- end_line
- 7093
- extracted_at
- 2026-01-30T20:48:15.152Z
- extracted_by
- structure-extraction-lambda
- start_line
- 7011
- text
- “What’s the matter?” exclaimed Johnson, out of breath, and bursting
into the Calabooza: “how did it happen?—speak quick!” and he looked at
Long Ghost.
I told him how the fit came on.
“Singular”—he observed—“very: good enough pulse;” and he let go of it,
and placed his hand upon the heart.
“But what’s all that frothing at the mouth?” he continued; “and bless
me! look at the abdomen!”
The region thus denominated exhibited the most unaccountable symptoms.
A low, rumbling sound was heard; and a sort of undulation was
discernible beneath the thin cotton frock.
“Colic, sir?” suggested a bystander.
“Colic be hanged!” shouted the physician; “who ever heard of anybody in
a trance of the colic?”
During this, the patient lay upon his back, stark and straight, giving
no signs of life except those above mentioned.
“I’ll bleed him!” cried Johnson at last—“run for a calabash, one of
you!”
“Life ho!” here sung out Navy Bob, as if he had just spied a sail.
“What under the sun’s the matter with him!” cried the physician,
starting at the appearance of the mouth, which had jerked to one side,
and there remained fixed.
“Pr’aps it’s St. Witus’s hornpipe,” suggested Bob.
“Hold the calabash!”—and the lancet was out in a moment.
But before the deed could be done, the face became natural;—a sigh was
heaved;—the eyelids quivered, opened, closed; and Long Ghost, twitching
all over, rolled on his side, and breathed audibly. By degrees, he
became sufficiently recovered to speak.
After trying to get something coherent out of him, Johnson withdrew;
evidently disappointed in the scientific interest of the case. Soon
after his departure, the doctor sat up; and upon being asked what upon
earth ailed him, shook his head mysteriously. He then deplored the
hardship of being an invalid in such a place, where there was not the
slightest provision for his comfort. This awakened the compassion of
our good old keeper, who offered to send him to a place where he would
be better cared for. Long Ghost acquiesced; and being at once mounted
upon the shoulders of four of Captain Bob’s men, was marched off in
state, like the Grand Lama of Thibet.
Now, I do not pretend to account for his remarkable swoon; but his
reason for suffering himself to be thus removed from the Calabooza was
strongly suspected to be nothing more than a desire to insure more
regularity in his dinner-hour; hoping that the benevolent native to
whom he was going would set a good table.
The next morning, we were all envying his fortune; when, of a sudden,
he bolted in upon us, looking decidedly out of humour.
“Hang it!” he cried; “I’m worse off than ever; let me have some
breakfast!” We lowered our slender bag of ship-stores from a rafter,
and handed him a biscuit. While this was being munched, he went on and
told us his story.
“After leaving here, they trotted me back into a valley, and left me in
a hut, where an old woman lived by herself. This must be the nurse,
thought I; and so I asked her to kill a pig, and bake it; for I felt my
appetite returning. ‘Ha! Hal—oee mattee—mattee nuee’—(no, no; you too
sick). ‘The devil mattee ye,’ said I—‘give me something to eat!’ But
nothing could be had. Night coming on, I had to stay. Creeping into a
corner, I tried to sleep; but it was to no purpose;—the old crone must
have had the quinsy, or something else; and she kept up such a wheezing
and choking that at last I sprang up, and groped after her; but she
hobbled away like a goblin; and that was the last of her. As soon as
the sun rose, I made the best of my way back; and here I am.” He never
left us more, nor ever had a second fit.
- title
- Chunk 2