The Holy Bible – Knox Translation
The Acts of the Apostles
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Chapter 27
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And now word was given for the voyage to Italy, Paul being handed over, with some other prisoners, to a centurion called Julius, who belonged to the Augustan cohort.
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We embarked on a boat from Adrumetum which was bound for the Asiatic ports, and set sail; the Macedonian, Aristarchus, from Thessalonica, was with us.
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Next day we put in at Sidon; and here Julius shewed Paul courtesy by allowing him to visit his friends and be cared for.
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Then, setting sail, we coasted under the lee of Cyprus, to avoid contrary winds,
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but made a straight course over the open sea that lies off Cilicia and Pamphylia, and so reached Lystra in Lycia.
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There the centurion found a boat from Alexandria which was sailing for Italy, and put us on board.
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We had a slow voyage for many days after this; we made Gnidus with difficulty, and then, with the wind beating us back, had to sail under the lee of Crete by way of Salmone.
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Here we were hard put to it to coast along as far as a place called Fair Havens, near the city of Thalassa.
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Much time had now been wasted, and sailing had become dangerous; the fast was already over; and Paul bade them make the best of it.
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Sirs, he said, I can see plainly that there is no sailing now, without injury and great loss, not only of our freight and of the vessel, but of our own lives too.

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The centurion, however, paid more attention to the helmsman and the master than to Paul’s advice.
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The harbour was not well placed for wintering in; so that more of them gave their voices for sailing further still, in the hope of making Phoenice and wintering there; it is a harbour in Crete, which faces in the direction of the South-west and North-west winds.
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A light breeze was now blowing from the South, so that they thought they had achieved their purpose, and coasted along Crete, leaving their anchorage at Assos.
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But it was not long before a gale of wind struck the ship, the wind called Euraquilo;
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she was carried out of her course, and could make no head against the wind, so we gave up and let her drive.
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We now ran under the lee of an island named Cauda, where we contrived, with difficulty, to secure the ship’s boat.
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When it had been hoisted aboard, they strengthened the ship by passing ropes round her; then, for fear of being driven on to the Syrtis sands, they let down the sea-anchor, and so drifted.
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On the next day, so violently were we tossed about in the gale, they lightened ship,
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and on the third, they deliberately threw the spare tackle overboard.

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For several days we saw nothing of the sun or the stars, and a heavy gale pressed us hard, so that we had lost, by now, all hope of surviving;
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and we were much in want of food. And now Paul stood up in their presence, and said, Sirs, you should have taken my advice; if you had not put out from Crete, you would have saved all this injury and damage.
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But I would not have you lose courage, even now; there is to be no loss of life among you, only of the ship.
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An angel stood before me last night, sent by the God to whom I belong, the God whom I serve,
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and said, Have no fear, Paul, thou art to stand in Caesar’s presence; and behold, God has granted thee the safety of all thy fellow voyagers.
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Have courage, then, sirs; I trust in God, believing that all will fall out as he has told me.
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Only we are to be cast up on an island.
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On the fourteenth night, as we drifted about in the Adriatic sea, the crew began to suspect, about midnight, that we were nearing land;
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so they took soundings, and made it twenty fathom; then they sounded again a short distance away, and made it fifteen fathom.
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Afraid, therefore, that we might be cast ashore on some rocky coast, they let down four anchors from the stern, and fell to wishing it were day.
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And now the sailors had a mind to abandon the ship, and lowered the boat into the sea, pretending that they meant to lay out anchors from the bows.
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But Paul told the centurion and the soldiers, These must stay on board, or there is no hope left for you;
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whereupon the soldiers cut the boat’s ropes away and let it drop.

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As day began to break, Paul entreated them all to take some food; To-day, he said, is the fourteenth day you have been in suspense, and all that time gone hungry, neglecting to eat;
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pray take some food, then; it will make for your preservation; not a hair of anyone’s head is to be lost.
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And with that he took bread, and gave thanks to God before them all, and broke it, and began to eat.
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Thereupon they all found courage, and themselves took a meal.
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The whole number of souls on board was two hundred and seventy six.
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So all ate till they were content; and afterwards they began to lighten the ship, throwing the corn into the sea.

39
When day broke, they found that the coast was strange to them. But they sighted a bay with a sloping beach, and made up their minds, if it should be possible, to run the ship ashore there.
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They lifted the anchors and trusted themselves to the mercy of the sea, at the same time unlashing the tiller; then they hoisted the foresail to the breeze, and held on for the shore.
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But now, finding they were running into a cross-sea, they grounded the ship where they were. The bows, which were stuck fast, felt no movement, but the stern began falling to pieces under the violence of the waves;
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whereupon the soldiers would have killed the prisoners, for fear that any of them should dive overboard and escape,
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but the centurion balked them of their will, because he had a mind to keep Paul safe. He gave orders that those who could swim should go overboard first, and make their way to land;
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of the rest, some were ferried across on planks, and some on the ship’s wreckage. So it was that all reached land in safety.