STORMS AND TROUBLES
A week of fine weather caused Ruby
Brand to fall as deeply in love with the work at the
Bell Rock as his comrades had done.
There was an amount of vigour and
excitement about it, with a dash of romance, which
quite harmonized with his character. At first
he had imagined it would be monotonous and dull, but
in experience he found it to be quite the reverse.
Although there was uniformity in the
general character of the work, there was constant
variety in many of the details; and the spot on which
it was carried on was so circumscribed, and so utterly
cut off from all the world, that the minds of those
employed became concentrated on it in a way that aroused
strong interest in every trifling object.
There was not a ledge or a point of
rock that rose ever so little above the general level,
that was not named after, and intimately associated
with, some event or individual. Every mass of
seaweed became a familiar object. The various
little pools and inlets, many of them not larger than
a dining-room table, received high-sounding and dignified
names—such as Port Stevenson, Port, Erskine,
Taylor’s Track, Neill’s Pool, &c.
Of course the fish that frequented the pools, and
the shell-fish that covered the rock, became subjects
of much attention, and, in some cases, of earnest
study.
Robinson Crusoe himself did not pry
into the secrets of his island-home with half the
amount of assiduity that was displayed at this time
by many of the men who built the Bell Rock Lighthouse.
The very fact that their time was limited acted as
a spur, so that on landing each tide they rushed hastily
to the work, and the amateur studies in natural history
to which we have referred were prosecuted hurriedly
during brief intervals of rest. Afterwards, when
the beacon house was erected, and the men dwelt upon
the rock, these studies (if we may not call them amusements)
were continued more leisurely, but with unabated ardour,
and furnished no small amount of comparatively thrilling
incident at times.
One fine morning, just after the men
had landed, and before they had commenced work, “Long
Forsyth”, as his comrades styled him, went to
a pool to gather a little dulse, of which there was
a great deal on the rock, and which was found to be
exceedingly grateful to the palates of those who were
afflicted with sea-sickness.
He stooped over the pool to pluck
a morsel, but paused on observing a beautiful fish,
about a foot long, swimming in the clear water, as
quietly as if it knew the man to be a friend, and were
not in the least degree afraid of him.
Forsyth was an excitable man, and
also studious in his character. He at once became
agitated and desirous of possessing that fish, for
it was extremely brilliant and variegated in colour.
He looked round for something to throw at it, but
there was nothing within reach. He sighed for
a hook and line, but as sighs never yet produced hooks
or lines he did not get one.
Just then the fish swam slowly to
the side of the pool on which the man kneeled, as
if it actually desired more intimate acquaintance.
Forsyth lay fiat down and reached out his hand toward
it; but it appeared to think this rather too familiar,
for it swam slowly beyond his reach, and the man drew
back. Again it came to the side, much nearer.
Once more Forsyth lay down, reaching over the pool
as far as he could, and insinuating his hand into
the water. But the fish moved off a little.
Thus they coquetted with each other
for some time, until the man’s comrades began
to observe that he was “after something”.
“Wot’s he a-doin’
of?” said one. “Reachin’ over
the pool, I think,” replied another. “Ye
don’t mean he’s sick?” cried a third.
The smile with which this was received was changed
into a roar of laughter as poor Forsyth’s long
legs were seen to tip up into the air, and the whole
man to disappear beneath the water. He had
overbalanced himself in his frantic efforts to reach
the fish, and was now making its acquaintance in its
native element!
The pool, although small in extent,
was so deep that Forsyth, long though he was, did
not find bottom. Moreover, he could not swim,
so that when he reached the surface he came up with
his hands first and his ten fingers spread out helplessly;
next appeared his shaggy head, with the eyes wide
open, and the mouth tight shut. The moment the
latter was uncovered, however, he uttered a tremendous
yell, which was choked in the bud with a gurgle as
he sank again.
The men rushed to the rescue at once,
and the next time Forsyth rose he was seized by the
hair of the head and dragged out of the pool.
It has not been recorded what became
of the fish that caused such an alarming accident,
but we may reasonably conclude that it sought refuge
in the ocean cavelets at the bottom of that miniature
sea, for Long Forsyth was so very large, and created
such a terrible disturbance therein, that no fish
exposed to the full violence of the storm could have
survived it!
“Wot a hobject!” exclaimed
Joe Dumsby, a short, thickset, little Englishman,
who, having been born and partly bred in London, was
rather addicted to what is styled chaffing. “Was
you arter a mermaid, shipmate?”
“Av coorse he was,” observed
Ned O’Connor, an Irishman, who was afflicted
with the belief that he was rather a witty fellow,
“av coorse he was, an’ a merry-maid she
must have bin to see a human spider like him kickin’
up such a dust in the say.”
“He’s like a drooned rotten,”
observed John Watt; “tak’ aff yer claes,
man, an’ wring them dry.”
“Let the poor fellow be, and
get along with you,” cried Peter Logan, the
foreman of the works, who came up at that moment.
With a few parting remarks and cautions,
such as,—“You’d better bring
a dry suit to the rock next time, lad,” “Take
care the crabs don’t make off with you, boy,”
“and don’t be gettin’ too fond o’
the girls in the sea,” &c., the men scattered
themselves over the rock and began their work in earnest,
while Forsyth, who took the chaffing in good part,
stripped himself and wrung the water out of his garments.
Episodes of this kind were not unfrequent,
and they usually furnished food for conversation at
the time, and for frequent allusion afterwards.
But it was not all sunshine and play, by any means.
Not long after Ruby joined, the fine
weather broke up, and a succession of stiff breezes,
with occasional storms, more or less violent, set
in. Landing on the rock became a matter of extreme
difficulty, and the short period of work was often
curtailed to little more than an hour each tide.
The rolling of the Pharos lightship,
too, became so great that sea-sickness prevailed to
a large extent among the landsmen. One good arose
out of this evil, however. Landing on the Bell
Rock invariably cured the sickness for a time, and
the sea-sick men had such an intense longing to eat
of the dulse that grew there, that they were always
ready and anxious to get into the boats when there
was the slightest possibility of landing.
Getting into the boats, by the way,
in a heavy sea, when the lightship was rolling violently,
was no easy matter. When the fine weather first
broke up, it happened about midnight, and the change
commenced with a stiff breeze from the eastward.
The sea rose at once, and, long before daybreak, the
Pharos was rolling heavily in the swell, and straining
violently at the strong cable which held her to her
moorings.
About dawn Mr. Stevenson came on deck.
He could not sleep, because he felt that on his shoulders
rested not only the responsibility of carrying this
gigantic work to a satisfactory conclusion, but also,
to a large extent, the responsibility of watching over
and guarding the lives of the people employed in the
service.
“Shall we be able to land to-day,
Mr. Wilson?” he said, accosting the master of
the Pharos, who has been already introduced
as the landing-master.
“I think so; the barometer has
not fallen much; and even although the wind should
increase a little, we can effect a landing by the Fair
Way, at Hope’s Wharf.”
“Very well, I leave it entirely
in your hands; you understand the weather better than
I do, but remember that I do not wish my men to run
unnecessary or foolish risk.”
It may be as well to mention here
that a small but exceedingly strong tramway of iron-grating
had been fixed to the Bell Rock at an elevation varying
from two to four feet above it, and encircling the
site of the building. This tramway or railroad
was narrow, not quite three feet in width; and small
trucks were fitted to it, so that the heavy stones
of the building might be easily run to the exact spot
they were to occupy. From this circular rail several
branch lines extended to the different creeks where
the boats deposited the stones. These lines,
although only a few yards in length, were dignified
with names—as, Kennedy’s Reach,
Lagan’s Reach, Watt’s Reach, and Slights
Reach. The ends of them, where they dipped
into the sea, were named Hope’s Wharf, Duff’s
Wharf, Rae’s Wharf, &c.; and these wharves
had been fixed on different sides of the rock, so
that, whatever wind should blow, there would always
be one of them on the lee-side available for the carrying
on of the work.
Hope’s Wharf was connected
with Port Erskine, a pool about twenty yards
long by three or four wide, and communicated with the
side of the lighthouse by Watt’s Reach,
a distance of about thirty yards.
About eight o’clock that morning
the bell rang for breakfast. Such of the men
as were not already up began to get out of their berths
and hammocks.
To Ruby the scene that followed was
very amusing. Hitherto all had been calm and
sunshine. The work, although severe while they
were engaged, had been of short duration, and the
greater part of each day had been afterwards spent
in light work, or in amusement. The summons to
meals had always been a joyful one, and the appetites
of the men were keenly set.
Now, all this was changed. The
ruddy faces of the men were become green, blue, yellow,
and purple, according to temperament, but few were
flesh-coloured or red. When the bell rang there
was a universal groan below, and half a dozen ghostlike
individuals raised themselves on their elbows and
looked up with expressions of the deepest woe at the
dim skylight. Most of them speedily fell back
again, however, partly owing to a heavy lurch of the
vessel, and partly owing to indescribable sensations
within.
“Blowin’!” groaned
one, as if that single word comprehended the essence
of all the miseries that seafaring man is heir to.
“O dear!” sighed another, “why did
I ever come here?”
“Och! murder, I’m dyin’,
send for the praist an’ me mother!” cried
O’Connor, as he fell flat down on his back and
pressed both hands tightly over his mouth.
The poor blacksmith lost control over
himself at this point and—found partial
relief!
The act tended to relieve others.
Most of the men were much too miserable to make any
remark at all, a few of them had not heart even to
groan; but five or six sat up on the edge of their
beds, with a weak intention of turning out They sat
there swaying about with the motions of the ship in
helpless indecision, until a tremendous roll sent
them flying, with unexpected violence, against the
starboard bulkheads.
“Come, lads,” cried Ruby,
leaping out of his hammock, “there’s nothing
like a vigorous jump to put sea-sickness to flight.”
“Humbug!” ejaculated Bremner,
who owned a little black dog, which lay at that time
on the pillow gazing into his master’s green
face, with wondering sympathy.
“Ah, Ruby,” groaned the
smith, “it’s all very well for a sea-dog
like you that’s used to it, but——”
James Dove stopped short abruptly.
It is not necessary to explain the cause of his abrupt
silence. Suffice it to say that he did not thereafter
attempt to finish that sentence.
“Steward!” roared Joe Dumsby.
“Ay, ay, shipmate, what’s
up?” cried the steward, who chanced to pass
the door of the men’s sleeping-place, with a
large dish of boiled salt pork, at the moment.
“Wot’s up?” echoed
Dumsby. “Everythink that ever went into
me since I was a hinfant must be ‘up’
by this time. I say, is there any chance of gettin’
on the rock to-day?”
“O yes. I heard the cap’n
say it would be quite easy, and they seem to be makin’
ready now, so if any of ’ee want breakfast you’d
better turn out.”
This speech acted like a shock of
electricity on the wretched men. In a moment
every bed was empty, and the place was in a bustle
of confusion as they hurriedly threw on their clothes.
Some of them even began to think of
the possibility of venturing on a hard biscuit and
a cup of tea, but a gust of wind sent the fumes of
the salt pork into the cabin at the moment, and the
mere idea of food filled them with unutterable loathing.
Presently the bell rang again.
This was the signal for the men to muster, the boats
being ready alongside. The whole crew at once
rushed on deck, some of them thrusting biscuits into
their pockets as they passed the steward’s quarters.
Not a man was absent on the roll being called.
Even the smith crawled on deck, and had spirit enough
left to advise Ruby not to forget the bellows; to which
Ruby replied by recommending his comrade not to forget
the matches.
Then the operation of embarking began.
The sea at the time was running pretty
high, with little white flecks of foam tipping the
crests of the deep blue waves. The eastern sky
was dark and threatening. The black ridges of
the Bell Rock were visible only at times in the midst
of the sea of foam that surrounded them. Anyone
ignorant of their nature would have deemed a landing
absolutely impossible.
The Pharos, as we have said,
was rolling violently from side to side, insomuch
that those who were in the boats had the greatest
difficulty in preventing them from being stove in;
and getting into these boats had much the appearance
of an exceedingly difficult and dangerous feat, which
active and reckless men might undertake for a wager.
But custom reconciles one to almost
anything. Most of the men had had sufficient
experience by that time to embark with comparative
ease. Nevertheless, there were a few whose physical
conformation was such that they could do nothing neatly.
Poor Forsyth was one of these.
Each man had to stand on the edge of the lightship,
outside the bulwarks, holding on to a rope, ready to
let go and drop into the boat when it rose up and met
the vessel’s roll. In order to facilitate
the operation a boat went to either side of the ship,
so that two men were always in the act of watching
for an opportunity to spring. The active men
usually got in at the first or second attempt, but
others missed frequently, and were of course “chaffed”
by their more fortunate comrades.
The embarking of “Long Forsyth”
was always a scene in rough weather, and many a narrow
escape had he of a ducking. On the present occasion,
being very sick, he was more awkward than usual.
“Now, Longlegs,” cried
the men who held the boat on the starboard side, as
Forsyth got over the side and stood ready to spring,
“let’s see how good you’ll be to-day.”
He was observed by Joe Dumsby, who
had just succeeded in getting into the boat on the
port side of the ship, and who always took a lively
interest in his tall comrade’s proceedings.
“Hallo! is that the spider?”
he cried, as the ship rolled towards him, and the
said spider appeared towering high on the opposite
bulwark, sharply depicted against the grey sky.
It was unfortunate for Joe that he
chanced to be on the opposite side from his friend,
for at each roll the vessel necessarily intervened
and hid him for a few seconds from view.
Next roll, Forsyth did not dare to
leap, although the gunwale of the boat came within
a foot of him. He hesitated, the moment was lost,
the boat sank into the hollow of the sea, and the man
was swung high into the air, where he was again caught
sight of by Dumsby.
“What! are you there yet?”
he cried. “You must be fond of a swing——”
Before he could say more the ship
rolled over to the other side, and Forsyth was hid
from view.
“Now, lad, now! now!”
shouted the boat’s crew, as the unhappy man
once more neared the gunwale.
Forsyth hesitated. Suddenly he
became desperate and sprang, but the hesitation gave
him a much higher fall than he would otherwise have
had; it caused him also to leap wildly in a sprawling
manner, so that he came down on the shoulders of his
comrades “all of a lump”. Fortunately
they were prepared for something of the sort, so that
no damage was done.
When the boats were at last filled
they pushed off and rowed towards the rock. On
approaching it the men were cautioned to pull steadily
by Mr. Stevenson, who steered the leading boat.
It was a standing order in the landing
department that every man should use his greatest
exertions in giving to the boats sufficient velocity
to preserve their steerage way in entering the respective
creeks at the rock, that the contending seas might
not overpower them at places where the free use of
the oars could not be had on account of the surrounding
rocks or the masses of seaweed with which the water
was everywhere encumbered at low tide. This order
had been thoroughly impressed upon the men, as carelessness
or inattention to it might have proved fatal to all
on board.
As the leading boat entered the fairway,
its steersman saw that more than ordinary caution
would be necessary; for the great green billows that
thundered to windward of the rock came sweeping down
on either side of it, and met on the lee side, where
they swept onward with considerable, though much abated
force.
“Mind your oars, lads; pull
steady,” said Mr. Stevenson, as they began to
get amongst the seaweed.
The caution was unnecessary as far
as the old hands were concerned; but two of the men
happened to be new hands, who had come off with Ruby,
and did not fully appreciate the necessity of strict
obedience. One of these, sitting at the bow oar,
looked over his shoulder, and saw a heavy sea rolling
towards the boat, and inadvertently expressed some
fear. The other man, on hearing this, glanced
round, and in doing so missed a stroke of his oar.
Such a preponderance was thus given to the rowers
on the opposite side, that when the wave struck the
boat, it caught her on the side instead of the bow,
and hurled her upon a ledge of shelving rocks, where
the water left her. Having been kanted
to seaward, the next billow completely filled her,
and, of course, drenched the crew.
Instantly Ruby Brand and one or two
of the most active men leaped out, and, putting forth
all their strength, turned the boat round so as to
meet the succeeding sea with its bow first. Then,
after making considerable efforts, they pushed her
off into deep water, and finally made the landing-place.
The other boat could render no assistance; but, indeed,
the whole thing was the work of a few minutes.
As the boats could not conveniently
leave the rock till flood-tide, all hands set to work
with unwonted energy in order to keep themselves warm,
not, however, before they ate heartily of their favourite
dulse—the blacksmith being conspicuous for
the voracious manner in which he devoured it.
Soon the bellows were set up; the
fire was kindled, and the ring of the anvil heard;
but poor Dove and Ruby had little pleasure in their
work that day; for the wind blew the smoke and sparks
about their faces, and occasionally a higher wave
than ordinary sent the spray flying round them, to
the detriment of their fire. Nevertheless they
plied the hammer and bellows unceasingly.
The other men went about their work
with similar disregard of the fury of the elements
and the wet condition of their garments.