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    Chapter 57

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    ALMOST A FAMINE

    "Mammy! mammy! come and see the sailors eating out of little troughs,
    just like our pigs at home." Thus exclaimed one of the steerage
    children, who at dinner-time was peeping down into the forecastle, where
    the crew were assembled, helping themselves from the "kids," which,
    indeed, resemble hog-troughs not a little.

    "Pigs, is it?" coughed Jackson, from his bunk, where he sat presiding
    over the banquet, but not partaking, like a devil who had lost his
    appetite by chewing sulphur.--"Pigs, is it?--and the day is close by, ye
    spalpeens, when you'll want to be after taking a sup at our troughs!"

    This malicious prophecy proved true.

    As day followed day without glimpse of shore or reef, and head winds
    drove the ship back, as hounds a deer; the improvidence and
    shortsightedness of the passengers in the steerage, with regard to their
    outfits for the voyage, began to be followed by the inevitable results.

    Many of them at last went aft to the mate, saying that they had nothing
    to eat, their provisions were expended, and they must be supplied from
    the ship's stores, or starve.

    This was told to the captain, who was obliged to issue a ukase from the
    cabin, that every steerage passenger, whose destitution was
    demonstrable, should be given one sea-biscuit and two potatoes a day; a
    sort of substitute for a muffin and a brace of poached eggs.

    But this scanty ration was quite insufficient to satisfy their hunger:
    hardly enough to satisfy the necessities of a healthy adult. The
    consequence was, that all day long, and all through the night, scores of
    the emigrants went about the decks, seeking what they might devour. They
    plundered the chicken-coop; and disguising the fowls, cooked them at the
    public galley. They made inroads upon the pig-pen in the boat, and
    carried off a promising young shoat: him they devoured raw, not
    venturing to make an incognito of his carcass; they prowled about the
    cook's caboose, till he threatened them with a ladle of scalding water;
    they waylaid the steward on his regular excursions from the cook to the
    cabin; they hung round the forecastle, to rob the bread-barge; they
    beset the sailors, like beggars in the streets, craving a mouthful in
    the name of the Church.

    At length, to such excesses were they driven, that the Grand Russian,
    Captain Riga, issued another ukase, and to this effect: Whatsoever
    emigrant is found guilty of stealing, the same shall be tied into the
    rigging and flogged.

    Upon this, there were secret movements in the steerage, which almost
    alarmed me for the safety of the ship; but nothing serious took place,
    after all; and they even acquiesced in, or did not resent, a singular
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