Max Pemberton
The House Under the Sea (Musaicum Adventure Classics)
Published by
Books
- Advanced Digital Solutions & High-Quality eBook Formatting -
2021 OK Publishing
EAN 4064066380236
Table of Contents
Chapter II. We Go Ashore and Learn Strange Things
Chapter III. In which Jasper Begg Makes Up His Mind what to Do
Chapter IV. We Go Aboard, but Return Again
Chapter V. Strange Sights Ashore, and what We Saw of Them
Chapter VI. Jasper Begg Meets His Old Mistress, and is Watched
Chapter VII. In which Help Comes from the Last Quarter We had Expected It
Chapter VIII. The Bird's Nest in the Hills
Chapter IX. We Look Out for the Southern Cross
Chapter X. We are Surely Caged on Ken's Island
Chapter XI. Lights Under the Sea
Chapter XII. The Dancing Madness
Chapter XIV. A White Pool—and Afterwards
Chapter XV. An Interlude, during which We Read in Ruth Bellenden's Diary Again
Chapter XVI. Rosamunda and the Iron Doors
Chapter XVII. In Which Jasper Begg Enters the House Under the Sea
Chapter XVIII. Chance Opens a Gate for Jasper Begg, and He Passes Through
Chapter XIX. Which Shows that a Man Who Thinks of Big Things Sometimes Forgets the Little Ones
Chapter XX. The First Attack is Made by Czerny's Men
Chapter XXI. Which Brings in the Day and what Befell Therein
Chapter XXII. The Beginning of the Sixty Hours
Chapter XXIII. The End of the Sixty Hours
Chapter XXIV. The Second Attack on Czerny's House
Chapter XXV. In which the Sun-time Comes Again
CHAPTER I
IN WHICH JASPER BEGG MAKES KNOWN THE PURPOSE OF HIS VOYAGE TO THE PACIFIC OCEAN, AND HOW IT CAME ABOUT THAT HE COMMISSIONED THE STEAM-SHIP SOUTHERN CROSS THROUGH PHILIPS, WESTBURY, AND CO.
Many gentlemen have asked me to write the story of Ken's Island, and in so far as my ability goes, that I will now do. A plain seaman by profession, one who has had no more education than a Kentish grammar school can give him, I, Jasper Begg, find it very hard to bring to other people's eyes the wonderful things I have seen or to make all this great matter clear as it should be clear for a right understanding. But what I know of it, I will here set down; and I do not doubt that the newspapers and the writers will do the rest.
Now, it was upon the third day of May in the year 1899, at four bells in the first dog watch, that Harry Doe, our boatswain, first sighted land upon our port-bow, and so made known to me that our voyage was done. We were fifty-three days out from Southampton then; and for fifty-three days not a man among the crew of the Southern Cross had known our proper destination, or why his skipper, Jasper Begg, had shipped him to sail for the Pacific Ocean. A pleasure voyage, the papers said; and some remembered that I had been in and out of private yachts ever since I ran away from school and booked with Skipper Higg, who sailed Lord Kanton's schooner from the Solent; but others asked themselves what pleasure took a yacht's skipper beyond the Suez, and how it came about that a poor man like Jasper Begg found the money to commission a 500-ton tramp through Philips, Westbury, and Co., and to deal liberally with any shipmate who had a fancy for the trip. These questions I meant to answer in my own time. A hint here and there of a lady in whose interest the voyage was undertaken kept the crew quiet, if it did not please its curiosity. Mister Jacob, my first officer, and Peter Bligh (who came to me because he said I was the only man who kept him away from the drink) guessed something if they knew little. They had both served under me in Ruth Bellenden's yacht; neither had forgotten that Ruth Bellenden's husband sailed eastward for the wedding trip. If they put their heads together and said that Ruth Bellenden's affairs and the steam-ship Southern Cross were not to be far apart at the end of it, I don't blame them. It was my business to hold my tongue until the land was sighted, and so much I did for Ruth Bellenden's sake.
Well, it was the third day of May, at four bells in the first dog watch, when Harry Doe, the boatswain, sighted land on the port-bow, and came abaft with the other hands to hear what I had got to say to him. Mr. Jacob was in his bunk then, he being about to take the first watch, and Peter Bligh, who walked the bridge, had rung down for half-speed by the time I came out with my glass for the first view of the distant island. We were then, I must tell you at a rough reckoning, in longitude 150 east of Greenwich, by about 30 north; and my first thought was that we might have sighted the Ganges group, as many a ship sailing from 'Frisco to Japan; but when I had looked at the land a little while, and especially at a low spur of rocks to the northward, I knew that this was truly the Ken Archipelago, and that our voyage was done.
"Lads," I said, "yonder is your port. Good weather