Captains Courageous eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about Captains Courageous.

Captains Courageous eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 219 pages of information about Captains Courageous.

Then everybody shouted and tried to haul up his anchor to get among the school, and fouled his neighbour’s line and said what was in his heart, and dipped furiously with his dip-net, and shrieked cautions and advice to his companions, while the deep fizzed like freshly opened soda-water, and cod, men, and whales together flung in upon the luckless bait.  Harvey was nearly knocked overboard by the handle of Dan’s net.  But in all the wild tumult he noticed, and never forgot, the wicked, set little eye—­something like a circus elephant’s eye—­of a whale that drove along almost level with the water, and, so he said, winked at him.  Three boats found their rodings fouled by these reckless mid-sea hunters, and were towed half a mile ere their horses shook the line free.

Then the caplin moved off, and five minutes later there was no sound except the splash of the sinkers overside, the flapping of the cod, and the whack of the muckles as the men stunned them.  It was wonderful fishing.  Harvey could see the glimmering cod below, swimming slowly in droves, biting as steadily as they swam.  Bank law strictly forbids more than one hook on one line when the dories are on the Virgin or the Eastern Shoals; but so close lay the boats that even single hooks snarled, and Harvey found himself in hot argument with a gentle, hairy Newfoundlander on one side and a howling Portuguese on the other.

Worse than any tangle of fishing-lines was the confusion of the dory-rodings below water.  Each man had anchored where it seemed good to him, drifting and rowing round his fixed point.  As the fish struck on less quickly, each man wanted to haul up and get to better ground; but every third man found himself intimately connected with some four or five neighbours.  To cut another’s roding is crime unspeakable on the Banks; yet it was done, and done without detection, three or four times that day.  Tom Platt caught a Maine man in the black act and knocked him over the gunwale with an oar, and Manuel served a fellow-countryman in the same way.  But Harvey’s anchor-line was cut, and so was Penn’s, and they were turned into relief-boats to carry fish to the ‘We’re Here’ as the dories filled.  The caplin schooled once more at twilight, when the mad clamour was repeated; and at dusk they rowed back to dress down by the light of kerosene-lamps on the edge of the pen.

It was a huge pile, and they went to sleep while they were dressing.  Next day several boats fished right above the cap of the Virgin; and Harvey, with them, looked down on the very weed of that lonely rock, which rises to within twenty feet of the surface.  The cod were there in legions, marching solemnly over the leathery kelp.  When they bit, they bit all together; and so when they stopped.  There was a slack time at noon, and the dories began to search for amusement.  It was Dan who sighted the Hope Of Prague just coming up, and as her boats joined the company they were greeted with the question:  “Who’s the meanest man in the Fleet?”

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Captains Courageous from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.