THE RISING OF THE TIDE—A NARROW ESCAPE
The portion of the work that Mr. Stevenson
was now most anxious to get advanced was the beacon.
The necessity of having an erection
of this kind was very obvious, for, in the event of
anything happening to the boats, there would be no
refuge for the men to fly to; and the tide would probably
sweep them all away before their danger could be known,
or assistance sent from the attendant vessels.
Every man felt that his personal safety might depend
on the beacon during some period of the work.
The energies of all, therefore, were turned to the
preliminary arrangements for its erection.
As the beacon would require to withstand
the utmost fury of the elements during all seasons
of the year, it was necessary that it should be possessed
of immense strength.
In order to do this, six cuttings
were made in the rock for the reception of the ends
of the six great beams of the beacon. Each beam
was to be fixed to the solid rock by two strong and
massive bats, or stanchions, of iron. These bats,
for the fixing of the principal and diagonal beams
and bracing chains, required fifty-four holes, each
measuring a foot and a half deep, and two inches wide.
The operation of boring such holes into the solid
rock, was not an easy or a quick one, but by admirable
arrangements on the part of the engineer, and steady
perseverance on the part of the men, they progressed
faster than had been anticipated.
Three men were attached to each jumper,
or boring chisel; one placed himself in a sitting
posture, to guide the instrument, and give it a turn
at each blow of the hammer; he also sponged and cleaned
out the hole, and supplied it occasionally with a
little water, while the other two, with hammers of
sixteen pounds weight, struck the jumper alternately,
generally bringing the hammer with a swing round the
shoulder, after the manner of blacksmith work.
Ruby, we may remark in passing, occupied
himself at this work as often as he could get away
from his duties at the forge, being particularly fond
of it, as it enabled him to get rid of some of his
superabundant energy, and afforded him a suitable exercise
for his gigantic strength. It also tended to
relieve his feelings when he happened to think of
Minnie being so near, and he so utterly and hopelessly
cut off from all communication with her.
But to return to the bat-holes.
The three men relieved each other in the operations
of wielding the hammers and guiding the jumpers, so
that the work never flagged for a moment, and it was
found that when the tools were of a very good temper,
these holes could be sunk at the rate of one inch
per minute, including stoppages. But the tools
were not always of good temper; and severely was poor
Dove’s temper tried by the frequency of the
scolds which he received from the men, some of whom
were clumsy enough, Dove said, to spoil the best tempered
tool in the world.
But the most tedious part of the operation
did not lie in the boring of these holes. In
order that they should be of the required shape, two
holes had to be bored a few inches apart from each
other, and the rock cut away from between them.
It was this latter part of the work that took up most
time.
Those of the men who were not employed
about the beacon were working at the foundation-pit.
While the party were thus busily occupied
on the Bell Rock, an event occurred which rendered
the importance of the beacon, if possible, more obvious
than ever, and which wellnigh put an end to the career
of all those who were engaged on the rock at that time.
The Pharos floating light lay
at a distance of above two miles from the Bell Rock;
but one of the smaller vessels, the sloop Smeaton,
lay much closer to it, and some of the artificers were
berthed aboard of her, instead of the floating light.
Some time after the landing of the
two boats from the Pharos, the Smeaton’s
boat put off and landed eight men on the rock; soon
after which the crew of the boat pushed off and returned
to the Smeaton to examine her riding-ropes,
and see that they were in good order, for the wind
was beginning to increase, and the sea to rise.
The boat had no sooner reached the
vessel than the latter began to drift, carrying the
boat along with her. Instantly those on board
endeavoured to hoist the mainsail of the Smeaton, with
the view of working her up to the buoy from which
she had parted; but it blew so hard, that by the time
she was got round to make a tack towards the rock,
she had drifted at least three miles to leeward.
The circumstance of the Smeaton
and her boat having drifted was observed first by
Mr. Stevenson, who prudently refrained from drawing
attention to the fact, and walked slowly to the farther
point of the rock to watch her. He was quickly
followed by the landing-master, who touched him on
the shoulder, and in perfect silence, but with a look
of intense anxiety, pointed to the vessel.
“I see it, Wilson. God
help us if she fails to make the rock within a very
short time,” said Mr. Stevenson.
“She will never reach
us in time,” said Wilson, in a tone that convinced
his companion he entertained no hope.
“Perhaps she may,” he
said hurriedly; “she is a good sailer.”
“Good sailing,” replied
the other, “cannot avail against wind and tide
together. No human power can bring that vessel
to our aid until long after the tide has covered the
Bell Rock.”
Both remained silent for some time,
watching with intense anxiety the ineffectual efforts
of the little vessel to beat up to windward.
In a few minutes the engineer turned
to his companion and said, “They cannot save
us, Wilson. The two boats that are left—can
they hold us all?”
The landing-master shook his head.
“The two boats,” said he, “will be
completely filled by their own crews. For ordinary
rough weather they would be quite full enough.
In a sea like that,” he said, pointing to the
angry waves that were being gradually lashed into foam
by the increasing wind, “they will be overloaded.”
“Come, I don’t know that,
Wilson; we may devise something,” said Mr. Stevenson,
with a forced air of confidence, as he moved slowly
towards the place where the men were still working,
busy as bees and all unconscious of the perilous circumstances
in which they were placed.
As the engineer pondered the prospect
of deliverance, his thoughts led him rather to despair
than to hope. There were thirty-two persons in
all upon the rock that day, with only two boats, which,
even in good weather, could not unitedly accommodate
more than twenty-four sitters. But to row to
the floating light with so much wind and in so heavy
a sea, a complement of eight men for each boat was
as much as could with propriety be attempted, so that
about half of their number was thus unprovided for.
Under these circumstances he felt that to despatch
one of the boats in expectation of either working the
Smeaton sooner up to the rock, or in hopes of getting
her boat brought to their assistance would, besides
being useless, at once alarm the workmen, each of
whom would probably insist upon taking to his own
boat, and leaving the eight men of the Smeaton to their
chance. A scuffle might ensue, and he knew well
that when men are contending for life the results
may be very disastrous.
For a considerable time the men remained
in ignorance of terrible conflict that was going on
in their commander’s breast. As they wrought
chiefly in sitting or kneeling postures, excavating
the rock or boring with jumpers, their attention was
naturally diverted from everything else around them.
The dense volumes of smoke, too, that rose from the
forge fire, so enveloped them as to render distant
objects dim or altogether invisible.
While this lasted,—while
the numerous hammers were going and the anvil continued
to sound, the situation of things did not appear so
awful to the only two who were aware of what had occurred.
But ere long the tide began to rise upon those who
were at work on the lower parts of the beacon and
lighthouse. From the run of the sea upon the
rock, the forge fire was extinguished sooner than usual;
the volumes of smoke cleared away, and objects became
visible in every direction.
After having had about three hours’
work, the men began pretty generally to make towards
their respective boats for their jackets and socks.
Then it was that they made the discovery
that one boat was absent.
Only a few exclamations were uttered.
A glance at the two boats and a hurried gaze to seaward
were sufficient to acquaint them with their awful
position. Not a word was spoken by anyone.
All appeared to be silently calculating their numbers,
and looking at each other with evident marks of perplexity
depicted in their countenances. The landing-master,
conceiving that blame might attach to him for having
allowed the boat to leave the rock, kept a little apart
from the men.
All eyes were turned, as if by instinct,
to Mr. Stevenson. The men seemed to feel that
the issue lay with him.
The engineer was standing on an elevated
part of the rock named Smith’s Ledge, gazing
in deep anxiety at the distant Smeaton, in
the hope that he might observe some effort being made,
at least, to pull the boat to their rescue.
Slowly but surely the tide rose, overwhelming
the lower parts of the rock; sending each successive
wave nearer and nearer to the feet of those who were
now crowded on the last ledge that could afford them
standing-room.
The deep silence that prevailed was
awful! It proved that each mind saw clearly the
impossibility of anything being devised, and that a
deadly struggle for precedence was inevitable.
Mr. Stevenson had all along been rapidly
turning over in his mind various schemes which might
be put in practice for the general safety, provided
the men could be kept under command. He accordingly
turned to address them on the perilous nature of their
circumstances; intending to propose that all hands
should strip off their upper clothing when the higher
parts of the rock should be laid under water; that
the seamen should remove every unnecessary weight and
encumbrance from the boats; that a specified number
of men should go into each boat; and that the remainder
should hang by the gunwales, while the boats were
to be rowed gently towards the Smeaton, as the
course to the floating light lay rather to windward
of the rock.
But when he attempted to give utterance
to his thoughts the words refused to come. So
powerful an effect had the awful nature of their position
upon him, that his parched tongue could not articulate.
He learned, from terrible experience, that saliva
is as necessary to speech as the tongue itself.
Stooping hastily, he dipped his hand into a pool of
salt water and moistened his mouth. This produced
immediate relief and he was about to speak, when Ruby
Brand, who had stood at his elbow all the time with
compressed lips and a stern frown on his brow, suddenly
took off his cap, and waving it above his head, shouted
“A boat! a boat!” with all the power of
his lungs.
All eyes were at once turned in the
direction to which he pointed, and there, sure enough,
a large boat was seen through the haze, making towards
the rock.
Doubtless many a heart there swelled
with gratitude to God, who had thus opportunely and
most unexpectedly sent them relief at the eleventh
hour; but the only sound that escaped them was a cheer,
such as men seldom give or hear save in eases of deliverance
in times of dire extremity.
The boat belonged to James Spink,
the Bell Rock pilot, who chanced to have come off
express from Arbroath that day with letters.
We have said that Spink came off by
chance; but, when we consider all the circumstances
of the case, and the fact that boats seldom visited
the Bell Rock at any time, and never during bad weather,
we are constrained to feel that God does in His mercy
interfere sometimes in a peculiar and special manner
in human affairs, and that there was something more
and higher than mere chance in the deliverance of
Stevenson and his men upon this occasion.
The pilot-boat, having taken on board
as many as it could hold, set sail for the floating
light; the other boats then put off from the rock
with the rest of the men, but they did not reach the
Pharos until after a long and weary pull of
three hours, during which the waves broke over the
boats so frequently as to necessitate constant baling.
When the floating light was at last
reached, a new difficulty met them, for the vessel
rolled so much, and the men were so exhausted, that
it proved to be a work of no little toil and danger
to get them all on board.
Long Forsyth, in particular, cost
them all an infinite amount of labour, for he was
so sick, poor fellow, that he could scarcely move.
Indeed, he did at one time beg them earnestly to drop
him into the sea and be done with him altogether,
a request with which they of course refused to comply.
However, he was got up somehow, and the whole of them
were comforted by a glass of rum and thereafter a cup
of hot coffee.
Ruby had the good fortune to obtain
the additional comfort of a letter from Minnie, which,
although it did not throw much light on the proceedings
of Captain Ogilvy (for that sapient seaman’s
proceedings were usually involved in a species of obscurity
which light could not penetrate), nevertheless assured
him that something was being done in his behalf, and
that, if he only kept quiet for a time, all would
be well.
The letter also assured him of the
unalterable affection of the writer, an assurance
which caused him to rejoice to such an extent that
he became for a time perfectly regardless of all other
sublunary things, and even came to look upon the Bell
Rock as a species of paradise, watched over by the
eye of an angel with golden hair, in which he could
indulge his pleasant dreams to the utmost.
That he had to indulge those dreams
in the midst of storm and rain and smoke, surrounded
by sea and seaweed, workmen and hammers, and forges
and picks, and jumpers and seals, while his strong
muscles and endurance were frequently tried to the
uttermost, was a matter of no moment to Ruby Brand.
All experience goes to prove that
great joy will utterly overbear the adverse influence
of physical troubles, especially if those troubles
are without, and do not touch the seats of life within.
Minnie’s love, expressed as it was in her own
innocent, truthful, and straightforward way, rendered
his body, big though it was, almost incapable of containing
his soul. He pulled the oar, hammered the jumper,
battered the anvil, tore at the bellows, and hewed
the solid Bell Rock with a vehemence that aroused
the admiration of his comrades, and induced Jamie
Dove to pronounce him to be the best fellow the world
ever produced.