THE BELL ROCK AGAIN—A DREARY NIGHT IN A STRANGE HABITATION
During that winter Ruby Brand wrought
diligently in the workyard at the lighthouse materials,
and, by living economically, began to save a small
sum of money, which he laid carefully by with a view
to his marriage with Minnie Gray.
Being an impulsive man, Ruby would
have married Minnie, then and there, without looking
too earnestly to the future. But his mother had
advised him to wait till he should have laid by a little
for a “rainy day”. The captain had
recommended patience, tobacco, and philosophy, and
had enforced his recommendations with sundry apt quotations
from dead and living novelists, dramatists, and poets.
Minnie herself, poor girl, felt that she ought not
to run counter to the wishes of her best and dearest
friends, so she too advised delay for a “little
time”; and Ruby was fain to content himself with
bewailing his hard lot internally, and knocking Jamie
Dove’s bellows, anvils, and sledge-hammers about
in a way that induced that son of Vulcan to believe
his assistant had gone mad!
As for big Swankie, he hid his ill-gotten
gains under the floor of his tumble-down cottage,
and went about his evil courses as usual in company
with his comrade Davy Spink, who continued to fight
and make it up with him as of yore.
It must not be supposed that Ruby
forgot the conversation he had overheard in the Gaylet
Cove. He and Minnie and his uncle had frequent
discussions in regard to it, but to little purpose;
for although Swankie and Spink had discovered old
Mr. Brand’s body on the Bell Rock, it did not
follow that any jewels or money they had found there
were necessarily his. Still Ruby could not divest
his mind of the feeling that there was some connexion
between the two, and he was convinced, from what had
fallen from Davy Spink about “silver teapots
and things”, that Swankie was the man of whose
bad deeds he himself had been suspected.
As there seemed no possibility of
bringing the matter home to him, however, he resolved
to dismiss the whole affair from his mind in the meantime.
Things were very much in this state
when, in the spring, the operations at the Bell Bock
were resumed.
Jamie Dove, Ruby, Robert Selkirk,
and several of the principal workmen, accompanied
the engineers on their first visit to the rock, and
they sailed towards the scene of their former labours
with deep and peculiar interest, such as one might
feel on renewing acquaintance with an old friend who
had passed through many hard and trying struggles
since the last time of meeting.
The storms of winter had raged round
the Bell Rock as usual—as they had done,
in fact, since the world began; but that winter the
handiwork of man had also been exposed to the fury
of the elements there. It was known that the
beacon had survived the storms, for it could be seen
by telescope from the shore in clear weather—like
a little speck on the seaward horizon. Now they
were about to revisit the old haunt, and have a close
inspection of the damage that it was supposed must
certainly have been done.
To the credit of the able engineer
who planned and carried out the whole works, the beacon
was found to have resisted winds and waves successfully.
It was on a bitterly cold morning
about the end of March that the first visit of the
season was paid to the Bell Rock. Mr. Stevenson
and his party of engineers and artificers sailed in
the lighthouse yacht; and, on coming within a proper
distance of the rock, two boats were lowered and pushed
off. The sea ran with such force upon the rock
that it seemed doubtful whether a landing could be
effected. About half-past eight, when the rock
was fairly above water, several attempts were made
to land, but the breach of the sea was still so great
that they were driven back.
On the eastern side the sea separated
into two distinct waves, which came with a sweep round
the western side, where they met, and rose in a burst
of spray to a considerable height. Watching, however,
for what the sailors termed a smooth, and catching
a favourable opportunity, they rowed between the two
seas dexterously, and made a successful landing at
the western creek.
The sturdy beacon was then closely
examined. It had been painted white at the end
of the previous season, but the lower parts of the
posts were found to have become green—the
sea having clothed them with a soft garment of weed.
The sea-birds had evidently imagined that it was put
up expressly for their benefit; for a number of cormorants
and large herring-gulls had taken up their quarters
on it—finding it, no doubt, conveniently
near to their fishing-grounds.
A critical inspection of all its parts
showed that everything about it was in a most satisfactory
state. There was not the slightest indication
of working or shifting in the great iron stanchions
with which the beams were fixed, nor of any of the
joints or places of connexion; and, excepting some
of the bracing-chains which had been loosened, everything
was found in the same entire state in which it had
been left the previous season.
Only those who know what that beacon
had been subjected to can form a correct estimate
of the importance of this discovery, and the amount
of satisfaction it afforded to those most interested
in the works at the Bell Rock. To say that the
party congratulated themselves would be far short
of the reality. They hailed the event with cheers,
and their looks seemed to indicate that some piece
of immense and unexpected good fortune had befallen
each individual.
From that moment Mr. Stevenson saw
the practicability and propriety of fitting up the
beacon, not only as a place of refuge in case of accidents
to the boats in landing, but as a residence for the
men during the working months.
From that moment, too, poor Jamie
Dove began to see the dawn of happier days; for when
the beacon should be fitted up as a residence he would
bid farewell to the hated floating light, and take
up his abode, as ho expressed it, “on land”.
“On land!” It is probable
that this Jamie Dove was the first man, since the
world began, who had entertained the till then absurdly
preposterous notion that the fatal Bell Rock was “land”,
or that it could be made a place of even temporary
residence.
A hundred years ago men would have
laughed at the bare idea. Fifty years ago that
idea was realized; for more than half a century that
sunken reef has been, and still is, the safe and comfortable
home of man!
Forgive, reader, our tendency to anticipate.
Let us proceed with our inspection.
Having ascertained that the foundations
of the beacon were all right, the engineers next ascended
to the upper parts, where they found the cross-beams
and their fixtures in an equally satisfactory condition.
On the top a strong chest had been
fixed the preceding season, in which had been placed
a quantity of sea-biscuits and several bottles of
water, in case of accident to the boats, or in the
event of shipwreck occurring on the rock. The
biscuit, having been carefully placed in tin canisters,
was found in good condition, but several of the water-bottles
had burst, in consequence, it was supposed, of frost
during the winter. Twelve of the bottles, however,
remained entire, so that the Bell Rock may be said
to have been transformed, even at that date, from
a point of destruction into a place of comparative
safety.
While the party were thus employed,
the landing-master reminded them that the sea was
running high, and that it would be necessary to set
off while the rock afforded anything like shelter to
the boats, which by that time had been made fast to
the beacon and rode with much agitation, each requiring
two men with boat-hooks to keep them from striking
each other, or ranging up against the beacon.
But under these circumstances the greatest confidence
was felt by everyone, from the security afforded by
that temporary erection; for, supposing that the wind
had suddenly increased to a gale, and that it had been
found inadvisable to go into the boats; or supposing
they had drifted or sprung a leak from striking upon
the rocks, in any of these possible, and not at all
improbable, cases, they had now something to lay hold
of, and, though occupying the dreary habitation of
the gull and the cormorant, affording only bread and
water, yet life would be preserved, and, under
the circumstances, they would have been supported
by the hope of being ultimately relieved.
Soon after this the works at the Bell
Rock were resumed, with, if possible, greater vigour
than before, and ere long the “house” was
fixed to the top of the beacon, and the engineer and
his men took up their abode there.
Think of this, reader. Six great
wooden beams were fastened to a rock, over which the
waves roared twice everyday, and on the top of these
a pleasant little marine residence was nailed, as one
might nail a dove-cot on the top of a pole!
This residence was ultimately fitted
up in such a way as to become a comparatively comfortable
and commodious abode. It contained four storeys.
The first was the mortar-gallery, where the mortar
for the lighthouse was mixed as required; it also
supported the forge. The second was the cook-room.
The third the apartment of the engineer and his assistants;
and the fourth was the artificer’s barrack-room.
This house was of course built of wood, but it was
firmly put together, for it had to pass through many
a terrific ordeal.
In order to give some idea of the
interior, we shall describe the cabin of Mr. Stevenson.
It measured four feet three inches in breadth on the
floor, and though, from the oblique direction of the
beams of the beacon, it widened towards the top, yet
it did not admit of the full extension of the occupant’s
arms when he stood on the floor. Its length was
little more than sufficient to admit of a cot-bed being
suspended during the night. This cot was arranged
so as to be triced up to the roof during the day,
thus leaving free room for occasional visitors, and
for comparatively free motion, A folding table was
attached with hinges immediately under the small window
of the apartment. The remainder of the space
was fitted up with books, barometer, thermometer,
portmanteau, and two or three camp-stools.
The walls were covered with green
cloth, formed into panels with red tape, a substance
which, by the way, might have had an accidental
connexion with the Bell Rock Lighthouse, but which
could not, by any possibility, have influenced it
as a principle, otherwise that building would
probably never have been built, or, if built, would
certainly not have stood until the present day!
The bed was festooned with yellow cotton stuff, and
the diet being plain, the paraphernalia of the table
was proportionally simple.
It would have been interesting to
know the individual books required and used by the
celebrated engineer in his singular abode, but his
record leaves no detailed account of these. It
does, however, contain a sentence in regard to one
volume which we deem it just to his character to quote.
He writes thus:—
“If, in speculating upon the
abstract wants of man in such a state of exclusion,
one were reduced to a single book, the Sacred Volume,
whether considered for the striking diversity of its
story, the morality of its doctrine, or the important
truths of its gospel, would have proved by far the
greatest treasure.”
It may be easily imagined that in
a place where the accommodation of the principal engineer
was so limited, that of the men was not extensive.
Accordingly, we find that the barrack-room contained
beds for twenty-one men.
But the completion of the beacon house,
as we have described it, was not accomplished in one
season. At first it was only used as a smith’s
workshop, and then as a temporary residence in fine
weather.
One of the first men who remained
all night upon it was our friend Bremner. He
became so tired of the floating light that he earnestly
solicited, and obtained, permission to remain on the
beacon.
At the time it was only in a partially
sheltered state. The joiners had just completed
the covering of the roof with a quantity of tarpaulin,
which the seamen had laid over with successive coats
of hot tar, and the sides of the erection had been
painted with three coats of white lead. Between
the timber framing of the habitable part, the interstices
were stuffed with moss, but the green baize cloth
with which it was afterwards lined had not been put
on when Bremner took possession.
It was a splendid summer evening when
the bold man made his request, and obtained permission
to remain. None of the others would join him.
When the boats pushed off and left him the solitary
occupant of the rock, he felt a sensation of uneasiness,
but, having formed his resolution, he stuck by it,
and bade his comrades good night cheerfully.
“Good night, and goodbye,”
cried Forsyth, as he took his seat at the oar.
“Farewell, dear,” cried
O’Connor, wiping his eyes with a very
ragged pocket handkerchief.
“You won’t forget me?” retorted
Bremner.
“Never,” replied Dumsby, with fervour.
“Av the beacon should be carried
away, darlin’,” cried O’Connor,
“howld tight to the provision-chest, p’raps
ye’ll be washed ashore.”
“I’ll drink your health in water, Paddy,”
replied Bremner.
“Faix, I hope it won’t be salt wather,”
retorted Ned.
They continued to shout good wishes,
warnings, and advice to their comrade until out of
hearing, and then waved adieu to him until he was
lost to view.
We have said that Bremner was alone,
yet he was not entirely so; he had a comrade with
him, in the shape of his little black dog, to which
reference has already been made. This creature
was of that very thin and tight-skinned description
of dog, that trembles at all times as if afflicted
with chronic cold, summer and winter. Its thin
tail was always between its extremely thin legs, as
though it lived in a perpetual condition of wrong-doing,
and were in constant dread of deserved punishment.
Yet no dog ever belied its looks more than did this
one, for it was a good dog, and a warmhearted dog,
and never did a wicked thing, and never was punished,
so that its excessive humility and apparent fear and
trembling were quite unaccountable. Like all
dogs of its class it was passionately affectionate,
and intensely grateful for the smallest favour.
In fact, it seemed to be rather thankful than otherwise
for a kick when it chanced to receive one, and a pat
on the head, or a kind word made it all but jump out
of its black skin for very joy.
Bremner called it “Pup”.
It had no other name, and didn’t seem to wish
for one. On the present occasion it was evidently
much perplexed, and very unhappy, for it looked at
the boat, and then wistfully into its master’s
face, as if to say, “This is awful; have you
resolved that we shall perish together?”
“Now, Pup,” said Bremner,
when the boat disappeared in the shades of evening,
“you and I are left alone on the Bell Rock!”
There was a touch of sad uncertainty
in the wag of the tail with which Pup received this
remark.
“But cheer up, Pup,” cried
Bremner with a sudden burst of animation that induced
the creature to wriggle and dance on its hind legs
for at least a minute, “you and I shall have
a jolly night together on the beacon; so come along.”
Like many a night that begins well,
that particular night ended ill. Even while the
man spoke, a swell began to rise, and, as the tide
had by that time risen a few feet, an occasional billow
swept over the rocks and almost washed the feet of
Bremner as he made his way over the ledges. In
five minutes the sea was rolling all round the foot
of the beacon, and Bremner and his friend were safely
ensconced on the mortar-gallery.
There was no storm that night, nevertheless
there was one of those heavy ground swells that are
of common occurrence in the German Ocean.
It is supposed that this swell is
caused by distant westerly gales in the Atlantic,
which force an undue quantity of water into the North
Sea, and thus produce the apparent paradox of great
rolling breakers in calm weather.
On this night there was no wind at
all, but there was a higher swell than usual, so that
each great billow passed over the rock with a roar
that was rendered more than usually terrible, in consequence
of the utter absence of all other sounds.
At first Bremner watched the rising
tide, and as he sat up there in the dark he felt himself
dreadfully forsaken and desolate, and began to comment
on things in general to his dog, by way of inducing
a more sociable and cheery state of mind.
“Pup, this is a lugubrious state
o’ things. Wot d’ye think o’t?”
Pup did not say, but he expressed
such violent joy at being noticed, that he nearly
fell off the platform of the mortar-gallery in one
of his extravagant gyrations.
“That won’t do, Pup,”
said Bremner, shaking his head at the creature, whose
countenance expressed deep contrition. “Don’t
go on like that, else you’ll fall into the sea
and be drownded, and then I shall be left alone.
What a dark night it is, to be sure! I doubt if
it was wise of me to stop here. Suppose the beacon
were to be washed away?”
Bremner paused, and Pup wagged his
tail interrogatively, as though to say, “What
then?”
“Ah! it’s of no use supposin’,”
continued the man slowly. “The beacon has
stood it out all winter, and it ain’t likely
it’s goin’ to be washed away to-night.
But suppose I was to be took bad?”
Again the dog seemed to demand, “What then?”
“Well, that’s not very
likely either, for I never was took bad in my life
since I took the measles, and that’s more than
twenty years ago. Come, Pup, don’t let
us look at the black side o’ things, let us try
to be cheerful, my dog. Hallo!”
The exclamation was caused by the
appearance of a green billow, which in the uncertain
light seemed to advance in a threatening attitude
towards the beacon as if to overwhelm it, but it fell
at some distance, and only rolled in a churning sea
of milky foam among the posts, and sprang up and licked
the beams, as a serpent might do before swallowing
them.
“Come, it was the light deceived
me. If I go for to start at every wave like that
I’ll have a poor night of it, for the tide has
a long way to rise yet. Let’s go and have
a bit supper, lad.”
Bremner rose from the anvil, on which
he had seated himself, and went up the ladder into
the cook-house above. Here all was pitch dark,
owing to the place being enclosed all round, which
the mortar-gallery was not, but a light was soon struck,
a lamp trimmed, and the fire in the stove kindled.
Bremner now busied himself in silently
preparing a cup of tea, which, with a quantity of
sea-biscuit, a little cold salt pork, and a hunch
of stale bread, constituted his supper. Pup watched
his every movement with an expression of earnest solicitude,
combined with goodwill, in his sharp intelligent eyes.
When supper was ready Pup had his
share, then, feeling that the duties of the day were
now satisfactorily accomplished, he coiled himself
up at his master’s feet, and went to sleep.
His master rolled himself up in a rug, and lying down
before the fire, also tried to sleep, but without
success for a long time.
As he lay there counting the number
of seconds of awful silence that elapsed between the
fall of each successive billow, and listening to the
crash and the roar as wave after wave rushed underneath
him, and caused his habitation to tremble, he could
not avoid feeling alarmed in some degree. Do
what he would, the thought of the wrecks that had
taken place there, the shrieks that must have often
rung above these rocks, and the dead and mangled bodies
that must have lain among them, would obtrude
upon him and banish sleep from his eyes.
At last he became somewhat accustomed
to the rush of waters and the tremulous motion of
the beacon. His frame, too, exhausted by a day
of hard toil, refused to support itself, and he sank
into slumber. But it was not unbroken. A
falling cinder from the sinking fire would awaken
him with a start; a larger wave than usual would cause
him to spring up and look round in alarm; or a shrieking
sea-bird, as it swooped past, would induce a dream,
in which the cries of drowning men arose, causing
him to awake with a cry that set Pup barking furiously.
Frequently during that night, after
some such dream, Bremner would get up and descend
to the mortar-gallery to see that all was right there.
He found the waves always hissing below, but the starry
sky was calm and peaceful above, so he returned to
his couch comforted a little, and fell again into
a troubled sleep, to be again awakened by frightful
dreams of dreadful sights, and scenes of death and
danger on the sea.
Thus the hours wore slowly away.
As the tide fell the noise of waves retired a little
from the beacon, and the wearied man and dog sank
gradually at last into deep, untroubled slumber.
So deep was it, that they did not
hear the increasing noise of the gulls as they wheeled
round the beacon after having breakfasted near it;
so deep, that they did not feel the sun as it streamed
through an opening in the woodwork and glared on their
respective faces; so deep, that they were ignorant
of the arrival of the boats with the workmen, and
were dead to the shouts of their companions, until
one of them, Jamie Dove, put his head up the hatchway
and uttered one of his loudest roars, close to their
ears.
Then indeed Bremner rose up and looked
bewildered, and Pup, starting up, barked as furiously
as if its own little black body had miraculously become
the concentrated essence of all the other noisy dogs
in the wide world rolled into one!