Out of the Fog 
 
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Title: Out of the Fog 
Author: C. K. Ober 
Release Date: April, 2005 [EBook #7957] [Yes, we are more than one 
year ahead of schedule] [This file was first posted on June 5, 2003] 
Edition: 10 
Language: English
Character set encoding: ASCII 
*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK OUT OF 
THE FOG *** 
 
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OUT OF THE FOG 
A Story of the Sea 
C. K. OBER 
Introduction By Dr. Wilfred T. Grenfell 
 
FOREWORD 
Since I am permitted to consider myself in some way responsible for 
this narrative's being put on record, it is with the very heartiest good 
will that I accept the publishers' kind invitation to write a brief 
foreword to it. 
I have, during twenty years, been working against a problem that I 
recognized called for all--yes, and more, than--I had to give it. For I 
have been endeavoring, through my own imperfect attainments, to 
translate into undeniable language on the Labrador Coast, the message 
of God's personal fatherhood over and love for the humblest of His 
creatures. During these years, often of overwork, I have considered it 
worth while to lay aside time and energy and strength to improve the 
charting and pilot directions of our devious and sometimes dangerous 
waterways. 
How much more gladly shall I naturally avail myself of any chance by 
which to contribute to the knowledge of that seemingly ever evasive 
pathway leading to that which to me is the supreme motive power of 
human life--faith in the divine Redeemer and Master. The best helps to 
reach the haven we are in search of, over the unblazed trails of 
Labrador, are ever the tracks of those who have found the way before 
us. Just such to me is this simple and delightful story of Mr. Ober's. It 
has my most hearty prayers for its unprecedented circulation. 
WILFRED T. GRENFELL.
[Illustration] 
OLD SALTS 
The lure of the sea prevailed, and at nineteen I shipped for a 
four-months' fishing trip on the Newfoundland Banks. These banks are 
not the kind that slope toward some gentle stream where the weary 
fisherman can rest between bites, protected from the sun by the shade 
of an overhanging tree; they are thirty to forty fathoms beneath the 
surface of the Atlantic Ocean, a thousand miles out from the 
Massachusetts coast. 
The life that had long appealed to my imagination now came in with a 
shock and a realism that was in part a disillusionment and in part an 
intense satisfaction of some of my primal instincts and cravings. Old 
salts are more picturesque and companionable spinning yarns about the 
stove in a shoemaker's shop than they are when one is obliged to live, 
eat and sleep with them for four months in the crowded forecastle of a 
fishing schooner. An ocean storm is a sublime spectacle, witnessed 
from a position of safety on the land; but a storm on the ocean, 
experienced in its very vortex from the deck of a tiny fishing boat, is 
thrilling beyond description. "Ships that pass in the night" make 
interesting reading; but if they pass near you, in a foggy night, on the 
Banks, they are better than the muezzin of the Moslem in reminding a 
man that it is time to pray. I recall with vividness the scene on such a 
night, and still feel the compelling power of the panic in the voice of 
the mild-mannered old sea dog on anchor watch, as he yelled down the 
companionway, "All hands on deck." In six seconds we were all there; 
and there was the great hulk of a two-thousand-ton ship looming up out 
of the night. She had evidently sighted our little craft just in time to 
change her course, and was passing us with not    
    
		
	
	
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