The Grain Ship Part 7
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"Leaving a trail of blood, he slunk forward of the house, and there must have met his enemy, the tiger. We could not see, but we could hear, and we knew the fight between the two was resumed.
"The snakes were thras.h.i.+ng it out all this time, but neither seemed to get the better of it. The boa's instincts were to crush, the python's to swallow; but this swallowing pertained also to the boa, and it came about that the boa got about three inches of the python's tail into his mouth, and later the python got a grip on the boa's tail.
"They held fast and ceased their struggles, their efforts now being centered in the desire to swallow each other. This seemed a good solution of our problem, and we wished them well.
"Meanwhile, the hyenas and the Russian wolves got mixed up, and--talk about your dog fights--you never saw anything like it. Those beasts fought and snarled and wrestled round the deck in a way to make you glad you were up aloft, out of harm's way.
"It was a strange fight; both the hyenas and the wolves are cowards, each afraid of the other. And it was only when two wolves got at a hyena, or two hyenas got at a wolf that there was any real sc.r.a.pping.
But it came about that these two breeds destroyed each other.
"One after the other crawled away to die from loss of blood.
"The wild a.s.ses and zebras had got busy. Something about the arrangement of the zebra's stripes must have offended the artistic sensibilities of the wild a.s.ses, for pretty soon there was a lively kicking-match going on round the deck--a zebra against a donkey, kicking out, stern to stern, like prize-fighters sparring. It was funny, the way they looked round at each other while backing up to a fresh reach.
"Now, the tiger and the lion were having it out forward of the house; the wolves and the hyenas were sc.r.a.pping, as they could, two against one; the python and the cobra were trying to swallow each other, and the a.s.ses and zebras were kicking the ribs out of each other. And, as if this were not enough to complete the circus, the hippo and the rhino must get together.
"Hippo made a plunging charge upon rhino and met that formidable tusk.
But the hide of a hippo is something akin to armor-plate, and there was no damage, though the big brute was lifted and turned over. He came back, and in some manner got a grip on that big horn with his teeth; and from that on, their fight was simply a wrestling-match, neither able to hurt the other.
"And over their grunts and groanings, over the noise of the wolves and hyenas, the tiger and lion, and the slatting and b.u.mping of the broken gear against the mast, and the sounds of sea and wind, rose supreme to our ears the blatant squealing and trumpeting of that mad elephant in the 'tween-decks.
"Added to this were the insane orders to us fellows of the skipper and the two mates. They demanded that we go down and quell the disturbance.
Well, we did not go down. We did other things.
"It was I who suggested to the skipper the advisability of cutting away the connections that held those spars and sails aloft, so that they would drop down and free the s.h.i.+p of the extra top-hamper. He was badly rattled, but accepted my suggestion; so, at his orders, men went aloft on all three masts, and soon the wreck came down, the mizzen top-hamper falling overboard and the main diving down the open main-hatch. We hoped it hit the elephant.
"It was only chance, of course; but the foretop-gallantmast, with the royal yard attached, did hit the tiger a smas.h.i.+ng blow on the head that ended his troubles. We could see him, just clear of the forward house, with the lion at his throat. There wasn't much of it. The lion bit in; then, satisfied that he had done the job, he left the dead tiger and came aft, still bleeding from the hole between the forelegs, and pounced upon rhino, who had made that hole.
"It roused the rhino. With a mighty upheaval, he shook off the hippo and charged on the lion. But this fighter had grown wary; he dodged and jumped, growling and snarling the while, but apparently in no mood to again risk the puncturing of his hide by that upright horn.
"Meanwhile the stupid old hippo, who usually wanted nothing more than his grub and his bath, lumbered around looking for further trouble. He found it; he interfered between the wild a.s.ses and the zebras, and soon the whole bunch, both sides, were bombarding him with their hind feet.
He squealed and groaned and growled, but to no end.
"They backed up to him and thumped him with their hoofs, as many as could get near him. It was a beautiful exhibition of the law of the brotherhood of man and the brotherhood of beast. Those equine propagandists of the law of the survival of the fittest kicked that poor, peaceful old hippo into a condition of coma.
"At last he lay down, with his head between his paws, and gave it up; then the kickers ceased kicking him and resumed their kicking of each other.
"By this time the python and the boa had gathered in about three feet of each other; the wolves and hyenas--two against one, understand--had reduced their number by half, and the lion was still pretending to fight the rhino.
"He still found it best to dodge that upright tusk, while his claws and teeth couldn't even scratch the rhino's impervious hide.
"Then he got it from another quarter. The porcupines had climbed up, and one was nosing round the deck, attending to his own affairs--which seemed to be nothing more than an intention to find out where he was--when he got between these two. He suddenly balled himself up, turned round a couple of times, and then fired a volley of his quills.
"They went, straight and true, right into that open hole between the lion's forelegs. He stood on his hindfeet for a moment, bellowing and roaring, while he tried to brush them out; then he slunk forward again and hid behind the house. But we heard his occasional snarls of pain.
"Meanwhile the porcupine had opened fire on the rhino, but did him no harm; and rhino was too big-minded to notice him. He lumbered round, looking for a match with something, but not finding it; even the kickers got out of his way, and the poor old hippo wandered forward to commune with the lion.
"Not finding an antagonist worthy of his horn, the rhino began nosing the two mutual-minded snakes. He tossed them 'round, and they were helpless to resist--only the rough handling seemed to induce increased swallowing power. We could see their jaws working convulsively; and inch by inch, foot by foot, they rapidly disappeared from sight.
"The rhino soon got tired and tackled the wolves and hyenas--what was left of them. They had reduced their number to two of each kind; but this was too small to admit of two against one, so they were now dodging each other, snarling bravely enough, but not fighting.
"The rhino caught a hyena on his tusk, tossed him in air, caught him as he fell, sent him flying again, and then stamped his life out. This seemed to settle the fate of the other hyena, for immediately the two remaining wolves got at him. But rhino's next victim was a wolf, which he disposed of as quickly.
"This left two cowards to fight for the supremacy; but the fight was taken out of them. They slunk apart and did not meet again.
"Now, here was the condition of things when a new factor intruded upon the problem: the lion was nursing his hurts, forward of the house, out of sight; the hippo had gone to sleep from sheer weariness and disgust; the last wolf and hyena were prowling round, avoiding each other; the python and the boa had swallowed two-thirds of each other's length; the rhino was wandering round, looking for a sc.r.a.p; the kicking zebras and wild a.s.ses had grown tired and called it a draw, and the porcupines, three or four of them, had finished their inspection of their environment and had snuggled down in various places to await developments.
"The new factor was a green sea that lifted aboard amids.h.i.+ps and flooded the waist of the s.h.i.+p. Of course, the quick movers of the lot got forward or aft, out of the way of the water surging back and forth across the deck; but the poor porcupines were drowned before the water ran out the scuppers. And when it had gone out, we saw what we had not seen before--the small, poisonous cobras.
"They had come up, but had kept out of sight until that sea washed them round; then, as the water shallowed on the deck, they made for the masts or the rigging and began to climb. It's hard to drown a snake, you know.
"There were at least two dozen of the reptiles, and it looked bad for us fellows aloft. Did you ever see a snake climb a rope? He goes up in a sort of wriggling spiral, wrapped loosely round it, but s.h.i.+fting his different sections up for a fresh grip. The other fellows climbed to the topmast-crosstrees and looked down; but the snakes stopped at the eyes of the rigging, or the tops, and rested.
"Then came a second new factor in our problem: a sea came aboard from the other side and washed about; another with the next roll, and still another. The rolls were long and heavy, and I, who had once been on a sinking s.h.i.+p, sensed the reason.
"'We're sinking, captain,' I said. 'That main-topgallantmast going down that hatch has punched a hole or started a b.u.t.t.'
"'Maybe you're right,' he exclaimed. 'What can we do?'
"That was too hard a question at the time for a skipper to ask of a foremast-hand, so I said nothing, but did a lot of thinking. The flywheel-pump was amids.h.i.+ps at the main fife-rail. We could not go down to it without danger from the wounded lion, the rhino, and possibly the wolf, though, with these out of the way, we might dodge or kill the cobras and fight off the hyena.
"As it was, we were caught. I suggested to the skipper that he go down the mizzentopmast-backstay, dart into his cabin, and get his rifle.
Then he could pot the brutes from the forward windows. But he declined and forbade me going. I had no business in his cabin.
"I saw that he had lost his nerve. Now, when a skipper loses his nerve, he loses his rights; so I didn't hesitate to sing out to the mate in the main-topmast-crosstrees to clear away downhaul-blocks, quarter-blocks, or anything handy and heavy, and try and drop them on the lion and the rhino, the two most dangerous of the bunch. He seemed to be much in the same condition as the skipper, for he answered and pa.s.sed the word forward to the fellows on the fore.
"In a few minutes things began raining down onto the deck--blocks, bulls'-eyes, and sea-boots. The bombardment raised a commotion, though none of the brutes was. .h.i.t.
"Yet the sick and sore lion responded to the extent of bounding aft and mounting the p.o.o.p. Here he came within range of us fellows up the mizzen, and I had the disconnected mizzen-staysail halyard-block in my hand ready for him. He gained the s.p.a.ce abaft the house near the wheel and stood still, las.h.i.+ng his tail and nosing the air as though he smelled us up aloft.
"He was only about forty feet down; and when young I had been a good ball-player. I leaned over and let that block go with all my strength.
It wasn't the ordinary sh.e.l.l-block, but a solid carving of _lignum-vitae_; and it fetched that lion a smash on the head that must have cracked his skull, for he sank down, then got up and wabbled, rather than walked, forward along the alley to the p.o.o.p-steps.
"There he blindly fell off the p.o.o.p; and the rhino, whom he had dodged on the run aft, was ready for him. It wasn't a fight. The lion was dying, and the rhino simply hastened the job, goring him relentlessly until the bleeding carca.s.s lay still.
"Then the rhino, flushed with victory, went for the nearest brute, a wild a.s.s, and soon he had the whole of them--a.s.ses and zebras--kicking the stomach out of him, or into him, perhaps, by the way he bellowed.
"It was funny, in a way, for they were all too quick for him; they could dodge that plunging beast with his murderous horn, and turn for a kick before he got by.
"But there was nothing funny about that water in the hold, nor in the prospective job of stopping the leak, pumping her out, and bending new canvas, in case we could get that rhinoceros out of the way. He was the only thing we feared now, for the rest were not really dangerous unless you got too close.
"We knew the wolf and the hyena would run from a man with a handspike, and the zebras and a.s.ses would run from a man without one. To make matters worse, darkness closed down. So, las.h.i.+ng ourselves to the crosstrees, we slept more or less sweetly until daylight.
"When we took stock of things, we knew that all was up with that bark.
Her plank-sheer amids.h.i.+ps was awash, and the water rolling in a green body from starboard to port and back again.
"The crazy elephant stood under the hatch, squealing and trumpeting in fright. He must have smashed the monkeys' cages during the night, for the rigging was dotted with chimpanzees, orangs, and the small fellows.
The hyena and the wolf had gained the forecastle-deck, and stood, side by side, looking aft, with no thought of quarreling in this emergency.
The Grain Ship Part 7
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The Grain Ship Part 7 summary
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