登陆注册
19463600000006

第6章 CORSICA(2)

When M. Marouin was telling me these details one evening on the very spot where it all happened, though twenty years had passed, he remembered clearly the slightest incidents of the embarkation that night. From that moment he assured me that a presentiment of misfortune seized him; he could not tear himself away from the shore, and several times he longed to call the king back, but, like a man in a dream, he opened his mouth without being able to utter a sound.

He was afraid of being thought foolish, and it was not until one o'clock that is, two and a half hours after the departure of the boat-that he went home with a sad and heavy heart.

The adventurous navigators had taken the course from Toulon to Bastia, and at first it seemed to the king that the sailors'

predictions were belied; the wind, instead of getting up, fell little by little, and two hours after the departure the boat was rocking without moving forward or backward on the waves, which were sinking from moment to moment. Murat sadly watched the phosphorescent furrow trailing behind the little boat: he had nerved himself to face a storm, but not a dead calm, and without even interrogating his companions, of whose uneasiness he took no account, he lay down in the boat, wrapped in his cloak, closing his eyes as if he were asleep, and following the flow of his thoughts, which were far more tumultuous than that of the waters. Soon the two sailors, thinking him asleep, joined the pilot, and sitting down beside the helm, they began to consult together.

"You were wrong, Langlade," said Donadieu, "in choosing a craft like this, which is either too small or else too big; in an open boat we can never weather a storm, and without oars we can never make any way in a calm.""'Fore God! I had no choice. I was obliged to take what I could get, and if it had not been the season for tunny-fishing I might not even have got this wretched pinnace, or rather I should have had to go into the harbour to find it, and they keep such a sharp lookout that I might well have gone in without coming out again.""At least it is seaworthy," said Blancard.

"Pardieu, you know what nails and planks are when they have been soaked in sea-water for ten years. On any ordinary occasion, a man would rather not go in her from Marseilles to the Chateau d'If, but on an occasion like this one would willingly go round the world in a nutshell.""Hush!" said Donadieu. The sailors listened,; a distant growl was heard, but it was so faint that only the experienced ear of a sailor could have distinguished it.

"Yes, yes," said Langlade, "it is a warning for those who have legs or wings to regain the homes and nests that they ought never to have left.""Are we far from the islands?" asked Donadieu quickly.

"About a mile off."

"Steer for them."

"What for?" asked Murat, looking up.

"To put in there, sire, if we can."

"No, no," cried Murat; "I will not land except in Corsica. I will not leave France again. Besides, the sea is calm and the wind is getting up again--""Down with the sails!" shouted Donadieu. Instantly Langlade and Blancard jumped forward to carry out the order. The sail slid down the mast and fell in a heap in the bottom of the boat.

"What are you doing?" cried Murat. "Do you forget that I am king and that I command you?""Sire," said Donadieu, "there is a king more powerful than you--God;there is a voice which drowns yours--the voice of the tempest: let us save your Majesty if possible, and demand nothing more of us."Just then a flash of lightning quivered along the horizon, a clap of thunder nearer than the first one was heard, a light foam appeared on the surface of the water, and the boat trembled like a living thing.

Murat began to understand that danger was approaching, then he got up smiling, threw his hat behind him, shook back his long hair, and breathed in the storm like the smell of powder--the soldier was ready for the battle.

"Sire," said Donadieu, "you have seen many a battle, but perhaps you have never watched a storm if you are curious about it, cling to the mast, for you have a fine opportunity now.""What ought I to do?" said Murat. "Can I not help you in any way?""No, not just now, sire; later you will be useful at the pumps."During this dialogue the storm had drawn near; it rushed on the travellers like a war-horse, breathing out fire and wind through its nostrils, neighing like thunder, and scattering the foam of the waves beneath its feet.

Donadieu turned the rudder, the boat yielded as if it understood the necessity for prompt obedience, and presented the poop to the shock of wind; then the squall passed, leaving the sea quivering, and everything was calm again. The storm took breath.

"Will that gust be all?" asked Murat.

"No, your Majesty, that was the advance-guard only; the body of the army will be up directly.""And are you not going to prepare for it?" asked the king gaily.

"What could we do?" said Donadieu. "We have not an inch of canvas to catch the wind, and as long as we do not make too much water, we shall float like a cork. Look out-sire!"Indeed, a second hurricane was on its way, bringing rain and lightning; it was swifter than the first. Donadieu endeavoured to repeat the same manoeuvre, but he could not turn before the wind struck the boat, the mast bent like a reed; the boat shipped a wave.

"To the pumps!" cried Donadieu. "Sire, now is the moment to help us----"

Blancard, Langlade, and Murat seized their hats and began to bale out the boat. The position of the four men was terrible--it lasted three hours.

At dawn the wind fell, but the sea was still high. They began to feel the need of food: all the provisions had been spoiled by sea-water, only the wine had been preserved from its contact.

同类推荐
  • 送人游南越

    送人游南越

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 红楼复梦

    红楼复梦

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
  • 张氏妇科

    张氏妇科

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 菩萨戒本经

    菩萨戒本经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。汇聚授权电子版权。
  • 佛说决定义经

    佛说决定义经

    本书为公版书,为不受著作权法限制的作家、艺术家及其它人士发布的作品,供广大读者阅读交流。
热门推荐
  • 金牌杀手:废材傲天下

    金牌杀手:废材傲天下

    被至亲背叛,一朝穿越,竟成了苍穹大陆风韵国第一世家花无家族的废材嫡女:花无血颜!天生丹田破碎,不能修炼灵力,又与召唤师,炼药师无缘,因有天下第一美人的称号被庶姐活活打死。当美眸再次睁开,褪去了懦弱与痴傻,有的只是凌厉与冰冷......什么?不能修炼?滚蛋,老娘可是前无古人后无来者的绝世天才!什么!不能召唤魔兽?对不起,老娘家里禁忌神兽和上古神兽都快放不下了,哪儿有时间管魔兽呢?什么?丹药太稀少?老娘家里满满几房逆天神丹!上辈子,她独活。这辈子,遇上了他,他至高无上,冰冷无比,却追着她死缠烂打,而她经历了上辈子的伤害,还会相信爱情吗?敬请以待吧
  • 幽默一笑天天乐

    幽默一笑天天乐

    老师:“各位同学,觉得自己很蠢的请站起来。”同学们互相看了看,都不敢站起来,只有一个勇敢的站了起来,老师:“这位同学,你觉得自己很蠢吗?”学生:“不是的,老师,我只是不想让你一个人站着!”
  • 鬼道人间

    鬼道人间

    这是某个黑色的星期天。深夜,电闪雷鸣,大雨磅礴,外面响起了激烈的敲门声,我的房间瞬间阴冷起来。我打开了门,一个美丽清秀的女孩站在我的面前,她浑身湿漉漉的,向我提出了嗄一个要求:要我抱着她睡觉。有些色心的我没有拒绝这个请求,抱着她渡过了诡异惊魂的夜晚。这一晚,是我命运的开始,这一晚,也是我命运的终结……
  • 《打工时代》

    《打工时代》

    肩背行囊走四方,云天旷野路茫茫。相逢莫问家何处,总是他乡望故乡。------打工谣
  • 特工毒医:支离破碎的梦

    特工毒医:支离破碎的梦

    她,二十一世纪的特工,穿越为白痴小公主的身上,说她白痴,好那她就装白痴,让他们睁大眼睛看看,白痴是如何让他们死无葬身之地的,为了强大而努力,为了力量而走向世界的巅峰,可是她命里终有一劫——情劫......他,为了爱而将灵魂拆散,遍布个个大陆,为的只是寻找她转世后的灵魂,万年来,他的心从不曾变过,可她终会恢复记忆......一个魔,一个神。会因爱而不顾天下反对在一起,还是会因前世的恨而敌对?
  • 落梦无情

    落梦无情

    妖王殿的后山是一座冰山,上面有一种植物叫做梦回,寓意梦回三生,可以让人起死回生,时间轮回,冰山有结界是神兽守护的地方,妖王一直想得到梦回,但一直都没成功,小女孩梦雅为了找回父亲,踏上了旅程
  • 天工

    天工

    顶尖文物修复师苏进,重生在了一个新的世界。故宫变成了古玩街,乐山大佛垮了一半,敦煌壁画被风沙侵蚀,莫高窟变成了无头窟。文物破损,修复技术流失。人们需要历史,人们没有历史。苏进,是为改变这个世界而来的。
  • 走下神坛的关羽

    走下神坛的关羽

    马蹄扬尘狼烟处,血泪英雄,戍装上阵,仗剑划开万里开幕,惊天动地壮烈事,问鼎华夏,折戟沉沙,洒血凝注千秋史书。绚烂如繁花,闪耀似群星,但英雄总有归去之时。千古风流,终化尘土。不过,他们曾经那么轰轰烈烈地活过:大丈夫生于乱世。当提三尺剑立不世功——这足以感动我们,也足以慰藉英雄壮志未酬的雄心。
  • 舍爱:下堂妻之追妻三千里

    舍爱:下堂妻之追妻三千里

    因为一个稀里糊涂的承诺,她竟穿越了。尘埃落定的时候,她才发现自己上当了,虽然她的夫君家财万贯,但却与她毫无感情。第二天便被休了,只给了她二百两,还说是可怜她无父无母才给的。最可气的是,还有一个五岁的拖油瓶,这也能忍,可为什么要限制她离开益州呢?他们不是没有关系了吗?所以,她逃出了三千里,到了京城。
  • 剑道符仙

    剑道符仙

    一个少年无法引气修炼,迫不得已转而修炼符道却没想到,他却是符道天才,不再是废物,不再忍受屈辱,谁敢辱我一句,必定千倍百倍还之且看少年杀伐决断,一剑一符,玩转异世江湖大千世界里,不一样的剑道,不一样的符道