With his teeth set, his brow
knit, his legs rigid, his hands clinched on the oar, he made it
bend from end to end at every stroke, and the Pearl was veering
landward. Father Roland, sitting in the bows, so as to leave the
stern seat to the two women, wasted his breath shouting, "Easy,
number one; pull harder, number two!" Pierre pulled harder in his
frenzy, and "number two" could not keep time with his wild
stroke.
At last the skipper cried: "Stop her!" The two oars were lifted
simultaneously, and then by his father's orders Jean pulled alone
for a few minutes. But from that moment he had it all his own way;
he grew eager and warmed to his work, while Pierre, out of breath
and exhausted by his first vigorous spurt, was lax and panting.
Four times running father Roland made them stop while the elder
took breath, so as to get the boat into her right course again.
Then the doctor, humiliated and fuming, his forehead dropping with
sweat, his cheeks white, stammered out:
"I cannot think what has come over me; I have a stitch in my
side. I started very well, but it has pulled me up."
Jean asked: "Shall I pull alone with both oars for a time?"
"No, thanks, it will go off."
And their mother, somewhat vexed, said:
"Why, Pierre, what rhyme or reason is there in getting into such
a state. You are not a child."
And he shrugged his shoulders and set to once more.
Mme. Rosemilly pretended not to see, not to understand, not to
hear. Her fair head went back with an engaging little jerk every
time the boat moved forward, making the fine wayward hairs flutter
about her temples.
But father Roland presently called out:
"Look, the Prince Albert is catching us up!"
They all looked round. Long and low in the water, with her two
raking funnels and two yellow paddle-boxes like two round cheeks,
the Southampton packet came ploughing on at full steam, crowded
with passengers under open parasols. Its hurrying, noisy
paddle-wheels beating up the water which fell again in foam, gave
it an appearance of haste as of a courier pressed for time, and the
upright stem cut through the water, throwing up two thin
translucent waves which glided off along the hull.
When it had come quite near the Pearl, father Roland lifted his
hat, the ladies shook their handkerchiefs, and half a dozen
parasols eagerly waved on board the steamboat responded to this
salute as she went on her way, leaving behind her a few broad
undulations on the still and glassy surface of the sea.
There were other vessels, each with its smoky cap, coming in
from every part of the horizon towards the short white jetty, which
swallowed them up, one after another, like a mouth. And the fishing
barks and lighter craft with broad sails and slender masts,
stealing across the sky in tow of inconspicuous tugs, were coming
in, faster and slower, towards the devouring ogre, who from time to
time seemed to have had a surfeit, and spewed out to the open sea
another fleet of steamers, brigs, schooners, and three-masted
vessels with their tangled mass of rigging. The hurrying steamships
flew off to the right and left over the smooth bosom of the ocean,
while sailing vessels, cast off by the pilot-tugs which had hauled
them out, lay motionless, dressing themselves from the main-mast to
the fore-tops in canvas, white or brown, and ruddy in the setting
sun.
Mme. Roland, with her eyes half-shut, murmured: "Good heavens,
how beautiful the sea is!"
And Mme. Rosemilly replied with a long sigh, which, however, had
no sadness in it:
"Yes, but it is sometimes very cruel, all the same."
Roland exclaimed:
"Look, there is the Normandie just going in. A big ship, isn't
she?"
Then he described the coast opposite, far, far away, on the
other side of the mouth of the Seine—that mouth extended over
twenty kilometres, said he. He pointed out Villerville, Trouville,
Houlgate, Luc, Arromanches, the little river of Caen, and the rocks
of Calvados which make the coast unsafe as far as Cherbourg. Then
he enlarged on the question of the sand-banks in the Seine, which
shift at every tide so that even the pilots of Quilleboeuf are at
fault if they do not survey the channel every day. He bid them
notice how the town of Havre divided Upper from Lower Normandy. In
Lower Normandy the shore sloped down to the sea in pasture-lands,
fields, and meadows. The coast of Upper Normandy, on the contrary,
was steep, a high cliff, ravined, cleft and towering, forming an
immense white rampart all the way to Dunkirk, while in each hollow
a village or a port lay hidden: Etretat, Fecamp, Saint-Valery,
Treport, Dieppe, and the rest.
The two women did not listen. Torpid with comfort and impressed
by the sight of the ocean covered with vessels rushing to and fro
like wild beasts about their den, they sat speechless, somewhat
awed by the soothing and gorgeous sunset. Roland alone talked on
without end; he was one of those whom nothing can disturb. Women,
whose nerves are more sensitive, sometimes feel, without knowing
why, that the sound of useless speech is as irritating as an
insult.
Pierre and Jean, who had calmed down, were rowing slowly, and
the Pearl was making for the harbour, a tiny thing among those huge
vessels.
When they came alongside of the quay, Papagris, who was waiting
there, gave his hand to the ladies to help them out, and they took
the way into the town. A large crowd, the crowd which haunts the
pier every day at high tide—was also drifting homeward. Mme. Roland
and Mme. Rosemilly led the way, followed by the three men. As they
went up the Rue de Paris they stopped now and then in front of a
milliner's or a jeweller's shop, to look at a bonnet or an
ornament; then after making their comments they went on again. In
front of the Place de la Bourse Roland paused, as he did every day,
to gaze at the docks full of vessels—the Bassin du Commerce,
with other docks beyond, where the huge hulls lay side by side,
closely packed in rows, four or five deep. And masts innumerable;
along several kilometres of quays the endless masts, with their
yards, poles, and rigging, gave this great gap in the heart of the
town the look of a dead forest. Above this leafless forest the
gulls were wheeling, and watching to pounce, like a falling stone,
on any scraps flung overboard; a sailor boy, fixing a pulley to a
cross-beam, looked as if he had gone up there bird's-nesting.
"Will you dine with us without any sort of ceremony, just that
we may end the day together?" said Mme.
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