[A Footnote to History by Robert Louis Stevenson]@TWC D-Link bookA Footnote to History CHAPTER X--THE HURRICANE 19/27
It was led by the old admiral in person, rang out over the storm with holiday vigour, and was answered by the Calliopes with an emotion easily conceived.
This ship of their kinsfolk was almost the last external object seen from the _Calliope_ for hours; immediately after, the mists closed about her till the morrow.
She was safe at sea again--_una de multis_--with a damaged foreyard, and a loss of all the ornamental work about her bow and stern, three anchors, one kedge-anchor, fourteen lengths of chain, four boats, the jib-boom, bobstay, and bands and fastenings of the bowsprit. Shortly after Kane had slipped his cable, Captain Schoonmaker, despairing of the _Vandalia_, succeeded in passing astern of the _Olga_, in the hope to beach his ship beside the _Nipsic_.
At a quarter to eleven her stern took the reef, her hand swung to starboard, and she began to fill and settle.
Many lives of brave men were sacrificed in the attempt to get a line ashore; the captain, exhausted by his exertions, was swept from deck by a sea; and the rail being soon awash, the survivors took refuge in the tops. Out of thirteen that had lain there the day before, there were now but two ships afloat in Apia harbour, and one of these was doomed to be the bane of the other.
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