Coconuts and
Cannibals
From Far East Adventure Stories, December 1931
“HOWDY,”
RUMBLED the old sailor, as I strolled down the wharf and found him at his
favorite spot, gazing fixedly at the sea and dangling a hand-line for cunners.
Then,
without turning his head; “See anything out yonder?” he asked,
“Yes,” I
replied, glancing across the Sound, “A couple of three-masters and a
square-rigger.”
“Square-rigger,
eh?” muttered the old man, turning his grizzled head and squinting at the
horizon, “Don’t see many of ’em knockin’ about nowadays, Can ye see what she
be an’ how she’s standin’? My eyes ain’t what they used to be.”
“She’s a
bark,” I told him, "Standing to the eastward under fore and main topsails
and to’ gallant sails, spanker, and fore to’ gallant staysail and jib,”
“Hmm,”
muttered the old salt, as he knocked the ashes from his cold pipe and
expectantly extended his hand, I handed him my pouch and he proceeded to ram a
generous load into his pipe, “Speakin’ o’ barks, ’minds me o’ the Harvey Fullerton. Did I ever tell ye o’ my cruise in
her?”
“Don’t
believe you ever did,” I replied, filling my own pipe, I seated myself on the
stringpiece of the wharf beside him and waited for the old fellow to light his
pipe with the matches I supplied.
Presently
his reeking clay was vomiting smoke like a miniature volcano, and I knew that a
salty tale was being hatched in his fertile brain.
“THE FULLERTON,” he began at last, “was
a New London ship, leastwise New London was her home port, and a barkentine.
’Tany rate, if she wa’n’t a barkentine I dunno what She was. But the
gosh-dingest barkentine what ever me or ye or any other chap ever clapped eyes
onto. If ye’d seed her out yonder ye couldn't have told which way she was
headin’. Why? Ye’re askin’; ’cause she was built an’ rigged starn-fo’most with
a square-rigged mizzen an’ fore-an’-aft fo’-mast an’ mainmast. Crazy idea,
ye’ll say, an’ p’rhaps ’twas; an’ so me an’ me mates thought.
“But arter
all, I dunno, as ’twas so all-fired crazy at that. The fellow what owned her
must have had some sense in his head, even if he did live up to Willimantic an’
hadn’t never seed salt water nor nary craft bigger ’n a canal boat. He’d read a
heap o’ books though, an’ he calc’lated that seein’ as a square-rigger was best
afore the wind, an’ a fore-an’-aft ship was best on the wind, he could get the
good p’ints o’ both by puttin’ of square sails after to catch a star wind, an’
fore-an’-aft sails for’ard to catch a head wind. An’ derned if it didn’t work
out!
“But twas
a all-fired job to get a crew o’ sailor-men to ship along on her. No sooner
would they clap eyes onto that there starn-fust rig than they’d shake their
heads an’ walk away, an’ the only ones what would sign on was bums what
couldn’t get nothin’ else or greenies what didn’t know a rope-end from a
marlin-spike.
“Dunno why
I shipped myself. But I cal’clate it was just out o’ cur’osity to see how the
consarned old hooker would sail; or mebbe ’cause old man Stebbins was skipper
on her an’ I’d been shipmates with him afore.
An’ the
cargo what she loaded was just as plumb crazy as the ship. Ye couldn’t never
guess what ’twas in a month o’ Sundays, so I might just as well tell ye an’ be
done with it. ’Twas skates an’ hatracks an’ sunbonnets an’ aprons! Yes, sir,
queerest lot o’ cargo ever I'd seed or heard of. I reckon old man Fullerton
just shipped what they made up to his shops. Ye see, ’bout that time, there was
a big New England trade on with the West Injies, an’ folks was sendin’ down the
most cur’ostest things not known’ nothin’ ’bout the islan’s, and missionaries
was just openin’ up the South Seas an’ Christianizin’ o’ the natives.
Well, this
Fullerton bird calc’iated as he could ship skates to Newfunlan’ an’ trade ’em
for salt codfish, he bein’ a reg’lar Yankee trader an’ not doin’ no cash
business on the whole v’age, an’ then send the codfish to the West Injies an’
make a trade with it for rum an’ molasses an’ sugar and sech.
Then we
was to sail ’round the Horn an’ trade the aprons an’ sun-bonnets to the naked
cannibals—reckon old Fullerton thought mebbe the rum might come in handy for to
get the natives too drunk to know what they were trading an’ bring back copra
an’ pearl shell.
And where was them hatracks go-in’? You might be askin’. To South
Ameriky, to be sure. Fullerton allowed as how them there Dons always wore
whoppin’ big hats and spurs an such like, an’ that every man-jack of ’em would
need a private an’ personal hatrack for to hang his duds on.
Now I
expect ye’re a thinkin’ this here’s just an ord’nary yarn, which it ain’t. No,
sir, ’taint one of them there whoppers what some folks I’ve heard of are
everlastin’ly tellin’. Nothing like that there story book what ya was readin’
of ’tother day about a cruise o’ a crew o’ city chaps what went to the South
Seas an’ found square birds’ eggs an’ such all. There weren’t never no such
things as square eggs, an’ ye know it well as me. An’ as for white shadders,
who ever heard tell of a white shadder? Though there’s plenty o’ white men
knockin’ about out there what ain’t nothin’ more’n shadders at that.
Howsomever,
I’m a gettin’ often my couse an’ missin’ stays, so I’d better about ship an’ be
a gettin’ on. Wal, as I was sayin’, we had a bum crew. Outside the skipper an’
me there was the first mate—rum short o’ chap named Finny from down the Cape
somewheres. Second named Rooney—a crazy Irishman with a peg-leg, an’ every time
he got roiled an’ started somethin’ he’d pull off his timber leg to slam some
chap an’ forget about it an’ tumble all over his-self an’ the deck, a cussin’
most dref-ful. Bosun, he was a Portugee from New Bedford—an old whale man an’ a
mighty good sailor man, even if he was a Dago, an’ the crew was just a paddel
of bums.
O, yes,
there was another chap, too, a fellow by name o’ Henry, sort o’ supergargo sent
along by old Fullerton to look after the accounts an’ such like the owner not
trustin’ skipper to attend to ’em. Wust lan’ lubber ever I see, that there
Henry, an’ thought he know a heap about the sea, too. And reckoned he was might
funny. Used to crack his sides, tellin’ a yarn about a cruise what he took on a
schooner called the Flounder out o’ Gloucester with a cap’m name of Turbot. I knowed a skipper
o’ that name once an’ didn’t tumble to the joke ’til Henry told how the
schooner was that full that not a soul aboard had a place for to eat.
Howsomever,
soon as we was out o’ the Sound, Henry took to his berth an’ never said nothin’
more till we made port again, so he don’t matter none nohow.
Skipper
Stebbins was one o’ them cap’ns what had got religion—turned parson once, but
he used to forget hisself when he got a preachin’ an’ would swear scandalous in
the pulpit if he got a mite excited an’ had to quit. But so long’s we was bound
for heathen lands he vowed he’d have to
save some souls, so he took ’long enough tracts an’ Bibles to fill a yawl boat. Wal, we got clear at last. Fine summer morning, ’twas, and
the tug come alongside an’ towed us down stream’ an’ out past Watch Hill and dropped us outside.
While we’d
been towin’ out we’d been makin’ sail, there being a
fair wind an’
soon’s ever the tug left us we squared away to the nor’east with
our square-rigged mizzen a catchin’ all
the wind an’ enough left over for to fill them big fore-an’-aft sails and a shovin’ the old hooker
along at a twelve knot clip if she made a foot. ’Cause all hands what was
sailors was mighty cur’ous to see bow she’d behave, an’ we was everlastin’ly
blowcd to find of her rip-snorin’ along that way. But just the same, twa’nt
right to look aft an’ see them there square sails an’ look for’ard an’ see
fore-an’-aft canvas, and every time I walked along aft to take my turn to the
wheel I had to walk backwards, by gum, or I’d have found myself headin’ for the
fo’c’sle instead of the poop!
So it was
on thet consarned pipe dream. Thar weren’t nothin’ thet weren’t backards, e’en
when yuh went climbin’ up yuh was liable to find yur-self taking a header down
below.
ABOUT THE
third day arter Nantucket lightship was hull down, the wind hauled round and
then our troubles began. Along about the middle o’ the night watch it was, when
the wind drawed around to the east’ard an the mate begun bawlin’ out orders to
swing yards an trim sail, Wal, sir, ’twas darker ’n a pocket, an’ we just had
to find braces and sheets an’ haliards by feelin’, an the first thing we
knowed, the old hooker was wallowin’ in the trough o’ the sea all aback, an’
the helsman a-singin’ out that the derned rudder’d went adrift, an’ things was
in a holy mess.
First the
old ship would come up into the wind for a jiffy an’ then she’d yaw an’ fall
off an’, blow me for a sojer, if every time she come up she didn’t sail starn
fo’rnost! An’ what do you guess the trouble was? Why, that there consarned mate
had clean forgotten how the Fullerton was rigged and had just ordered sail set same as if she was an ord
nary barkentine an’ ’course the ol’ hooker was a-dooin’ of her level best for
to sail starn fust.
Wal, the
rumpus woke up the Old Man an’ he come on deck and seen what the trouble was
an’ bawled out to furl all square sails which same was did an’ after a bit we
got the old Fullerton headed into the wind an’ on her
course again.
But we
didn’t never fetch, Newfunlan’. No, sir, just offen Nova Scotia we run into a
nasty nor’wester, an’ the consarned old craft had to just turn tail an’ run
afore it. Never did see such a gale’ wind lastin so all fired long. For six
mortal days and night it blowed a livin’ hur’eane and we scuddin’ afore it
under all but bare poles. And then, just as a sort o’ partin’ kiss, so to
speak, she let out one big blow an’ takes two o’ the sticks clean outen the old
hooker.
“Wal,
there we be driftin’ about, south o’ Bermuda, with just a square-rigged mizzen,
what wasn’t a mite o’ use, standin’. Wal, to make a long story short, so to
say, the Old Man had the yards sent down. He was a proper sailor man for his
prayin’ sanctimon’ous ways an’ with them we rigged up a couple o’ jury masts
settin’ the mizzen topsails for trysails and as we couldn’t do nothin’ else we
set a course for St. Thomas, that bein’ the nearest place where we could
refit.
We fetched
the island all right and while we was gettin’ new sticks, set up we had to
break outa bit o’ the cargo for to work below decks. We was doin’ this one
mornin’ when a big mullato Dane comes over the side, chap named Oleson he was,
an’ had a big ship chand’lry shop an’ general store in town—and as he comes
along the deck one o’ the cases o’ skates busts open.
Ole son
stops an’ looks at ’em. “What's ’em?” he says.
“Skates,”
says I.
“And what
be skates an’ for what?" he asks, him bein’ a Danish nigger an’ not
knowin’ about such things.
Wal, I was
a bit peeved at havin’ to be workin’ in the sun when there was plenty o’
niggers to do the job an’ good rum shore, an’ I answers kind o’ short an’
impatient like. “Can’t ye see for yerself that they be?” says I. “And they’re
mostly used for Christmas presents to home,” says I.
At that
Oleson tips his big floppin’ hat for’ard an’ scratches his kinky yaller head
for a minute an’ then he slaps his leg an’ says.
“They’re
just what I’ve been wantin’,” he says. “Do ye know if they’re for sale or on
consignment?”
“Go and
see the skipper or the supercargo about ’em,” I tells him, and with that I
goes on with my work.
And I'll
be everlastin’ly keelhauled if he didn’t make a dicker an’ take all them consarned
skates offen our hands, givin’ us bay rum in trade. What in tarnation he wanted
with all them there skates down there in St. Thomas, where it’s hotter’n
blazes, an’ the only ice they ever seen was brought down in barr’ls from Maine,
I couldn’t figger out. So, bein’ a cur'ous sort o’ cuss, as ye know, I made up
my mind for to find out soon as ever I got shore leave, which was next day, But
I’ll be blowed if I seen a sign o’ a skate in town. So in I walks to Oleson’s
place and asks the clerk about ’em.
“Oh,” says
he. “We ain’t showin’ ’em yet, They’re emblems o’ the Christmas season and
Mister Oleson calc’late to hang ’em outside his stores for to advertise his
stock o’ Christmas good when the time comes,”
And I’ll
bet ye, if ye go down to St, Thomas today, you’ll find them there same old
skates a-hangin’ in bunches like grapes outside o’ all the shops long towards
Christmas. Yes, sir. West Injins is queer guys. Remember that there yarn I
telled ye about them warming-pans what was shipped down an’ how the folks used
’em for sugar-ladles?
HOWSOMEVER, that’s nothin’ to do with this here
cruise o’ the Fullerton. By an’ by, the old hooker was
rigged an’ ready for sea, but ye never would have known her, ’cause why? ’Cause
the skipper had rigged her fore-an’-aft on fore an’ mizzenmasts an’ square on
the mainmast. Seemed as how him an’ Henry had an argument over it. The Old Man
insisted he was goin’ for to rig her ship-shape barkentine style, while Henry
swore he was the owner’s agent and if Fullerton wanted his ship rigged starn
fo’most, then starn-fo’most she’d stay. Seem’ as neither would give in, an’ as
Henry had the money to pay for the refittin’, the Old Man and him finally split
the difference an’ shoved the square-rigged stick amidships.
The next
port o’ call, accordin’ to orders, was South Ameriky where we was to trade off
them hatracks. So we squared away down the islands and I will say as how that
new-fangled rig worked mighty pretty an’ I’ve been wonderin’, many’s the time
since, why folks didn’t never build ships that way. Ye see, when sailin’ to
windward or with a beam wind, everything would draw, and if we was takin’ we
just used the fore-an’-aft canvas, while, if we was runnin’ free, we winged out
the for-anmizzen and set upper sails on the main, and there we be!
I
disremember just where ’twas, but along offen Barbadoes somewhere that we run
into the all firedest big school o’ sharks what ever I seen. And then, it bein’
pretty nigh a dead calm, all hands set to, a-tryin’ to catch them critters. But
they was so consarned big that no hook nor tackle we had would hold ’em. Wal,
sir, the ship now bein’ pretty steady, that Henry fellow—him not feelin’ sick
comes up on deck and watches us for a spell. Then he up an’ asks the skipper to
open a hatch and he goes down with a couple o’ hands and fetches up one o’ them
hatracks. Ye know the kind they was —thing made o’ a lot o’ sticks stand-in’ up
from a sort o’ middle spar.
Then Henry
makes one end o’ a coil o’ line fast to the hatrack, an’ heaves her over, an’ I’ll
be dumb-swizzled if a whoppin’ big shark didn’t grab it soon’s ever it hit the
water. And there he was! Them there prongs just stuck in his throat like about
a dozen big hooks, an’ reavin’ the line through a tackle, we tailed on an’ had
that there shark on deck in less’n no time. Just then the wind come up an’ the
mate commenced hollerin’ orders an’ I reckon ’twas lucky at that, or else we’d
all been fishin’ for sharks with them there hatracks an’ them South Ameriky
chaps wouldn’t never have got ’em.
I don’t
rightly know what the name o’ the place was where we put in at, but ’twas some
“Santa” or other—don’t, make a mite o’ difference nohow—and Henry had some o’
them hatrack gadjets broken out o’ the hold an’ sends ’em ashore and sets ’em
down outside a inn whilst he goes inside for a drink before a startin’ to do
business. Just then along comes a couple o’ chaps dashin’ up horse back and all
rigged out fit to kill in big hats and jinglin’ spurs an’ sashes an’ cloaks an’
such-like.
Pullin’ up
alongside the inn they sees Henry’s hatracks standin’ there convenient-like an’
thinkin’ Mister Innkeeper’d got some new-fangled kind o’ hitchin’ posts they
heaves their bridles over them racks and stomps inside. Wal, that was all what
was needed. After that, every consarned inn and pub in the place had to have a
hatrack hitchin’-post outside to do any business, an’ we was three mortal days
stowin’ the hides an’ coffee an’ rubber what we took in trade for them there
gadjets. Beats all what fool luck some folks do have.
Now there
ain’t a mite o’ use in me a tellin’ ye about the run down the coast an’ round
the Horn, ’ceptin’ we all wished we had them there skates for to get about the
decks with when we struck cold weather an’ the old hooker iced up. But we was
mighty glad we had them two fore-an’-aft sails, ’stead o’ square yards, an’ we
just stripped off the mainmast canvas an’ worked round the Horn under fore an’
mizzen, ’cause no mortal man could have handled square sails in the weather
what we had. But we got round at last, and mighty thankful at that, an’ stood
away for the South Sea Islands.
When we
fetched the first one the Old Man was pretty nigh flabbergasted to see all
them folks, men an’ wimmen, runnin’ around just as naked as the day they was
born. So, without waitin’ to give Henry a chance for to trade, he gets out them
aprons an’ sunbonnets an’ passes of ’em around to them heathen savages. An’
what do ye think? Them critters was tickled to death. They grabbed the bonnets
an’ tied ’em on for bustles an’ wrapped the aprons ’round their heads for
turbans, an’ goes struttin’ up an’ down the decks as proud as peacocks! Wal,
sir, skipper wasn’t no better off than before, so, hidin’ his eyes an’ blushin’
somethin’ awful, he shoos ’em off, an’ findin’ they don’t have no shell nor
copra he takes on a lot o’ coconuts an’ sets sail for the next island.
HERE THE
folks wears clothes in the shape o’ grass petticoats, an’ they also got plenty
o’ copra an’ shell, so the Old Man opens up the hatches an’ rigs hoistin’
tackle an’ slings to the mainyard an’ gets ready for to trade. Seein’ as how
the skipper’d given away all them aprons and bonnets at t’other island, we
didn’t have nothin’ to trade, ’ceptin’ the bay rum what we got to St. Thomas
and the coffee and hides an’ rubber what we took on over to South Ameriky.
’Course
the islanders didn’t have no use for hides or coffee or rubber, but the cap’n
an’ Henry figured as how the bay rum might have taken— seem’ as how ’twas
mostly made o’ good Santa Cruz rum an’ smelled mighty nice. And I’ll be bilged
if it didn’t take too consarned well at that. Gosh A’mighty! The old chief just
took one sniff o’ that there stuff an’ poured a bit down his scuppers an’ he
was ready for to trade everythin’ he had. And right then and there that dumb-swizzled
fool Henry made a big mistake. Thinkin’ to get the copra and shell aboard
faster, he gives out a dozen cases o’ bay rum before more’n half a ton o’ shell
an’ a couple o’ canoe loads o’ copra was alongside and then, o’ course them
consarned savages just sot down an’ got themselves plumb fightin’ drunk.
We could
hear of ’em a-yellin' and squealin’ over to the village and when no more stuff
comes off the skipper sends a boat ashore for to see what was the trouble. But
that boat never touched the beach, I tell ye. Soon’s ever they seen us comin’
they grabs up spears and clubs an’ such an’ comes tearin’ an’ yellin’ for us
and we just turns tail an’ pulls like blue blazes for the ship. Lucky thing
they was too drunk to handle canoes or I wouldn’t be here tellin’ ye about it.
And we was
in a pretty fix. There we be, anchored inside the lagoon and not a breath o’
wind stirrin’ the palm trees and with a passel o’ cannibals carousin’ ashore
an’ us with no way o’ gettin’ clear. We knowed, soon’s ever them blacks had
guzzled all the bay rum they had, that they’d be comin’ out to stick us up and
gather in the rest o’ the stuff and skipper—him bein’ such a sanctimonious
chap, and a man o’ peace—we didn’t have no guns aboard. Wal, there we be,
settin’ an’ waitin’ for to have our throats slit—an’ like as not et
arterwards—and not knowin’ what to do, when Rooney gives a yell an’ bangs his
peg-leg on the deck.
“B’gorra I
have it!” says he. “B’ys, break out that there rubber an’ be lively about it!”
Not
knowin’ nor carin’ what the idea was, but willin’ for to do most anythin’ just
to keep our minds offen them wild cannibals ashore, we falls to and gets them
bales o’ rubber on deck. It had been tarnation hot weather for weeks past and
the rubber’d got soft and sticky-like, and Rooney sets us all to work pullin’
of it out and twistin’ of it into cables. Then he fetches up a barrel o’ sulphur,
what we had for fumigatin’ the ship in case o’ fever and we rubbed the
brimstone over the rubber cables an’ lays ’em out in the sun. Next, Rooney
orders us to get a hide outen the hold, and he fastens one end o’ the rubber
cables to this and t’other ends to a couple o’ sheer-poles rigged up alongside
o’ the rail, and then we begins for to see what he’s doin'.
Gosh all
hemlock! There he had the aimightiest big slungshot what ever was, and we
hadn’t no more’n finished it when about fifty canoes came a skyhootin’ from
shore filled chock-o-block with savages. Soon’s they come about two cables’
lengths off, Rooney clapped a tackle onto the hide with a lashing to a
snatch-block —an’ drawin’ the things-mabob clean back to t’other rail he dumps
a sack o’ coconuts into the hide an’ cuts the lashin’s with his knife.
Holy
mackerel! Ye’d oughta seed them nuts go shootin’ when them big rubber cables
go! Talk about bombshells. Some o’ them there nuts struck the canoes an’
busted and knocked the niggers all about.
’Tothers
plumped into the water alongside, while them cannibals what was hit fair might
just as well been struck by a six-inch shell. But they was game all right. Some
on ’em got nigh enough the ship to heave a few spears and arrers, but a couple
o’ more loads o' nuts finished ’em.
An’ just
then a breeze comes up, an’ slippin’ our cable we got clear o’ the lagoon. But
the last shot was too consarned much for them sheerpoles, and rubbers an’ hide
an’ poles an’ all went flyin’ off together. Seem’ as the sheerpoles was made
outen the main torpsail yards we couldn’t use the mainmast for square canvas,
so we put into Samoa and rigged the old Fullerton as a three-masted schooner afore we
sailed home, and there was one square-rigger less.”
The old
sailor stopped and refilled his pipe.
“That’s a
corker of a yarn,” I chuckled, “Beats any you’ve told me yet.” Slowly he rose
to his feet and looked down at me with a hurt expression on his weather-beaten
face.
“Meanin’
you don’t believe it,” he said in injured tones. “Wal, o’ course folks what
ain’t never been to sea don’t know what almighty queer things does happen.
Howsomever, if ye’ll come up to my place 1 can prove it’s true, I got one o’
the pearl shells an’ a arrer up there.”
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