THE VOYAGE
"Amidst the storm they sang,
And the stars
heard and the sea."
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UPON finally getting away from
Plymouth they were favored with fair winds and calm seas for some days,
their course being due west. On September 6th, however, they ran into a
great storm, and amid tempestuous winds and waves experienced great
terror. Equinoctial gales shook the Mayflower from
stem to stern, and for many days the ship could bear no sail.
The breaking of a main beam below
decks and amidships seriously imperiled their safety for a time, but
even with the scant facilities at hand, and the services of some of the
able members of the company therein, the break was effectually repaired.
During these days the navigators
and the leaders of the band were often in close consultation, and the
question was raised as to whether it might not be better to return.
With so much of the route already covered, this hardly seemed
advisable; so they continued their course to the westward amid
succeeding storms, with winds so fierce and seas so high that for many
days their ship made no appreciable progress.
The company crowded below, cold and
drenched with sea-water, and the huge waves chased each other day and
night over the decks. One John Howland, venturing above the gratings,
was washed overboard in a moment, and had it not been that he caught a
rope's end, which was thrown to him, would have perished.
On November 6th William Butten, a
serving lad to Samuel Fuller, died and was buried at sea. Their number,
however, remained the same at the landing, for during the voyage a
child was born to Stephen and Elizabeth Hopkins and was christened
Oceanus.
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