THE HAVEN IN THE CORAL RING.
It seemed as if the storm-fiend were
satisfied with the mischief he had accomplished, for
immediately after the disaster just described, the
gale began to moderate, and when the sun rose it had
been reduced to a stiff but steady breeze.
From the moment of the accident onward,
the whole crew had been exerting themselves to the
utmost with axe and knife to cut and clear away the
wreck of the masts and repair damages.
Not the least energetic among them
was our amateur first mate, Nigel Roy. When all
had been made comparatively snug, he went aft to where
his father stood beside the steersman, with his legs
nautically wide apart, his sou’-wester pulled
well down over his frowning brows, and his hands in
their native pockets.
“This is a bad ending to a prosperous
voyage,” said the youth, sadly; “but you
don’t seem to take it much to heart, father!”
“How much or little I take it
to heart you know nothin’ whatever about, my
boy, seein’ that I don’t wear my heart
on my coat-sleeve, nor yet on the point of my nose,
for the inspection of all and sundry. Besides,
you can’t tell whether it’s a bad or a
good endin’, for it has not ended yet one way
or another. Moreover, what appears bad is often
found to be good, an’ what seems good is pretty
often uncommon bad.”
“You are a walking dictionary
of truisms, father! I suppose you mean to take
a philosophical view of the misfortune and make the
best of it,” said Nigel, with what we may style
one of his twinkling smiles, for on nearly all occasions
that young man’s dark, brown eyes twinkled, in
spite of him, as vigorously as any “little star”
that was ever told in prose or song to do so—and
much more expressively, too, because of the eyebrows
of which little stars appear to be destitute.
“No, lad,” retorted the
captain; “I take a common-sense view—not
a philosophical one; an’ when you’ve bin
as long at sea as I have, you’ll call nothin’
a misfortune until it’s proved to be such.
The only misfortune I have at present is a son who
cannot see things in the same light as his father
sees ’em.”
“Well, then, according to your
own principle that is the reverse of a misfortune,
for if I saw everything in the same light that you
do, you’d have no pleasure in talking to me,
you’d have no occasion to reason me out of error,
or convince me of truth. Take the subject of
poetry, now—”
“Luff,” said Captain Roy,
sternly, to the man at the wheel.
When the man at the wheel had gone
through the nautical evolution involved in “luff,”
the captain turned to his son and said abruptly—
“We’ll run for the Cocos-Keelin’
Islands, Nigel, an’ refit.”
“Are the Keeling Islands far off?”
“Lift up your head and look
straight along the bridge of your nose, lad, and you’ll
see them. They’re an interesting group,
are the Keelin’ Islands. Volcanic, they
are, with a coral top-dressin’, so to speak.
Sit down here an’ I’ll tell ’ee
about ’em.”
Nigel shut up the telescope through
which he had been examining the thin, blue line on
the horizon that indicated the islands in question,
and sat down on the cabin skylight beside his father.
“They’ve got a romantic
history too, though a short one, an’ are set
like a gem on the bosom of the deep blue sea—”
“Come, father, you’re
drifting out of your true course—that’s
poetical!”
“I know it, lad, but I’m
only quotin’ your mother. Well, you must
know that the Keelin’ Islands—we
call them Keelin’ for short—were
uninhabited between fifty and sixty years ago, when
a Scotsman named Ross, thinking them well situated
as a port of call for the repair and provisioning
of vessels on their way to Australia and China, set
his heart on them and quietly took possession in the
name of England. Then he went home to fetch his
wife and family of six children, intendin’ to
settle on the islands for good. Returning in 1827
with the family and fourteen adventurers, twelve of
whom were English, one a Portugee and one a Javanee,
he found to his disgust that an Englishman named Hare
had stepped in before him and taken possession.
This Hare was a very bad fellow; a rich man who wanted
to live like a Rajah, with lots o’ native wives
and retainers, an’ be a sort of independent prince.
Of course he was on bad terms at once with Ross, who,
finding that things were going badly, felt that it
would be unfair to hold his people to the agreement
which was made when he thought the whole group was
his own, so he offered to release them. They
all, except two men and one woman, accepted the release
and went off in a gun-boat that chanced to touch there
at the time. For a good while Hare and his rival
lived there—the one tryin’ to get
the Dutch, the other to induce the English Government
to claim possession. Neither Dutch nor English
would do so at first, but the English did it at long-last—in
1878—and annexed the islands to the Government
of Ceylon.
“Long before that date, however—before
1836—Hare left and went to Singapore, where
he died, leaving Ross in possession—the
’King of the Cocos Islands’ as he came
to be called. In a few years—chiefly
through the energy of Ross’s eldest son, to
whom he soon gave up the management of affairs—the
Group became a prosperous settlement. Its ships
traded in cocoa-nuts (the chief produce of the islands)
throughout all the Straits Settlements, and boat-buildin’
became one of their most important industries.
But there was one thing that prevented it from bein’
a very happy though prosperous place, an’ that
was the coolies who had been hired in Java, for the
only men that could be got there at first were criminals
who had served their time in the chain-gangs of Batavia.
As these men were fit for anything—from
pitch-and-toss to murder—and soon outnumbered
the colonists, the place was kept in constant alarm
and watchfulness. For, as I dare say you know,
the Malays are sometimes liable to have the spirit
of amok on them, which leads them to care for
and fear nothin’, and to go in for a fight-to-death,
from which we get our sayin’—run
amuck. An’ when a strong fellow is
goin’ about loose in this state o’ mind,
it’s about as bad as havin’ a tiger prowlin’
in one’s garden.”
“Well, sometimes two or three
o’ these coolies would mutiny and hide in the
woods o’ one o’ the smaller uninhabited
islands. An’ the colonists would have no
rest till they hunted them down. So, to keep matters
right, they had to be uncommon strict. It was
made law that no one should spend the night on any
but what was called the Home Island without permission.
Every man was bound to report himself at the guard-house
at a fixed hour; every fire to be out at sunset, and
every boat was numbered and had to be in its place
before that time. So they went on till the year
1862, when a disaster befell them that made a considerable
change—at first for the worse, but for the
better in the long-run. Provin’ the truth,
my lad, of what I was—well, no—I
was goin’ to draw a moral here, but I won’t!
“It was a cyclone that did the
business. Cyclones have got a free-an’-easy
way of makin’ a clean sweep of the work of years
in a few hours. This cyclone completely wrecked
the homes of the Keelin’ Islanders, and Ross—that’s
the second Ross, the son of the first one—sent
home for his son, who was then a student of
engineering in Glasgow, to come out and help him to
put things to rights. Ross the third obeyed the
call, like a good son,—observe that, Nigel.”
“All right, father, fire away!”
“Like a good son,” repeated
the captain, “an’ he turned out to be a
first-rate man, which was lucky, for his poor father
died soon after, leavin’ him to do the work
alone. An’ well able was the young engineer
to do it. He got rid o’ the chain-gang men
altogether, and hired none but men o’ the best
character in their place. He cleared off the forests
and planted the ground with cocoa-nut palms. Got
out steam mills, circular saws, lathes, etc.,
and established a system of general education with
a younger brother as head-master—an’
tail-master too, for I believe there was only one.
He also taught the men to work in brass, iron, and
wood, and his wife—a Cocos girl that he
married after comin’ out—taught all
the women and girls to sew, cook, and manage the house.
In short, everything went on in full swing of prosperity,
till the year 1876, when the island-born inhabitants
were about 500, as contented and happy as could be.
“In January of that year another
cyclone paid them a visit. The barometer gave
them warning, and, remembering the visit of fourteen
years before, they made ready to receive the new visitor.
All the boats were hauled up to places of safety,
and every other preparation was made. Down it
came, on the afternoon o’ the 28th—worse
than they had expected. Many of the storehouses
and mills had been lately renewed or built. They
were all gutted and demolished. Everything movable
was swept away like bits of paper. Lanes, hundreds
of yards in length, were cleared among the palm trees
by the whirling wind, which seemed to perform a demon-dance
of revelry among them. In some cases it snapped
trees off close to the ground. In others it seemed
to swoop down from above, lick up a patch of trees
bodily and carry them clean away, leaving the surrounding
trees untouched. Sometimes it would select a
tree of thirty years growth, seize it, spin it round,
and leave it a permanent spiral screw. I was
in these regions about the time, and had the account
from a native who had gone through it all and couldn’t
speak of it except with glaring eyeballs and gasping
breath.
“About midnight of the 28th
the gale was at its worst. Darkness that could
be felt between the flashes of lightning. Thunder
that was nearly drowned by the roaring of the wind
an’ the crashing of everything all round.
To save their lives the people had to fling themselves
into ditches and hollows of the ground. Mr. Ross
and some of his people were lying in the shelter of
a wall near his house. There had been a schooner
lying not far off. When Mr. Ross raised his head
cautiously above the wall to have a look to wind’ard
he saw the schooner comin’ straight for him
on the top of a big wave. ‘Hold on!’
he shouted, fell flat down, and laid hold o’
the nearest bush. Next moment the wave burst right
over the wall, roared on up to the garden, 150 yards
above highwater mark, and swept his house clean away!
By good fortune the wall stood the shock, and the
schooner stuck fast just before reachin’ it,
but so near that the end of the jib-boom passed right
over the place where the household lay holdin’
on for dear life and half drowned. It was a tremendous
night,” concluded the captain, “an’
nearly everything on the islands was wrecked, but
they’ve survived it, as you’ll see.
Though it’s seven years since that cyclone swep’
over them, they’re all right and goin’
ahead again, full swing, as if nothin’ had happened.”
“And is Ross III. still king?”
asked Nigel with much interest.
“Ay—at least he was
king a few years ago when I passed this way and had
occasion to land to replace a tops’l yard that
had been carried away.”
“Then you won’t arrive as a stranger?”
“I should think not,”
returned the captain, getting up and gazing steadily
at the atoll or group of islets enclosed within
a coral ring which they were gradually approaching.
Night had descended, however, and
the gale had decreased almost to a calm, ere they
steered through the narrow channel—or what
we may call a broken part of the ring—which
led to the calm lagoon inside. Nigel Roy leaned
over the bow, watching with profound attention the
numerous phosphorescent fish and eel-like creatures
which darted hither and thither like streaks of silver
from beneath their advancing keel. He had enough
of the naturalist in him to arouse in his mind keen
interest in the habits and action of the animal life
around him, and these denizens of the coral-groves
were as new to him as their appearance was unexpected.
“You’ll find ’em
very kind and hospitable, lad,” said the captain
to his son.
“What, the fish?”
“No, the inhabitants. Port—port—steady!”
“Steady it is!” responded the man at the
wheel.
“Let go!” shouted the captain.
A heavy plunge, followed by the rattling
of chains and swinging round of the brig, told that
they had come to an anchor in the lagoon of the Cocos-Keeling
Islands.