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    Chapter 30

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    CHAPTER XXX.

    Will this frail float, forty feet by twenty, bear us in safety?
    Sink it cannot; the material of which it is composed is of a kind
    that must surmount the waves. But it is questionable whether it
    will hold together. The cords that bind it will have a
    tremendous strain to bear in resisting the violence of the sea.
    The most sanguine amongst us trembles to face the future; the
    most confident dares to think only of the present. After the
    manifold perils of the last seventy-two days' voyage all are too
    agitated to look forward without dismay to what in all human
    probability must be a time of the direst distress.

    Vain as the task may seem, I will not pause in my work of
    registering the events of our drama, as scene after scene they
    are unfolded before our eyes.

    Of the twenty-eight persons who left Charleston in the
    "Chancellor," only eighteen are left to huddle together upon this
    narrow raft; this number includes the five passengers, namely M.
    Letourneur, Andre, Miss Herbey, Falsten, and myself; the ship's
    officers, Captain Curtis, Lieutenant Walter, the boatswain,
    Hobart the steward, Jynxtrop the cook, and Dowlas the carpenter;
    and seven sailors, Austin, Owen, Wilson, O'Ready, Burke, Sandon,
    and Flaypole.

    Such are the passengers on the raft; it is but a brief task to
    enumerate their resources.

    The greater part of the provisions in the store-room were
    destroyed at the time when the ship's deck was submerged, and the
    small quantity that Curtis has been able to save will be very
    inadequate to supply the wants of eighteen people, who too
    probably have many days to wait ere they sight either land or a
    passing vessel. One cask of biscuit, another of preserved meat,
    a small keg of brandy, and two barrels of water complete our
    store, so that the utmost frugality in the distribution of our
    daily rations becomes absolutely necessary.

    Of spare clothes we have positively none; a few sails will serve
    for shelter by day, and covering by night. Dowlas has his
    carpenter's tools, we have each a pocket-knife, and O'Ready an
    old tin pot; of which he takes the most tender care; in addition
    to these, we are in possession of a sextant, a compass, a chart,
    and a metal tea-kettle, everything else that was placed on deck
    in readiness for the first raft having been lost in the partial
    submersion of the vessel.

    Such then is our situation; critical indeed, but after all
    perhaps not desperate. We have one great fear; some there are
    amongst us whose courage, moral as well as physical, may give
    way, and over failing spirits such as these we may have no
    control.
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