<h2><SPAN name="chap41"></SPAN>CHAPTER XLI.</h2>
<p>The days have passed and I have broken my resolve; for here I am again writing
while the <i>Elsinore</i> surges along across a magnificent, smoky, dusty sea.
But I have two reasons for breaking my word. First, and minor, we had a real
dawn this morning. The gray of the sea showed a streaky blue, and the
cloud-masses were actually pink-tipped by a really and truly sun.</p>
<p>Second, and major, <i>we are around the Horn</i>! We are north of 50 in the
Pacific, in Longitude 80.49, with Cape Pillar and the Straits of Magellan
already south of east from us, and we are heading north-north-west. <i>We are
around the Horn</i>! The profound significance of this can be appreciated only
by one who has wind-jammed around from east to west. Blow high, blow low,
nothing can happen to thwart us. No ship north of 50 was ever blown back. From
now on it is plain sailing, and Seattle suddenly seems quite near.</p>
<p>All the ship’s company, with the exception of Margaret, is better
spirited. She is quiet, and a little down, though she is anything but prone to
the wastage of grief. In her robust, vital philosophy God’s always in
heaven. I may describe her as being merely subdued, and gentle, and tender. And
she is very wistful to receive gentle consideration and tenderness from me. She
is, after all, the genuine woman. She wants the strength that man has to give,
and I flatter myself that I am ten times a stronger man than I was when the
voyage began, because I am a thousand times a more human man since I told the
books to go hang and began to revel in the human maleness of the man that loves
a woman and is loved.</p>
<p>Returning to the ship’s company. The rounding of the Horn, the better
weather that is continually growing better, the easement of hardship and toil
and danger, with the promise of the tropics and of the balmy south-east trades
before them—all these factors contribute to pick up our men again. The
temperature has already so moderated that the men are beginning to shed their
surplusage of clothing, and they no longer wrap sacking about their sea-boots.
Last evening, in the second dog-watch, I heard a man actually singing.</p>
<p>The steward has discarded the huge, hacking knife and relaxed to the extent of
engaging in an occasional sober romp with Possum. Wada’s face is no
longer solemnly long, and Louis’ Oxford accent is more mellifluous than
ever. Mulligan Jacobs and Andy Fay are the same venomous scorpions they have
always been. The three gangsters, with the clique they lead, have again
asserted their tyrrany and thrashed all the weaklings and feeblings in the
forecastle. Charles Davis resolutely refuses to die, though how he survived
that wet and freezing room of iron through all the weeks off the Horn has
elicited wonder even from Mr. Pike, who has a most accurate knowledge of what
men can stand and what they cannot stand.</p>
<p>How Nietzsche, with his eternal slogan of “Be hard! Be hard!” would
have delighted in Mr. Pike!</p>
<p>And—oh!—Larry has had a tooth removed. For some days distressed
with a jumping toothache, he came aft to the mate for relief. Mr. Pike refused
to “monkey” with the “fangled” forceps in the
medicine-chest. He used a tenpenny nail and a hammer in the good old way to
which he was brought up. I vouch for this. I saw it done. One blow of the
hammer and the tooth was out, while Larry was jumping around holding his jaw.
It is a wonder it wasn’t fractured. But Mr. Pike avers he has removed
hundreds of teeth by this method and never known a fractured jaw. Also, he
avers he once sailed with a skipper who shaved every Sunday morning and never
touched a razor, nor any cutting-edge, to his face. What he used, according to
Mr. Pike, was a lighted candle and a damp towel. Another candidate for
Nietzsche’s immortals who are hard!</p>
<p>As for Mr. Pike himself, he is the highest-spirited, best-conditioned man on
board. The driving to which he subjected the <i>Elsinore</i> was meat and
drink. He still rubs his hands and chuckles over the memory of it.</p>
<p>“Huh!” he said to me, in reference to the crew; “I gave
’em a taste of real old-fashioned sailing. They’ll never forget
this hooker—at least them that don’t take a sack of coal overside
before we reach port.”</p>
<p>“You mean you think we’ll have more sea-burials?” I inquired.</p>
<p>He turned squarely upon me, and squarely looked me in the eyes for the matter
of five long seconds.</p>
<p>“Huh!” he replied, as he turned on his heel. “Hell
ain’t begun to pop on this hooker.”</p>
<p>He still stands his mate’s watch, alternating with Mr. Mellaire, for he
is firm in his conviction that there is no man for’ard fit to stand a
second mate’s watch. Also, he has kept his old quarters. Perhaps it is
out of delicacy for Margaret; for I have learned that it is the invariable
custom for the mate to occupy the captain’s quarters when the latter
dies. So Mr. Mellaire still eats by himself in the big after-room, as he has
done since the loss of the carpenter, and bunks as before in the
’midship-house with Nancy.</p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />