| PAGE | |
|---|---|
| One would have taken her for a small Island | [Frontispiece] |
| Carpentering, Rigging, and Painting | [6] |
| Then began the slow interminable Ascent | [17] |
| Every Man at the capstan-bars was knocked down | [22] |
| Soon we came in sight of Queenstown | [29] |
| Captain Corsican and I bowed | [30] |
| When a body rolled at my feet | [40] |
| The waif was the hull of a ship | [49] |
| “They,” said he, “are people from the Far West” | [56] |
| I often see them leaning over the railings of the engine-rooms | [61] |
| He made an angry gesture, which I arrested | [68] |
| “I see,” said Dr. Pitferge | [76] |
| A fine-looking young fellow | [85] |
| His back rounded, and his head muffled in a hood | [91] |
| The Black Lady | [96] |
| He treated Drake with supreme contempt | [108] |
| Fabian went near to the cabin doors | [113] |
| One of the sailors lying unconscious | [122] |
| A troop of Minstrels | [130] |
| “Do you accept that blow?” | [132] |
| The Prayer for the Dead | [147] |
| I remained on deck, watching the storm rise | [152] |
| A small schooner was signalled to starboard | [153] |
| I turned, and saw Ellen, pale as death | [162] |
| The fog cleared off | [174] |
| Nature has combined everything to astonish the eye | [179] |
| The Cataract falling before us | [187] |
| “Fabian! Fabian!” cried she, at last | [191] |
| She plunged into the Clyde | [199] |
| “The same,” replied the Skipper | [208] |
| And soon disappeared | [213] |
| “Captain!” exclaimed he | [220] |
| Thank you, sir, thank you | [232] |
| He saw distinctly | [235] |
| The Squall | [244] |
| Crockston was examining the horizon attentively | [246] |
| Miss Halliburtt was standing on the poop | [251] |
| “I promise you, Miss Jenny” | [260] |
| Mr. Halliburtt? | [271] |
| Jenny fell into her father’s arms | [275] |
| He took the shell | [282] |
| “Well, Uncle Vincent” | [286] |
A FLOATING CITY.
CHAPTER I.
On the 18th of March, 1867, I arrived at Liverpool, intending to take a berth simply as an amateur traveller on board the “Great Eastern,” which in a few days was to sail for New York. I had sometimes thought of paying a visit to North America, and was now tempted to cross the Atlantic on board this gigantic boat. First of all the “Great Eastern,” then the country celebrated by Cooper.
This steam-ship is indeed a masterpiece of naval construction; more than a vessel, it is a floating city, part of the country, detached from English soil, which after having crossed the sea, unites itself to the American Continent. I pictured to myself this enormous bulk borne on the waves, her defiant struggle with the wind, her boldness before the powerless sea, her indifference to the billows, her stability in the midst of that element which tosses “Warriors” and “Solferinos” like ship’s boats. But my imagination carried me no farther; all these things I did indeed see during the passage, and many others which do not exclusively belong to the maritime domain. If the “Great Eastern” is not merely a nautical engine, but rather a microcosm, and carries a small world with it, an observer will not be astonished to meet here, as on a larger theatre, all the instincts, follies, and passions of human nature.
On leaving the station, I went to the Adelphi Hotel. The “Great Eastern” was announced to sail on the 20th of March, and as I wished to witness the last preparations, I asked permission of Captain Anderson, the commander, to take my place on board immediately, which permission he very obligingly granted.
The next day I went down towards the basins which form a double line of docks on the banks of the Mersey. The gate-keepers allowed me to go on to Prince’s Landing-Stage, a kind of movable raft which rises and falls with the tide, and is a landing place for the numerous boats which run between Liverpool, and the opposite town of Birkenhead on the left bank of the Mersey.
The Mersey, like the Thames, is only an insignificant stream, unworthy the name of river, although it falls into the sea.
It is an immense depression of the land filled with water, in fact nothing more than a hole, the depth of which allows it to receive ships of the heaviest tonnage, such as the “Great Eastern,” to which almost every other port in the world is closed. Thanks to this natural condition, the streams of the Thames and the Mersey have seen two immense commercial cities, London and Liverpool, built almost at their mouths, and from a similar cause has Glasgow arisen on the Clyde.