The Gilded Age by Mark Twain and Charles Dudley Warner

curse with it to blister your heart a hundred years–and may you live so

long!”

And he tore a ring from his finger, stripping flesh and skin with it,

threw it down and fell dead!

But these things must not be dwelt upon. The Boreas landed her dreadful

cargo at the next large town and delivered it over to a multitude of

eager hands and warm southern hearts–a cargo amounting by this time to

39 wounded persons and 22 dead bodies. And with these she delivered a

list of 96 missing persons that had drowned or otherwise perished at the

scene of the disaster.

A jury of inquest was impaneled, and after due deliberation and inquiry

they returned the inevitable American verdict which has been so familiar

to our ears all the days of our lives–“NOBODY TO BLAME.”

**[The incidents of the explosion are not invented. They happened just

as they are told.–The Authors.]

CHAPTER V.

Il veut faire secher de la neige au four et la vendre pour du sel blanc.

When the Boreas backed away from the land to continue her voyage up the

river, the Hawkinses were richer by twenty-four hours of experience in

the contemplation of human suffering and in learning through honest hard

work how to relieve it. And they were richer in another way also.

In the early turmoil an hour after the explosion, a little black-eyed

girl of five years, frightened and crying bitterly, was struggling

through the throng in the Boreas’ saloon calling her mother and father,

but no one answered. Something in the face of Mr. Hawkins attracted her

and she came and looked up at him; was satisfied, and took refuge with

him. He petted her, listened to her troubles, and said he would find her

friends for her. Then he put her in a state-room with his children and

told them to be kind to her (the adults of his party were all busy with

the wounded) and straightway began his search.

It was fruitless. But all day he and his wife made inquiries, and hoped

against hope. All that they could learn was that the child and her

parents came on board at New Orleans, where they had just arrived in a

vessel from Cuba; that they looked like people from the Atlantic States;

that the family name was Van Brunt and the child’s name Laura. This was

all. The parents had not been seen since the explosion. The child’s

manners were those of a little lady, and her clothes were daintier and

finer than any Mrs. Hawkins had ever seen before.

As the hours dragged on the child lost heart, and cried so piteously for

her mother that it seemed to the Hawkinses that the moanings and the

wailings of the mutilated men and women in the saloon did not so strain

at their heart-strings as the sufferings of this little desolate

creature. They tried hard to comfort her; and in trying, learned to love

her; they could not help it, seeing how she clung, to them and put her

arms about their necks and found-no solace but in their kind eyes and

comforting words: There was a question in both their hearts–a question

that rose up and asserted itself with more and more pertinacity as the

hours wore on–but both hesitated to give it voice–both kept silence–

and–waited. But a time came at last when the matter would bear delay no

longer. The boat had landed, and the dead and the wounded were being

conveyed to the shore. The tired child was asleep in the arms of Mrs.

Hawkins. Mr. Hawkins came into their presence and stood without

speaking. His eyes met his wife’s; then both looked at the child–and as

they looked it stirred in its sleep and nestled closer; an expression of

contentment and peace settled upon its face that touched the mother-

heart; and when the eyes of husband and wife met again, the question was

asked and answered.

When the Boreas had journeyed some four hundred miles from the time the

Hawkinses joined her, a long rank of steamboats was sighted, packed side

by side at a wharf like sardines, in a box, and above and beyond them

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