Five Months on a German Raider eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 139 pages of information about Five Months on a German Raider.

Five Months on a German Raider eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 139 pages of information about Five Months on a German Raider.
if, indeed, he was even on the bridge at that moment.  I rushed to inform the American sailing ship Captain of my discovery, and he confirmed my opinion that it was a four-funnelled warship.  The Germans were by this time fully alarmed, and the ship slowed down a little; the Captain, evidently also thinking that the vessel was a cruiser, went to his cabin to dispose of the ship’s papers, the crew got into their best uniform to surrender, and it looked as if help were at hand at last.  We got our precious packages together, put them in our pockets, and got everything ready to leave the ship.  We were all out on deck, delighted beyond words (our elation can be imagined), and saw the ship—­it must be remembered that it was a very misty day—­resolve itself into two two-funnelled ships, apparently transports, one seemingly in distress and very much camouflaged, and the other standing by.  Soon, however, they proceeded on their course and crossed our bows fairly close.  We were then all ordered to our cabins, and we saw the two ships steam off to the westward, without having spoken us or given any evidence of having seen us at all.

It was a most bitter disappointment to us, comparable to that of shipwrecked sailors on a desert island watching a ship expected to deliver them pass out of sight.  Our hopes, raised to such a high pitch, were indeed dashed—­we felt very low after this.  Would help never come?  Better we had not seen the ships than to be deceived and disappointed in this way.  But it was a great relief to the Germans.  We never discovered what ships they were, but the American said he believed them to be American transports and that each mounted a gun.  If only we had seen them the day before, when we were in company with the Wolf, they might have been suspicious, and probably have been of some help to us.  The Captain was very worried by their appearance, and did not feel that all danger was passed even when the ships disappeared.  He feared they might communicate with some armed vessel met with, and give them a description and the position of his ship.  Also, had these two ships seen the Wolf, from which we had parted only twenty-four hours before?

In the middle of the excitement the Spanish chief mate had rushed on to the bridge into the wireless room, and while the wireless operator was out of the room, or his attention had been diverted, he took from their place all the six or eight bombs on board and threw them overboard.  They fell into the sea with a great splash just near where I was standing, but I did not then know it was the bombs which were being got rid of.  It was a plucky act, for had he been discovered by the armed sentry while doing it he would have undoubtedly been shot on the spot.  On the next day, on the morning of which we saw two sailing ships far distant, an inquiry was held as to the disappearance of the bombs, which would, of course, have been used to sink the ship, and the chief

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Five Months on a German Raider from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.