if one had presented. Towards evening,
Captain Bankhead visited the prize; and one of the boat’s crew handed
Jack a letter from home. It was a joyous missive; for it contained the
intelligence of his father’s escape from the rebels, and his return to
Pinchbrook. On the last page were a few lines written in the well-known
heavy hand of Captain Somers, in which he encouraged his son to do his
duty to the country faithfully, and to stand by the old flag to the
last. The old gentleman declared his intention of going into the navy
in some capacity, as soon as he had recovered from the effects of his
campaign in Virginia.

The letter also contained tidings from “Tom Somers in the Army,” who
had been promoted to the rank of sergeant for meritorious conduct. The
people of Pinchbrook were all well, and everything was in a prosperous
condition at the cottage.

“All right!” said Jack, as he folded up the letter, and put it in his
pocket, to be read over and over again. “They shall hear from _me_ one
of these days. Well, God bless the old gentleman! He is one of the
right sort, and ought to have the command of one of these gunboats.
I suppose little Dickey, who don’t know enough to go into the house
when it rains, could get a vessel as quick again as my father, who has
tumbled about on the ocean all his lifetime.”

Mr. Dickey obtained a great deal of credit for the skilful manner in
which he had brought in the Kenshaw; and there was a strong probability
that he would be promoted for his good conduct on that occasion. The
facts in the case were not explained. Tom Longstone could not tell
the captain, that, if it had not been for Jack’s suggestions, the
whole affair must have been a failure. Mr. Gordon, the engineer, might
have said so; but he was a prudent man, and minded his own business.
Probably it was just as well that nothing of the kind was said; for
Mr. Dickey’s faults were those which age would correct. He was a good
fellow with his equals, and as brave as a lion in the presence of his
country’s foes.

The crew of the prize-steamer were sent on board the Middy on the day
after her arrival, with a fine prospect before them of pocketing a
very handsome allowance of prize-money, after the Kenshaw and her
cargo had passed through all the meshes of red-tape with which the law
surrounds a naval prize.

The little steamer was repaired and strengthened where she had been
found to be weak; and, at the expiration of a fortnight, she was
ready for another cruise. An addition was made to her crew. Mr.
Hayswell’s place was supplied by Mr. McBride, the fourth-lieutenant of
the Harrisburg; and a pilot of known loyalty was put on board. Thus
prepared, the little Middy again sailed upon a cruise up the river.
This time she attended the Harrisburg and other ships of the fleet, and
went up as far as Vicksburg. Natchez, Baton Rouge, and other cities on
the river, had surrendered, after more or less display of force.

Vicksburg proved to be “a hard nut to crack.” The batteries which
defended the city were located on high bluffs, where the guns of the
fleet were unable to reach them. The water was falling, and the larger
ships had experienced much difficulty in getting up. The Harrisburg had
been compelled to lighter her battery and coal over some of the shoals.
In the face of these difficulties, operations were suspended until a
rise of the river should favor their renewal; and the larger vessels of
the fleet returned to New Orleans or Baton Rouge.

The gunboats had command of the river, however, below Vicksburg, and
the ironclads belonging to the squadron of Commodore Porter had run the
gauntlet of the heavy batteries at that place. During the summer, the
fleet inflicted severe injury upon the rebels at various points; and
all the efforts of the latter to regain possession of the river were
unavailing. The Arkansas, which had forced a passage through the Union
fleet at Vicksburg, was destroyed, Grand Gulf bombarded, and the enemy
terribly punished at Baton Rouge.

In the midst of such events as these, Jack Somers passed the season.
The Middy was ordered to watch the banks of the river, to protect the
transports which conveyed troops and stores to the fleet and the army,
and generally to annoy the enemy as opportunity was presented. At
one time she narrowly avoided a broadside from the Arkansas; and, at
another, escaped by superior running from the Webb and Music,--the two
consorts of the rebel ironclad.

Later in the season, when the river began to rise, the Middy was
ordered to make a reconnoissance up the Red River; and she started
upon the perilous duty. This river had been the hiding-place for rebel
gunboats and cotton-steamers; and the Middy had not proceeded many
miles before she was attacked by a battery of light-artillery, which
she repulsed without difficulty, and proceeded on her way.

“I don’t think we shall make a very long trip in this direction,” said
Mr. Deane, the pilot.

“I suppose we have only come up to take a look, and find out what there
is here,” replied Jack, who was at the wheel.

“There’s a steamer round that bend,” added the pilot. “I see her
smoke-stacks.”

“There’s a chance for a prize, then. Very likely she is a rebel
gunboat,--one of the cotton-clads.”

“Well, we shall soon find out.”

He had hardly uttered the words before a shot from a concealed battery
struck the wheel-house, tearing the roof completely off, and scattering
the splinters in every direction.

“That’s a close shave,” said Jack. “Are you hurt, Mr. Deane?”

“Not at all,” replied he, shaking off the pine-wood which had fallen
upon him. “But I shouldn’t like to try it over again.”

“Two shots never go in the same place. We are safe for the rest of the
day.”

The order was given by the captain to stop and back her; but, before
the Middy could get out of range, half a dozen more shot fell
unpleasantly near to her. The guns in the fort were heavy, long-range
pieces; and it would be madness for the little steamer to attempt to go
any further. She therefore put about, and commenced her return trip.
She had proceeded but a few miles toward the Mississippi, when a white
flag was discovered on the shore, around which were gathered some forty
or fifty men. They hailed the steamer, and asked to be taken off.

The Middy’s wheels were stopped, and Captain Bankhead desired to know
who and what they were.

“We are all Union men,” replied the spokesman of the party; “and want
to get out of this region.”

“Where are you from?”

“We came from up the river. We have been robbed by the rebels of
everything we had: some of the Unionists have been murdered; and we
want to get inside the Union lines.”

“Where are your families?” demanded Captain Bankhead.

“We had to leave them; but the rebels don’t meddle with the women and
children. We haven’t had anything to eat for two days.”

The bow of the Middy was run up to the shore: but the captain seemed to
have some doubts in regard to the party; for a portion of them were
armed with guns, pistols, and other weapons. He questioned them still
further in regard to their antecedents, and finally permitted them to
come on board; taking the precaution to disarm them as they passed the
gang-plank. They were provided with food, of which they partook with
ravenous appetites.

Their clothing was in a very dilapidated condition; and their
appearance certainly confirmed their story, that they had suffered
every imaginable hardship. Many of them proposed at once to enlist in
the Union army, or enter the navy, as the captain might elect. They
professed to be very anxious to avenge the indignities to which they
had been subjected, and desired to join any force which should have for
its object the subjugation of their State.

The man who had spoken for them was an intelligent and gentlemanly
person; but the majority of the party were coarse and rude in their
manners, belonging to the lowest stratum of Western society.

“I say, Jack, my dear, I don’t like the looks of them bloody vill’ns
on the main-deck,” said Tom Longstone in a low tone when he came up to
relieve the wheel at dinner-time.

“Why not?”

“Stop my grub if I don’t believe they are rebels at heart, Jack!”

“What makes you think so?”

“I don’t like the looks of them. The sharks would dodge such a crowd!”

“They have seen hard times.”

“I don’t mind their dress, Jack; but they look ugly about the eyes.”

“Is that all you have against them?”

“No; shiver my timbers if it is. I seen ’em whispering together more’n
decent men ought to.”

Jack went down to his dinner; and, being off duty afterwards, he took
the opportunity to examine the refugees. They were certainly whispering
together; and he noticed that their spokesman frequently passed from
one squad to another about the deck. Their movements were suspicious;
and Jack very much desired to know what their head man had to say in
this confidential manner.

The refugees were congregated on the deck around the wind-sail by which
fresh air was introduced to the fire-room below the main-deck. Dunnett,
the leader, was seated near this wind-sail at that moment, talking to
a group around him; and Jack’s curiosity was so thoroughly stimulated,
that he could not resist the temptation to become one of his hearers.

Descending to the fire-room, he procured a short ladder used in oiling
the engine; and, running it up the hatch through which the wind-sail
passed, he ascended till his head was above the deck. He was now right
in the midst of the squad, and could distinctly hear every word that
was said.

“When I whistle, every man will do his share of the work,” said Dunnett
in a whisper. “Half the crew are below: put the hatch on, and keep them
there; then we can easily conquer the rest.”

Jack did not wait to hear any more. He was only afraid that the plot
would be executed before he could communicate the information to
the officers. Coming up from the fire-room, he hastened to find Mr.
McBride, who was then officer of the deck. In a few words, he informed
him of the conspiracy. The captain was then made acquainted with the
alarming facts; but not a word was yet said to any other person.

Captain Bankhead was prompt and decided. The watch on deck were ordered
to the quarter-guns in a quiet way. They had been loaded with case-shot
during the action with the light-battery. The charge of one was given
to Tom Longstone, while the other was in care of Raymond.

At the same time, a plank in the bulkhead between the forecastle--where
part of the men were at the time--and the fire-room was knocked out.
Through this opening the seamen passed into the fire-room, and thence
into the after-cabin, where they were armed with cutlasses and pistols.
They were ordered to stay behind the paddle-boxes, where they could not
be seen by the conspirators. The two quarter-guns were in readiness to
be slung round in an instant, so as to command the passage on each side
of the engine.

The preparations were all completed; but Dunnett did not yet give
his signal for the attack. The crew of the Middy were impatient for
operations to commence; and, after some further time had elapsed,
the captain began to think that Jack had been deceived, and that his
passengers were honest and loyal men.

The fact was, that Dunnett had been waiting for a better disposition
of the crew for his purpose; but, when he had waited till his patience
was exhausted as well as that of the captain, he gave the designated
whistle.

A couple of the rebels sprang to the hatch, and closed it; perfectly
confident, no doubt, that they were imprisoning at least half the
seamen of the Middy. Others rushed to the wheel-house and to the
engine-room, where, of course, they overpowered the pilot and the
engineer. Having secured these points, they formed in a body, and
moved aft. It now appeared that they were armed with bowie-knives;
but, believing they were to encounter only half their number, they
advanced with entire confidence.




CHAPTER XXVII.

THE CONSPIRACY ON BOARD THE MIDDY.


“Swing round the guns!” said Captain Bankhead; and when the
rebels advanced, they were confronted by the black muzzles of the
twenty-four-pounders.

“There! what do you think of that, my beauties?” added Tom Longstone,
who stood with the lock-string in his hand, ready to scatter the iron
hail among the conspirators.

“Silence!” commanded the captain.

The rebels, seeing what kind of a trap they had fallen into, began to
retreat.

“Halt!” shouted the captain in a voice of thunder. “If a man of you
moves, I will give the order to fire!”

There was no mistaking this insinuating request; and the party stood in
dumb amazement before the frowning guns. It was impossible for them to
help seeing, that, if they made any movement, it would result in the
certain destruction of half their number. Their plans had certainly
been well laid; and nothing but the discovery of them interfered with
their success. Expecting an easy victory, they were confounded to find
the whole project suddenly ruined.

Dunnett looked savagely discontented with the result; and Captain
Bankhead was afraid he would be rash enough to rush upon the guns, and
sacrifice his party. It would have been a terrible necessity to him to
give the order for the destruction of so many human beings as must have
followed the discharge of the twenty-four-pounders, especially as the
engineers and two seamen were also exposed to the fire.

“You understand the matter now,” said Captain Bankhead, after the
rebels had stared at the guns long enough to understand the situation.
“It only remains for you to surrender.”

“Never!” yelled Dunnett, stamping his foot with rage.

“Very well: you can take your choice.”

The villain looked behind him, glancing at the shore ahead of the
steamer. He evidently had something to hope for; as the rebels had
the wheel and engine in their power, and could take the Middy where
they pleased. Captain Bankhead then nipped this hope in the bud by
sending Mr. McBride, with Jack Somers and two marines, to recover the
wheel-house.

Unfortunately, the rebels who had captured Mr. Deane, the pilot, had
taken his pistols from him; and the two men at the wheel were thus
supplied with weapons. The lieutenant and his men were equally well
armed, it is true; but the capture of the rebels involved the loss of
some life, which a prudent officer should always avoid if possible.
There was no other way, however; for the Confederates at the wheel,
beginning to understand the state of affairs below, were putting the
steamer about, probably with the intention of running her under the
guns of some battery in the vicinity.

Mr. McBride ordered the marines to advance, and take the men at the
wheel. They obeyed; but the rebels were prompt and decided in their
resistance, and one of the marines fell. The other, intimidated by
the fall of his companion, discharged his musket, and retreated. Jack,
seeing how matters were going, climbed upon the top of the pilot’s
stateroom,--which was a continuation of the wheel-house,--and advanced
towards the scene of action.

“Shoot them, Somers!” said Mr. McBride, fearful that Jack might attempt
to compromise the matter.

“Ay, ay, sir!” replied our sailor-boy, lying down upon his stomach, and
creeping forward, with his revolver in his hand.

The lieutenant then approached the wheel-house with the marine, ready
to take advantage of the panic which the other movement might occasion;
though they did not show themselves to the enemy. Jack had now reached
a point where he could see the rebels; for, as the reader remembers,
the roof of the wheel-house had been blown off by the shot from the
battery on shore. The two men were crouching behind the door, pistols
in hand, ready to repel an assault in that direction. Jack took
deliberate aim at the man who had one hand on the wheel, and fired. The
wretch uttered an oath, and let go his hold, which caused the wheel
to roll over; for the steamer was in the act of coming about. His
companion, dismayed by this unexpected assault, turned to see whence
it came, and to be in readiness to repel it. As he did so, Mr. McBride
fired his pistol, but missed his aim.

The rebel, finding himself attacked in front and in flank, and not
knowing from what direction the next assault might come, crouched down
in the corner of the wheel-house, and cried for “quarter.” Jack Somers
then dropped into the apartment from the broken roof, and grasped the
wheel, while Mr. McBride and the marine seized the discomfited rebel.
Mr. Deane, who had been thrust into the pilot’s stateroom for safe
keeping, was called out; and the Middy, which had nearly run into the
bank of the river during the affray, was again headed down stream.

The steamer was now a “house divided against itself,” having a Union
pilot and a rebel engineer. The latter soon manifested his opposition
to the dominant power in the wheel-house by stopping the engine. Mr.
McBride, after the wounded rebel and the wounded marine had been placed
in the pilot’s room, left the hurricane-deck to report to the captain
on the quarter.

While these events were transpiring, Captain Bankhead had been
parleying with Dunnett, endeavoring to prevent the scene of bloodshed
which must follow more decided operations. When the rebel engineer
stopped the engine at a signal from the chief conspirator, it was plain
that no further temporizing must be allowed.

“I give you two minutes to surrender!” said the captain sternly. “At
the end of that time, we shall fire upon you!”

“And blow your boat all to pieces!” sneered Dunnett, who evidently
did not believe Captain Bankhead would put his threat into execution,
except in self-defence.

“Whatever happens, we shall fire!” said the captain, taking out his
watch.

Dunnett waited with compressed lips and glaring eyes until the captain
announced that the time had nearly expired.

“Lie down, boys!” shouted the rebel leader; and, suiting the action to
the words, he threw himself flat upon the deck, and the others followed
his example.

Without any orders from the Captain, Tom Longstone and Raymond
depressed the muzzles of the guns till they pointed into the midst of
the two groups in the passageways.

“Those who wish to surrender, come aft!” said Captain Bankhead in a
loud tone, so that all the rebels could hear him.

Before Dunnett could counteract the effects of this invitation upon his
party, the miserable rebels began to crawl aft; for it was not in the
nature of man to face the muzzles of those terrible guns, which at any
instant might tear them in pieces. It was folly and madness to stand up
or lie down in range of such savage persecutors.

The movement soon became general; and, as the rebels came aft, they
were disarmed and secured by the seamen.

“Cowards!” yelled Dunnett. “Will you desert me? Will you put your necks
into a halter?”

The words hissed from his mouth in the fearful rage he exhibited when
he saw himself deserted by nearly all his party. He was a desperate
man, and evidently had no regard for his own life or the lives of
his men. He had risen from his recumbent posture when the stampede
of his forces became general. Finding his words had no effect upon
his frightened followers, he began to flourish his bowie-knife, and
threatened to take the life of anyone who accepted the captain’s offer.

The force of example was potent; and apparently there were not more
than half a dozen who were willing to stand by him in his reckless
measures. The battle among the rebels themselves had actually
commenced; and the desperado had stabbed two or three of his miserable
crew, when Captain Bankhead considered it time for him to interfere.
He ordered six marines to advance with bayonets, under the direction
of Mr. Dickey, to be supported by half the crew with cutlasses and
pistols.

Mr. Dickey, with his sword drawn, advanced valiantly to the charge.
Dunnett, and the half-dozen rebels who still adhered to his failing
fortunes, retreated to the bow of the steamer, passing over the wounded
and frightened ones who had been vainly striving to escape the fury of
their own leader.

“Come on, my men!” shouted Mr. Dickey, who led the way ten feet ahead
of the marines, when the rebels fled from the heavy force sent to
capture them.

He rushed forward, flourishing his sword in the air exactly as he
had seen the weapon displayed in pictures of such desperate affrays.
Dunnett probably inspired with a supreme contempt for this puny
antagonist, and more likely with a desire to wreak his vengeance upon
the authors of his discomfiture, advanced upon him; and the captain
trembled for the fate of his little officer. But Mr. Dickey parried
the blow of the bowie-knife with the trusty blade, which had hitherto
been only an ornament in his hand; and, stepping back a pace or two, he
drew his pistol, and fired. Dunnett fell. The marines then charged upon
the others who supported him. Disheartened by the fate of their chief,
they gave way, and, throwing down their knives, were made prisoners.
The battle was ended, and the Middy still remained in possession of the
original officers and crew.

“Mr. Dickey, you have done nobly!” said Captain Bankhead, when the
gallant tars had given the cheers which are almost irrepressible after
a victory.

“Hurrah!” shouted the crew, as the captain took the hand of his
second-lieutenant.

“Thank you, sir. I have only endeavored to do my duty,” replied Mr.
Dickey.

“You have done it bravely; and I thank you for your valuable services,
which, I assure you, I shall not fail to embody in my report to the
flag-officer.”

“I am very grateful to you, sir, both for the opportunity you afforded
me of serving the cause, and for your kind appreciation of my humble
endeavors to do my duty,” added Mr. Dickey.

“But there is another man on board who ought to be remembered at this
time,--one who ferreted out this plot, and gave me the information in
time to prevent its execution. Where is Somers?”

“Somers again!” exclaimed Mr. Dickey, facetiously repeating the
captain’s words on a former occasion.

“I am here, sir,” said Jack, who, after the engine started, had come
down from the wheel-house to witness the exciting events transpiring on
the main-deck,--“I am here, sir; but----”

“Hurrah!” shouted the crew.

“The credit does not belong to me, Captain Bankhead,” continued Jack.
“It was Tom Longstone----”

“Vast heavin’, my darling!” interposed that veteran. “It was Jack
Somers, your honor. Don’t believe a word he says about me, sir.”

“It was Longstone who first found out about it, sir. He told me when he
came up to relieve the wheel, at dinner-time.”

“Hurrah!” shouted the crew, swinging their caps in honor of the veteran
quartermaster.

“Silence, my lads!” said the captain.

“Who climbed up the wind-sail, and heard what the lubbers had to say?”
persisted Tom stoutly.

“We owe our safety to both of you; and both of you have behaved very
handsomely during the affair.”

“Somers certainly has,” added Mr. McBride, who now reported the events
which had taken place at the wheel-house.

“Somers again!” added Mr. Dickey.

Jack blushed, and was glad when the orders were given to dispose of the
rebel prisoners. Dunnett was the only man killed during the exciting
affray; the ball from Mr. Dickey’s pistol passing through his head. The
marine wounded on the hurricane-deck was in a critical condition. The
ball from Jack’s pistol had passed through the rebel’s shoulder; but
his wound was not mortal. Three of the desperadoes, stabbed by Dunnett
and his immediate supporters, appeared not to be dangerously hurt.
All of these sufferers were placed in the cabin, and the surgeon was
already attending to them.

When the usual order and quiet of the steamer had been restored,
Captain Bankhead examined the prisoners in relation to the desperate
enterprise they had undertaken. It was ascertained that Dunnett was a
lieutenant in the light-battery which had fired upon the Middy in her
passage up the river, and that the men were, most of them, members of
the company. Dunnett had suggested the plot, and selected the men to
carry it out. Knowing that the steamer would soon be beaten back by the
heavy battery above, he had awaited her return, and hailed her under
cover of a flag of truce. They had been provided with bowie-knives,
which they had concealed about their persons, though they had not
expected to be deprived of their guns and pistols. The wariness of
Captain Bankhead had prevented the earlier execution of the treacherous
scheme, which could hardly have failed of ultimate success if the
suspicions of Tom Longstone and the investigations of Jack Somers had
not disclosed it in season to prevent its accomplishment.

The Middy reached the Mississippi at dark, and joined the fleet which
was blockading the mouth of the Red River. The next day, she reported
to the flag-officer at Baton Rouge, and was ordered to New Orleans for
repairs.




CHAPTER XXVIII.

THE MIDDY ON THE BLOCKADE.


The Middy arrived at New Orleans about the middle of August, where she
was immediately followed by the Harrisburg. The little steamer was then
hauled up at Algiers, opposite the city, and completely dismantled for
the purpose of making certain repairs and alterations, to adapt her to
a different service from that in which she had before been engaged. Her
officers returned to the ship, with the exception of Mr. Dickey, who
remained in charge of the crew. The Harrisburg then departed for Ship
Island.

During the session of Congress, the navy had been re-organized;
and Jack learned that his friend Mr. Bankhead was now a commander.
Flag-officer Farragut was henceforth to be known as a rear-admiral. Mr.
Dickey had been promoted to the new rank of ensign. Mr. McBride was
still a lieutenant; but his name was much nearer the head of the list
than before.

Our sailor-boy was rejoiced at the promotion of his friends; but he
was heartily disgusted when he learned, a few days later, that Captain
Bankhead had been ordered to the command of a gunboat in the Eastern
Gulf Squadron, and that by no possibility could he obtain a berth in
the same vessel. He poured out his sorrows in dubious strains to his
friend Tom Longstone, who did all he could to comfort him.

“I’ve got enough of this fresh-water duty!” said Jack. “I want to see
the blue sea again, and be tumbled about in a gale once more. I suppose
we can get back into the Harrisburg again, if we want to do so.”

“Don’t you do it, my darling. We have done very well in this ’ere trim
little craft.”

“But I don’t want to paddle about here in fresh water all my days;
though I wouldn’t mind it if Captain Bankhead were to remain in
command.”

“See here, Jack: do you mind what them ’ere men are doin’?” continued
Tom, pointing to the shipwrights at work on the forecastle of the Middy.

“They are putting up bulwarks, of course.”

“That means that we are going to sea, my bantling.”

“But who is going to command her? That is the question.”

“I dunno, Jack.”

“Mr. Dickey, very likely.”

“Perhaps he be: he’s a ensign now!” added Tom with one of his inward
chuckles. “What a lubberly name that is to give an officer in the
United States Navy! It aren’t much better nor callin’ him a marine.”

The supposition in regard to Mr. Ensign Dickey proved not to be
correct; for the command of the Middy was given to Lieutenant
McBride: but the aspiring little gentleman was to serve as executive
officer, while an acting-ensign--Mr. Brackett--was attached to her as
second-lieutenant. The repairs and alterations were completed, her
quota of officers reported to the captain, and the Middy was again
ready for duty.

“All hands, up anchor, ahoy!” piped the acting-boatswain one fine
morning about the middle of September.

“Here’s a letter which Commander Bankhead requested me to deliver to
you, Somers,” said Captain McBride, who had just come on board with his
orders, having arrived the night before from Ship Island.

“Thank you, sir,” replied Jack, as he received the letter through the
window of the wheel-house.

“You had better open it before we get off; for it may contain an
official document,” added the captain. “I have been expecting an order
to send you ashore; but I hope there is nothing of the kind there.”

“Nothing, sir.”

“Anchor away, sir!” reported the boatswain.

“Strike one bell, quartermaster!” said Mr. Dickey.

“One bell, sir!” replied Tom Longstone.

There was a pilot on board, who had already received his instructions;
and, as Tom had the helm, Jack was at liberty to read his letter, which
was an object of no little interest to him. Captain Bankhead informed
him that he was waiting an opportunity to join his ship, and that they
should probably meet again in a few weeks; for the Middy had been
transferred to the Eastern Gulf Squadron.

  “I hope you will continue to conduct yourself with the same heroism,
  and devotion to your country’s cause, which have heretofore
  distinguished you,” the writer continued: “for I have high hopes of
  your future. Your character has, thus far, been above reproach; and I
  am satisfied that you will continue to keep it pure and unsullied. I
  have just written to your mother a long story about you, in which I
  told her that you never gambled, drank liquor, or swore; that, when
  you had a day’s liberty in New Orleans, you returned with no vices
  clinging to you; that your shipmates love you for your virtues; that
  you frequently read your Testament; and are, in every respect, what
  I would have you. It is easier to be brave in battle than it is to be
  a good man.

  “But I have not written this letter to tell you what a good boy you
  have been; though it was exceedingly pleasant to be able to give
  your mother so good an account of you. I desired to inform you that
  I have represented your case to the admiral, and others who have
  influence at Washington. I hope to procure for you a warrant as a
  midshipman in the navy. I think I could obtain a commission for you
  as an acting-ensign; but you are not a navigator, and I wish to have
  you well instructed. You must go to the Naval School for a time; and,
  as your education has not been neglected, you need remain there but a
  few months. The admiral warmly seconds my views; and I doubt not, as
  a special favor to him, the request we make will be granted.

  “Now, my dear boy, be true to yourself, your country, and God,
  and I shall hope to see you an officer in the regular navy--not a
  volunteer--in a few months. I have taken all this pains, and am
  willing to accept a warrant, when I could procure a commission for
  you, in order that you may not be thrown out of the service when the
  war closes; of which, Heaven knows, there seems to be no present
  prospect. I shall expect to see you when the Middy arrives; but I may
  be gone before she comes.

  “Good-by, Jack; and remember me to Tom Longstone.

                                       “Your devoted friend,
                                                        “JOHN BANKHEAD.”

Jack was bewildered by the contents of this kind letter, and glanced
at his collar to see if there was not already an anchor upon it.
“Midshipman Somers” did not sound badly; and our hero’s face was
wreathed in smiles as the thought passed through his mind. A delightful
prospect was certainly before him; and he resolved to be good and
true to the end, that he might be worthy of such friends as Commander
Bankhead.

“What’s in the letter, my dear?” demanded Tom, bluntly, as Jack went
forward to look out at the window.

“Captain Bankhead desires to be remembered to you, Tom.”

“God bless his honor!” exclaimed the old quartermaster, lifting his cap.

“Starboard!” said the pilot.

“Starboard, sir!” repeated Tom.

“Steady!”

“Steady, sir!”

“Well, Somers,” said Captain McBride, stopping at the side of the
window of the wheel-house, “did the letter please you?”

“Very much, sir,” replied Jack. “Will you please to read it, sir?”

Captain McBride, in spite of the traditions of the navy, had ventured
to be quite familiar with the quartermasters of the Middy; for both of
them were trusty men, and had more than once won the approbation of the
officers. He took the letter, and read it through.

“I knew something about this matter before, Somers; and I congratulate
you upon the bright prospect before you.”

“Thank you, sir,” replied Jack, touching his cap; for he was determined
that this familiarity in his case should not breed contempt.

“I don’t know much about your education, Somers. What have you
studied?” asked the captain.

“I’ve only been to the common school, sir; but I went through with what
they called the high-school course.”

“Have you studied Latin?”

“No, sir,” laughed Jack; “but I have studied algebra and geometry.”

“Well, Somers, I’ll give you my opinion, and you may take it for what
it is worth. I’ve got some books in my cabin; and, while we are lying
at anchor, I recommend you to overhaul your studies, and brush them up.
You have plenty of time to spare.”

“I thank you, sir: I shall certainly do so.”

“You and Longstone have the wheel-house all to yourselves after we have
discharged the pilot; and there is nothing to prevent your making good
use of your time.”

“I shall do so, sir.”

“And, if you want any assistance, I will cheerfully afford it,” added
the captain as he walked aft.

“Thank you, sir. You are very kind.”

“God bless your honor!” ejaculated Tom Longstone, who felt just as
though all these favors were conferred upon himself. “What’s in the
wind, my darling?”

“Port!” said the pilot.

“Port, sir!” repeated Tom.

“Steady!” added the pilot, who was determined that the wheelman should
not do any talking while upon duty.

“Steady, sir!” repeated Tom.

But Jack, who sympathized with his friend in his impatience to know
what the important letter contained, took the helm, and handed the
document to Tom, who sat down in the corner, and proceeded to study out
its contents.

“Is it a middy, my darling?” exclaimed the veteran when he had
finished the letter. “I touch my hat to your honor.”

“Not yet, Tom.”

“Starboard!” said the pilot.

“Starboard, sir!” added Jack.

“No talking at the helm!” said the pilot testily. “If you say another
word, I’ll report you to the officer of the deck.”

Tom took the helm again, and Jack went below. In the course of the
day, the captain gave him several works on geometry, gunnery, and
mathematics in general, which he carefully deposited in the closet in
the wheel-house.

In the afternoon, the Middy went through Pass à l’Outre, and, before
evening, was rolling about in the swells of the Gulf; but she was a
good sea-boat, and the motion was rather refreshing to the old salts on
board. Before daylight, she came to anchor near the Harrisburg. Visits
were interchanged between the ship and the Middy during the day; but
Jack was disappointed to find that Captain Bankhead had gone the day
before.

At sunset, the Middy departed for the eastward, and, on the following
day, reported to the acting admiral commanding the Eastern Gulf
Squadron. Captain McBride received his orders, and immediately sailed
again for the station, which was near the mouth of the Suwanee River,
in Florida. Tom Longstone expressed his disgust when he found, as he
supposed, that the steamer was actually engaged in the blockading
service; but Jack was too busy with his books to object to this life of
inactivity.

After they had lain on the station a few days, and Jack’s head was as
full of lines and angles, projectiles and parabolas, as a professor’s,
an incident occurred which broke up the monotony of the blockader’s
life. Jack was standing at the window of the wheel-house, running over
in his mind a difficult problem in geometry which had perplexed him
during the day. It was a dark and foggy evening, and no lights were
allowed; for it was just the time to tempt a blockade-runner into a
daring deed: but Jack was an earnest student, and he did not cease to
study because he could not use his book.

As he meditated upon the mysterious problem, he thought he heard the
splashing of a steamer’s paddles in the water, between the Middy and
the shore. The sound drove all the mathematics out of his head; and
he soon satisfied himself that the splashing was not an illusion. He
immediately reported the fact to Mr. Dickey, who communicated it to
Captain McBride. The cable was instantly slipped and buoyed, and the
Middy was in motion. The fog was so dense, that nothing could be seen;
but, after going at full speed for fifteen minutes in the direction
of the mouth of the river, she was stopped, and her officers listened
attentively for the sounds. They could now be distinctly heard; and
the Middy continued the chase in the fog and darkness. She approached
the mouth of the river, sounding her way, and stopping frequently to
listen to the splashing of the steamer’s wheels, which could be more
distinctly heard at every pause.

“Hullo, de steamer!” said a voice, close aboard of her, at one of these
stoppages.

A negro in a skiff now emerged from a dense volume of fog, and came
alongside.

“May I come on board, massa?” said he. “I’m a pilot, massa: knows ebery
foot ob de riber.”

“Ay, ay; come on board!” replied the captain.

“You go mos’ aground, massa! No water ober dar,” added the man as he
pointed over on the port-bow. “How much water do you draw, massa?”

“We can carry up about five feet,” replied Captain McBride.

“Golly, massa! jus’ five foot on de bar at high water,--dat’s all!”
grinned the negro.

“Are there any batteries up the river?”

“Yes, sir: tree guns up dar. Mos’ on de bar now, massa cap’n.”

“We will remain here till high water, Mr. Dickey,” added the captain.

“Dis chile want to run away awful bad, massa,” said the visitor. “Good
pilot, massa: knows all about de Keys and all about here.”

“I am glad to see you, then. What steamer was that which just went up
the river?”

“Don’t know, massa: ’speck it was de ’Lympus. She done run de blockade
from de Keys.”

The Middy remained where she was, and the pilot was taken below to be
fed and clothed.




CHAPTER XXIX.

THE BLOCKADE RUNNER.


The water on that portion of the coast of Florida to which the Middy
had been ordered is very shallow. The shoals extend out from the land
about sixteen miles; and, six miles from shore, there was not, in
many places, more than a foot of water between the Middy’s keel and
the bottom. Her light draught, and weatherly qualities, had been her
principal recommendations for the service on which she had been sent;
but, for in-shore duty, she was well-nigh useless without a pilot,
which she had, thus far, been unable to obtain.

The Suwanee River has two outlets. In front of these there is a long,
circular reef, outside of which the Middy lay. The blockade-runner had
approached from the direction of Cedar Keys, and entered the river by
the most southern of the two outlets, passing inside of the Middy.

The negro who had boarded the steamer said he had been after oysters.
He had been on the lookout for a Government vessel for weeks; for, as
he had declared, he “wanted to run away very bad.” Hundreds of slaves
had come off to the fleet in various places; and Clem--this was the
negro’s name--said there were thousands more who wanted to escape from
slavery. There was no difficulty in believing all this, and nothing
very strange in Clem’s coming off just when and where he did. His color
was a sufficient guaranty for his loyalty, but not for his skill as a
pilot in those difficult and dangerous waters.

Captain McBride gave him some supper, and supplied him with clothing;
for the poor fellow was not very far from naked. He questioned him
very closely in regard to his knowledge of the navigation of the river
and the contiguous waters. Clem answered that he had been a fireman
on a river-steamer for ten years; had been fishing and oystering for
five more; and, finally, that he had several times piloted a steamer,
drawing three or four feet of water, from the Keys to Clay Landing; and
he wished he “was jes as sartin of gwine to heaben as he was of gwine
frew dem channels.”

The Middy started, in the fog and darkness, to pass the bar; though not
till the captain had carefully consulted all his authorities on board
in regard to the channel, and ascertained that the spring-tides were
then prevailing.

“I’m going to trust you, Clem,” said the captain, as he conducted him
to the wheel-house; “but woe betide you if you get us into trouble!”

“Golly, massa! What’s dis nigger gwine to git you into trouble fur? I
kin take de steamboat up to Clay Landin’; and dat’s fur as five foot
kin go. Git you into trouble, massa cap’n! Golly! I guess dis chile git
hisself into trouble fus. Yah, yah! What you s’pose ole massa say if
he cotch Clem takin’ Yankee gunboat up de riber? I s’peck he broke his
back if he cotch him, jes as shore as you was a white man!”

“Well, never mind that now,” added Captain McBride, who could not
help seeing the force of the black pilot’s argument. “Go into the
wheel-house, now, and tell the quartermaster how to steer.”

“Sar!” exclaimed Clem, opening his mouth from ear to ear.

“Give these men your orders, and they will observe them.”

“Clem gib dese gemmen de orders?”

“Certainly.”

“Cotch Clem doin’ such a t’ing as dat, massa cap’n! Niger gib orders to
de white man! Yah, yah, yah!” and the pilot doubled up and laughed till
the waistbands of his new trousers were in danger of being ruptured.

“Come, Clem, we are losing the tide,” said the captain.

“Yes, sar!” exclaimed he, springing to the wheel. “Whar does you stroke
dem bells?”

“Here,” said Jack, pointing out the bell-pulls.

“If de gemman gib dis chile de wheel, he can steer hisself all alone.”

“Give him the wheel, quartermaster,” added the captain.

The black pilot stuck his head out of the window, as though he was
trying to peer through the fog and gloom of the night. It certainly
looked very hopeless; but the negro snuffed the air half a dozen times,
and then confidently struck the bell to go ahead.

“Have you got your bearings?” demanded the captain nervously; for it
looked like dubious business to go over a bar, with not more than six
feet of water on it, in such a night as that.

“Yes, massa cap’n: I smell um,” replied Clem, gravely.

“You smell them, you black rascal! What do you mean by that?” roared
the captain angrily; for he was disturbed by a strong suspicion that
Clem was making game of him.

“Golly, massa cap’n, you frighten dis nigger out of his wits; and he
won’t know de channel from de reef!”

“What do you mean by saying that you _smell_ your bearings?”

“Yes, massa, dat’s so: I smell de rotten isters ober on de point dar.”

The Middy now went ahead slowly. Clem was as confident as though it had
been broad daylight, with a clear sky above him. Tom Longstone heaved a
lead constantly.

“Quarter, less two!” said he as the steamer began to move.

“Dat’s all right dar,” said the black pilot. “Dis chile kin tell you de
depf hisself, widout no soundin’.”

“And a half, one!” added Tom with emphasis.

“Yes, sar; and, de nex’ time you frow, find jes one fadom.”

“By the mark, one!” roared Tom, who thought it was about time to strike
two bells.

“Rite on de bar, massa,” said Clem, thrusting his head out of the
side-window, and taking three long snuffs. “Dar’s de pint ober dar.”

“By the mark, one!” repeated Tom as he threw the lead again.

“Needn’t sound no more down dar. Dis chile knows all about it hisself,”
cried Clem, who appeared to think that the precaution was an imputation
upon his skill or his loyalty.

But Tom did not suspend the operation; and soon the depth increased to
eight feet.

“All right now, massa cap’n,” said Clem a few minutes later, as he
fixed his eye on the compass.

The binnacle-lamp had been lighted: but it was not to be supposed that
Clem knew anything about the compass; yet great was the astonishment of
the captain when it was observed that now he steered entirely by that
instrument.

“What is your course, Clem?” asked Captain McBride.

“No’th-east by no’th, massa,” replied the black pilot.

“Can you box the compass?”

“Yes, sar, no’th, no’th by east, nor’-nor’-east, no’th-east by no’th,
nor’-east by east, east-nor’-east, east by no’th, east,” chattered Clem
without hesitation.

“That will do. Where did you learn that?”

“’Board vessel down t’ de Keys.”

Clem was certainly a prize; and Captain McBride was duly grateful that
this “intelligent contraband” had concluded to run away at the precise
time he did.

“Steamer on the port-bow!” shouted the lookout on the forecastle.

“Dems ’em, massa cap’n; and de fort’s right ober dar,” said Clem,
pointing out of the window.

“We had better not wake up the fort, if we can help it,” said the
captain.

“I think not, sir,” added Mr. Dickey.

The fog was not quite so dense up the river as it had been outside;
and the blockade-runner could be distinctly seen, at anchor. But there
was a great deal of confusion on board of her, as it now appeared from
the noise which reached the Middy. Probably her captain was not a
little surprised to find a United States steamer at his heels on such
a night and in such a place; and it must be acknowledged that Captain
McBride was scarcely less surprised.

“Can you run alongside that steamer?” asked the captain of the pilot.

“No, sar: dat steamer don’t draw no more’n four foot ob water.”

“Clear away the first cutter, Mr. Dickey!” added the captain. “Send Mr.
Brackett to board the steamer.”

In a few moments, the first cutter, as the starboard quarter-boat was
designated, was pulling towards the blockade-runner. It contained,
besides the second-lieutenant, an engineer, a master’s mate, and
fifteen seamen, all armed to the teeth. As the boat approached the
prize, a rocket went up from her forecastle, and she began to move up
the river again. But, before she had got full headway on, Mr. Brackett
boarded her. No resistance was made, though some of the crew jumped
overboard, and swam towards the shore.

The rocket had done its work, and the battery opened fire; but the
aim of the gunners seemed to be half a mile farther up the river,
and no notice was taken of the firing by the Middy. The prize was
brought alongside the steamer, and her crew put in irons to prevent
them from doing mischief. Mr. Brackett was directed to remain on board
of her with his prize-crew; and Jack was ordered to her wheel, with
instructions to follow the Middy. Both vessels reached the bar in
safety; but there was not water enough for the little gunboat to go
over, and she was compelled to anchor. The Olympus--for Clem had been
correct in his supposition--was supplied with provisions and stores,
and ordered to Key West. An engineer and two first-class firemen were
sent on board, who, with her negro firemen, formed a sufficient force
for the engine. The master’s mate and six seamen also went in her.

The Olympus was a river-steamer of light draught. She was loaded with
a valuable cargo of hardware and clothing, which she had just brought
up from Cedar Keys, where it had been landed by a schooner hailing
from Nassau. Captain McBride had some doubts whether she would reach
Key West; but nothing else could be done with her; and he had full
confidence in Mr. Brackett’s skill and prudence. She was fortunately
favored with good weather; and, at the end of three weeks, the
prize-crew returned to the Middy by a vessel bound to Pensacola.

“Now, massa cap’n,” said Clem, when the Olympus had departed, “dar’s
two boats loaded with cotton up de riber, wat’s gwin down to de Keys to
load de schooners dar.”

“Where are they?”

“Up to Clay Landing, massa.”

“Can we go up there?”

“Yes, sar, ’spose de fort let you go.”

“We can take care of the fort.”

“And de gorillas, massa?”

“The what?”

“Dem fellers dat goes about on hoss-back cutting people’s froats,--dem
dat fired on de boats down to de Keys.”

“Oh! the guerillas?”

“Yes, sar.”

“We can take care of them too.”

“Take de gum-boat right up dar, den; but de gorillas done shoot de man
at de wheel!” added Clem with a shudder.

“Well, we have iron screens to protect the helmsman.”

The Middy remained at her anchorage above the bar till forenoon of
the next day, when a southerly wind, which had prevailed for several
days, had raised the water nearly two feet above the ordinary level
of high tide. The fog had disappeared; and, under these favorable
circumstances, the little gunboat sailed on her cruise up the river,
where no armed steamer had gone before. The iron screens had been put
up to protect the gunners and the helmsman, and every preparation made
for a stormy time.

Clem was now as lively as though he had been going to a ball instead
of a battle. He opened his mouth wide enough to shame the alligators,
and seemed to rejoice continually at his good fortune in escaping to
the “gum-boat.” From the paymaster’s stores he had been rigged out in
a complete suit of seaman’s clothes; and the change of dress certainly
wrought a marvellous revolution in his personal appearance. He was
apparently forty years of age, as black as charcoal, and very far from
being a handsome man. He had no knowledge of anything except what
related to his particular sphere of duty. He didn’t know what caused
the war; but he was sure it would free the slaves. He had been down to
Key West several times in a schooner; but his travels did not appear to
have enlarged his understanding. He was always good-natured, docile,
and funny. He could not speak without exciting a laugh; and at once
became a favorite with both officers and crew, all of whom had a high
respect for him on account of his skill as a pilot.

Clem took his place at the wheel; and the Middy ascended the river,
with the American flag flying at the stern, to the intense disgust
of “Secesh” on its banks. In due time, the fort opened upon her very
spitefully; but its guns proved to be miserably inefficient in range,
which suggested to Captain McBride his proper course. Dropping his
anchor with a spring on the cable, out of reach of the enemy’s guns, he
proceeded in a leisurely manner to knock the works to pieces with his
thirty-two-pounder and one quarter-gun.




CHAPTER XXX.

ON THE SUWANNEE RIVER.


The superiority of the Middy’s metal over that of the fort was soon
manifest, not only to those on board the steamer, but to the occupants
of the works; and the latter displayed their appreciation of the fact
by running away. This important part of the enterprise being disposed
of, the gunboat proceeded up the river. On her passage, she was
continually assailed by riflemen on the banks of the river; but the
bullets struck harmlessly upon the iron screens which protected the
wheel-house and the gun-crews.

Clem performed his share of the work to the admiration of the officers.
Safely ensconced behind the iron plates of his quarters, he shouted
with delight when the rifle-balls struck the screens.

“Golly! dis jes like a skeeter-bar!” cried he with his long chattering
laugh. “You hears de skeeters buzz on de outside: but dey can’t come
in, nohow; no, sar! Yah, yah, yah!”

“Shut your mouth, blackee, afore anyone falls into it,” added Tom
Longstone.

“Yah, yah, yah!” added Clem, peering through the sight-holes in the
front screens. “Dar’s de steamers!”

“I see them,” said Jack. “There are hundreds of people on shore.”

Just then, a shot from the thirty-two-pounder fell near them, and
they fled. At the same time, the quarter-guns opened with canister;
and not a human being could be seen in any direction. Captain McBride
was afraid that the rebels would set fire to the steamers when their
capture became inevitable, especially as the Middy could not run up
into the shallow water, where they were moored to the shore.

Mr. Dickey was ordered to get out the first cutter, and, with a strong
force, proceed to the steamers; the Middy all the time playing upon
the shore with grape and canister to keep the rebels at a respectful
distance. Jack Somers asked permission to go in the boat; and, as Mr.
Dickey knew the value of his services, his request was readily granted.
The boat dashed in under the stern of the nearest steamer; but the
painter had scarcely been made fast before a volley of rifle-balls was
discharged into the midst of the crew by a gang of rebels concealed
among the cotton-bales.

“I am wounded!” groaned Mr. Dickey, sinking back in the stern-sheets
of the boat, just as he had risen to board the steamer. “Lead on,
Somers; don’t mind me!” added the intrepid young officer as the seamen
hesitated.

“Come on, boys! come on!” shouted Jack, leaping on board the
cotton-boat.

“Ay, ay!” added the men with a cheer as they followed our hero.

The rebels who had fired the volley had formed a case-mate among the
cotton-bales, at the stern of the steamer. As soon as Jack discovered
the position of the enemy, he ordered the cockswain of the first cutter
to cast off, and pull away from his exposed situation. The order was
obeyed, the four men in the boat moving her up under the lee of the
steamer’s paddles. One man had been killed, and one wounded, besides
the first-lieutenant.

Jack had fourteen men with him; and of course he lost no time in
placing them out of the reach of the rebel riflemen at the stern of the
boat. As the guns of the Middy protected his party from assault in the
direction of the shore, our hero was in no haste to finish the affair.
He took time to consider the best means of driving the enemy from their
lair without the loss of any of his men.

Climbing up to the top of the mass of cotton-bales, he soon found a way
to their stronghold, which was open at the top. But it was not safe to
approach the den; for the rebels were ready to fire the moment they
discovered a blue-jacket.

“Bear a hand here, my lads!” said Jack in a low tone, when a happy
thought took possession of his mind. “Roll up this bale!”

“Ay, ay!” replied the men promptly, as they saw at a glance what Jack
intended to do. “Now she rises!”

The bale did rise, was rolled over two or three times, and then tumbled
down into the lair of the rebels. From the groans and the oaths that
followed this novel assault, it was plain that some of the boat’s
defenders had been crushed under the bale.

“Up with another!” shouted Jack.

“Ay, ay, Somers! Here she goes!”

But the rebels did not wait for another. They leaped from their
dangerous quarters, and fled to the shore,--those who were able to do
so. An examination of the den showed that two of the rebels had been
badly injured by the fall of the bale. As the seamen were all on the
top of the pile, they were unable to prevent the escape of the others,
if they had been disposed to do so.

Not another rebel could be found, after a diligent search in every
part of the steamer; and the victory was complete. The fasts were cast
off; and, while a dozen men pushed her off from the landing-place with
poles, Jack, with the rest of the men, pulled off to the Middy with
the wounded officer and seamen. Mr. Dickey was evidently very badly
injured,--a bullet having passed through his side. He was faint, and
appeared to be rapidly sinking.

“Somers again!” said he with a gentle smile, in recognition of the
service which Jack had rendered.

“How do you feel, sir?”

“Very bad: there is a hole in my side big enough for an alligator to
crawl in,” he replied languidly.

Jack could not smile at this conceit, for Mr. Dickey looked as though
he was dying.

“I ought to have taken you on board before, sir.”

“No, Somers: you did just right, and just what I ordered you to do.”

The cutter came alongside the Middy, and the wounded officer was
tenderly conveyed to the cabin, where the surgeon proceeded to examine
his wound. Before his decision could be reached, the captain ordered
off the cutter to secure the other steamer. It was fully manned again,
and placed in charge of Mr. Scott, the master’s mate, and the only
remaining officer who was available for this duty. Captain McBride
would willingly have given Jack the command of this expedition; but it
was hardly in order to send a petty-officer upon such duty.

As the boat pulled over to the steamer, Jack informed Mr. Scott of
the manner in which the first steamer had been defended: so that
officer was prepared for an ambush. But all doubts on this point were
soon settled by the discovery of a broad sheet of flame rising from
the steamer’s forecastle. The rebels, who were concealed in various
hiding-places near the landing, had improved the opportunity while the
boat returned to the Middy, and set her on fire.

The first cutter dashed up to the cotton-boat, and her crew leaped on
board. The fire had made but little progress. By rolling a few of the
bales overboard, and a diligent use of the buckets, the flames were
extinguished. During these operations, an occasional shot had been
fired by the rebels from their concealment in the storehouses on the
shore; but the distance was too great for effective firing, and no one
had been hit.

Mr. Scott, while the cutter was coming off, expressed his astonishment
that the enemy had not burned the boats on the appearance of the Middy;
but it seemed, from the plan they had adopted to defend them, that they
were confident of beating off the steamer’s boats. A further reason
was now manifest to the party, consisting of a company of artillery,
having four guns, which now appeared on the shore, dashing down to the
landing-place at the utmost speed of the horses.

“We must abandon her!” exclaimed Mr. Scott when this new array of force
was discovered.

“I hope not, sir!” replied Jack. “We can tow her off with the boat, or
carry a long line to the Middy.”

“Cast off the fasts, Somers!” shouted Mr. Scott in an excited tone.
“Pass that hawser into the boat! Lively, my men!”

Jack rushed forward to let go the steamer’s fasts. The rebel company
were wheeling their guns into position, and there was yet imminent
danger. Our sailor-boy, foreseeing that the long hawser would be
necessary in hauling off the steamer, considered it necessary to cast
off the end on shore so as to save the line. For this purpose he sprang
over the gang-plank, and had unfastened the rope, when a bullet from
the rifle of one of the concealed rebels passed through the fleshy part
of his left thigh. He dropped upon the ground, just as the steamer
began to recede from the land.

All the boat-party were in the cutter or in the after-part of the
steamer, so that the catastrophe which had overtaken him was not
discovered till it was too late to remedy it. Jack, with admirable
presence of mind, tied his handkerchief tightly around his leg. He
rose, and attempted to walk down to the water; but he found himself
unable to do so.

By this time, the artillery company had unlimbered their pieces, and
were pouring a steady fire into the Middy and the first cutter; to
which she was replying with shell from her thirty-two, and canister
from one of the twenty-fours. Mr. Scott was still on board of the
steamer, with a portion of the men. He had attached the hawser which
Jack had saved to the tow-line, so that the Middy soon had both her
prizes in hand; with which, having accomplished the work for which she
had come, she steamed down the river.

Jack had crawled a short distance from the landing-place to shelter
himself from the fire of the Middy’s guns; but, as soon as the action
ceased, he was waited upon by at least fifty rebels. They were not
in the best humor imaginable, and not disposed to treat the wounded
quartermaster with the kindness due to a brave but unfortunate enemy.
He was taken to a shed, and laid upon some cotton-bales. A doctor who
was present dressed his wound, and declared that he would be fit to be
hung in a week; which was certainly very consoling to the sufferer.

While he lay there surrounded by a knot of rebels, he had an
opportunity to learn their opinions. They were vexed, disappointed,
and angry, and bestowed unmeasured abuse upon the artillery company
for not coming sooner. This battery had been in the vicinity of the
Keys to guard that place from a boat-attack, which was expected. On the
appearance of the Middy on the preceding night, it had been sent for,
and had been momentarily expected during the forenoon. This was the
principal reason why the steamers had not been burned.

Jack Somers found himself to be an object of great curiosity. He was
visited by all the men, women and children in the place, all of whom
were anxious to look upon one of the “terrible Yankees.” The sufferer
was not a very dangerous-looking person, especially in his present
exhausted condition; and those who came to scoff at him found their
admiration and sympathy excited rather than their hatred. He was pale,
but he was handsome; and the ladies expressed their surprise that such
a pretty boy should be a “horrid Yank.”

Among those who came were Major Sandford, a rich planter residing near
the landing, and his wife and daughter. The latter, a girl of fifteen,
was touched to the heart by the sad, pale face of Jack. She thought it
was a terrible thing for such a nice-looking young man to lie wounded
and suffering upon a heap of cotton-bales.

“What is your name, poor fellow?” said she.

“John Somers, miss,” answered Jack.

“What did you come down here to kill our people for?” added she.

“Because they are rebels and traitors!” replied he faintly.

We don’t know whether Miss Edith Sandford liked this answer or not; but
she protested with all her might against the little Yankee’s lying on
cotton-bales, where he was, in such a dreadful condition. She insisted
that her father should take him home, and treat him like a human being.
She was an only daughter; and, though Major Sandford had a great many
objections, he finally consented, and Jack was paroled for this purpose.

He was conveyed in a wagon to the house of the planter; a good room was
provided for him, and Edith saw that he was tenderly nursed. At the
expiration of a fortnight, he was able to walk out.

“I wish you wasn’t a Yankee,” said Edith one day, as they walked in
front of the mansion.

“I wish you wasn’t a rebel,” replied Jack.

“I’m not a rebel, any more than you are!” exclaimed she, with a very
pretty pout upon her interesting countenance.

“We won’t talk politics then,” laughed Jack. “I suppose my time here is
about out, and I must soon be sent to a rebel prison.”

“To prison? Oh, no! they won’t send a nice young man like you to
prison.”

“But they will, Miss Edith.”

“Why don’t you run off, then?”

“I would not break my parole.”

“I thought a Yankee would do anything that is mean.”

“I think not.”

It was plain that Edith was much interested in Jack; and she was not
the first young lady who had been moved in the same direction: not
that she indulged in “moonshine” at his expense; but she pitied him.
She wept when the captain of the artillery company insisted that his
prisoner should be sent off; for he did not believe in treating Yankees
like gentlemen. No reasonable excuse could be offered for resisting
this claim; and Jack, after giving up his parole, was taken into
custody. He was sent to a barrack a few miles farther inland, where
three others, captured from a boat-expedition at Cedar Keys, were
confined. They were to remain here till an opportunity offered to send
them to a prison-camp.

Jack decided not to wait for this opportunity; but one night he made
his way through the roof of the barrack, and, under the guidance of a
negro who was panting for the “day of jubilee,” reached the coast, near
the mouth of the Suwannee. After starving, and suffering from cold and
storms, for a week, they found a dug-out, with which they pulled off to
the Middy.

“Somers again!” said Mr. Dickey, as he climbed over the bulwark.

Mr. Dickey was not dead, and gave him a warm hand as he stepped upon
deck.

“My darling!” cried Tom Longstone. “I was sure you was dead!”

“Not yet, Tom. I was wounded; but I am pretty well now.”

Jack had been absent four weeks, and had suffered a great deal during
the last part of this time; but it was worth while to endure a
great deal for such a welcome as was extended to him by officers and
crew. After he had taken his supper, he told his story, and listened
to a narrative of the events which had taken place on board during
his absence. The cotton-steamers had been sent to Key West, and the
officers and men who went in them had just returned. Mr. Dickey had
been very low, and was not expected to live for a week. He was now able
only to walk about the deck. Clem had taken the Middy through every
conceivable channel where there was water enough to float her, and was
still a favorite on board.

“Now, Somers, if you have finished your yarn, I want to see you,” said
Captain McBride at a later hour in the evening. “Here is your warrant
as a midshipman; and you are ordered to the Naval Academy, after a
thirty-days’ leave of absence. Here is a letter from Captain Bankhead.”

“Thank you, sir!” exclaimed Jack as he took the papers.

“A supply-steamer will be along in a few days, and you will leave in
her,” added the captain.

Jack was bewildered by this intelligence, for the prospect of seeing
Pinchbrook in a few days, and embracing his mother, shaking hands with
his father, and spinning yarns to the rest of the folks, was very
delightful. The two days he remained on board the Middy, he spent with
Tom in the wheel-house. The veteran could hardly reconcile himself to
part with his young friend; but, as it was for Jack’s advancement, he
put a cheerful face upon the matter.

The supply-steamer arrived; and Jack, after thanking the captain for
his kindness and shaking hands with officers and crew, went on board
and thus ended the career of Jack Somers in the navy as an ordinary
seaman.




CHAPTER XXXI.

HOMEWARD BOUND.


Jack Somers was compelled to remain at Key West three weeks before he
could find a vessel bound to the North; and the important documents
which he carried burned in his pocket. He wanted to show them to
Captain Barney, to his mother, and to all his friends in Pinchbrook.
They were the evidences of his good conduct, of his skill and bravery;
and, though Jack was a modest young man, he was proud of his record. He
had served his country faithfully and zealously; and he was grateful to
his friends for their high appreciation of his services.

During those three weeks of idleness, Jack applied himself closely to
the study of navigation; using a book which Captain McBride had kindly
presented to him. He felt that he had not a moment to waste, and that
his future success depended upon the zeal and energy with which he
devoted himself to his studies. He was anxious to secure a high rank
in the Naval School; and he was willing to purchase his anticipated
position by hard work.

He was already a thorough seaman. Tom Longstone had been a patient
teacher, and he had learned all that belongs to an able seaman’s
duty. He was perfectly familiar with the practical part of gunnery;
was thoroughly posted in all the technicalities of the ship and its
batteries. Of the science of gunnery he knew only what he had learned
from his books since the Middy sailed from New Orleans. He had thus
obtained a measure of knowledge in regard to the practical details of
his profession, to the attainment of which the young gentlemen in the
Naval School must devote months or years. But Jack had not acquired
all this information during the single year he had been in the navy: he
had simply added to his previous knowledge by close attention to his
duty.

Busy as he was with his studies, he found time to write a long letter
to Captain Bankhead, informing him of the reception of his warrant,
and expressing his gratitude for the friendly interest he had ever
manifested in his welfare. “I shall always think the trip we made to
Fort Warren on that dark November night, a year ago, was the luckiest
cruise I ever made,” wrote Jack in the letter; “for it gave me a friend
who has done more for me than I could ever have done for myself.”

Jack wrote this; but I am sure that Captain Bankhead neither would
nor could have done what he did, if our hero had not deserved such
distinguished favors,--if he had not been a good boy and a good seaman.
He had several weeks before received letters from home, informing
him that his brother had been promoted to a lieutenancy. Tom was a
commissioned officer, and was therefore some months, if not years,
ahead of him in the race for distinction; but both of them, while
they had a just and proper regard for the honors of their respective
professions, were better satisfied to have served their country in its
hour of trial than they were to receive their merited promotion.

Jack wanted very much to get home; but he was so busy with his studies,
that he had no time to be impatient at the delay. When an opportunity
to depart was presented, he was much less elated than his half-dozen
impatient companions who had nothing to occupy their minds. The men who
were to go North were sent on board of an old steamer, which was hardly
seaworthy, and which was going to New York for repairs.

The voyage was prosperous till the steamer reached the latitude of Cape
Hatteras, where she was overtaken by one of the severe gales which
prevailed in that region. The vessel leaked badly, and shipped great
seas, till she was in imminent danger of foundering. It required the
utmost exertion of all hands to keep her afloat; but the men worked
zealously and cheerfully, till an accident to the engine seemed to
deprive them of all hope of ever seeing the land again.

The ship rolled and pitched heavily in the head-seas for a time; and,
at every roll, it seemed as though her back must be broken. By almost
superhuman efforts on the part of the crew, sufficient sail was set to
keep her head up to the sea, and she worked easier. Jack had just come
down from the fore-topsail-yard, completely exhausted by the violence
of his exertions. Life-lines had been extended along the deck for the
men to hold on by when the seas swept over the decks. Jack had grasped
one of these ropes just as the ship felt her helm; when a great combing
billow broke over the bow, sweeping a flood of water towards the stern.

The second-lieutenant of the steamer, who had been forward
superintending the setting of the sail, was in front of him, and,
either by accident or carelessness, lost his hold upon the life-line.
The mass of water bore him along as though he had been a feather,
towards a hole which the sea had stove in the bulwarks. Perceiving the
perilous situation of the officer, Jack seized the inner fake of a
rope, flemished on the deck, and sprang towards the lieutenant. Passing
the line around his body, he followed the rolling billow, and succeeded
in securing a hold upon the officer’s leg, just as he was sliding over
the plank-shear into the sea.

Jack would certainly have gone with him, if his attentive shipmates
had not grasped the other end of the line by which he had secured
himself. Another sea rolled over them before they could recover their
perpendicular positions; but Jack held on to the leg of the officer,
and the men hauled them both up to the life-line.

“Your name?” demanded the lieutenant, when he had regained his feet.

“Somers, sir.”

“Well, Somers, this is a bad time to plank the deck,” he added with a
smile, as he emptied the salt water from his mouth.

“Very bad, sir.”

“You shall hear from me again, Somers,” added the officer as he walked
aft.

After the crew of the old steamer had endured more than we have room
to describe, the gale broke; and, favored with better weather, the
engine was repaired, and she proceeded on her voyage, very much to the
satisfaction of those who had lost all hope of ever reaching the land.

The next day, while the ship was rolling heavily through the sea which
had not yet subsided, Jack, who had just been relieved from duty at the
pumps, was accosted by Mr. Waldron, the second-lieutenant, whom he had
saved from an ocean-grave.

“Somers, you saved my life yesterday: what can I do for you?” said he.

“Thank you, sir: I’m not in want of anything just now,” replied Jack,
touching his cap.

“Your time is out, I suppose?”

“Yes, sir.”

“Do you quit the navy?”

“No, sir.”

“Well, then, my lad, you shall have a better berth than you had before.
I think I have influence enough to procure a good rating.”

“Thank you, sir,” replied Jack.

“You look as though you would make a good topman. What do you say to
being captain of the main-top?”

“Thank you, sir: I have been rated as cockswain of the captain’s gig
and as a quartermaster.”

“Is that so? Then I may not be able to do anything better in that
direction.”

Jack thought it would be a good joke to show him his midshipman’s
warrant at this point of the conversation; and accordingly he produced
the precious document.

“What are you doing forward with this paper in your pocket?” asked the
astonished lieutenant.

“I had no uniform, sir, and was in no condition to appear as an
officer.”

“You shall swing your hammock in the steerage for the rest of the
voyage, at least. If you are a brother-officer, I need not think of
rewarding you,” laughed Mr. Waldron.

“I hope not, sir.”

Jack was immediately presented to the captain, who ordered him to
carry his bag into the steerage, greatly to the astonishment of his
late companions, who had no suspicion that they had messed with so
distinguished an individual as a midshipman. The steamer rolled along
on her voyage, and at last arrived at New York.

Jack lost no time in proceeding to Boston, though not till he had
arranged for a meeting with Mr. Waldron at some future time; for
the grateful officer insisted upon continuing the acquaintance so
fortunately begun. It was about sunset when the sailor-boy reached
Pinchbrook.

“Hallo, Jack, my hearty!” said a familiar voice as he stepped from the
car.

“Captain Barney!”

“Ay, ay, my lad! But where do you come from? We did not expect you back
yet a while,” added the old gentleman, still wringing our hero’s hand.

Jack briefly informed his good friend where he had come from.

“Well, Jack----”

“I beg your pardon, Captain Barney: call me Mr. Somers, if you please,”
laughed Jack.

“Eh?”

“Mr. Midshipman Somers is my present designation.”

“Whew!” whistled the old sailor.

“I have won my warrant.”

“Well, _Mr._ Somers----”

“Avast, captain: that will do. You may call me Jack, now; for I don’t
know the sound of my own name with such a long handle to it.”

“Come down to the house with me, Jack.”

“Oh, no, sir! not now. I must go up and see mother--and father: I
haven’t seen him for nearly two years.”

“Never mind: come down to the house. You will scare your mother out of
her wits if you bolt in upon her like a harpoon into a whale. I’ll put
the horse in, and take you up pretty soon.”

“I want to see her at once.”

“And frighten her into a fit!”

“She don’t have fits: at any rate, she would only have a fit of
gladness at seeing me.”

Captain Barney persisted, apparently firm in the belief that Mrs.
Somers would go into hysterics if her son presented himself too
suddenly. It would be better to break the news gradually to her. Jack
could not help himself, and walked home with Captain Barney. He was
conducted to the library as the bell rang for tea.

“Come, Jack, now come out and have some supper with me,” said the
captain.

“No, sir: decidedly, I cannot. What would my mother say if I took tea
in Pinchbrook before I went home?” replied Jack emphatically.

“Well, come out and look at the folks, at any rate; and then, if you
insist on going, I will harness right up.”

Jack began to protest that he would not go, even to look at the folks;
when Captain Barney took him by the arm, and gently forced him through
the door leading to the dining-room.

“Why, John Somers!” exclaimed a voice which Jack could not possibly
mistake.

“Why, Jack, my boy! is that you?” added another voice equally familiar
to his ear.

In another moment our sailor-boy was in the arms of his mother, who
hugged and kissed him as though he were still an infant. Mr. Midshipman
Somers, regardless of the dignity of an officer in the United States
Navy, wept like a baby. His “top-lights” were flooded, in spite of all
his efforts to suppress the rising tide; but we are happy to say that
Mrs. Somers did not go into hysterics, “conniptions,” or anything of
the sort. Like a sensible woman, she did not even faint.

Captain Somers took the hand of his brave boy, and gave him a sailor’s
hearty welcome home. The whole family, it appeared, were taking tea at
the hospitable mansion of the retired shipmaster, who had got up a
surprise for Jack as well as for his mother.

“Don’t you think my mother will be frightened into a fit, Captain
Barney?” said Jack, when the first greetings were over. “You meant to
throw me into a fit.”

“Well, Jack, I had no more idea of seeing you than I had of seeing Jeff
Davis. I went up after my newspaper; for I can’t eat my supper till
I’ve seen the news; but I didn’t expect to bring you back with me.”

“I’ll forgive you this time.”

“Next time you come home, I suppose you’ll be an admiral.”

“I hope not; for I shall be older than you are, then.”

I need not tell my readers what a happy evening was spent at Captain
Barney’s, nor how late Jack and his parents sat up that night in
reviewing the events of the year. Tom’s letters were all brought out
and read; and Jack could not help taking a little walk about the house,
though the Pinchbrook clock was striking twelve.

“Eight bells! All the starboard watch, ahoy!” said Jack, as he kissed
his mother, and went to his old chamber in the attic of the cottage.

A few days after his return, Jack put on his uniform: and certain young
ladies declared that he was even a “handsomer fellow than his brother
Tom”; for patriotic young ladies have a high regard for blue coats and
bright buttons.

At the expiration of his furlough, Jack reported at the Naval School;
and here--leaving him as a bright example of what a young man may
accomplish by being true to himself, true to his country, and true
to God--here properly ends the eventful history of “THE SAILOR BOY,”
though not of “JACK SOMERS IN THE NAVY.”




FOOTNOTES:

[A] We refer those who are curious to know more about ships-of-war to
Master Brady’s “Kedge Anchor;” to Herman Melville’s “White Jacket, or
the World in a Man-of-War,” and, for ships in general, to Mr. Dana’s
“Seaman’s Friend.”

[B] Discharged, dead.




TRANSCRIBER’S NOTES:


Italicized text is surrounded by underscores: _italics_.

Perceived typographical errors have been corrected.

Inconsistencies in hyphenation have been standardized.

Archaic or variant spelling has been retained.





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