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The Mysterious Blood Stain


In the year 185- I was in command of the Dolphin, a fine bark of six hundred tons. We had been on a whaling voyage, and had obtained an unusually good cargo of oil. With our course laid for home, the crew in good health, and a fair prospect of percentage money on the cargo, what more could we want to keep the song and the jest upon the lips of the crew.

One night, about eleven o’clock, I was sitting at the upper end of my cabin table, consulting a chart on which the vessel’s course was laid down. I had been reading Dante’s ‘Inferno,’ and the horrible nature of the work had aroused my sensitive feelings to such an extent that I had determined to try how far a cigar and a walk on deck would steady my nerves. Just as I was about rising from my chair to go on deck, I noticed a figure descending the companionway before me. A single glance told me that it was not one of the crew. Slowly he descended the steps, grasping the hand-rail to support himself, as if he were too feeble to descend without support.

His feet were bare, while his head was enveloped in a piece of old sail-cloth in place of a cap. His left arm hung by his side, carefully rolled up in his coat, which had evidently been taken off for that purpose, and the arm itself appeared to be broken. Quietly and without uttering a word he approached me, and at last he sat down at the end of the table.

He then slowly raised his head, and a sight was presented to my astonished gaze, the like of which I hope I may never see again. The features had been good and regular, but now the cheeks were sunken and hollow; the teeth, white and even, were firmly set together; the thin, parched lips were drawn back from them. The eyes were as black as coal, but sunk far back into the head, and I saw they were fixed on me with a dull, unmeaning stare. The figure now stood up just opposite to me, and I felt myself spell bound… Read More