LIST OF ILLUSTRATIONS
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- [The "Spray" (Frontispiece)
From A Photograph Taken In Australian Waters.] - [The "Northern Light," Captain Joshua Slocum, Bound For Liverpool, 1885]
- [Cross-section Of The "Spray"]
- ["It'll Crawl"]
- ["No Dorg Nor No Cat"]
- [The Deacon's Dream]
- [Captain Slocum's Chronometer]
- ["Good Evening, Sir"]
- [He Also Sent His Card]
- [Chart Of The "Spray's" Course Around The World—april 24, 1895, To July 3, 1898]
- [The Island Of Pico]
- [Chart Of The "Spray's" Atlantic Voyages From Boston To Gibraltar, Thence To The Strait Of Magellan, In 1895, And Finally Homeward Bound From The Cape Of Good Hope In 1898]
- [The Apparition At The Wheel]
- [Coming To Anchor At Gibraltar]
- [The "Spray" At Anchor Off Gibraltar]
- [Chased By Pirates]
- [I Suddenly Remembered That I Could Not Swim]
- [A Double Surprise]
- [At The Sign Of The Comet]
- [A Great Wave Off The Patagonian Coast]
- [Entrance To The Strait Of Magellan]
- [The Course Of The "Spray" Through The Strait Of Magellan]
- [The Man Who Wouldn't Ship Without Another "Mon And A Doog"]
- [A Fuegian Girl]
- [Looking West From Fortescue Bay, Where The "Spray" Was Chased By Indians]
- [A Brush With Fuegians]
- [A Bit Of Friendly Assistance]
- [Cape Pillar]
- [They Howled Like A Pack Of Hounds]
- [A Glimpse Of Sandy Point (Punta Arenas) In The Strait Of Magellan]
- ["Yammerschooner!"]
- [A Contrast In Lighting—the Electric Lights Of The "Colombia" And The Canoe Fires Of The Fortescue Indians]
- [Records Of Passages Through The Strait At The Head Of Borgia Bay]
- [Salving Wreckage]
- [The First Shot Uncovered Three Fuegians]
- [The "Spray" Approaching Juan Fernandez, Robinson Crusoe's Island]
- [The House Of The King]
- [Robinson Crusoe's Cave]
- [The Man Who Called A Cabra A Goat]
- [Meeting With The Whale]
- [First Exchange Of Courtesies In Samoa]
- [Vailima, The Home Of Robert Louis Stevenson]
- [The "Spray's" Course From Australia To South Africa]
- [The Accident At Sydney]
- [Captain Slocum Working The "Spray" Out Of The Yarrow River, A Part Of Melbourne Harbor]
- [The Shark On The Deck Of The "Spray"]
- [On Board At St. Kilda. Retracing On The Chart The Course Of The "Spray" From Boston]
- [The "Spray" In Her Port Duster At Devonport, Tasmania, February 22, 1897]
- ["Is It A-goin' To Blow?"]
- [The "Spray" Leaving Sydney, Australia, In The New Suit Of Sails Given By Commodore Foy Of Australia]
- [The "Spray" Ashore For "Boot-topping" At The Keeling Islands]
- [Captain Slocum Drifting Out To Sea]
- [The "Spray" At Mauritius]
- [Captain Joshua Slocum]
- [Cartoon Printed In The Cape Town "Owl" Of March 5, 1898, In Connection With An Item About Captain Slocum's Trip To Pretoria]
- [Captain Slocum, Sir Alfred Milner (With The Tall Hat), And Colonel Saunderson, M. P., On The Bow Of The "Spray" At Cape Town]
- [The Spray in the storm of New York.]
- [Reading Day And Night.]
- [The "Spray" Passed By The "Oregon"]
- [Again Tied To The Old Stake At Fairhaven.]
- [Plan Of The After Cabin Of The "Spray"]
- [Deck-plan Of The "Spray"]
- [Sail-plan Of The "Spray"]
- [Steering-gear Of The "Spray"]
- [Body-plan Of The "Spray"]
- [Lines Of The "Spray"]
SAILING ALONE AROUND THE WORLD
CHAPTER I
A blue-nose ancestry with Yankee proclivities—Youthful fondness for the sea—Master of the ship Northern Light—Loss of the Aquidneck—Return home from Brazil in the canoe Liberdade—The gift of a "ship"—The rebuilding of the Spray-Conundrums in regard to finance and calking—The launching of the Spray.
In the fair land of Nova Scotia, a maritime province, there is a ridge called North Mountain, overlooking the Bay of Fundy on one side and the fertile Annapolis valley on the other. On the northern slope of the range grows the hardy spruce-tree, well adapted for ship-timbers, of which many vessels of all classes have been built. The people of this coast, hardy, robust, and strong, are disposed to compete in the world's commerce, and it is nothing against the master mariner if the birthplace mentioned on his certificate be Nova Scotia. I was born in a cold spot, on coldest North Mountain, on a cold February 20, though I am a citizen of the United States—a naturalized Yankee, if it may be said that Nova Scotians are not Yankees in the truest sense of the word. On both sides my family were sailors; and if any Slocum should be found not seafaring, he will show at least an inclination to whittle models of boats and contemplate voyages. My father was the sort of man who, if wrecked on a desolate island, would find his way home, if he had a jack-knife and could find a tree. He was a good judge of a boat, but the old clay farm which some calamity made his was an anchor to him. He was not afraid of a capful of wind, and he never took a back seat at a camp-meeting or a good, old-fashioned revival.
As for myself, the wonderful sea charmed me from the first. At the age of eight I had already been afloat along with other boys on the bay, with chances greatly in favor of being drowned. When a lad I filled the important post of cook on a fishing-schooner; but I was not long in the galley, for the crew mutinied at the appearance of my first duff, and "chucked me out" before I had a chance to shine as a culinary artist. The next step toward the goal of happiness found me before the mast in a full-rigged ship bound on a foreign voyage. Thus I came "over the bows," and not in through the cabin windows, to the command of a ship.
My best command was that of the magnificent ship Northern Light, of which I was part-owner. I had a right to be proud of her, for at that time—in the eighties—she was the finest American sailing-vessel afloat. Afterward I owned and sailed the Aquidneck, a little bark which of all man's handiwork seemed to me the nearest to perfection of beauty, and which in speed, when the wind blew, asked no favors of steamers, I had been nearly twenty years a shipmaster when I quit her deck on the coast of Brazil, where she was wrecked. My home voyage to New York with my family was made in the canoe Liberdade, without accident.