CONCLUSION
Facts are facts; there is no denying
that. They cannot be controverted; nothing can
overturn them, or modify them, or set them aside.
There they stand in naked simplicity: mildly contemptuous
alike of sophists and theorists.
Immortal facts! Bacon founded
on you; Newton found you out; Dugald Stewart and all
his fraternity reasoned on you, and followed in your
wake. What would this world be without
facts? Rest assured, reader, that those who ignore
facts and prefer fancies are fools. We say it
respectfully. We have no intention of being personal,
whoever you may be.
On the morning after Ruby was cast
on the Bell Rock, our old friend Ned O’Connor
(having been appointed one of the lighthouse-keepers,
and having gone for his fortnight ashore in the order
of his course) sat on the top of the signal-tower
at Arbroath with a telescope at his eye directed towards
the lighthouse, and became aware of a fact,—a
fact which seemed to be contradicted by those who ought
to have known better.
Ned soliloquized that morning.
His soliloquy will explain the circumstances to which
we refer; we therefore record it here. “What’s
that? Sure there’s something wrong wid me
eye intirely this mornin’. Howld on”
(he wiped it here, and applying it again to the telescope,
proceeded); “wan, tshoo, three, four!
No mistake about it. Try agin. Wan, tshoo,
three, FOUR! An’ yet the ball’s up
there as cool as a cookumber, tellin’ a big
lie; ye know ye are,” continued Ned, apostrophizing
the ball, and readjusting the glass.
“There ye are, as bold as brass—av
ye’re not copper—tellin’ me
that everything goin’ on as usual, whin I can
see with me two eyes (wan after the other) that there’s
four men on the rock, whin there should be
only three! Well, well,” continued Ned,
after a pause, and a careful examination of the Bell
Rock, which being twelve miles out at sea could not
be seen very distinctly in its lower parts, even through
a good glass, “the day afther to-morrow ’ll
settle the question, Misther Ball, for then the Relief
goes off, and faix, if I don’t guv’ ye
the lie direct I’m not an Irishman.”
With this consolatory remark, Ned
O’Connor descended to the rooms below, and told
his wife, who immediately told all the other wives
and the neighbours, so that ere long the whole town
of Arbroath became aware that there was a mysterious
stranger, a fourth party, on the Bell Rock!
Thus it came to pass that, when the
relieving boat went off, numbers of fishermen and
sailors and others watched it depart in the morning,
and increased numbers of people of all sorts, among
whom were many of the old hands who had wrought at
the building of the lighthouse, crowded the pier to
watch its return in the afternoon.
As soon as the boat left the rock,
those who had “glasses” announced that
there was an “extra man in her”.
Speculation remained on tiptoe for
nearly three hours, at the end of which time the boat
drew near.
“It’s a man, anyhow,”
observed Captain Ogilvie, who was one of those near
the outer end of the pier.
“I say,” observed his
friend the “leftenant”, who was looking
through a telescope, “if—that’s—not—Ruby—Brand—I’ll
eat my hat without sauce!”
“You don’t mean—let
me see,” cried the captain, snatching the glass
out of his friend’s hand, and applying it to
his eye. “I do believe
it is Ruby, or his ghost!”
By this time the boat was near enough
for many of his old friends to recognize him, and
Ruby, seeing that some of the faces were familiar
to him, rose in the stern of the boat, took off his
hat and waved it.
This was the signal for a tremendous
cheer from those who knew our hero; and those who
did not know him, but knew that there was something
peculiar and romantic in his case, and in the manner
of his arrival, began to cheer from sheer sympathy;
while the little boys, who were numerous, and who
love to cheer for cheering’s sake alone, yelled
at the full pitch of their lungs, and waved their ragged
caps as joyfully as if the King of England were about
to land upon their shores!
The boat soon swept into the harbour,
and Ruby’s friends, headed by Captain Ogilvy,
pressed forward to receive and greet him. The
captain embraced him, the friends surrounded him,
and almost pulled him to pieces; finally, they lifted
him on their shoulders, and bore him in triumphal
procession to his mother’s cottage.
And where was Minnie all this time?
She had indeed heard the rumour that something had
occurred at the Bell Rock; but, satisfied from what
she heard that it could be nothing very serious, she
was content to remain at home and wait for the news.
To say truth, she was too much taken up with her own
sorrows and anxieties to care as much for public matters
as she had been wont to do.
When the uproarious procession drew
near, she was sitting at Widow Brand’s feet,
“comforting her” in her usual way.
Before the procession turned the corner
of the street leading to his mother’s cottage,
Ruby made a desperate effort to address the crowd,
and succeeded in arresting their attention.
“Friends, friends!” he
cried, “it’s very good of you, very kind;
but my mother is old and feeble; she might be hurt
if we were to come on her in this fashion. We
must go in quietly.”
“True, true,” said those
who bore him, letting him down, “so, good day,
lad; good day. A shake o’ your flipper;
give us your hand; glad you’re back, Ruby; good
luck to ’ee, boy!”
Such were the words, followed by three
cheers, with which his friends parted from him, and
left him alone with the captain.
“We must break it to her, nephy,”
said the captain, as they moved towards the cottage.
“’Still
so gently o’er me stealin”,
Memory will bring back the feelin’.’
It won’t do to go slap into
her, as a British frigate does into a French line-o’-battle
ship. I’ll go in an’ do the breakin’
business, and send out Minnie to you.”
Ruby was quite satisfied with the
captain’s arrangement, so, when the latter went
in to perform his part of this delicate business, the
former remained at the doorpost, expectant.
“Minnie, lass, I want to speak
to my sister,” said the captain, “leave
us a bit—and there’s somebody wants
to see you outside.”
“Me, uncle!”
“Ay, you; look alive now.”
Minnie went out in some surprise,
and had barely crossed the threshold when she found
herself pinioned in a strong man’s arms!
A cry escaped her as she struggled, for one instant,
to free herself; but a glance was sufficient to tell
who it was that held her. Dropping her head on
Ruby’s breast, the load of sorrow fell from her
heart. Ruby pressed his lips upon her forehead,
and they both rested there.
It was one of those pre-eminently
sweet resting-places which are vouchsafed to some,
though not to all, of the pilgrims of earth, in their
toilsome journey through the wilderness towards that
eternal rest, in the blessedness of which all minor
resting-places shall be forgotten, whether missed
or enjoyed by the way.
Their rest, however, was not of long
duration, for in a few minutes the captain rushed
out, and exclaiming “She’s swounded, lad,”
grasped Ruby by the coat and dragged him into the
cottage, where he found his mother lying in a state
of insensibility on the floor.
Seating himself by her side on the
floor, he raised her gently, and placing her in a
half-sitting, half-reclining position in his lap,
laid her head tenderly on his breast. While in
this position Minnie administered restoratives, and
the widow ere long opened her eyes and looked up.
She did not speak at first, but, twining her arms round
Ruby’s neck, gazed steadfastly into his face;
then, drawing him closer to her heart, she fervently
exclaimed “Thank God!!” and laid her head
down again with a deep sigh.
She too had found a resting-place
by the way on that day of her pilgrimage.
* * * * *
Now, reader, we feel bound to tell
you in confidence that there are few things more difficult
than drawing a story to a close! Our tale is
done, for Ruby is married to Minnie, and the Bell Rock
Lighthouse is finished, and most of those who built
it are scattered beyond the possibility of reunion.
Yet we are loath to shake hands with them and to bid
you farewell.
Nevertheless, so it must be, for if
we were to continue the narrative of the after-careers
of our friends of the Bell Rock, the books that should
be written would certainly suffice to build a new lighthouse.
But we cannot make our bow without
a parting word or two.
Ruby and Minnie, as we have said,
were married. They lived in the cottage with
their mother, and managed to make it sufficiently large
to hold them all by banishing the captain into the
scullery.
Do not suppose that this was done
heartlessly, and without the captain’s consent.
By no means. That worthy son of Neptune assisted
at his own banishment. In fact, he was himself
the chief cause of it, for when a consultation was
held after the honeymoon, as to “what was to
be done now”, he waved his hand, commanded silence,
and delivered himself as follows:—
“Now, shipmates all, give ear
to me, an’ don’t ventur’ to interrupt.
It’s nat’ral an’ proper, Ruby, that
you an’ Minnie and your mother should wish to
live together; as the old song says, ’Birds of
a feather flock together’, an’ the old
song’s right; and as the thing ought to be,
an’ you all want it to be, so it shall
be. There’s only one little difficulty
in the way, which is, that the ship’s too small
to hold us, by reason of the after-cabin bein’
occupied by an old seaman of the name of Ogilvy.
Now, then, not bein’ pigs, the question is,
what’s to be done? I will answer that question:
the seaman of the name of Ogilvy shall change his
quarters.”
Observing at this point that both
Ruby and his bride opened their mouths to speak,
the captain held up a threatening finger, and sternly
said, “Silence!” Then he proceeded—
“I speak authoritatively on
this point, havin’ conversed with the seaman
Ogilvy, and diskivered his sentiments. That seaman
intends to resign the cabin to the young couple, and
to hoist his flag for the futur’ in the fogs’l.”
He pointed, in explanation, to the
scullery; a small, dirty-looking apartment off the
kitchen, which was full of pots and pans and miscellaneous
articles of household, chiefly kitchen, furniture.
Ruby and Minnie laughed at this, and
the widow looked perplexed, but perfectly happy and
at her ease, for she knew that whatever arrangement
the captain should make, it would be agreeable in the
end to all parties.
“The seaman Ogilvy and I,”
continued the captain, “have gone over the fogs’l”
(meaning the forecastle) “together, and we find
that, by the use of mops, buckets, water, and swabs,
the place can be made clean. By the use of paper,
paint, and whitewash, it can be made respectable;
and, by the use of furniture, pictures, books, and
baccy, it can be made comfortable. Now, the question
that I’ve got to propound this day to the judge
and jury is—Why not?”
Upon mature consideration, the judge
and jury could not answer “why not?” therefore
the thing was fixed and carried out and the captain
thereafter dwelt for years in the scullery, and the
inmates of the cottage spent so much of their time
in the scullery that it became, as it were, the parlour,
or boudoir, or drawing-room of the place. When,
in course of time, a number of small Brands came to
howl and tumble about the cottage, they naturally
gravitated towards the scullery, which then virtually
became the nursery, with a stout old seaman, of the
name of Ogilvy, usually acting the part of head nurse.
His duties were onerous, by reason of the strength
of constitution, lungs, and muscles of the young Brands,
whose ungovernable desire to play with that dangerous
element from which heat is evolved, undoubtedly qualified
them for the honorary title of Fire-Brands.
With the proceeds of the jewel case
Ruby bought a little coasting vessel, with which he
made frequent and successful voyages. “Absence
makes the heart grow fonder,” no doubt, for Minnie
grew fonder of Ruby every time he went away, and every
time he came back. Things prospered with our
hero, and you may be sure that he did not forget his
old friends of the lighthouse. On the contrary,
he and his wife became frequent visitors at the signal-tower,
and the families of the lighthouse-keepers felt almost
as much at home in “the cottage” as they
did in their own houses. And each keeper, on returning
from his six weeks’ spell on the rock to take
his two weeks’ spell at the signal-tower, invariably
made it his first business, after kissing his
wife and children, to go up to the Brands and smoke
a pipe in the scullery with that eccentric old seafaring
nursery-maid of the name of Ogilvy.
In time Ruby found it convenient to
build a top flat on the cottage, and above this a
small turret, which overlooked the opposite houses,
and commanded a view of the sea. This tower the
captain converted into a point of lookout, and a summer
smoking-room,—and many a time and oft,
in the years that followed, did he and Ruby climb up
there about nightfall, to smoke the pipe of peace,
with Minnie beside them, and to watch the bright flashing
of the red and white light on the Bell Rock, as it
shone over the waters far and wide, like a star of
the first magnitude, a star of hope and safety, guiding
sailors to their desired haven; perchance reminding
them of that star of Bethlehem which guided the shepherds
to Him who is the Light of the World and the Rock
of Ages.
PRINTED IN GREAT BRITAIN
At the Villafield Press, Glasgow, Scotland