The Men Lift Up Their Oars,
And A Wave Comes Sweeping Over All, Giving The Impression
That The Boat Is
Going down, but she only goes beneath the top of the wave,
comes out on the other side, and swings
Down the slope,
and a man bales out the water with a bucket. Poor Sekwebu looked at me
when these terrible seas broke over, and said, "Is this the way you go?
Is this the way you go?" I smiled and said, "Yes; don't you see it is?"
and tried to encourage him. He was well acquainted with canoes,
but never had seen aught like this. When we reached the ship
- a fine, large brig of sixteen guns and a crew of one hundred and thirty -
she was rolling so that we could see a part of her bottom.
It was quite impossible for landsmen to catch the ropes and climb up,
so a chair was sent down, and we were hoisted in as ladies usually are,
and received so hearty an English welcome from Captain Peyton and all on board
that I felt myself at once at home in every thing except my own mother tongue.
I seemed to know the language perfectly, but the words I wanted would not come
at my call. When I left England I had no intention of returning,
and directed my attention earnestly to the languages of Africa, paying none
to English composition. With the exception of a short interval in Angola,
I had been three and a half years without speaking English,
and this, with thirteen years of previous partial disuse of my native tongue,
made me feel sadly at a loss on board the "Frolic".
We left Kilimane on the 12th of July, and reached the Mauritius
on the 12th of August, 1856.
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