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    Chapter 3

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    All day Sunday at anchor. The storm had gone down a great deal, but the
    sea had not. It was still piling its frothy hills high in air "outside,"
    as we could plainly see with the glasses. We could not properly begin a
    pleasure excursion on Sunday; we could not offer untried stomachs to so
    pitiless a sea as that. We must lie still till Monday. And we did. But
    we had repetitions of church and prayer-meetings; and so, of course, we
    were just as eligibly situated as we could have been any where.

    I was up early that Sabbath morning and was early to breakfast. I felt a
    perfectly natural desire to have a good, long, unprejudiced look at the
    passengers at a time when they should be free from self-consciousness
    --which is at breakfast, when such a moment occurs in the lives of human
    beings at all.

    I was greatly surprised to see so many elderly people--I might almost
    say, so many venerable people. A glance at the long lines of heads was
    apt to make one think it was all gray. But it was not. There was a
    tolerably fair sprinkling of young folks, and another fair sprinkling of
    gentlemen and ladies who were non-committal as to age, being neither
    actually old or absolutely young.

    The next morning we weighed anchor and went to sea. It was a great
    happiness to get away after this dragging, dispiriting delay. I thought
    there never was such gladness in the air before, such brightness in the
    sun, such beauty in the sea. I was satisfied with the picnic then and
    with all its belongings. All my malicious instincts were dead within me;
    and as America faded out of sight, I think a spirit of charity rose up in
    their place that was as boundless, for the time being, as the broad ocean
    that was heaving its billows about us. I wished to express my feelings
    --I wished to lift up my voice and sing; but I did not know anything to
    sing, and so I was obliged to give up the idea. It was no loss to the
    ship, though, perhaps.

    It was breezy and pleasant, but the sea was still very rough. One could
    not promenade without risking his neck; at one moment the bowsprit was
    taking a deadly aim at the sun in midheaven, and at the next it was
    trying to harpoon a shark in the bottom of the ocean. What a weird
    sensation it is to feel the stem of a ship sinking swiftly from under you

    and see the bow climbing high away among the clouds! One's safest course
    that day was to clasp a railing and hang on; walking was too precarious a
    pastime.

    By some happy fortune I was not seasick.--That was a thing to be proud
    of. I had not always escaped before. If there is one thing in the world
    that will make a man peculiarly and insufferably self-conceited, it is to
    have his stomach behave itself, the first day it sea, when nearly all his
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