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CHAPTER VI. Schlei Fiord
 I make no apology for having described these early days in some detail. It is no wonder that their trivialities are as vividly1 before me as the colours of earth and sea in this enchanting2 corner of the world. For every trifle, sordid3 or picturesque4, was relevant; every scrap5 of talk a link; every passing mood critical for good or ill. So slight indeed were the determining causes that changed my autumn holiday into an undertaking6 the most momentous7 I have ever approached.  
Two days more preceded the change. On the first, the southwesterly wind still holding, we sallied forth8 into Augustenburg Fiord, “to practise smartness in a heavy thresh,” as Davies put it. It was the day of dedication9 for those disgusting oilskins, immured10 in whose stiff and odorous angles, I felt distressfully cumbersome12; a day of proof indeed for me, for heavy squalls swept incessantly13 over the loch, and Davies, at my own request, gave me no rest. Backwards14 and forwards we tacked15, blustering16 into coves17 and out again, reefing and unreefing, now stung with rain, now warmed with sun, but never with time to breathe or think.
 
I wrestled18 with intractable ropes, slaves if they could be subdued19, tyrants20 if they got the upper hand; creeping, craning, straining, I made the painful round of the deck, while Davies, hatless and tranquil21, directed my blundering movements.
 
“Now take the helm and try steering22 in a hard breeze to windward. It’s the finest sport on earth.”
 
So I grappled with the niceties of that delicate craft; smarting eyes, chafed23 hands, and dazed brain all pressed into the service, whilst Davies, taming the ropes the while, shouted into my ear the subtle mysteries of the art; that fidgeting ripple24 in the luff of the mainsail, and the distant rattle25 from the hungry jib—signs that they are starved of wind and must be given more; the heavy list and wallow of the hull26, the feel of the wind on your cheek instead of your nose, the broader angle of the burgee at the masthead—signs that they have too much, and that she is sagging27 recreantly28 to leeward29 instead of fighting to windward. He taught me the tactics for meeting squalls, and the way to press your advantage when they are defeated—the iron hand in the velvet30 glove that the wilful31 tiller needs if you are to gain your ends with it; the exact set of the sheets necessary to get the easiest and swiftest play of the hull—all these things and many more I struggled to apprehend32, careless for the moment as to whether they were worth knowing, but doggedly33 set on knowing them. Needless to say, I had no eyes for beauty. The wooded inlets we dived into gave a brief respite34 from wind and spindrift, but called into use the lead and the centreboard tackle—two new and cumbrous complexities35. Davies’s passion for intricate navigation had to be sated even in these secure and tideless waters.
 
“Let’s get in as near as we can—you stand by the lead,” was his formula; so I made false casts, tripped up in the slack, sent rivers of water up my sleeves, and committed all the other gaucheries that beginners in the art commit, while the sand showed whiter beneath the keel, till Davies regretfully drew off and shouted: “Ready about, centre-plate down,” and I dashed down to the trappings of that diabolical36 contrivance, the only part of the Dulcibella’s equipment that I hated fiercely to the last. It had an odious37 habit when lowered of spouting38 jets of water through its chain-lead on to the cabin floor. One of my duties was to gag it with cotton-waste, but even then its choking gurgle was a most uncomfortable sound in your dining-room. In a minute the creek39 would be behind us and we would be thumping40 our stem into the short hollow waves of the fiord, and lurching through spray and rain for some point on the opposite shore. Of our destination and objects, if we had any, I knew nothing. At the northern end of the fiord, just before we turned, Davies had turned dreamy in the most exasperating41 way, for I was steering at the time and in mortal need of sympathetic guidance, if I was to avoid a sudden jibe42. As though continuing aloud some internal debate, he held a onesided argument to the effect that it was no use going farther north. Ducks, weather, and charts figured in it, but I did not follow the pros43 and cons44. I only know that we suddenly turned and began to “battle” south again. At sunset we were back once more in the same quiet pool among the trees and fields of Als Sound, a wondrous45 peace succeeding the turmoil46. Bruised47 and sodden48, I was extricating49 myself from my oily prison, and later was tasting (though not nearly yet in its perfection) the unique exultation50 that follows such a day, when, glowing all over, deliciously tired and pleasantly sore, you eat what seems ambrosia51, be it only tinned beef; and drink nectar, be it only distilled52 from terrestrial hops53 or coffee berries, and inhale54 as culminating luxury balmy fumes55 which even the happy Homeric gods knew naught56 of.
 
On the following morning, the 30th, a joyous57 shout of “Nor’-west wind” sent me shivering on deck, in the small hours, to handle rain-stiff canvas and cutting chain. It was a cloudy, unsettled day, but still enough after yesterday’s boisterous58 ordeal59. We retraced60 our way past Sonderburg, and thence sailed for a faint line of pale green on the far south-western horizon. It was during this passage that an incident occurred, which, slight as it was, opened my eyes to much.
 
A flight of wild duck crossed our bows at some little distance, a wedge-shaped phalanx of craning necks and flapping wings. I happened to be steering while Davies verified our course below; but I called him up at once, and a discussion began about our chances of sport. Davies was gloomy over them.
 
“Those fellows at Satrup were rather doubtful,” he said. “There are plenty of ducks, but I made out that it’s not easy for strangers to get shooting. The whole country’s so very civilised; it’s not wild enough, is it?”
 
He looked at me. I had no very clear opinion. It was anything but wild in one sense, but there seemed to be wild enough spots for ducks. The shore we were passing appeared to be bordered by lonely marshes61, though a spacious62 champaign showed behind. If it were not for the beautiful places we had seen, and my growing taste for our way of seeing them, his disappointing vagueness would have nettled63 me more than it did. For, after all, he had brought me out loaded with sporting equipment under a promise of shooting.
 
“Bad weather is what we want for ducks,” he said; “but I’m afraid we’re in the wrong place for them. Now, if it was the North Sea, among those Fri............
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