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    Chapter 12

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    More About Being In An Open Boat

    On the third morning, at break of day, I sat at the steering oar, an
    hour or two previous having relieved Jarl, now fast asleep. Somehow,
    and suddenly, a sense of peril so intense, came over me, that it
    could hardly have been aggravated by the completest solitude.

    On a ship's deck, the mere feeling of elevation above the water, and
    the reach of prospect you command, impart a degree of confidence
    which disposes you to exult in your fancied security. But in an open
    boat, brought down to the very plane of the sea, this feeling almost
    wholly deserts you. Unless the waves, in their gambols, toss you and
    your chip upon one of their lordly crests, your sphere of vision is
    little larger than it would be at the bottom of a well. At best, your
    most extended view in any one direction, at least, is in a high,
    slow-rolling sea; when you descend into the dark, misty spaces,
    between long and uniform swells. Then, for the moment, it is like
    looking up and down in a twilight glade, interminable; where two
    dawns, one on each hand, seem struggling through the semi-transparent
    tops of the fluid mountains.

    But, lingering not long in those silent vales, from watery cliff to
    cliff, a sea-chamois, sprang our solitary craft,--a goat among the Alps!

    How undulated the horizon; like a vast serpent with ten thousand
    folds coiled all round the globe; yet so nigh, apparently, that it
    seemed as if one's hand might touch it.

    What loneliness; when the sun rose, and spurred up the heavens, we
    hailed him as a wayfarer in Sahara the sight of a distant horseman.
    Save ourselves, the sun and the Chamois seemed all that was left of
    life in the universe. We yearned toward its jocund disk, as in
    strange lands the traveler joyfully greets a face from home, which
    there had passed unheeded. And was not the sun a fellow-voyager? were
    we not both wending westward? But how soon he daily overtook and
    passed us; hurrying to his journey's end.

    When a week had gone by, sailing steadily on, by day and by night, and
    nothing in sight but this self-same sea, what wonder if disquieting
    thoughts at last entered our hearts? If unknowingly we should pass
    the spot where, according to our reckoning, our islands lay, upon what
    shoreless sea would we launch? At times, these forebodings bewildered
    my idea of the positions of the groups beyond. All became vague and
    confused; so that westward of the Kingsmil isles and the Radack chain,
    I fancied there could be naught but an endless sea.
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