OUR HERO OBLIGED TO GO TO SEA
When Ruby Brand reached the outskirts
of Arbroath, he checked his speed and walked into
his native town whistling gently, and with his hands
in his pockets, as though he had just returned from
an evening walk. He directed his steps to one
of the streets near the harbour, in which his mother’s
cottage was situated.
Mrs. Brand was a delicate, little
old woman—so little and so old that people
sometimes wondered how it was possible that she could
be the mother of such a stalwart son. She was
one of those kind, gentle, uncomplaining, and unselfish
beings, who do not secure much popularity or admiration
in this world, but who secure obedient children, also
steadfast and loving friends. Her favourite book
was the Bible; her favourite hope in regard to earthly
matters, that men should give up fighting and drinking,
and live in peace; her favourite theory that the study
of truth was the object for which man was created,
and her favourite meal—tea.
Ruby was her only child. Minnie
was the daughter of a distant relation, and, having
been left an orphan, she was adopted by her.
Mrs. Brand’s husband was a sailor. He commanded
a small coasting sloop, of which Ruby had been the
mate for several years. As we have said, Ruby
had been prevailed on to remain at home for some months
in order to please his mother, whose delicacy of health
was such that his refusal would have injured her seriously;
at least the doctor said so, therefore Ruby agreed
to stay.
The sloop Penguin, commanded
by Ruby’s father, was on a voyage to Newcastle
at that time, and was expected in Arbroath every day.
But it was fated never more to cast anchor in that
port. The great storm, to which reference has
been made in a previous chapter, caused many wrecks
on the shores of Britain. The Penguin was
one of the many.
In those days telegraphs, railroads,
and penny papers did not exist. Murders were
committed then, as now, but little was said, and less
was known about them. Wrecks occurred then, as
now, but few, except the persons immediately concerned,
heard of them. “Destructive fires”,
“terrible accidents”, and the familiar
round of “appalling catastrophes” occurred
then, as now, but their influence was limited, and
their occurrence soon forgotten.
We would not be understood to mean
that “now” (as compared with “then”,)
all is right and well; that telegraphs and railways
and daily papers are all-potent and perfect.
By no means. We have still much to learn and
to do in these improved times; and, especially, there
is wanting to a large extent among us a sympathetic
telegraphy, so to speak, between the interior of our
land and the sea-coast, which, if it existed in full
and vigorous play, would go far to improve our condition,
and raise us in the esteem of Christian nations.
Nevertheless, as compared with now, the state of things
then was lamentably imperfect.
The great storm came and went, having
swept thousands of souls into eternity, and hundreds
of thousands of pounds into nonentity. Lifeboats
had not been invented. Harbours of refuge were
almost unknown, and although our coasts bristled with
dangerous reefs and headlands, lighthouses were few
and far between. The consequence was, that wrecks
were numerous; and so also were wreckers,—a
class of men, who, in the absence of an efficient
coastguard, subsisted to a large extent on what they
picked up from the wrecks that were cast in their
way, and who did not scruple, sometimes, to cause
wrecks, by showing false lights in order to decoy
vessels to destruction.
We do not say that all wreckers were
guilty of such crimes, but many of them were so, and
their style of life, at the best, had naturally a
demoralizing influence upon all of them.
The famous Bell Rock, lying twelve
miles off the coast of Forfarshire, was a prolific
source of destruction to shipping. Not only did
numbers of vessels get upon it, but many others ran
upon the neighbouring coasts in attempting to avoid
it.
Ruby’s father knew the navigation
well, but, in the confusion and darkness of the furious
storm, he miscalculated his position and ran upon
the rock, where, as we have seen, his body was afterwards
found by the two fishermen. It was conveyed by
them to the cottage of Mrs. Brand, and when Ruby entered
he found his mother on her knees by the bedside, pressing
the cold hand of his father to her breast, and gazing
with wild, tearless eyes into the dead face.
We will not dwell upon the sad scenes that followed.
Ruby was now under the necessity of
leaving home, because his mother being deprived of
her husband’s support naturally turned in distress
to her son. But Ruby had no employment, and work
could not be easily obtained at that time in the town,
so there was no other resource left him but to go
to sea. This he did in a small coasting sloop
belonging to an old friend, who gave him part of his
wages in advance to enable him to leave his mother
a small provision, at least for a short time.
This, however, was not all that the
widow had to depend on. Minnie Gray was expert
with her needle, and for some years past had contributed
not a little to the comforts of the household into
which she had been adopted. She now set herself
to work with redoubled zeal and energy. Besides
this, Mrs. Brand had a brother, a retired skipper,
who obtained the complimentary title of Captain from
his friends. He was a poor man, it is true, as
regarded money, having barely sufficient for his own
subsistence, but he was rich in kindliness and sympathy,
so that he managed to make his small income perform
wonders. On hearing of his brother-in-law’s
death, Captain Ogilvy hastened to afford all the consolation
in his power to his sorrowing sister.
The captain was an eccentric old man,
of rugged aspect. He thought that there was not
a worse comforter on the face of the earth than himself,
because, when he saw others in distress, his heart
invariably got into his throat, and absolutely prevented
him from saying a single word. He tried to speak
to his sister, but all he could do was to take her
hand and weep. This did the poor widow more good
than any words could have done, no matter how eloquently
or fitly spoken. It unlocked the fountain of
her own heart, and the two wept together.
When Captain Ogilvy accompanied Ruby
on board the sloop to see him off, and shook hands
as he was about to return to the shore, he said—
“Cheer up, Ruby; never say die
so long as there’s a shot in the locker.
That’s the advice of an old salt, an’ you’ll
find it sound, the more you ponder of it. Wen
a young feller sails away on the sea of life, let
him always go by chart and compass, not forgettin’
to take soundin’s w’en cruisin’
off a bad coast. Keep a sharp lookout to wind’ard,
an’ mind yer helm—that’s my
advice to you lad, as ye go
‘A-sailin’
down life’s troubled stream,
All
as if it wor a dream’”.
The captain had a somewhat poetic
fancy (at least he was impressed with the belief that
he had), and was in the habit of enforcing his arguments
by quotations from memory. When memory failed
he supplemented with original composition.
“Goodbye, lad, an’ Providence go wi’
ye.”
“Goodbye, uncle. I need
not remind you to look after mother when I’m
away.”
“No, nephy, you needn’t; I’ll do
it whether or not.”
“And Minnie, poor thing, she’ll
need a word of advice and comfort now and then, uncle.”
“And she shall have it, lad,”
replied the captain with a tremendous wink, which
was unfortunately lost on the nephew, in consequence
of its being night and unusually dark, “advice
and comfort on demand, gratis; for
’Woman,
in her hours of ease,
Is
most uncommon hard to please’;
but she must be looked arter,
ye know, and made of, d’ye see? so Ruby, boy,
farewell.”
Half-an-hour before midnight was the
time chosen for the sailing of the sloop Termagant,
in order that she might get away quietly and escape
the press-gang. Ruby and his uncle had taken the
precaution to go down to the harbour just a few minutes
before sailing, and they kept as closely as possible
to the darkest and least-frequented streets while
passing through the town.
Captain Ogilvy returned by much the
same route to his sister’s cottage, but did
not attempt to conceal his movements. On the
contrary, knowing that the sloop must have got clear
of the harbour by that time, he went along the streets
whistling cheerfully. He had been a noted, not
to say noisy, whistler when a boy, and the habit had
not forsaken him in his old age. On turning sharp
round a corner, he ran against two men, one of whom
swore at him, but the other cried—
“Hallo! messmate, yer musical
the night. Hey, Captain Ogilvy, surely I seed
you an’ Ruby slinkin’ down the dark side
o’ the market-gate half an ’oor ago?”
“Mayhap ye did, an’ mayhap
ye didn’t,” retorted the captain, as he
walked on; “but as it’s none o’ your
business to know, I’ll not tell ye.”
“Ay, ay? O but ye’re
a cross auld chap. Pleasant dreams t’ ye.”
This kindly remark, which was expressed
by our friend Davy Spink, was lost on the captain,
in consequence of his having resumed his musical recreation
with redoubled energy, as he went rolling back to the
cottage to console Mrs. Brand, and to afford “advice
and comfort gratis” to Minnie Gray.