[Captains Courageous by Rudyard Kipling]@TWC D-Link book
Captains Courageous

CHAPTER IV
19/37

A rain-squall or two strayed aimlessly over the hopeless waste, ran down wind and back again, and melted away.
"'Seems to me I saw somethin' flicker jest naow over yonder," said Uncle Salters, pointing to the northeast.
"Can't be any of the fleet," said Disko, peering under his eyebrows, a hand on the fo'c'sle gangway as the solid bows hatcheted into the troughs.

"Sea's oilin' over dretful fast.

Danny, don't you want to skip up a piece an' see how aour trawl-buoy lays ?" Danny, in his big boots, trotted rather than climbed up the main rigging (this consumed Harvey with envy), hitched himself around the reeling crosstrees, and let his eye rove till it caught the tiny black buoy-flag on the shoulder of a mile-away swell.
"She's all right," he hailed.

"Sail O! Dead to the no'th'ard, comin' down like smoke! Schooner she be, too." They waited yet another half-hour, the sky clearing in patches, with a flicker of sickly sun from time to time that made patches of olive-green water.

Then a stump-foremast lifted, ducked, and disappeared, to be followed on the next wave by a high stern with old-fashioned wooden snail's-horn davits.


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