LIFE IN THE BEACON—STORY OF THE EDDYSTONE LIGHTHOUSE
Some time after this a number of the
men took up their permanent abode in the beacon house,
and the work was carried on by night as well as by
day, when the state of the tide and the weather permitted.
Immense numbers of fish called poddlies
were discovered to be swimming about at high water.
So numerous were they, that the rock was sometimes
hidden by the shoals of them. Fishing for these
thenceforth became a pastime among the men, who not
only supplied their own table with fresh fish, but
at times sent presents of them to their friends in
the vessels.
All the men who dwelt on the beacon
were volunteers, for Mr. Stevenson felt that it would
be cruel to compel men to live at such a post of danger.
Those who chose, therefore, remained in the lightship
or the tender, and those who preferred it went to the
beacon. It is scarcely necessary to add, that
among the latter were found all the “sea-sick
men!”
These bold artificers were not long
of having their courage tested. Soon after their
removal to the beacon they experienced some very rough
weather, which shook the posts violently, and caused
them to twist in a most unpleasant way.
But it was not until some time after
that a storm arose, which caused the stoutest-hearted
of them all to quail more than once.
It began on the night of as fine a
day as they had had the whole season.
In order that the reader may form
a just conception of what we are about to describe,
it may not be amiss to note the state of things at
the rock, and the employment of the men at the time.
A second forge had been put up on
the higher platform of the beacon, but the night before
that of which we write, the lower platform had been
burst up by a wave, and the mortar and forge thereon,
with all the implements, were cast down. The
damaged forge was therefore set up for the time on
its old site, near the foundation-pit of the lighthouse,
while the carpenters were busy repairing the mortar-gallery.
The smiths were as usual busy sharpening
picks and irons, and making bats and stanchions, and
other iron work connected with the building operations.
The landing-master’s crew were occupied in assisting
the millwrights to lay the railways to hand, and joiners
were kept almost constantly employed in fitting picks
to their handles, which latter were very frequently
broken.
Nearly all the miscellaneous work
was done by seamen. There was no such character
on the Bell Rock as the common labourer. The sailors
cheerfully undertook the work usually performed by
such men, and they did it admirably.
In consequence of the men being able
to remain on the beacon, the work went on literally
“by double tides”; and at night the rock
was often ablaze with torches, while the artificers
wrought until the waves drove them away.
On the night in question there was
a low spring-tide, so that a night-tide’s work
of five hours was secured. This was one of the
longest spells they had had since the beginning of
the operations.
The stars shone brightly in a very
dark sky. Not a breath of air was felt.
Even the smoke of the forge fire rose perpendicularly
a short way, until an imperceptible zephyr wafted
it gently to the west. Yet there was a heavy
swell rolling in from the eastward, which caused enormous
waves to thunder on Ralph the Rover’s Ledge,
as if they would drive down the solid rock.
Mingled with this solemn, intermittent
roar of the sea was the continuous clink of picks,
chisels, and hammers, and the loud clang of the two
forges; that on the beacon being distinctly different
from the other, owing to the wooden erection on which
it stood rendering it deep and thunderous. Torches
and forge fires cast a glare over all, rendering the
foam pale green and the rocks deep red. Some of
the active figures at work stood out black and sharp
against the light, while others shone in its blaze
like red-hot fiends. Above all sounded an occasional
cry from the sea-gulls, as they swooped down into
the magic circle of light, and then soared away shrieking
into darkness.
“Hard work’s not easy,”
observed James Dove, pausing in the midst of his labours
to wipe his brow.
“True for ye; but as we’ve
got to arn our brid be the sweat of our brows, we’re
in the fair way to fortin,” said Ned O’Connor,
blowing away energetically with the big bellows.
Ned had been reappointed to this duty
since the erection of the second forge, which was
in Ruby’s charge. It was our hero’s
hammer that created such a din up in the beacon, while
Dove wrought down on the rock.
“We’ll have a gale to-night,”
said the smith; “I know that by the feelin’
of the air.”
“Well, I can’t boast o’
much knowledge o’ feelin’,” said
O’Connor; “but I believe you’re
right, for the fish towld me the news this mornin’.”
This remark of Ned had reference to
a well-ascertained fact, that, when a storm was coming,
the fish invariably left the neighbourhood of the
rock; doubtless in order to seek the security of depths
which are not affected by winds or waves.
While Dove and his comrade commented
on this subject, two of the other men had retired
to the south-eastern end of the rock to take a look
at the weather. These were Peter Logan, the foreman,
whose position required him to have a care for the
safety of the men as well as for the progress of the
work, and our friend Bremner, who had just descended
from the cooking-room, where he had been superintending
the preparation of supper.
“It will be a stiff breeze,
I fear, to-night,” said Logan.
“D’ye think so?”
said Bremner; “it seems to me so calm that I
would think a storm a’most impossible.
But the fish never tell lies.”
“True. You got no fish to-day, I believe?”
said Logan.
“Not a nibble,” replied the other.
As he spoke, he was obliged to rise
from a rock on which he had seated himself, because
of a large wave, which, breaking on the outer reefs,
sent the foam a little closer to his toes than was
agreeable.
“That was a big one, but yonder is a bigger,”
cried Logan.
The wave to which he referred was
indeed a majestic wall of water. It came on with
such an awful appearance of power, that some of the
men who perceived it could not repress a cry of astonishment.
In another moment it fell, and, bursting
over the rocks with a terrific roar, extinguished
the forge fire, and compelled the men to take refuge
in the beacon.
Jamie Dove saved his bellows with
difficulty. The other men, catching up their
things as they best might, crowded up the ladder in
a more or less draggled condition.
The beacon house was gained by means
of one of the main beams, which had been converted
into a stair, by the simple process of nailing small
battens thereon, about a foot apart from each other.
The men could only go up one at a time, but as they
were active and accustomed to the work, they were
all speedily within their place of refuge. Soon
afterwards the sea covered the rock, and the place
where they had been at work was a mass of seething
foam.
Still there was no wind; but dark
clouds had begun to rise on the seaward horizon.
The sudden change in the appearance
of the rock after the last torches were extinguished
was very striking. For a few seconds there seemed
to be no light at all. The darkness of a coal
mine appeared to have settled down on the scene.
But this soon passed away, as the men’s eyes
became accustomed to the change, and then the dark
loom of the advancing billows, the pale light of the
flashing foam, and occasional gleams of phosphorescence,
and glimpses of black rocks in the midst of all, took
the place of the warm, busy scene which the spot had
presented a few minutes before.
“Supper, boys!” shouted Bremner.
Peter Bremner, we may remark in passing,
was a particularly useful member of society.
Besides being small and corpulent, he was a capital
cook. He had acted during his busy life both as
a groom and a house-servant; he had been a soldier,
a sutler, a writer’s clerk, and an apothecary—in
which latter profession he had acquired the art of
writing and suggesting recipes, and a taste for making
collections in natural history. He was very partial
to the use of the lancet, and quite a terrible adept
at tooth-drawing. In short, Peter was the factotum
of the beacon house, where, in addition to his other
offices, he filled those of barber and steward to the
admiration of all.
But Bremner came out in quite a new
and valuable light after he went to reside in the
beacon—namely, as a storyteller. During
the long periods of inaction that ensued, when the
men were imprisoned there by storms, he lightened
many an hour that would have otherwise hung heavily
on their hands, and he cheered the more timid among
them by speaking lightly of the danger of their position.
On the signal for supper being given,
there was a general rush down the ladders into the
kitchen, where as comfortable a meal as one could
wish for was smoking in pot and pan and platter.
As there were twenty-three to partake,
it was impossible, of course, for all to sit down
to table. They were obliged to stow themselves
away on such articles of furniture as came most readily
to hand, and eat as they best could. Hungry men
find no difficulty in doing this. For some time
the conversation was restricted to a word or two.
Soon, however, as appetite began to be appeased, tongues
began to loosen. The silence was first broken
by a groan.
“Ochone!” exclaimed O’Connor,
as well as a mouthful of pork and potatoes would allow
him; “was it you that groaned like a dyin’
pig?”
The question was put to Forsyth, who
was holding his head between his hands, and swaying
his body to and fro in agony.
“Hae ye the oolic, freen’?”
enquired John Watt, in a tone of sympathy.
“No—n—o,” groaned
Forsyth, “it’s a—a—to—tooth!”
“Och! is that all?”
“Have it out, man, at once.”
“Bam a red-hot skewer into it.”
“No, no; let it alone, and it’ll go away.”
Such was the advice tendered, and
much more of a similar nature, to the suffering man.
“There’s nothink like
‘ot water an’ cold,” said Joe Dumsby
in the tones of an oracle. “Just fill your
mouth with bilin’ ‘ot water, an’
dip your face in a basin o’ cold, and it’s
sartain to cure.”
“Or kill,” suggested Jamie Dove.
“It’s better now,”
said Forsyth, with a sigh of relief. “I
scrunched a bit o’ bone into it; that was all.”
“There’s nothing like
the string and the red-hot poker,” suggested
Ruby Brand. “Tie the one end o’ the
string to a post and t’other end to the tooth,
an’ stick a red-hot poker to your nose.
Away it comes at once.”
“Hoot! nonsense,” said
Watt. “Ye might as weel tie a string to
his lug an’ dip him into the sea. Tak’
my word for’t, there’s naethin’
like pooin’.”
“D’you mean pooh pooin’?”
enquired Dumsby. Watt’s reply was interrupted
by a loud gust of wind, which burst upon the beacon
house at that moment and shook it violently.
Everyone started up, and all clustered
round the door and windows to observe the appearance
of things without. Every object was shrouded
in thick darkness, but a flash of lightning revealed
the approach of the storm which had been predicted,
and which had already commenced to blow.
All tendency to jest instantly vanished,
and for a time some of the men stood watching the
scene outside, while others sat smoking their pipes
by the fire in silence.
“What think ye of things?”
enquired one of the men, as Ruby came up from the
mortar-gallery, to which he had descended at the first
gust of the storm.
“I don’t know what to
think,” said he gravely. “It’s
clear enough that we shall have a stiffish gale.
I think little of that with a tight craft below me
and plenty of sea-room; but I don’t know what
to think of a beacon in a gale.”
As he spoke another furious burst
of wind shook the place, and a flash of vivid lightning
was speedily followed by a crash of thunder, that
caused some hearts there to beat faster and harder
than usual.
“Pooh!” cried Bremner,
as he proceeded coolly to wash up his dishes, “that’s
nothing, boys. Has not this old timber house weathered
all the gales o’ last winter, and d’ye
think it’s goin’ to come down before a
summer breeze? Why, there’s a lighthouse
in France, called the Tour de Cordouan, which rises
right out o’ the sea, an’ I’m told
it had some fearful gales to try its metal when it
was buildin’. So don’t go an’
git narvous.”
“Who’s gittin’ narvous?”
exclaimed George Forsyth, at whom Bremner had looked
when he made the last remark.
“Sure ye misjudge him,”
cried O’Connor. “It’s only another
twist o’ the toothick. But it’s all
very well in you to spake lightly o’ gales in
that fashion. Wasn’t the Eddy-stone Lighthouse
cleared away wan stormy night, with the engineer and
all the men, an’ was niver more heard on?”
“That’s true,” said
Ruby. “Come, Bremner, I have heard you say
that you had read all about that business. Let’s
hear the story; it will help to while away the time,
for there’s no chance of anyone gettin’
to sleep with such a row outside.”
“I wish it may be no worse than
a row outside,” said Forsyth in a doleful tone,
as he shook his head and looked round on the party
anxiously.
“Wot! another fit o’ the
toothick?” enquired O’Connor ironically.
“Don’t try to put us in
the dismals,” said Jamie Dove, knocking the
ashes out of his pipe, and refilling that solace of
his leisure hours. “Let us hear about the
Eddystone, Bremner; it’ll cheer up our spirits
a bit.”
“Will it though?” said
Bremner, with a look that John Watt described as “awesome”.
“Well, we shall see.”
“You must know, boys——”
’”Ere, light your pipe, my ’earty,”
said Dumsby.
“Hold yer tongue, an’
don’t interrupt him,” cried one of the
men, flattening Dumsby’s cap over his eyes.
“And don’t drop yer Aaitches,”
observed another, “’cause if ye do they’ll
fall into the sea an’ be drownded, an’
then yell have none left to put into their wrong places
when ye wants ’em.”
“Come, Bremner, go on.”
“Well, then, boys,” began
Bremner, “you must know that it is more than
a hundred years since the Eddystone Lighthouse was
begun—in the year 1696, if I remember rightly—that
would be just a hundred and thirteen years to this
date. Up to that time these rocks were as great
a terror to sailors as the Bell Rock is now, or, rather,
as it was last year, for now that this here comfortable
beacon has been put up, it’s no longer a terror
to nobody——”
“Except Geordie Forsyth,” interposed O’Connor.
“Silence,” cried the men.
“Well,” resumed Bremner,
“as you all know, the Eddystone Rocks lie in
the British Channel, fourteen miles from Plymouth and
ten from the Ram Head, an’ open to a most tremendious
sea from the Bay o’ Biscay and the Atlantic,
as I knows well, for I’ve passed the place in
a gale, close enough a’most to throw a biscuit
on the rocks.
“They are named the Eddystone
Rocks because of the whirls and eddies that the tides
make among them; but for the matter of that, the Bell
Rock might be so named on the same ground. Howsever,
it’s six o’ one an’ half a dozen
o’ t’other. Only there’s this
difference, that the highest point o’ the Eddystone
is barely covered at high water, while here the rock
is twelve or fifteen feet below water at high tide.
“Well, it was settled by the
Trinity Board in 1696, that a lighthouse should be
put up, and a Mr. Winstanley was engaged to do it.
He was an uncommon clever an’ ingenious man.
He used to exhibit wonderful waterworks in London;
and in his house, down in Essex, he used to astonish
his friends, and frighten them sometimes, with his
queer contrivances. He had invented an easy chair
which laid hold of anyone that sat down in it, and
held him prisoner until Mr. Winstanley set him free.
He made a slipper also, and laid it on his bedroom
floor, and when anyone put his foot into it he touched
a spring that caused a ghost to rise from the hearth.
He made a summer house, too, at the foot of his garden,
on the edge of a canal, and if anyone entered into
it and sat down, he very soon found himself adrift
on the canal.
“Such a man was thought to be
the best for such a difficult work as the building
of a lighthouse on the Eddystone, so he was asked to
undertake it, and agreed, and began it well. He
finished it, too, in four years, his chief difficulty
being the distance of the rock from land, and the
danger of goin’ backwards and forwards.
The light was first shown on the 14th November, 1698.
Before this the engineer had resolved to pass a night
in the building, which he did with a party of men;
but he was compelled to pass more than a night, for
it came on to blow furiously, and they were kept prisoners
for eleven days, drenched with spray all the time,
and hard up for provisions.
“It was said the sprays rose
a hundred feet above the lantern of this first Eddystone
Lighthouse. Well, it stood till the year 1703,
when repairs became necessary, and Mr. Winstanley
went down to Plymouth to superintend. It had
been prophesied that this lighthouse would certainly
be carried away. But dismal prophecies are always
made about unusual things. If men were to mind
prophecies there would be precious little done in
this world. Howsever, the prophecies unfortunately
came true. Winstanley’s friends advised
him not to go to stay in it, but he was so confident
of the strength of his work that he said he only wished
to have the chance o’ bein’ there in the
greatest storm that ever blew, that he might see what
effect it would have on the buildin’. Poor
man! he had his wish. On the night of the 26th
November a terrible storm arose, the worst that had
been for many years, and swept the lighthouse entirely
away. Not a vestige of it or the people on it
was ever seen afterwards. Only a few bits of
the iron fastenings were left fixed in the rocks.”
“That was terrible,” said
Forsyth, whose uneasiness was evidently increasing
with the rising storm.
“Ay, but the worst of it was,”
continued Bremner, “that, owing to the absence
of the light, a large East Indiaman went on the rocks
immediately after, and became a total wreck. This,
however, set the Trinity House on putting up another
which was begun in 1706, and the light shown in 1708.
This tower was ninety-two feet high, built partly
of wood and partly of stone. It was a strong building,
and stood for forty-nine years. Mayhap it would
have been standin’ to this day but for an accident,
which you shall hear of before I have done. While
this lighthouse was building, a French privateer carried
off all the workmen prisoners to France, but they were
set at liberty by the King, because their work was
of such great use to all nations.
“The lighthouse, when finished,
was put in charge of two keepers, with instructions
to hoist a flag when anything was wanted from the
shore. One of these men became suddenly ill, and
died. Of course his comrade hoisted the signal,
but the weather was so bad that it was found impossible
to send a boat off for four weeks. The poor keeper
was so afraid that people might suppose he had murdered
his companion that he kept the corpse beside him all
that time. What his feelin’s could have
been I don’t know, but they must have been awful;
for, besides the horror of such a position in such
a lonesome place, the body decayed to an extent——”
“That’ll do, lad; don’t
be too partickler,” said Jamie Dove.
The others gave a sigh of relief at
the interruption, and Bremner continued—
“There were always three
keepers in the Eddystone after that. Well, it
was in the year 1755, on the 2nd December, that one
o’ the keepers went to snuff the candles, for
they only burned candles in the lighthouses at that
time, and before that time great open grates with
coal fires were the most common; but there were not
many lights either of one kind or another in those
days. On gettin’ up to the lantern he found
it was on fire. All the efforts they made failed
to put it out,’ and it was soon burned down.
Boats put off to them, but they only succeeded in
saving the keepers; and of them, one went mad on reaching
the shore, and ran off, and never was heard of again;
and another, an old man, died from the effects of
melted lead which had run down his throat from the
roof of the burning lighthouse. They did not
believe him when he said he had swallowed lead, but
after he died it was found to be a fact.
“The tower became red-hot, and
burned for five days before it was utterly destroyed.
This was the end o’ the second Eddystone.
Its builder was a Mr. John Rudyerd, a silk mercer
of London.
“The third Eddystone, which
has now stood for half a century as firm as the rock
itself, and which bids fair to stand till the end of
time, was begun in 1756 and completed in 1759.
It was lighted by means of twenty-four candles.
Of Mr. Smeaton, the engineer who built it, those who
knew him best said that ’he had never undertaken
anything without completing it to the satisfaction
of his employers’.
“D’ye know, lads,”
continued Bremner in a half-musing tone, “I’ve
sometimes been led to couple this character of Smeaton
with the text that he put round the top of the first
room of the lighthouse—’Except the
Lord build the house, they labour in vain that build
it’; and also the words, ‘Praise God’,
which he cut in Latin on the last stone, the lintel
of the lantern door. I think these words had
somethin’ to do with the success of the last
Eddystone Lighthouse.”
“I agree with you,” said
Robert Selkirk, with a nod of hearty approval; “and,
moreover, I think the Bell Rock Lighthouse stands a
good chance of equal success, for whether he means
to carve texts on the stones or not I don’t
know, but I feel assured that our engineer
is animated by the same spirit.”
When Bremner’s account of the
Eddystone came to a close, most of the men had finished
their third or fourth pipes, yet no one proposed going
to rest.
The storm without raged so furiously
that they felt a strong disinclination to separate.
At last, however, Peter Logan rose, and said he would
turn in for a little. Two or three of the others
also rose, and were about to ascend to their barrack,
when a heavy sea struck the building, causing it to
quiver to its foundation.