CHAPTER I.
CHAPTER II.
CHAPTER III.
CHAPTER IV.
CHAPTER V.
CHAPTER VI.
CHAPTER VII.
CHAPTER VIII.
CHAPTER IX.
CHAPTER X.
CHAPTER XI.
CHAPTER XII.
CHAPTER XIII.
CHAPTER XIV.
CHAPTER XV.
CHAPTER XVI.
CHAPTER I.
A
BACKWOODSMAN'S IDEAS."I
DECLARE this is almost like coming into another world, isn't it?""Yes,
and I, for one, am glad to get back. I like a good horse, and no one
enjoys a few days' shooting and fishing better than I do; but when I
get tired of the saddle and the woods, I like to see the blue water
and feel the solid planks of a yacht's deck under my feet once more.
We had a good time though, in spite of all our adventures and
mishaps.""We
certainly did. I am like Perk, who, after he had been down into the
Cave of the Winds, under Niagara Falls, said he would do it again for
no money, but seeing that he
had been down, he
would not sell his experience at any price. I couldn't be hired to
make that same trip to Fort Bolton again—being "snowed up"
was the worst part of it to me—but since it is all over and we are
safely out of it, I am glad we went."This
was a portion of the conversation carried on by our friends Archie,
Fred and Eugene, as they sat in the main-cross-trees of the Stranger,
swinging their feet in the air and looking out over the shipping
anchored off North Point Dock, in the harbor of San Francisco. They
had only just arrived that day, their trip across the mountains being
happily ended. They had discarded the half-savage, half-civilized
costumes they had worn during their sojourn in the wilderness and
substituted pea-jackets for their hunting-shirts, light shoes for
their high-top boots, and natty tarpaulins for their slouch hats.
They looked as though they had just come out of some lady's band-box,
and one and all declared that it was most refreshing to find
themselves dressed up like white folks once more.The
first thing these three uneasy youngsters did after they had donned
their "shore clothes," and put the suits they had worn in
the mountains carefully away in their trunks for safe-keeping, was to
run all over the vessel, looking into every locker and corner, just
as they had done when they first saw her on the stocks at New
Orleans, and the next to mount to the cross-trees to survey the
harbor. Here they had sat for half an hour, enjoying the prospect
spread out before them, and talking over their recent adventures and
exploits. The other members of the Club, Walter, Frank Nelson, George
Le Dell and the rest, were seated on the quarter-deck with Uncle
Dick, talking to Dick Lewis and old Bob Kelly.Dick
and Bob were objects of great interest to the sailors who composed
the Stranger's crew. They stared at everything with wide-open eyes,
and were as much out of place on the schooner's deck as the jolly
tars would have been in the mountains from which the backwoodsmen had
just arrived.The
Club had had a varied and eventful experience during the
comparatively short time that they had been absent from the Stranger,
and even now the hearts of some of them would beat a trifle faster
whenever they thought of what they had passed through. Walter drew a
long breath every time he recalled his experience in Potter's rancho;
Fred and Eugene shivered and drew their collars up around their ears
when they thought of the sight presented to their gaze on the day
they set out from their camp under the cliffs, to show the Pike and
his family the way to Fort Bolton, and imagined that they could see
the air filled with driving snow, and could hear the roaring of the
wind as it swept the prairie, just as they had seen it and heard it
on that long-to-be-remembered afternoon. Archie grew excited and
elated whenever he thought of the way he had captured the wild horse,
and then exasperated when he remembered how he had lost him before he
had had a chance to try even one race with his cousin. Frank shrugged
his shoulders when any of his companions called him "Chinny
Billy," as they often did, and thanked his lucky stars that he
was well out of the predicament which the genuine Chinny Billy had so
nearly got him into, when he denounced him as an impostor and spy in
the presence of all the members of Potter's gang; and even Uncle Dick
Gaylord, hardened as he was by a long life of adventure, did not like
to recall the feelings of anxiety and suspense that he had
experienced on more than one occasion, during the journey to Bolton
and back. The two trappers were probably the only ones in the party
for whom the last few months had no especial interest. Their lives
were made up of just such scenes and incidents, and they never
thought of them again, unless something happened to bring them
vividly to their recollection.The
last night that the friends passed at Fort Bolton was given up to
enjoyment. The colonel and major entertained Uncle Dick at their
quarters, and the younger officers took charge of the boys. After
supper it was noticed that some of the officers and their guests
distributed themselves in little groups about the room, that the
members of each group carried on a very earnest conversation in a low
tone of voice, and that various little keepsakes were passed from one
to the other, which each promised to preserve in remembrance of the
giver. The gifts that passed between Frank and Lieutenant Gaylord
were the most valuable of any. These two young fellows had been fast
friends and almost constant companions ever since the night on which
the lieutenant recaptured Dick Lewis after his flight from the guard
house, and arrested Frank for assisting him to make his escape. Frank
had something he knew the lieutenant wanted, and that was the
splendid horse which Potter had given him. Frank could not take the
animal around the world with him, and besides he was already the
happy owner of a steed which was just as handsome and swift, and
which held a much higher place in his affections. That was Roderick.
It was Uncle Dick's intention to travel on horseback until the party
reached a point from which they could continue their journey by stage
or railroad, and then sell off their stock—their wagon, which would
have been an almost useless encumbrance to them, now that the roads
were blocked with snow, having been exchanged for pack mules—Frank
would then have no further use for his horse, so he offered him to
the lieutenant, who was glad to accept him.The
journey to San Francisco was made without the occurrence of any
exciting or noteworthy incidents. Among them all they managed to
shoot a few black-tails, and one grizzly bear, whose skin and claws
were preserved by the old members of the Club as trophies. They found
the snow fully as deep as they expected, the travelling difficult,
and the weather extremely cold; but their progress was steady,
although slow, until they reached the railroad, and then in a few
hours they found themselves in an almost tropical climate.When
they reached the railroad, Dick and Old Bob would have taken leave of
them, but the boys would not listen to it. They were determined that,
if they could have their own way, the trappers should remain with
them for a long time to come. They owed much to these two men, and as
they could not repay them in any other way, they would take them
around the world, introducing them to scenes and people of which they
had never dreamed. Of course this idea originated with rattle-brained
Eugene Gaylord, and Uncle Dick, who could not find it in his heart to
refuse his nephews anything they asked for, consented to the
arrangement, though not without a good deal of grumbling."They'll
only be in the way, Eugene," said the old sailor. "They
just fit the mountains and the prairie—they were made for them; but
how will they look on the deck of the Stranger? There isn't room
enough aboard our little craft for that giant, Louis.""O,
Uncle, there are two or three empty bunks in the forecastle, and they
can sleep there as well as not," replied Eugene."But
they will be so uneasy that they'll not enjoy themselves in the
least," continued Uncle Dick. "They will be frightened to
death when they find themselves out of sight of land, and the men
will be playing tricks on them all the while.""But
the men mustn't play tricks on them. We won't let them; and besides
it would be dangerous. As for being out of sight of land, that need
not trouble them. They'll not be in half as much danger as they were
while they were with Potter's gang. Then think of the fun we'll have,
Uncle! Didn't you notice how they opened their eyes the other night
when Bab was telling them of the elephants we expect to see in
India?""Well,
well! do as you please," said the old sailor. "If they are
foolish enough to go, I shall have a fine time of it among you all; I
can see that plainly." And then he turned away to hunt up Frank
Nelson, to whom he always went when he had anything on his mind.Eugene
having gained his point went straight to Archie and Fred, who
declared that it was the best thing they ever heard of. The matter
was laid before the trappers with as little delay as possible, and
the proposition almost took their breath away. They opened their
mouths and eyes and looked wonderingly at each other, but said
nothing. Archie thought that was enough for one day, and although his
friends wanted an immediate answer, he succeeded in inducing them to
retire and leave the trappers to themselves. He thought it best to
give them leisure to turn the matter over in their minds (it seemed
to be more than they could grasp at once) and go to them for an
answer at some future time.Dick
and old Bob seemed to grow timid as they approached the confines of
civilization, but they were coaxed on board the train, and when the
party reached San Francisco, they were taken off to the Stranger. The
matter of the voyage around the world had been brought for up
discussion a few times, but Dick had found his tongue at last, and
declared that it was not to be thought of. The boys knew better than
to press the subject, and hoped that time would accomplish what
arguments could never do. A few hours on board the Stranger in the
harbor, where vessels were constantly coming and going, might
increase their confidence, while it familiarized them in some slight
degree with life on ship-board, and perhaps they could then be
induced to change their minds. Archie had tried to persuade Dick to
follow him and his companions to the cross-trees; but the trapper,
after glancing down at his colossal proportions, and then up at the
ratlines, which looked no larger than so many threads, declared that
the ropes wouldn't bear his weight, and remained below."Now,
this feels natural!" exclaimed Featherweight swinging back and
forth on his dizzy perch with such apparent recklessness that Dick
Lewis, who now and then looked up at him, fairly shook in his
moccasins; "and I am ready for new adventures and new sights
beyond the seas. Our fellows can say, what the books tell us
comparatively few American travellers can say, and that is, we have
seen the most of the wonders of our own country. I never expect to
see anything grander than the Yo Semite Valley. I wonder how long it
will be before Uncle Dick will hoist the signal for sailing?""Just
as soon as the stores are aboard," said Eugene. "We may get
off to-morrow.""Will
Dick and Bob go with us?""No,"
said Archie. "We might as well give that up. And since I have
come to think of it, I don't want them to go unless they are
perfectly willing to do so.""Nor
I," said Eugene. "If it frightens them so badly to travel
on a railroad train, what would be their feelings when they found the
schooner tossing about on such waves as we saw coming around the
Horn? I shall urge them no more.""They
have been talking to Frank about it," continued Fred. "They
always go to him and believe every word he says—that is, almost
every word.""Ah!
yes; I was going to put that in," said Archie. "They don't
like to believe that the world is round. They don't say so with their
mouths, but they do with their eyes.""And
they don't know what to think about elephants as large as that house
of Potter's, and lions and tigers, and snakes twenty feet long,"
said Fred."And
a whale bothers them," chimed in Eugene; "and Dick laughed
the other day when I told him about a flying-fish.""What's
going on down there?" asked Archie, as the sound of voices in
animated conversation came up from the deck.The
boys looked below and saw that the group, which they had last seen
scattered over the quarter-deck, were gathered about Dick Lewis, who
appeared to be making them a speech. Now and then he illustrated his
remarks by pointing to something he had placed at his feet; but the
boys could not see what it was, for the Club were crowded about it
and hid it from view. They were missing something, that was evident;
but they did not intend to miss any more of it, and it was but the
work of a few seconds to swing themselves out of the crosstrees on to
the ratlines, and descend to the deck. They ran up to the group, and
found that the object over which the trapper was holding forth was
simply a mess-pan filled with water."Them
stories you've been a tellin' seems wonderful to me an' ole Bob, who
never heard the like afore," Dick was saying as the boys came
up. "We don't conspute 'em, 'cause bein' unedicated men, we
never had no book larnin', an' don't know nothing outside the
mountains an' the prairy. Now, you tell me that thar's three times as
much water on the 'arth as thar is ground; that you're goin' to start
from Fr'isco an' sail clean around it in this yere little boat, an'
that if me an' ole Bob'll go with you, we won't even know that we're
sailing round the world. Won't we know when we come to the edge?""There
isn't any edge to it," said Frank."Sho!
Thar can't help bein' an edge if the world is round, can thar? This
yere," said Dick, pointing to the pan of water, "is the
sea; an' this yere," he continued, fumbling in the pockets of
his hunting shirt, "is the 'arth."As
he spoke he drew out a piece of hard tack, which he had rudely shaped
with his knife to represent his idea of the rotundity of the earth.
The corners were cut off, making the biscuit nearly round, and there
was a piece clipped out of the side of it, in shape something like a
bottle with a very short neck and wide body, to represent the Golden
Gate and the harbor of San Francisco. This miniature world Dick
placed in the middle of the pan of water, and then straightened up
and looked triumphantly at his audience. Eugene glanced at it, choked
back a laugh and then rushed off to find the steward, while the
trapper went on with his illustration."Now,
thar's the 'arth," said he, placing his finger on the biscuit,
"flat like a pan-cake, as anybody can see it is, that's ever
been out on the prairy, an' round like
you say it is. Here
is the sea all around it, an' here's Fr'isco. Now, after you go out
of the Golden Gate an' start to sail round the 'arth," said
Dick, moving his long finger through the water around the biscuit,
"can't you see the edge all the way round? I can understand
that, which wasn't so very plain to me a few days ago, but now comes
something I can't see into. You say the 'arth turns over onct every
day, but that don't by no means stand to reason, 'cause jest see what
would happen,"—he went on, placing his finger under the
biscuit and raising one edge of it out of the water. "If it
turned over, one side of it would keep gettin' higher an' higher all
the time, an' finally the houses, an' trees, an' mountains, an' folks
would get to slidin' an' slidin', an' when they come to the edge,
they'd all slip off into the water; an' when the 'arth turned
cl'ar over"—here
he flopped the biscuit up side down in the pan—"whar would we
all be?"None
of his auditors had attempted to interrupt the trapper, and the
reason was because there was not one among them who could trust
himself to speak, not even Uncle Dick. Believing from their silence
that he had got the better of all of them, the trapper said he was
more firmly convinced than he had ever been before, that all the
learning in the world was not to be found in books, and was about to
throw the contents of his mess-pan over the side, when Eugene came
elbowing his way into the group, carrying an apple in one hand and a
small magnet in the other."Now,
Dick," said he, "let me talk a minute. You haven't quite
got the idea. In the first place, that piece of hard tack doesn't
represent the shape of the earth, but this apple does, pretty nearly.
In the next place, the globe doesn't revolve through water, for the
water forms part of the earth and turns with it.""Sho!"
exclaimed the trapper. "It would all spill out.""Hold
on a minute, and I'll show you that it can't spill out. The world
revolves through the air. Don't you fellows criticise now,"
continued Eugene, turning to his companions. "If, when I get
through, you want to explain that the earth really revolves through
space, and that the air goes with it, except such portions as are
left behind and form the trade-winds, you are welcome to do it; but
it is quite beyond me."Eugene
handed the magnet to Archie to hold until he was ready to use it, and
with the point of his knife rudely traced upon the apple the shape of
the continents and the principal oceans. This done, he went on with
his explanation, which was simply a repetition of what every boy
learns when he first begins the study of geography. He described the
motions of the earth as well as he could, and used the magnet to
illustrate the attraction of gravitation. Dick listened attentively,
and when Eugene finished, took the apple from his hand and looked at
it with a great deal of interest. He turned it over several times,
and appeared to be meditating upon something."They're
goin' to sail round the 'arth this way," said he, moving his
finger slowly around the circumference of the apple, and talking more
to himself than to the boys standing about, "an' when they get
around here"—he stopped and thought a moment, holding the end
of his finger under the apple—"when they get around here,
they'll be—Human natur'!" he cried suddenly, as if frightened
at the discovery he had made. "When you get around here, on the
under side of the 'arth, you'll be walkin' with your heads downwards,
won't you? Bob can do as he likes, but
I won't go. Mebbe
that little red hoss-shoe aint strong enough to hold the boat fast to
the 'arth—don't look as if it was—an' some dark night she'll get
to fallin' an' fallin'—Whew! I'm as near that place now as I want
to be, an' I'm off fur the mountains to-morrow, bright an' 'arly."Dick
turned away, fairly trembling with excitement, and the boys scattered
as if some one had suddenly sent a charge of bird-shot among them.