Swallows and Amazons. Arthur Ransome
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Название: Swallows and Amazons

Автор: Arthur Ransome

Издательство: Ingram

Жанр: Детские приключения

Серия: Swallows And Amazons

isbn: 9781567924626

isbn:

СКАЧАТЬ till she floated. Captain John fastened one end of a length of spare rope to a cleat in the stern, and Able-seaman Titty climbed out on the rock with the other end of it. Roger held the painter. Then John came ashore. Titty pulled in on the stern rope and made it fast round a little rowan bush that was growing on the rock. Roger and John made the painter fast round the stump with the white cross on it, and the Swallow lay in the middle of the little harbour in two or three feet of water, moored fore and aft, and sheltered on every side.

      Captain John looked at his ship with pride.

      “I don’t believe there is a better harbour in the world,” he said.

      “If only somebody else didn’t know about it,” said Titty.

      Then they hurried back to the camp.

      The camp now began to look really like a camp. There were the two tents slung between the two pairs of trees. The mate and the able-seaman were to sleep in one, and the captain and the boy in the other. Then in the open space under the trees the fire was burning merrily. The kettle had boiled, and was standing steaming on the ground. Susan was melting a big pat of butter in the frying-pan. In a pudding-basin beside her she had six raw eggs. She had cracked the eggs on the edge of a mug and broken them into the basin. Their empty shells were crackling in the fire. Four mugs stood in a row on the ground.

      “No plates to-day,” said Mate Susan. “We all eat out of the common dish.”

      “But it isn’t a common dish,” said Roger. “It’s a frying-pan.”

      “Well, we eat out of it anyway. Egg’s awful stuff for sticking to plates.”

      She had now emptied the raw eggs into the sizzling butter, and was stirring the eggs and the butter together after shaking the pepper pot over them, and putting in a lot of salt.

      “They’re beginning to curdle,” said Titty, who was watching carefully. “When they begin to flake, you have to keep scraping them off the bottom of the pan. I saw Mrs. Jackson do it.”

      “They’re flaking now,” said Susan. “Come on and scrape away.”

      She put the frying-pan on the ground, and gave every one a spoon. The captain, mate, and the crew of the Swallow squatted round the frying-pan, and began eating as soon as the scrambled eggs, which were very hot, would let them. Mate Susan had already cut four huge slices of brown bread and butter to eat with the eggs. Then she poured out four mugs of tea, and filled them up with milk from a bottle. “There’ll be enough milk in the bottle for to-day,” mother had said, “but for to-morrow we must try to find you milk from a farm a little nearer than Holly Howe.” Then there was a big rice pudding, which had been brought with them on the top of the things in one of the big biscuit tins. It too became a common dish, like the frying-pan. Then there were four big slabs of seed cake. Then there were apples all round.

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      CHAPTER V

      FIRST NIGHT ON THE ISLAND

      AFTER THEY HAD finished the eggs and the rice pudding and the brown bread and butter and the seed cake and the apples, the mate and the able-seaman did some washing up. The spoons had to be cleaned and the frying-pan scraped, and the mugs and pudding-basin swilled in the lake. The captain and the boy took the telescope, and found a good place on the high ground above the camp at the northern end of the island, where they could lie in a hollow of the rocks and look out between tufts of heather without being seen by anyone. Close behind them was the tall pine tree that they had seen when they looked at the island from the Peak in Darien.

      Captain John lay on his back in the heather, and looked up into the tree.

      “Properly,” he said, “we ought to have a flagstaff on the top of it.”

      “What for?” said Roger.

      “So that we could hoist a flag there as a signal. Supposing Susan and Titty were here alone, while you and I had gone fishing. . .”

      “We’ve forgotten our fishing rods,” said Roger.

      “We’ll get them to-morrow,” said John. “But supposing we were away fishing, and the natives came back, the ones that made the fireplace, then if we saw the flag hoisted we should know something was the matter, and come back to help. And it would make a fine lighthouse too. If any of us were sailing home after dark, whoever was left on the island could hoist the lantern, and make the tree into a lighthouse, so that we could find the island however dark it was.”

      “But Susan and Titty and I could never climb the tree. It’s got no sticky-out branches.”

      Like most pines, the tree was bare of branches for the first fifteen or twenty feet of its height.

      “If I can swarm up it as far as the bottom branch I could hang a rope over it so that both ends came to the ground. Then no one would have to climb it again. Anybody could tie the lantern to the rope and pull it up. One end would have to be tied to the ring on the top of the lantern, and the other to the bottom so that we could pull it either up or down, and keep it from swinging about.”

      “Have we got enough rope?” said Roger.

      “We haven’t any small enough. The anchor rope is much too thick, and the spare rope isn’t long enough. I’ll have to get some small rope to-morrow. It’s a good thing I had a birthday just before we came here. We can get plenty of rope with five shillings.”

      Just then Mate Susan and Able-seaman Titty joined them, and threw themselves down in the heather.

      “Everything’s ready for the night,” said Susan, “except the beds, and we can’t make them till the native brings the haybags.”

      Titty jumped up. “There’s a boat coming now,” she said. “Roger, you must be sleepy, or you’d have seen it.”

      “I’m not sleepy,” said Roger. “I wasn’t looking. You can be wide awake, and not see a thing when you aren’t looking.”

      Captain John sat up, and put the telescope to his eye.

      “It is the native,” he said, “and he’s got mother with him.”

      “Do let me have the telescope,” said Titty. John gave it her, and she stared through it.

      “Mother is a native too,” she said at last.

      “Let me have it,” said Roger.

      He fixed the telescope to his eye, and pointed it the right way.

      “I can’t see anything at all,” he said. “It’s all black.”

      “You’ve got the cover over the eye-place,” said Titty, who knew all about telescopes. “Twist it round, and it’ll come open again.”

      “I can see them now,” said Roger.

      The native, who was Mr. Jackson from the Holly Howe Farm, was rowing his boat with long steady strokes. It looked like a water spider far away. But through the telescope it was easy to see that it was a boat, and to see the big lumps of the haybags and to see that mother СКАЧАТЬ