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"
What
will
you
do
?
"
repeated
Mrs.
Weldon
.
"
I
shall
be
forced
to
run
my
ship
aground
,
"
replied
the
novice
,
whose
brow
darkened
for
a
moment
.
"
Ah
!
it
is
a
hard
extremity
.
God
grant
that
we
may
not
be
reduced
to
that
.
But
,
I
repeat
it
,
Mrs.
Weldon
,
the
appearance
of
the
sky
is
reassuring
,
and
it
is
impossible
for
a
vessel
or
a
pilot-boat
not
to
meet
us
.
Then
,
good
hope
.
We
are
headed
for
the
land
,
we
shall
see
it
before
long
.
"
Yes
,
to
run
a
ship
aground
is
a
last
extremity
,
to
which
the
most
energetic
sailor
does
not
resort
without
fear
!
Thus
,
Dick
Sand
did
not
wish
to
foresee
it
,
while
he
had
some
chances
of
escaping
it
.
For
several
days
there
were
,
in
the
state
of
the
atmosphere
,
alternatives
which
,
anew
,
made
the
novice
very
uneasy
.
The
wind
kept
in
the
condition
of
a
stiff
breeze
all
the
time
,
and
certain
oscillations
of
the
barometrical
column
indicated
that
it
tended
to
freshen
.
Dick
Sand
then
asked
himself
,
not
without
apprehension
,
if
he
would
be
again
forced
to
scud
without
sails
.
He
had
so
much
interest
in
keeping
at
least
his
top-sail
,
that
he
resolved
to
do
so
so
long
as
it
was
not
likely
to
be
carried
away
.
But
,
to
secure
the
solidity
of
the
masts
,
he
had
the
shrouds
and
backstays
hauled
taut
.
Above
all
,
all
unnecessary
risk
must
be
avoided
,
as
the
situation
would
become
one
of
the
gravest
,
if
the
"
Pilgrim
"
should
be
disabled
by
losing
her
masts
.
Once
or
twice
,
also
,
the
barometer
rising
gave
reason
to
fear
that
the
wind
might
change
point
for
point
;
that
is
to
say
,
that
it
might
pass
to
the
east
.
It
would
then
be
necessary
to
sail
close
to
the
wind
!
A
new
anxiety
for
Dick
Sand
.
What
should
he
do
with
a
contrary
wind
?
Tack
about
?
But
if
he
was
obliged
to
come
to
that
,
what
new
delays
and
what
risks
of
being
thrown
into
the
offing
.
Happily
those
fears
were
not
realized
.
The
wind
,
after
shifting
for
several
days
,
blowing
sometimes
from
the
north
,
sometimes
from
the
south
,
settled
definitely
in
the
west
.
But
it
was
always
a
strong
breeze
,
almost
a
gale
,
which
strained
the
masting
.
It
was
the
5th
of
April
.
So
,
then
,
more
than
two
months
had
already
elapsed
since
the
"
Pilgrim
"
had
left
New
Zealand
.
For
twenty
days
a
contrary
wind
and
long
calms
had
retarded
her
course
.
Then
she
was
in
a
favorable
condition
to
reach
land
rapidly
.
Her
speed
must
even
have
been
very
considerable
during
the
tempest
.
Dick
Sand
estimated
its
average
at
not
less
than
two
hundred
miles
a
day
!
How
,
then
,
had
he
not
yet
made
the
coast
?
Did
it
flee
before
the
"
Pilgrim
?
"
It
was
absolutely
inexplicable
.