THE WRECK
Meantime the French privateer sped onward to her doom.
The force with which the French commander
fell when Ruby cast him off, had stunned him so severely
that it was a considerable time before he recovered.
The rest of the crew were therefore in absolute ignorance
of how to steer.
In this dilemma they lay-to for a
short time, after getting away to a sufficient distance
from the dangerous rock, and consulted what was to
be done. Some advised one course, and some another,
but it was finally suggested that one of the English
prisoners should be brought up and commanded to steer
out to sea.
This advice was acted on, and the
sailor who was brought up chanced to be one who had
a partial knowledge of the surrounding coasts.
One of the Frenchmen who could speak a few words of
English, did his best to convey his wishes to the
sailor, and wound up by producing a pistol, which
he cocked significantly.
“All right,” said the
sailor, “I knows the coast, and can run ye straight
out to sea. That’s the Bell Rock Light on
the weather-bow, I s’pose.”
“Oui, dat is de Bell Roke.”
“Wery good; our course is due nor’west.”
So saying, the man took the wheel
and laid the ship’s course accordingly.
Now, he knew quite well that this
course would carry the vessel towards the harbour
of Arbroath, into which he resolved to run at all
hazards, trusting to the harbour-lights to guide him
when he should draw near. He knew that he ran
the strongest possible risk of getting himself shot
when the Frenchmen should find out his faithlessness,
but he hoped to prevail on them to believe the harbour-lights
were only another lighthouse, which they should have
to pass on their way out to sea, and then it would
be too late to put the vessel about and attempt to
escape.
But all his calculations were useless,
as it turned out, for in half an hour the men at the
bow shouted that there were breakers ahead, and before
the helm could be put down, they struck with such force
that the topmasts went overboard at once, and the sails,
bursting their sheets and tackling, were blown to
ribbons.
Just then a gleam of moonlight struggled
through the wrack of clouds, and revealed the dark
cliffs of the Forfar coast, towering high above them.
The vessel had struck on the rocks at the entrance
to one of those rugged bays with which that coast
is everywhere indented.
t the first glance, the steersman
knew that the doom of all on board was fixed, for
the bay was one of those which are surrounded by almost
perpendicular cliffs; and although, during calm weather,
there was a small space between the cliffs and the
sea, which might be termed a beach, yet during a storm
the waves lashed with terrific fury against the rocks,
so that no human being might land there.
It chanced at the time that Captain
Ogilvy, who took great delight in visiting the cliffs
in stormy weather, had gone out there for a midnight
walk with a young friend, and when the privateer struck,
he was standing on the top of the cliffs.
He knew at once that the fate of the
unfortunate people on board was almost certain, but,
with his wonted energy, he did his best to prevent
the catastrophe.
“Run, lad, and fetch men, and
ropes, and ladders. Alarm the whole town, and
use your legs well. Lives depend on your speed,”
said the captain, in great excitement.
The lad required no second bidding.
He turned and fled like a greyhound.
The lieges of Arbroath were not slow
to answer the summons. There were neither lifeboats
nor mortar-apparatus in those days, but there were
the same willing hearts and stout arms then as now,
and in a marvellously short space of time, hundreds
of the able-bodied men of the town, gentle and semple,
were assembled on these wild cliffs, with torches,
rope, &c.; in short, with all the appliances for saving
life that the philanthropy of the times had invented
or discovered.
But, alas! these appliances were of
no avail. The vessel went to pieces on the outer
point of rocks, and part of the wreck, with the crew
clinging to it, drifted into the bay.
The horrified people on the cliffs
looked down into that dreadful abyss of churning water
and foam, into which no one could descend. Ropes
were thrown again and again, but without avail.
Either it was too dark to see, or the wrecked men
were paralysed. An occasional shriek was heard
above the roar of the tempest, as, one after another,
the exhausted men fell into the water, or were wrenched
from their hold of the piece of wreck.
At last one man succeeded in catching
hold of a rope, and was carefully hauled up to the
top of the cliff.
It was found that this was one of
the English sailors. He had taken the precaution
to tie the rope under his arms, poor fellow, having
no strength left to hold on to it; but he was so badly
bruised as to be in a dying state when laid on the
grass.
“Keep back and give him air,”
said Captain Ogilvy, who had taken a prominent part
in the futile efforts to save the crew, and who now
kneeled at the sailor’s side, and moistened his
lips with a little brandy.
The poor man gave a confused and rambling
account of the circumstances of the wreck, but it
was sufficiently intelligible to make the captain
acquainted with the leading particulars.
“Were there many of your comrades
aboard?” he enquired.
The dying man looked up with a vacant
expression. It was evident that he did not quite
understand the question, but he began again to mutter
in a partly incoherent manner.
“They’re all gone,”
said he, “every man of ’em but me!
All tied together in the hold. They cast us loose,
though, after she struck. All gone! all gone!”
After a moment he seemed to try to
recollect something. “No,” said he,
“we weren’t all together. They took
Ruby on deck, and I never saw him again.
I wonder what they did——”
Here he paused.
“Who, did you say?” enquired the captain
with deep anxiety.
“Ruby—Ruby Brand,” replied
the man.
“What became of him, said you?”
“Don’t know.”
“Was he drowned?”
“Don’t know,” repeated the man.
The captain could get no other answer
from him, so he was compelled to rest content, for
the poor man appeared to be sinking.
A sort of couch had been prepared
for him, on which he was carried into the town, but
before he reached it he was dead. Nothing more
could be done that night, but next day, when the tide
was out, men were lowered down the precipitous sides
of the fatal bay, and the bodies of the unfortunate
seamen were sent up to the top of the cliffs by means
of ropes. These ropes cut deep grooves in the
turf, as the bodies were hauled up one by one and
laid upon the grass, after which they were conveyed
to the town, and decently interred.
The spot where this melancholy wreck
occurred is now pointed out to the visitor as “The
Seamen’s Grave”, and the young folk of
the town have, from the time of the wreck, annually
recut the grooves in the turf, above referred to,
in commemoration of the event, so that these grooves
may be seen there at the present day.
It may easily be imagined that poor
Captain Ogilvy returned to Arbroath that night with
dark forebodings in his breast.
He could not, however, imagine how
Ruby came to be among the men on board of the French
prize; and tried to comfort himself with the thought
that the dying sailor had perhaps been a comrade of
Ruby’s at some time or other, and was, in his
wandering state of mind, mixing him up with the recent
wreck.
As, however, he could come to no certain
conclusion on this point, he resolved not to tell
what he had heard either to his sister or Minnie,
but to confine his anxieties, at least for the present,
to his own breast.