summaryrefslogtreecommitdiff
path: root/42415-0.txt
diff options
context:
space:
mode:
Diffstat (limited to '42415-0.txt')
-rw-r--r--42415-0.txt9662
1 files changed, 9662 insertions, 0 deletions
diff --git a/42415-0.txt b/42415-0.txt
new file mode 100644
index 0000000..66bd7a0
--- /dev/null
+++ b/42415-0.txt
@@ -0,0 +1,9662 @@
+*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42415 ***
+
+STORM WARRIORS:
+OR,
+Life-Boat Work
+ON THE GOODWIN SANDS.
+
+BY THE REV. JOHN GILMORE, M.A.,
+RECTOR OF HOLY TRINITY, RAMSGATE; AUTHOR OF "THE RAMSGATE LIFE-BOAT,"
+IN MACMILLAN'S MAGAZINE.
+
+_FOURTH THOUSAND._
+
+LONDON:
+MACMILLAN AND CO.
+1875.
+
+[_All rights reserved._]
+
+
+[Illustration: Life-boat]
+
+
+LONDON:
+PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS.
+STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING CROSS.
+
+
+TO
+THE MOST BELOVED MEMORY OF MY LATE FATHER,
+JOHN GILMORE, COMMANDER, R.N.,
+
+AND TO THE MOST BELOVED MEMORY OF
+MY LATE ELDEST BROTHER,
+ROBERT GRAHAM GILMORE, CAPT., R.N.R.,
+
+TWO MOST BRAVE, AND SKILFUL, AND TRUE,
+AND LOVING-HEARTED SAILORS,
+WHO HAVE PASSED IN FAITH AND PEACE TO THE
+HAVEN THAT THEY HUMBLY SOUGHT,
+I INSCRIBE THIS WORK.
+
+J. G.
+
+
+
+
+PREFACE.
+
+
+"O Mamma, I do hope that we shall be wrecked on the Goodwin Sands, that
+we may be saved by the brave life-boat men!"
+
+"You horrid boy, hold your tongue, do," replied the Mamma, who was
+anticipating, with some degree of nervousness, starting upon a voyage
+for Australia in about three weeks' time, and could scarcely be expected
+to enter to the full into her young son's very practical enthusiasm.
+
+But within the last half hour the boy's shrill voice had been heard at
+the Ramsgate pier-head, among the cheers that welcomed the life-boat
+back from a night of toil and triumph on the Goodwin; and for the
+present, to be saved from a wreck by the life-boat men is to him one of
+the most delightful ideas on earth.
+
+After reading an article in 'Macmillan's' of the life-boat men's doings,
+a brave English Admiral, then commanding a fleet, wrote--"My heart
+warms to the gallant fellows; tell them so, and please give them the
+enclosed (a guinea each) from an English Admiral without mentioning my
+name."
+
+A Kentish Squire, sending a donation of a guinea for each of the men
+wrote,--"To read the brave self-sacrificing doings of the Ramsgate
+life-boat men, makes me proud of the men of my county."
+
+Other gentlemen wrote, and ladies wrote, and by-and-by we heard from
+Australia, America, South America, and also from other parts of the
+world came evidence, that English hearts, wherever they are, cannot but
+feel deeply as they read the simple narrative of such gallant deeds.
+"Your life-boat stories have undoubtedly helped on the good life-boat
+cause," said Mr. Lewis.
+
+"The public have evinced considerable interest in those tales of
+life-boat work," said Mr. Macmillan; and so the idea grew that I must
+write a book about the life-boat work on the Goodwin Sands.
+
+A formidable idea this for a man with no "learned leisure," and quite
+unconscious of possessing any especial literary skill, or any especial
+literary ambition.
+
+Certainly, I could have no difficulty in obtaining full and abundant
+particulars of the various adventures of the life-boat.
+
+It was gravely said to a friend of mine,--"It is really very wrong of
+Mr. Gilmore, as a family man, to risk his life in the life-boat." I have
+been able to get all particulars without risking my life, and without,
+which is not much less to the point, lumbering up the boat with a
+useless hand; moreover, I doubt whether I should have had very keen
+powers of observation, while cold and exhausted and breathless, and
+clinging for very life to the thwarts, with the seas rushing over me,
+and tearing at me, striving to wash me out of the boat; which would have
+been my condition and very soon the condition of any unseasoned landsman
+who went to share the strife which the experienced boatmen often find it
+hard enough to endure.
+
+I have managed better: I have had sometimes two, three, or four boatmen
+up to my house; and we have fought their battles over again; I
+questioning and cross-questioning, getting particulars from them, small
+as well as great.
+
+"What did you do next?" To one such question, I remember the answer
+was--"Why then we handed the jar of rum round, for we were almost beaten
+to death."--"But with the seas running over the boat, and the boat full
+of water, it must have been salt-water grog very soon--how did you
+manage it?"--"Well, Sir, when there was a lull, a man just took a nip;
+then if there was a cry, 'Look out! a sea!' he put the jar down between
+his legs, shoved his thumb in the hole, held on to the thwart with his
+other arm, then bent well over the jar and let the sea break on his
+back."
+
+Thus getting them to recall incident after incident, I got the full
+details of each adventure; and when we arrived at the more stirring
+scenes, it was very exciting work indeed; the men could scarcely sit in
+their chairs--their muscles worked, faces flushed, and most graphically
+they told their tales, I, not one whit less excited, taking notes as
+rapidly as possible.
+
+Truly I must live to be an old man before I forget the hours I have
+spent in my study with Jarman, Hogben, and Reading, and R. Goldsmith,
+and Bill Penny, and Gorham, and Solly, and some other of my brave
+boatmen friends, as they have told me their many experiences and toils
+and dangers in life-boat work.
+
+To Jarman especially do I owe thanks for his many graphic narratives; he
+was coxswain of the boat for ten years, and during the time of most of
+the adventures related.
+
+One difficulty I have had to contend with has been the comparative
+sameness in the ordinary life-boat services. I could have had nine
+narratives in one especial fortnight, for nine times was the life-boat
+out during that time; but it has taken nearly ten years for me to find
+a sufficient number of narratives so varying in their chief incidents
+that the book should not of necessity be wearisome from repetition, and
+at the same time give a picture of the varied experiences and dangers of
+life-boat work.
+
+I must leave my Readers to judge how far I have gained my object in the
+selection I have made.
+
+As the few life-boat stories I have already published have been used to
+some extent in public Readings, Penny Readings, and on the like
+occasions, I have thought it well to make each story, as far as
+possible, complete in itself, although to effect this, some repetition
+of similar incidents has been unavoidable.
+
+I come of a sailor family--this will account to landsmen for my seeming
+acquaintance with nautical matters; I have never been to sea--this will
+explain to sailors the ignorance on such matters that they will not have
+much difficulty in detecting.
+
+"God help the poor fellows at sea!"--"God protect and bless the
+life-boat men!" (humble, honest, hardworking and most generous and
+brave-hearted men as I well know full many of them to be);
+
+"And God prosper the good Life-boat Institution, and advance its noble
+object!" that many a brave fellow may be spared to his family and home;
+many a good man be plucked from death to be yet the joy and support of
+loved ones; and many a man, unfitted to meet death, be snatched from its
+jaws to live to repent and to seek that peace which he had formerly
+disregarded. With such prayers I launch my book. And may God further it
+to His glory, by making it instrumental in gaining yet increased
+sympathy with the already much-loved life-boat cause; thus blessing it
+to be one of the humble instruments, among many, in helping to work out
+the results for which, in our sailor-loving land, so many are ever ready
+to hope, to work, to pray.
+
+One last word. The narratives related are, I firmly believe, as far as
+possible, strictly and literally true; I am positive the boatmen would
+not knowingly exaggerate in the least; and I have sought to tell the
+tales, incident by incident, what the men did, and what the men
+suffered, and what the men said--simply as they related each
+circumstance to me.
+
+
+
+
+CONTENTS.
+
+ PAGE
+CHAPTER I.
+HOW THE SHIPWRECKED FARED IN DAYS OF OLD, AND
+THE GROWTH OF SYMPATHY ON THEIR BEHALF 1
+
+CHAPTER II.
+WRECKERS 13
+
+CHAPTER III.
+THE INVENTOR OF THE LIFE-BOAT 19
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+THE GROWTH OF THE LIFE-BOAT MOVEMENT 23
+
+CHAPTER V.
+THE INVENTION AND LAUNCHING OF THE PRIZE LIFE-BOAT 32
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+THE RAMSGATE LIFE-BOAT AT WORK--STORM WARRIORS TO
+THE RESCUE 48
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+THE RESCUE OF THE CREW OF THE "SAMARITANO," AND
+THE RETURN 66
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+A NIGHT ON THE GOODWIN SANDS 82
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+THE WRECK ABANDONED, AND THE LIFE-BOAT DESPAIRED OF 94
+
+CHAPTER X.
+SIGNALS OF DISTRESS--OUT IN THE STORM 116
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+THE EMIGRANT SHIP 134
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+THE RESCUE OF THE CREW OF THE "DEMERARA," AND
+THE EMIGRANTS' WELCOME AT RAMSGATE 149
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+THE WRECK OF THE "MARY"--GALES ABROAD 161
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+THE WRECK OF THE "MARY"--A STRUGGLE FOR DEAR LIFE 171
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+DEAL BEACH 192
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+THE LOSS OF THE "LINDA," AND THE RACE TO THE RESCUE 203
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+THE RESCUE OF THE CREW OF THE "AMOOR" 214
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+THE RESCUE OF THE CREW OF THE "EFFORT"--THE
+DANGERS OF HOVELLING 224
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+THE HOVELLERS, OR SALVORS SAVED. THE "PRINCESS
+ALICE" HOVELLING LUGGER 234
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+THE SAVING OF "LA MARGUERITE"--(A HOVEL) 254
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+THE WRECK BROUGHT IN 265
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+THE WRECK OF THE "PROVIDENTIA" 275
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+HARDLY SAVED 287
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+SAVED AT LAST--THE FATAL GOODWIN SANDS 298
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+SAVED AT LAST--WE WILL NOT GO HOME WITHOUT THEM 310
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+SAVED AT LAST--"VICTORY OR DEATH" 320
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+OF SOME OF THE LIFE-BOAT MEN 333
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+CONCLUSION--THE LIFE-BOAT INSTITUTION 344
+
+
+
+
+STORM WARRIORS.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER I.
+
+HOW THE SHIPWRECKED FARED IN DAYS OF OLD, AND THE GROWTH OF SYMPATHY ON
+THEIR BEHALF.
+
+ A worthy Quaker thus wrote:--"I expect to pass through this world
+ but once; if, therefore, there can be any kindness I can show, or
+ any good thing I can do to any fellow human being, let me do it
+ now. Let me not defer or neglect it, for I shall not pass this way
+ again."
+
+
+Before in fancy we man the Life-boat, and rush out into the storm, and
+have the salt spray dashing over us, and the wind singing like
+suppressed thunder in our ears--before we watch the gallant Storm
+Warriors of the present day, in their life-and-death struggle, charging
+in through the raging seas to the rescue of the shipwrecked, let us look
+back and see how the unfortunate by shipwreck fared in the old time, and
+then take a hasty glance or two, watching the gradual growth, from age
+to age, of sympathy for the distressed; humanity becoming more
+pronounced, and more practical; the progressive adaptation of Maritime
+Law to the advancing tone of feeling; the gradual organization and
+development of that most noble Society, "The National Life-boat
+Institution," which has for its sole object the lessening of the dangers
+of the sea, and the saving of the shipwrecked; and, lastly, the progress
+and final triumph of the labours of science, in the invention of a
+life-boat which is able successfully to defy the efforts of the most
+raging storms.
+
+The "good old days!" Those who sing too emphatically the glories of the
+"good old days" must either be influenced by the enchantment distance
+lends to the view, or guided by the wholesome proverb, "Let nothing,
+except that which is good, be spoken of the dead."
+
+Human nature seems an inheritance unchanging in its properties, and it
+was in the old time much as it is now, capable of bringing forth fruit
+good or bad, in accordance with the training it received, or the
+associations by which it was surrounded. The old days were very far from
+being either very golden or very good, the strong arm was too often the
+strong law, and selfishness was far more likely to make the weak ones a
+prey for plunder, than was compassion to make them objects for
+assistance. There was a good deal of the Ishmael curse about the old
+feudal days; the Baron's hand was too ready to be against every man's,
+and every man's against his; to plunder and to pillage at all convenient
+opportunities, as well by sea as by land, seemed very much a leading
+institution.
+
+In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries Piracy was almost openly
+recognized; a foreign ship with a rich cargo was too great a temptation
+for the free sailors of those rough-and-ready days, and there was in
+reality as much of the spirit of piracy in the rugged justice by which
+it was endeavoured to suppress the crimes, as in the crimes themselves.
+Supposing an act of piracy to have been committed, restitution was first
+demanded from the nation, or maritime town, to which the pirate
+belonged; and if satisfaction was not obtained, then the aggrieved party
+was allowed to take out "Letters of Marque," and might sally forth to
+all intents a pirate, to plunder any ship sailing from the place to
+which the vessel which had first robbed him belonged. This system was
+acknowledged under the name of the "Right of Private Reprisal;" and so,
+what with pirates licensed and unlicensed, ships seeking plunder without
+any discrimination, and ships seeking revenge without much, Hallam might
+well write: "In the thirteenth and fourteenth centuries, a rich vessel
+was never secure from attack, and neither restitution nor punishment of
+the criminals was to be obtained from Governments, who sometimes feared
+the plunderer, and sometimes connived at the offence."
+
+To piracy was added the constant petty warfare and feuds that were
+carried on between maritime nations, and even between towns of the same
+nation.
+
+Hallam quotes, "The Cinque Ports, and other trading towns of England,
+were in a constant state of hostility with their opposite neighbours
+during the reigns of Edward I. and II.; half the instruments of Rymer
+might be quoted in proof of these conflicts, and of those with the
+mariners of Norway and Denmark."
+
+Sometimes mutual envy produced frays between different English towns;
+thus in the year 1254 the Winchilsea mariners attacked a Yarmouth
+galley, and killed some of her men.
+
+The evil effects of this confusion of might with right, the anxiety
+occasioned by this constant warfare, and by these petty feuds, lingered
+longer on sea than on land; and kept the morals of the seafaring
+population of the coasts at the lowest ebb; and as one consequence, the
+plundering of vessels wrecked on the shores was in all parts of Europe
+carried on with as ruthless a hand, as was piracy and privateering
+afloat.
+
+It may be somewhat interesting to consider the gradual progress of
+legislation with reference to this very terrible system and crime of
+wrecking; and while doing so, we shall receive further proof of how the
+rough mastery of the strong over the weak crept into the Laws, and how
+full a development it had in such laws, as especially related to wrecks
+and wreckage.
+
+It is hard in the present day to conceive how, in the name of any
+government making claim to the administration of justice, such a law
+could have been passed as that which existed prior to Henry I., which
+gave the king complete possession of all wrecked property: ownership on
+the part of the original possessor was supposed to have been lost by the
+action of the sea. Whether the law originated in that strong instinct
+for the appropriation of unconsidered trifles, which is rather a snare
+to all governments, or whether it was found necessary to make the king
+the owner of wreckage, in order to lessen the temptation to cause
+vessels to be wrecked, and their crews murdered for the sake of pillage,
+no unfrequent occurrence in those days, however it was, the law existed,
+and the shipwrecked merchant might come struggling ashore upon a broken
+spar, and find the coast strewn with scattered but still valuable goods,
+so lately his, but now by law his no longer, any more than they belonged
+to the half dozen rude fishermen who stood watching the torn wreck, and
+dispersed cargo being wave-lifted high upon the beach.
+
+Henry I., whose declining years were years of tender and deep sadness,
+on account of his own losses at sea, was somewhat more compassionate in
+his dealings with the unfortunate by shipwreck.
+
+He decreed that a wreck or wrecked goods should not be considered lost
+to the owner, or become the property of the Crown, if any man escaped
+from the wreck with life to the shore.
+
+Henry II. made a feeble enlargement of this scant degree of mercy--he
+expanded this saving clause, so that if either man or beast came ashore
+alive, the wreck and goods should still be considered as belonging to
+the original possessors; but failing this, although the owner should be
+known beyond all possibility of doubt, all the saved property should
+belong to the king; so that in those old days, if a cat was supposed to
+have nine lives, it was quite sufficient to account for its being for so
+long a popular institution on board ship; for even a cat washing
+ashore, would become the owner's title-deeds to all of his property that
+the sea had spared.
+
+Richard I. could be generous in things small as well as great; he could
+act nobly upon principle as well as upon impulse; it must have been,
+indeed, only natural to his open unselfish nature and high courage, to
+spurn the idea of robbing the robbed, of making the victim of the sea's
+destructive power the further victim of a king's greed; he was prepared
+to give his laws of chivalry a wide interpretation, and let them ordain
+succour for the distressed by the rage of waters, as well as for the
+distressed by the rage of men.
+
+And so when about to take part in the third crusade, King Richard
+decreed, "For the love of God, and the health of his own soul, and the
+souls of his ancestors and successors, kings of England.
+
+"That all persons escaping alive from a wreck should retain their goods;
+that wreck or wreckage should only be considered the property of the
+king when neither an owner, nor the heirs of a late owner, could be
+found for it."
+
+For several centuries all European nations had for the foundation of
+their maritime laws, a certain code, called the Code of Oleron.
+
+There is the usual veil of historical uncertainty clouding the origin of
+these laws, for while some authorities declare that Richard I. had
+nothing to do with them, others declare that they were completed and
+promulgated by Richard, at the Isle of Oleron, as he was returning from
+one of his crusades, and that they had first and especial reference to
+the customs on the coasts of some of his continental domains.
+
+The Laws of Oleron contain thirty-seven articles, and make very terrible
+statements as to the system of wrecking, which in those days disgraced
+the then civilized nations of the earth, while they show also, that if
+sinners were then prepared to sin with a high hand, that the authorities
+were prepared with no less energy to inflict punishment for crime.
+
+Some of the extracts from these laws are as utter darkness compared with
+light, when you read them beside extracts from the Life-boat journals of
+the present day, suggesting as they do the customs of the people as
+regards wrecking, and the scant mercy that was shown to the shipwrecked.
+
+Consider, for instance, the picture as given in the following extracts
+from the old laws of Oleron:--
+
+"An accursed custom prevailing in some parts, inasmuch as a third or
+fourth part of the wrecks that come ashore belong to the lord of the
+manor, where the wrecks take place, and that pilots for profit from
+these lords, and from the wrecks, like faithless and treacherous
+villains, do purposely run the ships under their care upon the rocks."
+
+The Code declares, that the lords, and all who assist in plundering the
+wreck shall be accursed, excommunicated, and punished as robbers. "That
+all false pilots shall suffer a most rigorous and merciless death, and
+be hung on high gibbets."
+
+"The wicked lords are to be tied to a post in the middle of their own
+houses, which shall be set on fire at all four corners, and burnt with
+all that shall be therein; the goods being first confiscated for the
+benefit of the persons injured; and the site of the houses shall be
+converted into places for the sale of hogs and swine."
+
+But if this threat of burning the said wicked lords, and the wholesale
+confiscation and destruction of their houses and properties, had not
+sufficient terrors to control such hardened sinners, and if they, or
+others, were prepared to add murder to robbery, then the laws enacted--
+
+"If people, more barbarous, cruel, and inhuman than mad dogs, murdered
+shipwrecked folk, they were to be plunged into the sea until half dead,
+and then drawn out and stoned to death."
+
+Railway directors and others would scarcely like the enforcement of laws
+parallel to those which dealt with the carelessness of Pilots; which
+provided, "That if negligence on the part of the Pilot caused shipwreck,
+he was to make good out of his own means the losses sustained, and if
+his means were not sufficient, then he should lose his head;" it was
+meekly suggested; "that some care should be taken by the master and
+mariners," possibly as much for their own sakes as for the sake of the
+unfortunate pilot. "That they should be persuaded that the man had not
+the means to make good the loss, before they cut off his head."
+
+The preamble of an Act of Parliament is generally the summary of the
+arguments for the necessity of the Bill.
+
+The preamble of a Bill for the repression of crime, may be therefore
+taken as the expression of the national conviction, that such crimes
+exist at the time.
+
+If so, during the reign of George II. human nature did not show itself
+to be one whit better than in earlier days, still were men equally
+capable of cruel selfishness and wrong, although civilization had done
+much to curb the outward expression of many of the former evils, and to
+control, to some extent, the open and virulent barbarities of still
+darker days.
+
+For we find that the old laws, and barbarous modes of punishment, were
+not sufficient to cope with the strongly developed tendencies for
+wrecking, which showed themselves, in various ways, to be existent, and
+in full activity.
+
+And therefore a new Act was passed, which recited--
+
+"That notwithstanding the good and salutary laws now in being against
+plundering and destroying vessels in distress, and against taking away
+shipwrecked, lost, and stranded goods, that still many wicked enormities
+had been committed to the disgrace of the nation." Therefore certain
+provisions were enacted, the bearing of which was as follows:--
+
+Death was to be the punishment for the chief of these enormities, such
+as hanging out false lights for the purpose of bringing vessels into
+distress.
+
+Death for those who killed, or prevented the escape of shipwrecked
+persons.
+
+Death for stealing goods from a wreck, whether there be any living
+creature on board or not.
+
+Acts of Parliament in following years felt the impress of the more
+merciful spirit of legislation which began to prevail. The punishment of
+death for theft from a wreck was reduced to imprisonment; while penal
+servitude for life was made the penalty for a new development of crime,
+namely, that of wilfully scuttling, or setting on fire, or wrecking a
+ship for the purpose of defrauding or damaging Insurance Offices or
+Owners.
+
+The existing Merchant Shipping Act of 1854, and the amendments and
+additions to it, now form the Code by which all maritime questions are
+arranged; and most of the barbarities, cruelties, and wrongs which, for
+so many ages, added to the perils of the sea, both as to life and
+property, are now sufficiently guarded against.
+
+But still a most subtle cruelty and fatal wrong is left almost
+altogether untouched, that of sending vessels to sea in an unseaworthy
+condition, as to hull, or spars, or sails, or rigging, or perhaps
+dangerously overladen; many a vessel only worthy of being utterly
+condemned, which no office would think for one moment of insuring, and
+that would scarcely pay for breaking up, is bought cheap, patched up,
+and sent, perhaps, to float up and down our coasts as a Collier, a sort
+of dingy coffin, only waiting to be entombed by the first heavy gale and
+raging sea in which she is caught, and then to go quickly down to her
+grave, carrying with her her crew, unless they have taken warning in
+time, and found some chance of escaping, which they are not slow to take
+advantage of, knowing the nature of the craft they are in; but many a
+brave sailor finds no escape, and feels no hope, when once the heavy
+gale breaks on the crazy craft, and thus dies a victim to one of the
+treacherous, and permitted, and most fatal cruelties of our most
+Christian and most enlightened age; but this state of things, we may
+well believe, will not be permitted to last much longer; the attention
+of the public has been thoroughly aroused to the subject, more
+especially by the zealous, energetic, and unselfish action of Samuel
+Plimsol, Esq., M.P., who having the welfare of the poor sailor most
+thoroughly at heart, has attacked with every courage the still existing
+abuses, arising chiefly from the deficiencies in our Maritime Code, and
+all who have sympathy with the sailor must wish him success, and who has
+not? but it is hard work to develop legislative action, even from
+wide-spread national sympathy; but the work is commenced; and as one
+result of his action, a Royal Commission has been issued by Her Majesty.
+The following is a synopsis of the opening instructions of the
+Commission:--
+
+
+ VICTORIA R.
+
+ WHEREAS--We have deemed it expedient for divers good causes and
+ considerations that a commission should forthwith issue to make
+ inquiry with regard to the alleged unseaworthiness of British
+ Registered Ships; whether arising from overloading, deck-loading,
+ defective construction, form, equipment, machinery, age or
+ improper stowage; and also to inquire into the present system of
+ Marine Insurance; of the alleged practice of undermanning ships;
+ and also to suggest any amendments in the law which might remedy or
+ lessen such evils as may be found to have arisen from the matters
+ aforesaid, &c., &c. Given at our Court at St. James's the 29th day
+ of March, 1873, in the thirty-sixth year of our reign.
+
+ By our command, (Signed) H. A. BRUCE.
+
+
+We may now therefore have great hopes, that there will be speedily some
+good result, from the spirited manner in which this question of sending
+unseaworthy vessels to sea has been brought before the public.
+
+
+ Note.--I have to thank a friend for Notes, which he kindly gave me,
+ of extracts which he made from books to which he had access in the
+ British Museum, referring to the Ancient Maritime Laws upon
+ Wrecking. My friend has, since this Chapter was first written,
+ developed his Notes into an Article, which he published in a
+ periodical; I have, nevertheless, not refrained from giving the
+ account, which I think my readers may find interesting.
+
+ J. G.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER II.
+
+WRECKERS.
+
+ "O father! I see a gleaming light;
+ O say what may it be?"
+ But the father answered never a word--
+ A frozen corpse was he.
+
+ And ever the fitful gusts between
+ A sound came from the land;
+ It was the sound of the trampling surf
+ On the rocks and the hard sea-sand.
+
+ The breakers were right beneath her bows
+ She drifted a dreary wreck,
+ And a whooping billow swept the crew
+ Like icicles from her deck."
+
+ _Longfellow._
+
+
+ "Perhaps some human kindness still
+ May make amends for human ill."
+
+ _Barry Cornwall._
+
+
+As we have considered the growth of legislation upon the question of
+wrecking and wreckage, and contrasted the more civilized, but not
+perfect code, now existing, with the barbarous laws of days gone by, we
+may also, perhaps, well put in contrast the present character and action
+of our coast population, as a rule, with what they were in days more
+remote.
+
+Imagine a homeward-bound vessel some two hundred and fifty years ago,
+clumsy in build, awkward in rig, little fitted for battling with the
+gales of our stormy coast, but yet manned with strong stouthearted men,
+who made their sturdy courage compensate for deficiency of other means;
+think of many perils overcome, a long weary voyage nearly ended, the
+crew rejoicing in thoughts of home, of home-love and home-rest, the
+headlands of dear Old England, loved by her sons no less then, than now,
+lying a dark line upon the horizon, the night growing apace, the breeze
+freshening, ever freshening, adding each moment a hoarser swell to the
+deep murmurs of its swift-following blasts; the ship scudding on,
+breasting the seas with her bluff bows, rising and pitching with the
+running waves which cover her with foam!
+
+Look on land! keen eyes have watched the signs of the coming storm, men
+more greedy than the foulest vulture, "more inhuman than mad dogs," have
+cast most cruel and wistful glances seaward! yes, their eyes light up
+with the very light of hell, as they see in the dim distance the white
+sail of a struggling ship making towards the land!
+
+And now try to imagine the scene, as the night falls, and the storm
+gathers, two or three ill-looking fellows drop in, say, to a low tavern
+standing in a by-lane that leads from the cliff to the beach, in some
+village on our south-western coast--soon muttered hints take form, and
+in low whispers the men talk over the chances of a wreck this wild
+night; they remember former gains, they talk over disappointments, when
+on similar nights of darkness, wildness, and storm, vessels discovered
+their danger too soon for them, and managed to weather the headlands of
+the bay.
+
+The plot takes form; with many a deep and muttered curse, the murderous
+decision is taken, that if a vessel can be trapped to destruction, it
+shall be.
+
+There is an old man of the party whose brow is furrowed with dread
+lines; he does not say much, but every now and then his eyes glare, and
+his features work as if convulsed; his comrades look at him, twice, and
+as a terrific squall shakes the house, a third time: silently he rises
+and leaves the inn; his mates now look away from him, as if quite
+unconscious as to what he is about; their stifled consciences cannot do
+much for them, but can give to each, just one faint half-realized
+sensation of shame. Now in the pitch darkness of the night, with bowed
+head, and faltering steps, battling against the storm, the old man leads
+a white horse along the edge of the cliff, to the top of the horse's
+tail a lantern is tied, and the light sways with the movement of the
+horse, and in its movements seems not unlike the mast-head light of a
+vessel rocked by the motion of the sea. A whisper has gone through the
+village, of a chance of something happening during the night, and most
+of the men and many of the women are on the alert, lurking in the caves
+beneath the cliff, or sheltered behind jutting pieces of rock.
+
+The vessel makes in steadily for the land; the captain grows uneasy, and
+fears running into danger; he will put the vessel round, and try and
+battle his way out to sea.
+
+The look-out man reports a dim light ahead; What kind? and Whither
+away? He can make out that it is a ship's light, for it is in motion.
+Yes, she must be a vessel standing on in the same course as that which
+they are on. It is all safe then, the captain will stand in a little
+longer; when suddenly in the lull of the storm a hoarse murmur is heard,
+surely the sound of the sea beating upon rocks? yes! look, a white gleam
+upon the water! Breakers ahead! Breakers ahead! Oh! a very knell of
+doom; the cry rings through the ship, Down, down with helm, round her
+to; too late, too late! a crash, a shudder from stem to stern of the
+stout ship; the shriek of many voices in their agony, green seas
+sweeping over the vessel, and soon, broken timbers, bales of cargo, and
+lifeless bodies scattered along the beach, while the shattered remnant
+of the hull is torn still further to pieces with each insweep of the
+mighty seas, as they roll it to, and fro, among the rocks. Fearful and
+crafty the smile that darkened the dark face of the willing murderer,
+who was leading the horse with the false light, as he heard the crash of
+the vessel, and the shrieks of the drowning crew, fearful the smiles
+that darkened the faces of the men and women waiting on the beach, as
+they came out from their places, ready to struggle and fight among
+themselves for any spoil that might come ashore; a homeward-bound ship
+from the Indies--great good fortune, rich spoil--bale after bale is
+seized upon by the wreckers, and dragged high upon the beach out of the
+way of the surf--but see, a sailor clinging to a bit of broken mast,
+with his last conscious effort he gains a footing on the shore, staggers
+forward and falls. Is he alive? not now! Why did that fearful old woman
+kneel upon his chest, and cover his mouth with her cloak? Dead men tell
+no tales! claim no property!
+
+Have such things been possible?
+
+They have, and have been done; traditions of such dread tragedies still
+linger on the Cornish coast, and it is a matter of history that all
+around our shores miscreants were to be found, who were ready to
+sacrifice to their blood-thirsty avarice those whom the rage of water
+had spared.
+
+Yes, and still many sailors find their worst enemies ashore, and know no
+danger so great as that of falling into the hands of their fellow-men;
+but not now in the small harbours or fishing-villages of the coast--not
+now among the seafaring population of our shores, must wretches capable
+of such deeds be looked for, but among the degraded quarters of our
+large maritime towns--among the land-sharks, who haunt the docks, the
+crimp-houses, the dens of infamy, the low taverns--there Jack may still
+be wrecked, and drugged, and robbed, and perhaps murdered. But even
+there darkness has not got it all its own way; for if there are many who
+are ready to ruin the reckless sailor, there are many others, thank God,
+who are ready to warn and aid him. Seamen's Churches, Bethels, Sailors'
+Homes, Sailors' Missionaries, and all sorts of benevolent institutions,
+seek to struggle with, and overcome, the bad effect of the many evils to
+which the sailor on shore is exposed.
+
+And the sea-coasts where the Storm Warriors now gather tell a tale of
+hardihood, of courage, of endurance, and of skill, no less than the
+olden days could boast of. But now courage is glorified by mercy, and
+hardihood by sympathy, and endurance is sustained, and skill and
+enterprise are quickened into action by the noblest feelings, and
+readiness for self-sacrifice, which can move the heart of man.
+
+If our last pages have been gloomy in the picture they have given of
+what was frequently done not many generations ago, let us seek a
+contrast, which shall be as light to darkness, and compare with those
+scenes of old, a picture of that which happens month after month, and in
+the winter season week after week, and sometimes, almost day after day,
+on our own coasts in the present time.
+
+A homeward-bound ship is rushing along, skimming the green seas, seeming
+to rejoice in the pride of her beauty, strength, and speed; there is
+some fatal error or accident, and she comes suddenly to destruction.
+Many men are anxiously on the look-out; they have been watching her
+closely from the shore, and eagerly preparing for action at the moment
+of the shipwreck, which for some time they have feared must happen. And
+now guns fire, and rockets flash, and the signals quickly given are
+quickly answered, and the Storm Warriors rush into action; they are not
+now the Storm Pirates as was the case too often of old, they are the
+Storm Warriors; their flashing lights tell of coming rescue, and do not
+lure to destruction; for as the gallant life-boat men rush into all
+danger, make every effort, battling with mad waves and boiling surf,
+they fight under the noble banner of Mercy--THEIR MISSION IS TO SAVE.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER III.
+
+THE INVENTOR OF THE LIFE-BOAT.
+
+ "The most eloquent speaker, the most ingenious writer, and the most
+ accomplished statesman cannot effect so much as the mere presence
+ of the man who tempers his wisdom and his vigour with humanity."
+
+ _Lavater._
+
+
+What dreams had Lionel Luken, coach-builder of London, in the year 1780,
+or thereabouts? The perils to machines, or coaches, in those days were
+many and varied; the roads were often rough, and dangerous enough to
+equal the pleasing variety and exciting accompaniments of a
+cross-country gallop; the bridges were very few, and the fords very
+many.
+
+Did Lionel Luken lose coach, or customer, or both, in a rushing flood
+which overwhelmed some burdensome coach and unhappy travellers at one of
+these fords? and, thinking over the disaster sorrowfully, patiently, and
+profitably, as great minds and great hearts will think, did he conceive
+the idea of a coach warranted against sinking, with air-tight
+compartments? and then, expanding the idea, did the noble thought occur
+to him of building a boat that would not merely float in the rush of a
+flood, but that would defy the troubled waters of a raging sea? And was
+it thus, that Lionel Luken gained unto himself the immortal honour of
+being the first inventor of the Life-boat?
+
+In whatever manner the idea presented itself to him, and however it was
+developed in the mind of the skilful and humane coach-builder, certain
+it is that it seized him very thoroughly, and that he, being one of the
+race of God's heroes, alike humane, brave, and earnest, was not content
+to let his happy, his blessed thought die barren of result, but made
+noble and persevering efforts to bring his invention to a successful
+issue. He had high courage, for his courage was inspired by the great
+hope that his boat might be the instrument of plucking many poor sailors
+from dread peril, carrying them through threatening seas, snatching them
+from the very jaws of death, and of restoring them to their loving ones
+in their loved homes. With this holy ambition, Lionel Luken laboured
+nobly, as, urged by a like ambition, many now labour nobly for the good
+life-boat cause. But the old days were not days of quick sympathy, or of
+ready enterprise, and Luken, although supported, to a certain extent, by
+royalty, uselessly clamoured at official doors, and sought public
+patronage in vain.
+
+People seemed then to have no strong objection to other people being
+drowned, just as they had no strong prejudice against others suffering
+the tortures of miserable prisons, the worst asylums, or any of the
+many horrors which a more enlightened age has sought with some degree of
+success to lessen or remove.
+
+In the year 1785 Luken took out a patent for a boat which, to a great
+extent, embodied almost all the more needful properties possessed by the
+present model life-boat; he at the same time published a pamphlet; "Upon
+the invention, principle, and construction of insubmergible boats." He
+suggested that such boats should be protected by bands of cork round
+their gunwales, that they should be rendered buoyant by the use of
+air-cases, especially at the bow and stern, and that they should be
+ballasted by an iron keel.
+
+But even when the good man passed from theory to practice, and succeeded
+at Bamborough in getting a boat converted into a life-boat on the above
+principles, and when this boat proved a success, and saved many lives,
+even then he could obtain no support from the authorities in carrying
+out his grand object.
+
+The story is told of a general who blamed a soldier for ducking at the
+sound of a cannon ball, saying that he had no business to be a soldier
+if he had the faintest objection to being shot. On the same principle,
+the first lord of the Admiralty, in his stern rejections of Luken's many
+efforts, may have considered that life-boats would interfere with a
+sailor's prerogative for being drowned; and drowned indeed many of the
+poor fellows were--swept to destruction in sight of land, for winds were
+cruel, and rocks were hard, and seas wild, and ships frail, while
+benevolence slept, and the cries of the drowning did not reach official
+ears, and Luken's loud appeals on behalf of humanity were disregarded,
+and he, brave man, who had so long struggled, hoping against hope,
+became utterly disappointed that the movement, the importance of which
+he so realized, and for which he had so long laboured, did not become
+general.
+
+Still he had the satisfaction of seeing his plan adopted in one or two
+places, in Shields especially, as we shall show; and he had the great
+happiness of knowing that, time after time, lives were saved by the
+boats which were built after his model. He had done all that he could,
+and went on building coaches, not, we may presume, on life-boat
+principles; and he tried somewhat to content himself, as he looked
+forward with hope for a time of greater enlightenment and sympathy, when
+he trusted that the seed he sowed, almost with tears, would bring its
+harvest of sheaves, and full of this faith, the good man devised an
+inscription for the stone which should mark his resting-place in a quiet
+country churchyard, simply stating, "That he was the Inventor of the
+first life-boat."
+
+Honoured be the memory of Lionel Luken!
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IV.
+
+THE GROWTH OF THE LIFE-BOAT MOVEMENT.
+
+ "What is noble? 'tis the finer
+ Portion of our mind and heart,
+ Linked to something still diviner
+ Than mere language can impart;
+ Ever prompting--ever seeing
+ Some improvement yet to plan;
+ To uplift our fellow-being,
+ And, like man, to feel for Man."
+
+ _C. Swain._
+
+
+If the ear were only as powerful to enable the mind to realize things
+heard, as the eye is powerful in enabling the mind to realize things
+seen, many reforms would have been worked out promptly, instead of
+having to wait year after year, sometimes almost generation after
+generation, while the mind of the public has had its sympathies but
+slowly awakened by the constant statement of some evil, and the
+unceasing demand for its remedy.
+
+Thus it was, that a terrible scene of disaster and death, of which many
+were the agonized eye-witnesses, did more to urge forward the life-boat
+cause than had been effected by the report of many similar tragedies,
+which but few lookers on had seen occur.
+
+It was in the year 1789, a tremendous gale of wind was raging at
+Newcastle; thousands of the inhabitants were watching the wild sea as it
+foamed up at the entrance of the port, and they trembled as they saw
+vessel after vessel stagger on through the sweeping waves, running into
+the harbour for refuge.
+
+One ship, the _Adventurer_, missed the entrance of the port, and was
+driven on to the rocks; the seas rushed over her deck, and flew half-way
+up the masts; the crew took refuge in the rigging, and the wreck was so
+near to the pier, that the horrified and terror-stricken people
+thronging there, could hear the cries for help, and even see the growing
+shade of the death agony upon the faces of the men, as they became more
+and more exhausted and faint from exposure to the heavy seas; and then
+they saw one after another of the seamen torn from his hold and perish
+miserably; and this within call of these thousands of spectators, who
+were full of grief and sympathy, but were unable even to attempt a
+rescue.
+
+Brave men stood powerless, and as they were frantically appealed to, to
+try and save the drowning men, could only groan over the utter
+impossibility of rendering them any assistance! Yes! the daring, hardy,
+skilful sailors, wept with the weeping women, as they stood overwhelmed
+with helpless horror watching the most heart-rending scene.
+
+Strong boats were there, ready to be manned, boats that had successfully
+battled with many a rough sea, but they were _not life-boats_, and to
+go out into such a mad boil of raging waves in any other kind of boat
+than a life-boat, would have been certain death to all the crew, without
+affording the faintest possibility of help to the shipwrecked; and thus,
+without help, without hope, one after the other of the poor shipwrecked
+sailors, exhausted and faint, fell back into the wild waves and
+perished: the vessel was speedily torn to pieces, the crowd slowly and
+sorrowfully went home; soon the darkness of night shadowed the wild sea
+and the saddened town, but the day's work was not done--the tragedy was
+not without fruit, in more senses than one, "the blood of the martyrs is
+the seed of the church;" the sympathies of the people were now fully
+aroused; meetings were at once held at South Shields--a committee was
+formed--and premiums were offered for the best life-boat.
+
+William Wouldham, a painter, was one of the successful competitors; he
+presented a model embracing many excellent qualities; Henry Greathead, a
+boat-builder of South Shields, stood next on the list.
+
+The various models presented were discussed--their more excellent
+qualities selected--and from the suggestions thus obtained, a model
+life-boat was planned, from which, as a type, Greathead built a boat,
+which, either from the fact that he improved upon the model given to
+him, or because his name, as its builder, was chiefly associated with
+it, became known as Greathead's life-boat, and he gained the honour of
+being its inventor--not but what the claims of Wouldham were stoutly
+asserted; and we may believe by many accepted, for in the parish church
+of St. Hilda, South Shields, a tombstone erected to the memory of
+Wouldham bears at its head a model of his life-boat, with the following
+inscription:--
+
+
+ "Heaven genius scientific gave,
+ Surpassing vulgar boast, yet he from soil
+ So rich, no golden harvest reap'd, no wreath
+ Of laurel gleaned. None but the sailor's heart,
+ Nor that ingrate, of palm unfading this,
+ Till shipwrecks cease, or Life-boats cease to save."
+
+
+Within the next fifteen years, or so, Greathead built about thirty
+life-boats, eight of which were sent to foreign countries. At last the
+life-boat cause was wakened into life, but into no vigorous existence;
+it did not actually die, but lingered on with here and there a spasm of
+vitality, as some local cause or stirring advocate excited a momentary
+interest in the question.
+
+Life-boat stations were scattered at long intervals round the coast, and
+boats of various designs, some very good, were placed at a few of the
+more dangerous positions on our shores.
+
+The public was not altogether unprepared to move, but was waiting for
+the needed impulse.
+
+The whole cause, in spite of all its intrinsic merits and great claims
+upon humanity, waited for the _coming man_, and he was found in the
+person of Sir William Hillary, Baronet, one of nature's real noblemen;
+his heart was great, as his arm was strong; his love for the sea was
+only equalled by his love for sailors; all that concerned their
+well-being excited his quick sympathy and active interest, and his
+feelings were, as a matter of course, very sincere, and very earnest for
+the life-boat cause.
+
+Sir W. Hillary lived at Douglas, in the Isle of Man. His sympathy for
+the sailor proved its vitality by being active and practical: he
+established Sailors' Homes, and in many ways sought their improvement
+and benefit; and when the hour of danger came, when the storms raged and
+lives were in peril, Sir William was the first, not only to encourage,
+but also to lead the boatmen to the rescue of the shipwrecked; he shrank
+from no danger, he shared all labour, and endured all hardship, and this
+to such an extent, that he was personally engaged in efforts by which
+more than three hundred lives were saved.
+
+The following are some of the occasions in which Sir William's heroic
+efforts were blessed in their results to the saving of life:--
+
+In the year 1825 Sir William, and the crews under him, rescued
+eighty-seven persons, sixty-two of these from the steamer _City of
+Glasgow_; eleven from the _Leopard_ brig; and nine from the _Fancy_
+sloop.
+
+In the year 1827 they saved seventeen lives. In 1830, four different
+crews were rescued, forty-three lives being saved; and in 1832 no fewer
+than fifty lives were saved from a passenger-ship.
+
+The nature of the perils Sir William Hillary so nobly encountered, and
+the toils he shared, may be well illustrated by an account of the rescue
+of the crew of the _St. George_.
+
+On the 29th of November, 1830, the mail steamer _St. George_ struck on
+St. Mary's rock, not far from Douglas. The captain had no boats to which
+he could trust in so violent a sea; he therefore cut away the mainmast,
+and endeavoured to construct a raft from its wreck, together with the
+spars which they had on board; but the seas proved too heavy for him to
+be able to do so, and he signalled his distress to the shore.
+
+Sir William Hillary and a crew of twelve men at once manned the
+life-boat, and proceeded in the direction of the wreck; they found the
+steamer hard upon the rock, and surrounded by such a raging boil of surf
+that any attempt to rescue the unfortunate passengers and crew seemed
+almost impossible; nevertheless they were not the men to leave their
+fellow-creatures to perish without making an effort for their safety, at
+whatever risk that effort must be made; they therefore let the boat rush
+before the gale into the heart of the surf; here she was completely at
+the mercy of the wild and broken waves--her rudder was torn off, oar
+after oar was broken, until scarcely half the number were left--some of
+the air-tight compartments were strained and filled with water, and
+rendered useless, and to add to the dismay of the crew, one of the
+tremendous seas which rushed over the boat washed Sir William and three
+men overboard; it was only after the greatest difficulty that they were
+recovered, and, happily, without being much hurt; the life-boat was then
+hurled by the waves between the steamer and the rock, here the broken
+mainmast and other wreckage were being driven violently by the surf in
+all directions, so that the life-boat was in a very whirlpool of danger.
+
+The crew and passengers of the steamer thought, however, that they would
+be safer in the boat, in spite of the dread peril she was in, than on
+board the steamer, which was being torn and beaten to pieces, and they
+left the steamer for the boat; the boat had then more than sixty persons
+on board; and hour after hour her crew struggled in vain to get her out
+of the position of extreme danger, in which the force of the gale and
+the rush of the waves held them as in a vice; every moment was one of
+very great hardship to all on board the boat, as the surf continually
+flew over them in volumes, and the danger of being crushed by the
+wreckage, that was tossing and leaping in the contest of the mad sea
+that raged around them, was incessant.
+
+After nearly three hours of the hardest struggle, they managed to get
+the almost disabled boat a little clear from the rock and the wreck, but
+still they were unable to make any headway against the seas, or get
+beyond the circle of surf, when at length the sea, as if tired of
+sporting with its shattered prey, drove the boat so far beyond the range
+of the surf, that other boats were able to come to her assistance and
+all lives were saved.
+
+Such was the nature of the perils and hardships that Sir William Hillary
+often readily and nobly encountered in his efforts to save life.
+
+When, therefore, urged by the cruel necessities of the case, he pleaded
+for the life-boat cause, and illustrated his pleading by his own
+personal experience, men began at last to listen to what he urged. He
+described not only that the dangers of the shipwrecked were fearfully
+increased from want of due means for their rescue, in the absence of
+boats properly constructed to contend against the peculiar danger
+arising from the raging seas and broken water which generally surrounded
+a wreck, but he showed also how, from the same cause, brave men too
+often rushed to their death.
+
+That in answer to the cry for rescue, men put to sea, urged by the
+generous impulses of sympathy and courage, went forth possessed of all
+the needed bravery, the strength, the skill, the determination to perish
+or to save: they did often perish, and did not save, because they needed
+the boats which could alone safely contend with the dangers that they
+had to encounter.
+
+Two members of Parliament, Mr. Thomas Wilson and Mr. George Hibbert,
+were especially moved by such a tale, told by such a man, out of a
+brave, loving, full heart, and illustrated by such terrible experience,
+and they gave Sir William their very hearty co-operation; and these
+three men became, in the year 1825, the founders of the "Royal National
+Institution for the Preservation of Life from Shipwreck."
+
+Sir W. Hillary undertook the formation of a branch committee of the
+society for the Isle of Man, and so fully succeeded that, by the year
+1829, each of the four harbours of the station possessed a life-boat.
+
+Under the organization of this society, and with the aid of some
+fourteen smaller, and local associations, and notably with the
+assistance of "The Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners' Royal Benevolent
+Society," which was instituted in the year 1839, and provided seven
+life-boats on different parts of the coast, the life-boat cause went on,
+doing much noble work, but leaving very much more undone; and very much
+that was effected was not done in really the best way.
+
+Thus the life-boat cause had prospered, the work was becoming organised;
+but still much was wanting; it needed some new and great stimulus--and
+in a few years the stimulus came.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER V.
+
+THE INVENTION AND LAUNCHING OF THE PRIZE LIFE-BOAT.
+
+ "In spite of rock and tempest's roar,
+ In spite of false lights on the shore,
+ Sail on, nor fear to breast the sea,
+ Our hearts, our hopes are all with thee;
+ Our hearts, our hopes, our prayers, our tears,
+ Our faith triumphant o'er our fears,
+ Are all with thee--are all with thee!"
+
+ _"The Ship of State."--Longfellow._
+
+
+In the year 1848, the Admiralty called for returns from the various
+coastguard stations which gird the coast, as to the condition of the
+life-boat service in their respective neighbourhoods; the results showed
+a state of things very far from satisfactory. It appeared that the
+number of life-boats was about one hundred, but out of these, only
+fifty-five were reported as being in good repair, and a great many of
+this number were declared to be of such heavy construction, that very
+much of their usefulness was sacrificed.
+
+Twenty boats were reported as being only in fair repair, and twenty-one
+boats were declared to be bad and unserviceable. From many stations came
+the reports of great loss of life from want of a boat. From Ballycotton,
+for instance, where a life-boat could be easily manned, and yet, sad to
+state, that within fifteen years no fewer than sixty-seven lives had
+been lost, no life-boat being there to effect a rescue.
+
+The evidence for the necessity for further effort was also afforded, by
+the long distances which existed between many of the life-boat stations.
+Twenty-seven miles, thirty-three, forty-five, ninety-four, one hundred
+and forty-one, and one hundred and fifty-one miles being among such
+distances; thus in various places the coast was left absolutely
+unprotected for many miles together.
+
+Equally sad, and similar to that given by Sir W. Hillary, was the
+evidence as to the faulty construction of many of the boats, inasmuch as
+although they were a decided improvement upon the ordinary boat, yet
+they too often proved incompetent to contend against the rush of seas
+and broken water to which they were exposed; from this cause the most
+painful tragedies frequently occurred, the loss of brave fellows who
+went out to save others from a dreadful death, and who through no lack
+of courage, of strength, or of skill, on their part, but from the faulty
+construction of the boat they were in, found one common grave with those
+whom they sought to rescue from the raging seas.
+
+Thus one life-boat gained a most sad notoriety: on one occasion she
+drowned four of her crew; on another occasion twelve; and on a third,
+twenty men were drowned out of her. A second, so called, life-boat lost
+on one occasion two men, on a second three men, and on a third all her
+crew; when she was most properly condemned as too dangerous to be of
+use.
+
+A Scarborough life-boat lost sixteen men. At Dunbar, on the occasion of
+a man-of-war being wrecked, the life-boat in two trips saved forty-five
+men; on her third trip she upset, and nearly all who were in her were
+drowned; she was condemned, and for many years no life-boat at all was
+stationed there, although from time to time many lives were lost.
+
+Thus we find that in the year 1850 life-boat work was no unknown work.
+Life-boat societies had done much, and were doing much. Life-boats had
+been stationed in various localities during the preceding half century,
+and there were at the date mentioned seventy-five life-boats in England,
+eight in Scotland, and eight in Ireland; but nearly one-half of these
+were, from one cause or another, more or less unserviceable; and many of
+the most exposed parts of the coast were still unprovided with
+life-boats. In that year, 1850, there were six hundred and eighty-one
+wrecks: the loss of life was about seven hundred and eighty-four,
+including a crew of eleven men, whose boat upset one stormy November
+night, they having put off to the assistance of a vessel in distress.
+
+It was evident that the life-boat system was not sufficiently developed
+or general, and there was, moreover, no universally approved model of a
+boat in which all boatmen might have confidence; this latter
+consideration was especially brought before the notice of the public by
+an accident which occurred to the Newcastle life-boat, the sad
+particulars of which are given in the following extracts from a letter
+written December 14th, 1849, by the then treasurer of the life-boat
+"Friend of the Ports of Newcastle-upon-Tyne and South Shields," Mr. R.
+Anderson.
+
+"The life-boats of the Port of Newcastle, stationed at the entrance of
+the Tyne in North and South Shields, have been for about sixty years
+instrumental in saving the crews of those vessels which have been
+unfortunately stranded at the entrance of the port. No correct account
+was kept of the exact number so rescued from danger previous to the year
+1841, but since then four hundred and sixty-six persons have been
+brought ashore from sixty-two vessels.
+
+"On the morning of the fatal accident, the _Betsy_, of Littlehampton,
+laden with salt, was stranded on the hard sand; and the receding tide
+left her among heavy breakers, with a heavy ebb-tide running past her.
+
+"The life-boat was launched about 9 A.M., and being manned by
+twenty-four pilots, immediately proceeded to the vessel; and, having
+hailed her, and given instructions to the people on board to prepare two
+ropes ready to throw to them, they waited for a little time between the
+ship and the shore for the ropes to be got ready, then they again
+proceeded to the vessel, and succeeded in getting alongside; the rope
+from the after end of the vessel was received into the boat; the rope
+from the fore end had just been received and reeved in the ring at the
+stern, and a few fathoms hauled into the boat; and the shipwrecked men
+were preparing to descend, when a terrific knot of sea recoiling from
+the resistance it met at the vessel's bow, threw the bow of the boat up
+over end, and the bow-rope not holding, the boat was driven in that
+position, with all her crew thrown into the stern, astern of the vessel,
+into the rapid ebb-tide, which running into her, caused the boat to
+capsize, and all the men were washed into the sea; they were carried
+away by the tide.
+
+"The accident was seen from the shore, and immediately the second
+life-boat was launched from South Shields, and, with seventeen pilots on
+board, proceeded with all possible despatch to the assistance of the
+crew of the former boat; they found and rescued three, one had succeeded
+in getting on board the brig, and thus only four out of the twenty-four
+were saved.
+
+"Nor were the crew of the stranded vessel forgotten; the third life-boat
+from North Shields was launched; and notwithstanding the appalling
+accident, a crew of seventeen brave fellows manned her instantly, and
+proceeded alongside the _Betsy_, and brought all her crew, and the one
+pilot who succeeded in getting on board her, safely ashore.
+
+"The first life-boat which had turned end-over-end was washed ashore
+bottom up; her great want was the self-righting principle."
+
+Urged by the necessities of the case, which became daily more apparent,
+the Duke of Northumberland, President of the National Life-boat
+Society, organized a plan by which the intellect and experience of the
+world at large should be encouraged to invent a life-boat, which should
+be on all points as perfect as possible.
+
+His Grace offered a premium of one hundred guineas for the best model of
+a life-boat. The defects of the existing boats were pointed out as a
+guide to inventors, they being chiefly:
+
+"1. They do not upright themselves in the event of being upset.
+
+"2. That they are too heavy to be readily launched or transported along
+the coast in case of need.
+
+"3. That they do not free themselves from water fast enough.
+
+"4. That they are very expensive."
+
+A committee was formed to examine, and report upon the models.
+
+The offer of His Grace, and the conditions of the competition, were
+published in October 1850, and no expense or pains were spared in making
+them known.
+
+The interest and excitement produced by the notice were deeply and
+widely felt; the challenge was accepted by great numbers of
+people--amateurs, to whom to invent a life-boat seemed a laudable and
+holy ambition, vied with the boat-builders who had thoughts of
+professional reputation to give a spur to their humanity--speedily in
+all parts of England, and in many other parts of the world, busy minds
+and skilful hands were at work.
+
+In due time models came teeming in upon the committee in almost
+overwhelming numbers.
+
+Not content with asking for models of life-boats, the committee also
+asked for information upon certain defined points, the models sent in
+numbered no fewer than two hundred and eighty, while the answers to
+inquiries were sufficient to fill five folio volumes of manuscript. As
+for the models, every possible form and every possible principle seemed
+to find its illustration.
+
+There were boats designed upon the principle of Pontoons, of Catamarans,
+of Rafts, Steamers, Paddle-box Boats, North Country Cobles--every
+possible modification of the whaleboat, and of the ordinary boat; boats
+made of wood, of tin, of galvanized corrugated iron, boats with cork
+linings, with air-boxes, with water-ballast, with no ballast, tubular
+boats, boats a series of tubs, a series of boxes; to be propelled by
+oars, by sails, by paddle-wheels, by screws, to be worked by hand power,
+by steam power, by atmospheric air.
+
+The Committee might well feel overwhelmed at such a perfect rush of
+ideas and designs thus suggested for their consideration; and as they
+began to go into details, they found it almost impossible to decide
+which model was best, where the elements of excellency were so varied
+and so numerous, especially as they found that so large a number of the
+boats presented such excellent combinations of different good qualities.
+
+The committee therefore deemed it necessary to organize a regular
+competitive examination, assigning marks to different necessary
+qualifications, that they might thus be able to arrange the boats
+presented in an order of merit, dependent upon their respective
+combination of good qualities.
+
+The following is the list of qualities that were required in the boats,
+with the number of marks apportioned to each.
+
+
+1st Quality. Rowing boat in all weathers 20
+
+2nd " Sailing boat in all weathers 18
+
+3rd " Sea boat, i.e., stability, safety, buoyancy forward
+ for launching through surf 10
+
+4th " Means of freeing boat from water readily 8
+
+5th " Extra buoyancy nature, amount, distribution,
+ mode of application 7
+
+6th " Power of self-righting 9
+
+7th " Suitableness for beaching 4
+
+8th " Room for, and power of carrying passengers 6
+
+9th " Moderate weight for transport along shore 3
+
+10th " Protection from injury to bottom 3
+
+11th " Ballast, as iron 1, water 2, cork 3 6
+
+12th " Access to stem and stern 3
+
+13th " Tumbler heads for securing warps 2
+
+14th " Fenders, life-lines, &c. 1
+
+
+With their mode of examination thus fully organized, the Committee
+patiently and carefully set about their interesting task, and after much
+labour it was decided that the model presented by Mr. James Beeching, of
+Great Yarmouth, possessed the best combination of necessary
+qualifications, and to it was awarded eighty-six out of the one hundred
+marks; and the inventor had the gratification of receiving the following
+letters from the Duke of Northumberland, and from the Chairman of the
+Life-boat Committee:--
+
+
+ _Alnwick Castle,_ _13th August, 1851._
+
+ SIR,
+
+ It gives me much pleasure to send you a cheque for £105, as the
+ prize for the best model of a life-boat.
+
+ And I must thank you for the assistance you have given me and the
+ Society for Saving Life from Shipwreck by that model, which will
+ enable us to establish a better life-boat on the coast than those
+ at present in use.
+
+ Yours, &c.,
+
+ NORTHUMBERLAND.
+
+ _To Mr. James Beeching._
+
+ * * * * *
+
+ _Somerset House, London,_ _14th August, 1851._
+
+ SIR,
+
+ I have the gratification to acquaint you that the Committee
+ appointed to examine the life-boat models sent to Somerset House,
+ to compete for the premium offered by His Grace the Duke of
+ Northumberland for the best model of a life-boat, have awarded the
+ prize to your model.
+
+ I am therefore directed by His Grace to transmit to you the
+ enclosed cheque for £105, and the report of the Committee upon
+ which the award was founded.
+
+ Yours, &c.,
+
+ J. WASHINGTON, R.N.,
+
+ Chairman of the Committee.
+
+ _To Mr. James Beeching._
+
+
+A fine boat, called the _Northumberland_, was speedily built by Mr.
+Beeching, and she immediately commenced a more memorable career than has
+ever fallen to the lot of any other boat--the stormy petrel of the
+sea--the pioneer of a work not more glorious than much which had been
+attempted, but which crowned almost every brave effort with abundant
+success, where science aided sympathy with all the fruits of her skill,
+so that the double cry of agony, where on the one hand there was
+lamentation for the shipwrecked and lost, and on the other a cry, if
+possible, even more piteous still, for those who perished in their
+efforts to save the shipwrecked--a cry that had been too often heard,
+was soon almost to cease from the land.
+
+The early passage in the history of the _Northumberland_ seemed to
+suggest that hers was to be a holiday existence, her career commenced
+with a round of triumphant display and popularity. She visited various
+parts of the coast, and all her properties were displayed, creating
+everywhere confidence in her powers, and enthusiasm at the thought of
+the stimulus to be given to the great work of saving life from
+shipwreck, by the possession of such a noble and efficient boat.
+
+There was a great gathering at Ramsgate to witness the first public
+trial the boat was to be put through; naval officers, elder brethren of
+the Trinity House, scientific men of all services were interested deeply
+in the series of experiments to which she was to be subjected, for they
+all fully realized how the question of life or death to thousands, yea,
+in the course of time, to tens of thousands, was involved in the
+problem, as to whether any boat could be found competent to resist all
+the fury of a raging and broken sea.
+
+The _Northumberland_ was manned, and first her stability was to be
+tested; all her crew stood and jumped upon one gunwale, but failed to
+upset her; her self-righting property was next to be tried; they brought
+her under a crane, and passing a rope from her mast round her bottom,
+gradually hauled her over, and she was bottom up; they let go the strain
+on the rope, and in five seconds she had righted herself, and in twenty
+seconds more she had emptied herself of water. Again she was to be
+turned over, and this time fresh interest was to be excited in the
+experiment, as Mr. Samuel Beeching, the son of the inventor and builder
+of the boat, determined to show his confidence in her powers by being in
+her when she was upset: slowly the strain is again put upon the rope
+under-running the boat, and she gradually turns over, Mr. Beeching
+clinging to the centre thwart the while; a moment's suspense, the boat
+is keel up, and the brave man out of sight--scarcely time for a pang of
+fear, when the boat comes round with a throb, and the man is seen
+standing on the thwart, cheering in answer to the cheers with which the
+success of the experiment and his re-appearance are greeted.
+
+Now for a trial at sea, among the bright leaping waves, which seem full
+of playfulness and glee, as if ready to greet her merrily, and to
+whisper no word of the many deadly conflicts she must wage with them in
+coming days, ere she shall snatch the spoil of human life from their
+rage and strength.
+
+Strong arms are at the oars, the good ash staves bend, and away she
+shoots through the waves, holding her own successfully as other boats
+race with her.
+
+Her sailing powers must be tried, and a revenue-cutter accepts her
+challenge; both bowl along with a fresh breeze bellying their sails, and
+the life-boat behaves well and bravely, and proves also a success under
+sail.
+
+The breeze freshens, and there is a great bubble of leaping surf in the
+broken water in the angle of the pier; an ordinary boat would speedily
+be swamped there; but there the life-boat rides on the tumbling seas
+like a thing of life; every experiment increases the confidence that her
+crew and the lookers-on feel in the boat.
+
+Seaward now for a sterner trial, and on the field where her numerous
+future contests are to be fought, and her numerous victories gained; out
+and away where the rolling seas break in upon the Goodwin Sands, and
+where they fret into surf as they are checked in their race, and make
+the sea white with the foam of their falling crests; away into the
+tumbling seas, running the gauntlet of the leaping waves; away, and
+away, she speeds round the north end of the Sands, then steers for the
+North Foreland, until all her crew are perfectly delighted with her
+powers, and return to describe the trip, and how she behaved, and the
+confidence they have in her, that they would not hesitate to go in her
+into any broken water whatever.
+
+Great is the congratulation and gladness among the naval and scientific
+men who are watching the experiments, and many thank God, that at last
+the problem is solved--that a boat is found able to defy the broken
+surf and raging waves--a fit and safe instrument in the hands of the
+brave-hearted boatmen, who are ever ready to do and dare all that is
+possible, in their efforts to save life from shipwreck.
+
+The crew that went out in the boat made the following report:--
+
+
+ To the Harbour Commissioners.
+
+ "This is to certify that we have this day been to sea in the
+ _Northumberland_ prize life-boat, and have had every opportunity of
+ proving her sailing qualities; she has also been through a great
+ deal of broken water and heavy sea, and we consider her, in the
+ true sense of the word, perfectly qualified to encounter any bad
+ weather when occasion might require her services, and we should be
+ quite willing to go in her to any vessel in distress at any time."
+
+
+The prize life-boat was purchased in December, 1851, for £250, by the
+Trinity Board, for the use of the Royal Harbour at Ramsgate, with the
+dread Goodwin Sands for her special cruising ground.
+
+The trial of the life-boat became an especial feature at the various
+regattas held round the coast. The interest in her became very general,
+and a great move was given to the life-boat cause.
+
+At Teignmouth they determined that the trial should be of a very
+practical and somewhat sensational nature--a capsize out at sea! At
+eleven o'clock one stormy morning the signal was given to man the
+life-boat. In about one quarter of an hour she was making her way out
+to sea, and then her crew endeavoured to capsize her; they had tried in
+vain to do so in smooth water, would she defy their efforts in a rough
+tumble of sea and heavy weather? They set all her sails and manoeuvred
+in every way to upset her, but without effect, when, while she was
+heeling over almost on her broadside, with all her sails full, the crew,
+at a given signal, jumped on her lee-gunwale, and down on her broadside
+she went; her sails were let go, and she righted at once, only two of
+her crew were thrown out of her, and these, with their cork jackets on,
+were bobbing up and down quite happily among the waves; they were soon
+picked up, and the boat speedily on her way again, the men more pleased
+and confident than ever in her wonderful powers.
+
+But the National Life Boat Institution was not quite contented with the
+prize life-boat; she had gained eighty-six marks out of the one hundred
+in the competition of models; she was near perfection, but still could
+be improved upon; and as the great aim of the Society was to obtain a
+perfect boat, they would naturally not be content with anything less
+than this desired perfection, a boat that should satisfy the judges to
+the full in every particular, and thus merit the whole one hundred
+marks, instead of the eighty-six.
+
+Mr. Peake, the then assistant master-shipwright at the Royal Dockyard at
+Woolwich, was appealed to. He made the matter his especial study. He
+took the prize-boat as his model, and combining with it some of the best
+qualities of the other boats, constructed a boat not differing much, or
+in any essential point, from the prize one, but yet sufficiently an
+improvement upon it to be pronounced as far as possible perfect on all
+points; and it was at once adopted by the National Life Boat Institution
+as the standard model life-boat.
+
+The life-boat cause was now to know no further stay in its onward
+course, the Committee was formed of thoroughly earnest and warm-hearted
+men--men full of practical knowledge and warm sympathy. Moreover, the
+Institution was blessed with as able and indefatigable a Secretary as an
+Institution ever rejoiced in, this in the person of Mr. Richard Lewis,
+Barrister-at-Law; the appeal to the public for sympathy and assistance
+was general, and generally acknowledged.
+
+The Society told of dangerous headlands, of treacherous sands and tides
+all round the coast, of shipwrecks frequent, and deaths often occurring
+for want of a life-boat, and of life-boats, faultless in construction,
+only waiting the time when the Committee should have the means to place
+them where needed; the funds grew as the wants were realized, and the
+heart of the nation was warmed to the noble cause; the wreck-chart still
+showed a dismal circumference of casualties round the coast, marking
+dangerous points where many vessels had been lost; but the inner line of
+defence began also to show itself on the map, and the marks of the
+life-boat stations began year by year to confront more regularly the
+signs of places where danger and shipwreck were most frequent.
+
+But more of this, and the noble Life-boat Society, in the closing
+chapter of the book. It is time that we launched our life-boat for its
+real work. The waves are roaring on the Goodwin, the life-boat is at her
+moorings in the harbour of Ramsgate, the brave boatmen--Storm Warriors
+indeed--are on the watch, hour after hour through the stormy night
+walking the Pier, and giving keen glances to where the Goodwin Sands are
+white with the churning seething waves that leap high, and plunge and
+foam amid the treacherous shoals and banks. Look! a flash is seen;
+listen, in a few seconds, yes, there is the throb and boom of a distant
+gun, a rocket cleaves the darkness; and now the cry--Man the life-boat!
+Man the life-boat! Seaward Ho! Seaward Ho! But now in a boat efficient
+on all points, whose only career shall be to save, and not to add victim
+to victim, as she herself is overcome by the rage of the sea.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VI.
+
+THE RAMSGATE LIFE-BOAT AT WORK.--STORM WARRIORS TO THE RESCUE.
+
+ "Ye mariners of England,
+ That guard our native seas;
+ Whose flag has braved a thousand years
+ The battle and the breeze!
+ Your glorious standard launch again
+ To match another foe;
+ And sweep through the deep,
+ While the stormy winds do blow,
+ While the battle rages loud and long
+ And the stormy winds do blow."
+
+
+It was a Sunday night, in the month of February, a few years ago, the
+anxious boatmen, who kept a diligent watch, shrugged their shoulders as
+they cast keen glances to windward, and declared that it was going to be
+a very dirty night.
+
+Heavy masses of cloud skirted the horizon as the sun set; and as the
+night drew on, violent gusts of wind swept along, accompanied by
+snow-squalls.
+
+It was a dangerous time for vessels in the Channel, and it proved fatal
+to one at least.
+
+Before the light broke on Monday morning, the Margate lugger _Eclipse_
+put out to sea to cruise round the shoals and sands in the neighbourhood
+of Margate, on the look out for the victims of any disasters that might
+have occurred during the night.
+
+The crew soon discovered that a vessel was ashore on the Margate Sands,
+and directly made for her. She proved to be the Spanish brig
+_Samaritano_ of one hundred and seventy tons, bound from Antwerp to
+Santander, and laden with a valuable and miscellaneous cargo.
+
+Her crew consisted of the captain, Modesto Crispo, and eleven men; it
+was during a violent squall of wind and snow that the vessel was driven
+on the Sands, at about half-past five in the morning; the crew attempted
+to get away from the vessel in the boats, but in vain, the oars were
+broken in the attempt, and the boats stove in.
+
+The lugger _Eclipse_, as she was running for the brig, spoke a
+Whitstable fishing-smack, and borrowed two of her men and her boat. They
+boarded the brig as the tide went down, and hoped to be able to get her
+off the Sands at the next high water. For this purpose, six Margate
+boatmen and the two Whitstable men were left on board.
+
+But with the rising tide, the gale came on again in all its fury, and
+the boatmen had speedily to give up every hope of saving the vessel.
+They hoisted their boat on board to prevent her being swamped by the
+seas which were breaking heavily, and all hands began to feel that it
+was becoming a question, not of saving the vessel, but of saving their
+own lives. The sea rushed furiously over the wreck, lifting her, and
+then letting her fall with crushing violence upon the sands. Her timbers
+did not long withstand this trial of their strength; a hole was quickly
+knocked in her side, she filled with water, and settled down upon the
+sand.
+
+The waves began now to break with great force over the deck; the
+lugger's boat was speedily knocked to pieces and swept overboard; the
+hatches were forced up, and some of the cargo which floated on the deck
+was at once washed away. The brig began to roll and labour fearfully, as
+wave after wave broke against her, with a force that shook her from stem
+to stern and threatened to throw her bodily upon her broadside; the men,
+fearing this, cut the weather-rigging of the main mast, and the mast
+soon broke off short with a great crash, and went over the side.
+
+All hands now took refuge in the fore-rigging; nineteen men had then no
+other hope between them and a terrible death than the few shrouds of the
+shaking mast.
+
+The wind beat against the poor fellows with hurricane force; each wave
+that broke against the vessel sprang up in columns of foam and drenched
+them to the skin; the air was full of spray and sleet, which froze upon
+them as it fell.
+
+The Margate boatmen were there, but the Margate lugger could not have
+lived five minutes in the sea that surrounded the vessel; the Whitstable
+smack would have been wrecked at once, if she had attempted to get near
+the wreck, and thus the poor fellows, caught in a trap, had to be left
+by their comrades to their fate, their only chance of escape being the
+possibility of a life-boat coming to their rescue, and this before their
+frail support should yield to the rush of wind and sea.
+
+And resting in this hope they waited hour after hour, clinging to the
+shrouds of the tottering mast; but no help came, until one and all
+despaired of life.
+
+In the meanwhile, news of the wreck had spread like wildfire through
+Margate. In spite of the gale, and the blinding snow squalls, many of
+the inhabitants struggled to the cliff, and with spy-glasses tried to
+penetrate the scud, or to gain in the breaks of the storm some glimpses
+of the wreck.
+
+As soon as the peril the crew of the brig were in was known, the smaller
+of the two Margate life-boats was manned and made to the rescue. As she
+sailed out into the storm, the seas broke over her and filled her; this
+her gallant crew heeded little at first, for they had every confidence
+in her powers to ride safely through any storm, that her air-tight
+compartments would prevent her from sinking; but to the astonishment of
+the men they found that the boat was rapidly losing her buoyancy, and
+fast becoming unmanageable; indeed she was filling with water, which
+came up to the men's waists. The air-tight boxes had evidently filled;
+and they remembered, too late, that the valves, with which each box is
+provided to let out any water that may leak in, had been left unscrewed
+in the excitement of starting. Their boat, with the air-tight
+compartments filled with water, virtually ceased to be a life-boat, and
+her crew had to struggle for their own safety. Although then within a
+quarter of a mile of the brig, there was no help for it, they could make
+no farther way against the storm; the boat was unmanageable, and the
+only chance of life left to the boatmen themselves, was to run her
+ashore on the nearest part of the coast. It was doubtful whether they
+would be able to succeed even in this; and it was not until they had
+battled for four hours with the sea and gale, that they were able to get
+ashore in Westgate Bay.
+
+There the coastguard were ready to receive them, and did their best to
+revive the exhausted men. As soon as it was discovered at Margate that
+the first life-boat was disabled, the large life-boat, the _Friend of
+all Nations_, was got ready with every speed, and with much trouble
+dragged round to the lee side of the pier, where it was launched. Away
+she started, her brave crew doing all they could to battle with the
+gale, and force their way out to the wreck; but all their efforts were
+in vain; the tremendous wind was right against them; the sea completely
+overpowered them, and prevented their beating to windward; the tiller
+gave way, and after a hard struggle her crew had also to give up the
+attempt, and this life-boat in turn was driven ashore about one mile
+from the town. With both their life-boats wrecked, the Margate men
+almost gave up all hopes of saving the crew of the vessel and the men
+that were left on board; but this should not be the case until every
+possible effort had been made; but it was with small hope for the
+shipwrecked, and with much apprehension for the boats themselves, that
+the people watched two luggers--the _Nelson_ and the _Lively_--undaunted
+by the fate of the life-boats, stagger out mid the sweeping seas to the
+rescue.
+
+The fate of one lugger, the _Nelson_, was soon settled; a fearful squall
+of wind caught her before she had got many hundred yards clear of the
+pier; it swept her foremast out of her, and her crew had to make every
+possible effort to avoid being driven on the rocks, and there wrecked.
+
+The _Lively_ was more fortunate; she beat her way out to sea, but found
+so heavy a surf breaking over the Sands, that it was evidently
+impossible to cross them, or to get near the wreck.
+
+The Margate people became full of despair, and many a bitter tear was
+shed for sympathy and for personal loss as they watched the wreck, and
+thought of the poor fellows perishing slowly before their eyes,
+apparently without any possibility of being saved.
+
+A rumour spread among the crowd that the lieutenant of the coastguard
+had sent an express off to Ramsgate, for the Ramsgate steamer and
+life-boat; but this scarcely afforded any hope, as it was thought
+impossible that the steamer and life-boat could make their way round the
+North Foreland in the teeth of so tremendous a gale, or that, if they
+did so, it was supposed impossible that either the ship could hold
+together, or the crew live, exposed as they were in the rigging, during
+the time it would of necessity take the steamer and boat to get to them.
+
+We now change the scene to Ramsgate.
+
+From an early hour on the Monday morning, groups of boatmen assembled
+on the pier at Ramsgate; they were occasionally joined by some of the
+more hardy among the townsmen, or by a stray visitor, attracted by the
+wild scene that the storm presented.
+
+The boatmen could faintly discern, in the intervals between the
+snow-squalls, a few vessels in the distance, running before the gale,
+and they were keenly on the watch for signals of distress, that they
+might hasten to the rescue.
+
+But no such signal was given.
+
+Every now and then, as the wind boomed by, some landsmen suggested that
+it was the report of a gun from one, or other, of the three
+light-vessels, which guard the dangerous Goodwin Sands; but the boatmen
+shook their heads, and those who with spy-glasses kept a look-out in the
+direction of the light-vessels confirmed them in their disbelief.
+
+About nine o'clock, tidings came to Ramsgate that a brig was ashore on
+the Woolpack Sands off Margate. It was, of course, concluded that the
+two Margate life-boats would go to the rescue; and although there was
+much anxiety and excitement as to the result of the attempt the Margate
+boatmen would certainly make, no one had the least idea that the
+services of the Ramsgate life-boat would be required. But shortly after
+twelve a coastguard man from Margate hastened breathless to the pier,
+and to the harbour-master's office, saying, in answer to eager inquiries
+as he hurried on, that the two Margate life-boats had been wrecked, and
+that the Ramsgate boat was wanted.
+
+The harbour-master immediately gave orders, "Man the life-boat."
+
+No sooner had the words passed from his lips than the boatmen, who had
+crowded round the door in anticipation of the order, rushed away to the
+boat.
+
+First come, first in; not a moment's hesitation, not a thought of
+further clothing; they will go as they are, rather than not go at all.
+The news rapidly spreads; each boatman as he heard it, hastily snatched
+up his bag of waterproof overalls, and south-wester cap, and rushed down
+to the boat; and for some time boatman after boatman was to be seen
+racing down the pier, hoping to find a place still vacant; if the race
+had been to save their lives, rather than to risk them, it would hardly
+have been more hotly contested.
+
+Some of those who had won the race and were in the boat, were ill
+prepared with clothing for the hardships they would have to endure, for
+if they had not their waterproofs at hand they did not delay to get
+them, fearing that the crew might be made up before they got to the
+boat. But these men were supplied by the generosity of their
+disappointed friends, who had come down better prepared, but too late
+for the enterprise; the famous cork jackets were thrown into the boat
+and at once put on by the men.
+
+The powerful steam-tug, well named the _Aid_, that belongs to the
+harbour, and has her steam up night and day ready for any emergency that
+may arise, speedily got her steam to full power, and with her brave and
+skilful master, Daniel Reading, in command, took the boat in tow, and
+together they made their way out of the harbour. James Hogben, who, with
+Reading, has been in many a wild scene of danger, was coxswain, and
+steered and commanded the life-boat.
+
+It was nearly low water at the time, but the force of the gale was such
+as to send a good deal of spray dashing over the pier; the snow fell in
+blinding squalls, and drifted and eddied in every protected nook and
+corner. It was hard work for the excited crowd of people, who had
+assembled to see the life-boat start, to battle their way through the
+drifts and against the wind, snow, and foam to the head of the pier; but
+there at last they gathered, and many a one felt his heart fail as the
+steamer and boat cleared the protection of the pier, and encountered the
+first rush of wind and sea outside. "She seemed to go out under water,"
+said one old fellow; "I would not have gone out in her for the
+universe." And those who did not know the heroism and determination that
+such scenes call forth in the breasts of the boatmen, could not help
+wondering much at the eagerness which had been displayed to get a place
+in the boat--and this although the hardy fellows knew that the two
+Margate life-boats had been wrecked in the attempt to get the short
+distance which separated the wreck from Margate; while they would have
+to battle their way through the gale for ten or twelve miles before they
+could get even in sight of the vessel.
+
+It says nothing against the daring or skill of the Margate boatmen,
+that they failed. In such a gale they could not get to windward against
+wind and tide, success therefore was almost impossible without the aid
+of steam; with a steam-boat to tow them into position for dashing in
+upon the Sands, the Margate boats would in all probability have
+succeeded; without such assistance the Ramsgate boat would have
+certainly failed. As soon as the steamer and boat got clear of the
+Ramsgate pier, they felt the full force of the storm, and it seemed
+almost doubtful whether they could make any progress against it. They
+slowly worked their way out of the full strength of the tide, as it
+swept round the head of the pier, and then began to move ahead a little
+more rapidly, and were soon ploughing their way through a perfect sea of
+foam.
+
+The steamer with its engines working full power, plunged heavily along;
+wave after wave broke over its bows, sent its spray flying over the
+funnel and mast, and deluged the deck with a tide of water, which, as it
+rushed aft, gave the men enough to do to hold on.
+
+The life-boat was towing astern with fifty fathom of five-inch hawser
+out, an enormously strong rope about the thickness of a man's wrist. Her
+crew already experienced the dangers and discomforts, that they were
+ready to endure, perhaps, for many hours, and without a murmur, in order
+to save life.
+
+There was anxiety and fear, but the one thought of anxiety and fear was,
+as to whether they could possibly be in time to save the lives of the
+poor fellows, who must, for so many hours, have been clinging to a
+shattered wreck. It would be hard to give a description to enable one to
+realize the position of the men in the boat, as they were being towed
+along by the steamer. The use of a life-boat is, that it will float and
+live, where other boats would of necessity be swamped, upset, and
+founder; they are made for, and generally only used on, occasions of
+extreme danger and peril, for terrible storms and wild seas.
+
+The water flows into the boat, and over it, and it still floats: some
+huge wave will break over it, and for a moment bury it, but it rises in
+its buoyancy and shakes itself free; beaten down on its broadside by the
+waves and wind, it struggles hard, and soon rises again on an upright
+keel, and defies them to do their worst; and even if some mighty breaker
+should come rushing along, catch her in its curling arms, and bodily
+upset her, only for a few seconds would the triumph last, the boat would
+speedily right again, sitting like an ark of refuge in the boiling sea
+of foam, while her crew, upheld by their cork jackets, would be floating
+and struggling around her, until one after another would manage to
+regain her sides, and clamber in over her low gunwale at the waist, and
+shortly she would be speeding away again on her life errand. Such were
+the qualities of the noble boat, which we are watching, while she is
+urging her way through the dismal seas, while a dozen poor fellows, some
+nine or ten miles off, are hanging to the shaking shrouds of a tottering
+mast, the waves that are breaking over them threatening every moment to
+be their tomb.
+
+Away! away, then, brave boat! gallant crew! God grant you good
+progress!
+
+Since the moment of clearing the pier, the waves that broke over the
+boat filled her time after time, and did everything but drown her. The
+men were up to their knees in water; they bent forward as much as they
+could, each with a firm hold upon the boat.
+
+The spray and waves rushed over them, and as they beat continuously upon
+their backs, although they could not penetrate their waterproof
+clothing, still they chilled them to the bone, for, as the spray fell,
+it froze, indeed so bitter was the cold that the men's mittens were
+frozen to their hands.
+
+After a tremendous struggle the steamer seemed to be making head against
+the storm; they were well clear of the pier and getting on gallantly.
+They made their way through the Cud Channel, and had passed between the
+black and white buoys, so well known to Ramsgate visitors, when a
+fearful sea came heading towards them. It met and broke over the
+steamer, buried her in foam, and swept along.
+
+The life-boat rose to it, for a moment hung with her bows high in air,
+and then as she felt the strain of the tow-rope, plunged bodily into the
+wave, and was almost altogether under water; the men were nearly washed
+out of her, but at that moment the tow-rope broke, the wave threw the
+boat back with a jerk, and as the strain of the rope suddenly ceased,
+the boat fell across the seas which swept in rapid succession over her,
+and seemed completely at their mercy. Oars out! oars out! was the cry,
+and the men, as soon as they could get breath, got them out, and began
+to make every effort to get the boat round again, head to wind, but in
+vain, the waves tossed the oars up, the wind caught the blades, and it
+was as much as the men could do to keep them in their hands. The gale
+was too heavy for them, and they drifted rapidly before wind and tide
+towards the Brake Shoal, which was directly under their lee, and over
+which the seas were rushing with great violence. But the steamer, which
+throughout was handled most admirably, both as regards skill and
+bravery, was put round as swiftly as possible, and very cleverly brought
+within a few yards to windward of the boat, as she lay athwart the sea.
+
+The men on board the steamer threw a hauling line on board the boat to
+which was attached a bran new hawser, and again took the boat in tow.
+
+The tide was still flowing, and as it rose, the wind came up in heavier
+and heavier gusts, bringing with it a blinding snow and sleet, which,
+with the spray, still freezing as it fell, swept over the boat, till the
+men looked, as one said at the time, like a body of ice.
+
+The men could not look to windward for the drifting snow and blinding
+seas which were continually rushing over them, they only knew that the
+strong steamer was plunging along, taking all as it came, for they felt
+the strain on the rope; thus they realized that each moment's suffering
+and peril brought them nearer to their poor perishing fellow-sailors;
+and not one heart failed, not one repented of winning the race to the
+life-boat.
+
+Off Broadstairs, they suddenly felt the way of the boat stop. The rope
+broken again, was the first thought of all; but on looking round as they
+were enabled to do, as the boat was no longer being dragged through the
+seas; they discovered to their utter dismay that the steamer had
+stopped; they thought that her machinery had broken down, and at once
+despaired of saving the lives of the shipwrecked, for with the wind as
+it was, it would be long hours before they could beat up against the
+gale, and get to the Sands, on which they were told the wreck lay; a
+moment's suspense and they discovered, to their gladness, that the
+steamer had merely stopped to let out more cable, fearful that it might
+break again in the struggle that was before them, as they fought their
+way round the North Foreland.
+
+Another hour's hard struggle, and they reached the North Foreland. There
+the sea was running tremendously high--the gale was still increasing;
+the snow, sleet, and spray, rushed by with hurricane speed.
+
+Although it was only early in the afternoon, the air was so darkened by
+the storm that it seemed a dull twilight. The captain of the boat was
+steering; he peered out between his collar and cap, but looked in vain
+for the steamer. He knew that she was all right, for the rope kept
+taught; but many times, although she was only a hundred yards ahead, he
+could see nothing of her, still less able were the men on board the
+steamer to see the life-boat.
+
+Often did they anxiously look astern, and watch for a break in the drift
+and scud to see that she was all right; for although there could be no
+doubt as to the strain upon the rope, she might be towing along bottom
+up, or have all her men washed out of her, for all they could tell. The
+master of the steamer watched the seas, which broke over the _Aid_,
+making her stagger again, as they rushed towards the life-boat, and
+several times the fear that she was gone came over him. But steamer and
+life-boat still battled successfully against the storm.
+
+As soon as they were round the North Foreland, the snow squall cleared
+and they sighted Margate; all anxiously looked for the wreck, but
+nothing of her could they see. They saw a lugger riding just clear of
+the pier, with foremast gone, and anchor down to prevent her being
+driven ashore by the gale. They next sighted the Margate life-boat
+driven ashore and abandoned in Westgate Bay, looking a complete wreck,
+the waves beating over her. A little beyond this they caught sight of
+the second life-boat, also washed ashore; and then they learnt to
+realize to the full the gallant efforts that had been made to save the
+shipwrecked, and the destruction that had been wrought as effort after
+effort had been overcome by the fury of the storm. But where was the
+wreck? Had she been beaten to pieces, all lives lost, and were they too
+late? A heavy mass of cloud and snowstorm rolled on to windward of them
+in the direction of the Sands off Margate, and they could not make out
+any signs of the wreck there.
+
+There was just a chance that it was the Woolpack Sand that she was on.
+They thought it the more likely, as the first intelligence of the wreck
+that came to Ramsgate declared that such was the case; and accordingly
+they determined to make for the Woolpack Sand, which was about three
+miles farther on; they had scarcely decided upon this, when,
+providentially, there was a break in the drift of the snow to windward,
+and they suddenly caught sight of the wreck. But for this sudden
+clearance in the storm they would, as we have said, have proceeded
+farther on, and some hours must have passed before they could have found
+out their mistake and got back again, and by that time every soul of the
+poor shipwrecked crew must have perished.
+
+The master of the steamer made out the flag of distress flying in the
+rigging of the vessel, the ensign union downwards; she, doubtlessly, was
+the wreck of which they were in search.
+
+But still it was a question how they could get to her, for she was on
+the other side of the Sand. To tow the boat round the Sand would take a
+long time in the face of such a gale; and for the boat to make across
+the Sand seemed almost impossible, so tremendous was the sea that was
+running over it.
+
+Nevertheless there was no hesitation on the part of the life-boat crew.
+It seemed a forlorn hope, a very rushing upon destruction, to attempt to
+force the boat under canvas through such a surf and sea; but they looked
+at the tottering wreck; they felt how any moment might be the last to
+the poor fellows clinging to her, and they could not bear to think of
+the delay that would be occasioned by their going round the Sands.
+
+Without hesitation, therefore, they cast off the tow-rope, and were
+about setting sail, when they found that the tide was running so
+furiously that they must be towed at least three miles to the eastward
+before they would be sufficiently far to windward to make certain of
+fetching the wreck.
+
+It was a hard struggle to get the tow-rope on board again, tossed about
+as they were by the tumbling seas, and a bitter disappointment to all,
+that an hour, or more, of their precious time must be consumed before
+they could possibly get to the rescue of their endangered brother
+seamen; but there was no help for it, and away again they went in tow of
+the steamer. The snow-squall came on again, and they lost sight of the
+wreck, but all kept an anxious look-out, and now and then, in a break in
+the squall, they could catch a glimpse of her. They could see that she
+was almost buried in the waves which broke over her in great clouds of
+foam, and again many and weary were the doubts and speculations, as to
+whether any on board of her could still be alive. For twenty minutes or
+so they battled steadily on against wind and tide.
+
+The gale, which had been increasing since the morning, came on heavier
+than ever, and roared like thunder over head; the sea was running so
+furiously and meeting the life-boat with such tremendous force that the
+men had to cling on their hardest not to be washed out of her, and at
+last the new tow-rope could no longer resist the increasing strain, and
+suddenly parted with a tremendous jerk; there was no thought of picking
+up the cable again--they could stand no further delay, and one and all
+of her crew rejoiced to hear the captain of the life-boat give orders to
+set sail.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VII.
+
+THE RESCUE OF THE CREW OF THE "SAMARITANO," AND THE RETURN.
+
+ Now set the teeth, and stretch the nostril wide;
+ Hold hard the breath, and bend up every spirit
+ To his full height! On, on, you noble English,
+ Whose blood is set from fathers of war-proof!
+ Fathers that, like so many Alexanders,
+ Have, in these parts, from morn till even fought.
+
+ "King Henry V."--_Shakespeare._
+
+
+Harder still the gale, and the rush of the sea and the blinding snow.
+The storm was at its height. As the life-boat headed for the Sands, a
+darkness, as of night, seemed to settle down upon the men; they could
+scarcely see each other; but on through the raging sea and blinding
+storm they drove the gallant boat. As they approached the shallow water,
+the high part of the Sand, where the heaviest waves were breaking, they
+could see spreading itself before them, standing out in the gloom, a
+white, gleaming, barrier wall of foam; for there as the rushing waves
+broke, they clashed together in their recoil, and mounted up in columns
+of foam, their heavier volume falling, and their crests caught by the
+wind and carried away in white streaming clouds of spray, while the
+fearful roar of the beat of the waves could be heard above the gale.
+
+But still straight for the breakers the men made. No faltering, no
+hesitation, brows knit, teeth clenched, hands ready, and hearts firm,
+and into it with a cheer.
+
+The boat, although under the smallest sail she could carry--a double
+reefed fore-sail and mizen--was driven on by the hurricane force of the
+wind, on through the outer range of breakers she plunged, and then came
+indeed a struggle for life.
+
+The waves no longer rolled on in foaming ranks, but leapt, and clashed,
+and battled together in a raging boil of sea. They broke over the boat,
+the surf poured in first on one side of the boat, and then on the other,
+as she rolled to starboard and port, wildly tossed from side to side.
+Some waves rushed bodily over the boat, threatening to sweep every man
+out of her. Look out, my men! hold on! hold on! was the cry. When they
+saw some huge breaker heading towards them like an advancing wall, then
+the men threw themselves breast down on the thwart, curled their legs
+under it, clasped it with all their force with both arms, held their
+breath hard, and clung on for very life against the tear and wrestle of
+the wave, while the rush of water poured over their backs and heads, and
+buried them in its flood. Down, down, beneath the weight of the water,
+the men and boat sank; but only for a moment; the splendid boat rose in
+her buoyancy, and freed herself of the seas, which for a moment had
+overcome her and buried her, and her crew breathed again; and a
+struggling cry of triumph rises from them. Well done, old boat! well
+done! all right! all right! Yes, all hands here, no one washed out of
+her; and with a quick glance of mutual congratulation they look at each
+other, and rejoice that all are safe, scarce time for a word. "Now she
+goes through it, now she's forging ahead! keep a tight hold, my boys!" A
+moment's lull, as she glided on the crest of some huge wave, or only
+smaller ones tried their strength against her; then again the monster
+fellows came heading on, again the warning cry was given; look out! hold
+on! hold on! and the men crouched, and clung, and struggled for their
+lives, while the wild waves rushed over the boat.
+
+Thus until they got clear of the Sands the fearful struggle was again
+and again repeated; but at last it was for a time over, they had burst
+through the belt of raging surf and got again into deep water. They had
+then only the huge rolling waves and less broken tumble of sea to
+contend with; this, in such a furious gale of wind, was bad enough, and
+almost more than any other kind of boat could have endured, but little
+in comparison to what they had just gone through, and escaped from.
+
+The boat was now put before the wind, and every man in her was on the
+look-out for the wreck. For a time it remained so thick that there was
+no possibility of finding her, when again a second time a sudden break
+in the storm revealed her: she was about half a mile to leeward.
+
+They shifted the foresail with great difficulty, and again made in for
+the Sands towards the vessel. The appearance of the wreck as they
+approached her made even the stoutest among them shudder.
+
+She had settled down by the stern in the Sands, the uplifted bow being
+the only part of the hull that was to be seen; the sea was making a
+clear breach over her.
+
+The mainmast was gone, her foresail, and foretopsail were blown adrift,
+and great columns of foam were mounting up, flying over her foremast and
+bow. They saw a Margate lugger lying at anchor just clear of the Sands,
+and made close to her. As they shot by they could just make out, mid the
+roar of the storm, a loud hail, eight of our men on board! and on they
+flew, and in a few minutes were in a sea that would instantly have
+swamped the lugger, noble and powerful boat though she was.
+
+Approaching the wreck, it was with terrible anxiety they strained their
+sight, trying to discover if there were still any men left in the
+tangled mass of rigging, over which the sea was breaking so furiously.
+By degrees they made them out. "I see a man's head, look! one is waving
+his arm."--"I make out two! three! why the rigging is full of the poor
+fellows;" and with a cheer of triumph, at being yet in time, the
+life-boat crew settled to their work.
+
+The wreck of the mainmast, and the tremendous wash of sea over the
+vessel, prevented their going to the lee of the wreck. This increased
+their danger tenfold, as the result proved.
+
+When about forty yards from the wreck, they lowered their sails, and
+cast the anchor over the side. The moment for which the boat had so
+gallantly battled for four hours, and the shipwrecked had waited almost
+in despair for eight hours, had at last arrived.
+
+No cheering! no shouting in the boat now, no whisper beyond the
+necessary orders; the risk and suspense are too terrible! yard by yard,
+the cable is cautiously payed out, and the great rolling seas are
+allowed to carry the boat, little by little, nearer to the vessel. The
+waves break over the boat, for a moment bury it, and then as the sea
+rushes on, and breaks upon the wreck, the spray, flying up, hides the
+men lashed to the rigging from the boatman's sight. They hoist up a
+corner of the sail to let the boat sheer in; all are ready; a huge wave
+lifts them. Pay out the cable! sharp, men! sharp! the coxswain shouts;
+belay all! The cable was let go a few yards by the run, and the boat is
+alongside the wreck. With a cry, three men jump into the boat and are
+saved! All hands to the cable! haul in hand over hand, for your lives,
+men, quick, the coxswain cries; for he sees a tremendous wave rushing in
+swiftly upon them. They haul in the cable, draw the boat a little from
+the wreck, the wave passes and breaks over the vessel; if the life-boat
+had been alongside she would have been dashed against the wreck, and
+perhaps capsized, or washed over, and utterly destroyed. Again the men
+watch the waves, and as they see a few smaller ones approaching, let the
+cable run again, and get alongside; this time they are able to remain a
+little longer by the vessel; and one after another, thirteen of the
+shipwrecked men unlash themselves from the rigging and jump into the
+boat, when again they draw away from the vessel in all haste, and avoid
+threatened destruction.
+
+"Are they all saved?" No! three of the vessel's crew, Spaniards, are
+still left in the rigging; they seem almost dead, and scarcely able to
+unlash themselves, and crawl down the shrouds and await the return of
+the boat.
+
+Again the boat is alongside, and this time the peril is greater than
+ever. They must place the boat close to the vessel, for the men are too
+weak to make any spring to reach her; they must remain alongside for a
+longer time, for two life-boatmen must get on to the wreck and lift the
+men on board; but, as before, they go coolly, quietly, and determinedly
+to work; the cable is veered out, the sail manoeuvred to make the boat
+sheer, and again she is alongside; the men are seized by their arms and
+clothing, and dragged into the boat.
+
+The last one left is the cabin-boy; he seems entangled in the rigging.
+The poor little fellow had a canvas bag of trinkets and things, he was
+taking as presents to the loved ones at home, and all through the
+howling storm, the rush and beat of the waves, as he held on exhausted
+and half dead to the shrouds, he still thought of those loved friends,
+and clung to the canvas bag.
+
+God only knows whether the loved ones at home were thinking of, and
+praying for him, and whether it was in answer to their prayers and those
+of many others that the life-boat then rode alongside that wreck, an ark
+of safety mid the raging seas.
+
+They shout, the boy lingers still, his half-dead hands cannot free the
+bag from the entangled rigging. A moment and all are lost; a boatman
+makes a spring, seizes the lad with a strong grasp, and tears him down
+from the rigging into the boat--too late, too late; they cannot get away
+from the vessel; a tremendous wave rushes on: hold hard all, hold
+anchor! hold cable! give but a yard, and all are lost! The boat lifts,
+is washed into the fore-rigging, the sea passes, and she settles down
+again upon an even keel! Thank God! If one stray rope of all the torn
+and tangled rigging of the vessel had caught the boat's rigging, or one
+of her spars--if the boat's keel or cork fenders had caught in the
+shattered gunwale, she would have turned over, and every man in her been
+shaken into the sea to speedy and certain death. Thank God, it is not
+so, and once more they are safe.
+
+The boat is very crowded; she has her own crew of thirteen on board, six
+of the Margate boatmen and two Whitstable fishermen, who were left on
+the vessel, the captain, mate, eight seamen and the boy; thus,
+thirty-two souls in all form her precious freight.
+
+The life-boatmen at once, without a second's delay, haul in the cable as
+fast as possible, and draw up to the anchor to get clear of the wreck,
+for they must get some distance away before they dare let go their
+cable, or with the wind and seas setting directly towards the vessel
+they would be driven upon her, unless they had plenty of room to sail by
+her.
+
+An anxious time it is, as they draw up to the anchor; at last they are
+pretty clear, and hoist the sail to draw still farther away before they
+let go.
+
+There is no thought of getting the anchor up in such a gale and sea.
+
+"She draws away," cries the captain of the boat, "pay out the cable;
+stand by to cut it; pass the hatchet forward; cut the cable, quick, my
+men, quick." There is a moment's delay, a delay by which indeed all
+their lives are saved; a few strong blows with the hatchet, and the
+cable would have been parted. A boatman takes out his knife, and begins
+gashing away at the hawser. Already one strand out of the three, which
+form the strong rope, is severed; when a fearful gust of wind sweeps by,
+the boat heels over almost on her side--a crash is heard, and the mast
+and sail are blown clean out of the boat.
+
+Never was a moment of greater peril. Away in the rush of the wave the
+boat is carried straight for the wreck; the cable is payed out and is
+slack; they haul it in as fast as they can, but on they are carried
+swiftly, apparently to certain destruction. Let them hit the wreck full,
+and the next wave must throw the boat bodily upon it, and all her crew
+will be swept at once into the sea; let them but touch the wreck, and
+the risk is fearful; on they are carried, the stem of the boat just
+grazes the bow of the vessel, they must be capsized by the bowsprit and
+entangled in the wreckage; some of the crew are ready for a spring into
+the bowsprit to prolong their lives a few minutes, the others are all
+steadily, eagerly, quietly, hauling in upon the cable might and main, as
+the only chance of safety to the boat and crew; one moment more and all
+are gone, one more haul upon the cable, a fathom or so comes in by the
+run, and at that moment it mercifully taughtens and holds; all may yet
+be safe, another yard or two and the boat would have been dashed to
+pieces.
+
+They again haul in the cable, and draw the boat away as rapidly as they
+can from the wreck, but they do it with a terrible dread, for they
+remember the cut strand of the rope. Will the remaining two strands
+hold? The strain is fearful, each time that the boat lifts to a wave,
+the cable tightens and jerks, and they think it breaking; but it still
+holds, and a thrill of joy passes through the heart of all, as they hear
+that the cut part of the rope is safely in the boat.
+
+But the danger is not even yet over: all this time the mast and sail
+have been dragging over the side of the boat; it is with great
+difficulty that they get them on board.
+
+The mast had been broken short off about three feet from the heel.
+
+They chop a new heel to it, and rig it up as speedily as they can, but
+it takes long to do so; for the boat is lying in the trough of the sea,
+and the waves are constantly breaking over her; moreover, she is so
+crowded that the men can scarcely move, and the gale is blowing as hard
+as ever.
+
+For the poor Spaniards, as they cling to each other, the terrors of
+death seem scarcely passed away; they know nothing of the properties of
+the life-boat, and cannot believe that it will live long in such a sea.
+As the waves beat over the boat and fill it, they imagine that she will
+founder, and each time that the great rolling seas launch themselves at
+her they cling to each other, expecting that she will capsize; besides,
+the poor fellows' nerves are not in a very good state; for eight hours
+they have been in great danger, for a large portion of that time in
+momentary expectation of death, during the four hours they were lashed
+to the rigging of the wreck, with the life nearly beaten and frozen out
+of them by the constant rush of sea and of spray, and by the bitter
+wind.
+
+One of the Spaniards seeing a life-belt lying down, which one of the
+crew had thrown off in the hurry of his work, sits upon it by way of
+making himself doubly safe. But the work goes on. At last the mast is
+fitted and raised. No unnecessary word is spoken all this time, for the
+life and death struggle is not yet over; nor, indeed, can it be before
+they are well away from the neighbourhood of the wreck. Now, as they
+hoist the sail, the boat gradually draws away; the cable is again payed
+out little by little; as soon as they are well clear of the vessel they
+cut it, and away they sail. The terrible suspense is over when each
+moment was a moment of fearful risk. It had lasted from the time when
+they let go the anchor to the time when they got clear of the
+vessel--about one hour. The men could now breathe freely, their faces
+brighten, and from one and all there arises spontaneously a pealing
+cheer. They are no longer face to face with death, and thankfully and
+joyfully they sail away from the sands, the breakers, and the wreck.
+
+The gale was still at its height, but the peril they were in then seemed
+nothing to what they had gone through, and had happily left behind. In
+the great reaction of feeling, the freezing cold and sleet, the driving
+wind, and foam, and sea, were all forgotten; and they felt as
+light-hearted as if they were out on a pleasant summer's cruize. They
+could at last look round and see who they had in the boat, speak hearty
+words of congratulation to the Margate and Whitstable men, some of whom
+they knew, and strive by a good deal of broken English, and slaps on the
+back, and shaking of hands, to cheer up the Spanish sailors, and to let
+them know how glad they are to have saved them. They then proceeded in
+search of the steamer, which, after casting the life-boat adrift, made
+for shelter to the back of the Hook Sand, not far from the Reculvers,
+and there waited, her crew anxiously on the look-out for the return of
+the life-boat.
+
+As they were making for the steamer, the lugger _Eclipse_ came in chase
+to hear whether they had succeeded in saving all hands, and especially,
+whether all the men of her crew were saved. They welcomed the glad
+tidings with three cheers for the life-boat crew, and made in for the
+land. Soon after, the Whitstable smack made towards them upon a similar
+errand, and her crew were equally rejoiced to hear that their
+ship-mates with all hands were safe. It was too rough, a great deal, for
+the men to be taken on board the smack; and so she, after speaking them,
+tacked in for the land.
+
+The night was coming on apace; it was not until they had run three or
+four miles that they sighted the steamer; and when they got alongside
+her it was a difficult matter to get the saved crew on board. The sea
+was raging, and the gale blowing as much as ever, and the steamer rolled
+and pitched heavily; the poor shipwrecked fellows were too exhausted to
+spring for the steamer as the opportunities occurred, and had to be
+almost lifted on board, one poor fellow being hauled on board by a rope.
+Again the boat was taken in tow, almost all her crew remaining in her,
+and they commenced their return home. The night was very dark and clear;
+the sea and gale had lost none of their force; and until the steamer and
+boat had got well round the North Foreland, the struggle to get back was
+just as great as it had been to get there.
+
+Once round the Foreland the wind was well on the quarter, and they made
+easier way; light after light opened to them; Kingsgate and Broadstairs
+were passed, and at last the Ramsgate pier-head light shone out with its
+bright welcome, and the men began to feel that their work was nearly
+over.
+
+A telegram had been sent from Margate in the afternoon, stating that the
+Ramsgate life-boat had been seen to save the crew; but nothing more had
+been heard. The boatmen had calculated the time when they thought the
+steamer and life-boat might both be back; and the fearful violence of
+the storm suggested some sad occasion for the delay. As hour after hour
+grew on, the anxiety increased; real alarm was beginning to be felt by
+all, and a keen watch was kept for the first appearance of the steamer
+and boat round the edge of the cliff.
+
+As the tide went down, and the sea broke less heavily over the pier, the
+men could venture farther along it, until, by the time of the boat's
+return, they were enabled to assemble at the end of the pier, and there
+a large and anxious crowd gathered. The anxiety of all was increased by
+the suggestions and speculations of disasters, which always present
+themselves at a time of suspense and apprehension; and so, when the
+steamer was announced with the life-boat in tow, the reaction was great,
+and the watchers shouted for very joy.
+
+And as the "Storm Warriors" entered the harbour waving the strong right
+arms that had worked so well, and shouted, "All saved!" "All saved!" and
+the flags of triumph were seen flying out in the gale. Cheer after cheer
+broke from the crowd as they welcomed home from the dread battle-field
+those who had fought and conquered, and now bore with them as trophies
+of their victory, nineteen men; fellow-sailors, whose lives had been
+saved from a terrible and certain death. And many cheered again as they
+thought of the number who would have had life-long cause to mourn, if
+these poor fellows had perished. Parents, wives, children--what a group
+they would seem if they could be pictured watching the saved ones
+return; what words, and looks, and tears of thanks where feelings are
+too deep for words, for the Storm Warriors, and for the life-boat cause,
+and for the generous English people who placed such boats at the
+disposal of such brave hearts and strong hands--of men ready to dare all
+and to do all that men can do to rescue the perishing from death.
+
+Think only of the group that may possibly welcome back the little pale,
+exhausted cabin-boy, their hearts as warm as his, their love as deep as
+his--as his, which made that little canvas bag full of simple presents
+so dear to him that he held to it through all the many hours of the
+storm; that made it his first thought when the wild seas rushed over the
+vessel, and the crew had to take to the rigging; love that made him,
+when grown men thought only of their own lives, rush to his chest and
+seize his treasure, and all through the wild gale cling to it; cling to
+it still, though the winds in their bitter cold froze him through and
+through, and the seas beat over him hour after hour. Think of the faces
+that may have seemed to peer at him out of the darkness of the storm. A
+loving-hearted father ready to thank him for the tobacco-box; a mother
+for that wonderful brooch; a little dark-eyed brother for the knife with
+four blades, and a little sister for the little very blue-eyed doll with
+such rosy cheeks. No, he could not let the bag go, and so it nearly cost
+him his life, and by the delay his clinging to it caused, nearly cost
+all the brave men their lives also; but the good God would not let so
+much simple love work so much disaster, and the loving ones shall see
+him again, and perhaps he will stand, and perhaps each of his
+fellow-sailors will stand, in the centre of some tearful group, who
+again and again will weep, and thank God, as they are told of the wreck,
+and the hours of peril, and the waiting for death, and the hopeless
+despair, and the strange wonderful boat that came in through the storm;
+and how they were saved, when they never thought to see home again. And
+often shall the brave boatmen be blessed and thanked by grateful hearts,
+and the life-boat cause not forgotten. I repeat the picture that we may
+learn to think much of the sailor's arrival home, as well of his being
+saved from the wreck, and thus learn to appreciate the more the value
+and the mercy of life-boat work.
+
+But to return. The Spanish sailors had, by the time they reached the
+harbour, somewhat recovered under the care of the life-boat crew, and
+were further well cared for, and supplied with clothes by the care of
+the Spanish consul. And the hardy English boatmen did not take long to
+recover from their exposure and fatigues, fearful as they had been.
+
+The Spanish captain, in speaking of the rescue, was almost overcome by
+his feelings of gratitude and wonder. He had quite made up his mind for
+death; he felt that the wreck could not by any possibility hold together
+much longer; every moment he expected a final crash; and all his
+experience taught him that it was impossible for any boat to come to
+their rescue in such a fearful sea. His experience of the life-boat was
+new, and not easily to be forgotten.
+
+He had a painting made of the rescue to take with him and show to the
+Spanish Government. It is pleasing to be able to wind up this story with
+stating, that the English Board of Control acknowledged the bravery and
+exertions of the men engaged in the rescue, by presenting to each of
+them 2_l._ and a medal, and that the Spanish Government also gratefully
+acknowledged the heroic exertions of the men, by granting to each a
+medal and 3_l._
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER VIII.
+
+A NIGHT ON THE GOODWIN SANDS.
+
+ "God help the poor fellows at sea!"
+ Far away inland, when tempests blow
+ Wild through the dark'ning night,
+ We list to the roar of the winds as they go
+ On their hurricane steeds to the fight;
+ For the hosts of the storm-king are gathering fast
+ Where the white-crested waters flee,
+ And our heart breathes this prayer, as he rushes past,
+ On the wings of the northern howling blast,--
+ "God help the poor fellows at sea!"
+
+ _C. T._
+
+
+"God have mercy upon the poor fellows at sea!" Household words these, in
+English homes, however far inland the homes may be; and although near
+these homes the sea may have no better representative than a sedge
+choked river, or canal, along which slow barges urge a lazy way.
+
+For when the storm-wrack darkens the sky, and gales are abroad, seaward
+fly the sympathies of English hearts, and the prayer is uttered, and in
+many cases, in this sea-loving island of ours, with very special
+reference to some loved and absent sailor. It is those, however, who
+live near the sea-shore, and watch the warfare going on in all its
+terrible reality, that learn the more truly to realize the fearful
+nature of the struggles for life that go on round our coasts; and who
+learn as the wild gales rave to find an answer to the murmurings of the
+fierce blast, in the prayer, "God have mercy upon the poor fellows at
+sea;" and this especially as they welcome ashore, as wrested from death,
+some rescued sailor, or mourn over those who have found a sudden grave
+almost within call of land.
+
+It is a pretty picture enough from Ramsgate Pier, when fifty or a
+hundred sail are in sight within two or three miles of land, and the day
+is sunny, and the sea bright, and a good wholesome breeze is bowling
+along; but anxious withal, when the clouds are gathering, and the fleet
+of vessels are seeking to make the best of their way to find shelter in
+the Downs: and a south-westerly gale moans up, and the last of the fleet
+are caught by it, and have to anchor in exposed places, and you watch
+them riding heavily, making bad weather, the seas every now and then
+flying over them. It is winter time, and the weather stormy; day after
+day brings into the harbour fresh evidences of the deadly contest that
+rages out at sea--vessels towed in disabled, with bulwarks washed away,
+masts over the side, bows stove in, or leaky, having been in collision,
+touched the ground or been struck by a sea; who at such times can
+withhold their interest or sympathy? the veriest landsmen grow excited,
+and make daily pilgrimages to the pier, to see how the vessels under
+repairs are getting on, or what new disasters have occurred.
+
+But it is at night-time especially that your thoughts take a more
+solemn and anxious turn. As you settle down by the fireside for a quiet
+evening, you remember the ugly appearance the sky had some two or three
+hours before, when you stood watching the scene from the end of the
+pier. You felt that mischief was brewing, as the gusts of wind swept by
+with increasing force, and you looked out upon a troubled sea that every
+minute seemed to grow more white and raging.
+
+The Downs anchorage was full of shipping; a few vessels had parted their
+cables, and had to run for it, while the luggers, heavily laden with
+chains and anchors, staggered out of the harbour to supply them: other
+ships made for the harbour; you almost shuddered as you looked down upon
+them from the pier, and saw them in the grasp of the sea, rolling and
+plunging, with the waves surging over their bows. Another minute's
+battle with the tide, you heard the orders shouted out, you saw the men
+rushing to obey them--the pilot steady at the wheel, and you could
+scarce forbear a cheer as ship after ship shot by the pier-head and
+found refuge in the harbour.
+
+Altogether it was a wild exciting scene, and you cannot shake off the
+effect--the wind rushes and moans by, a minute before it was raging over
+the sea.
+
+The muffled roaring sound that is heard, is that of the waves breaking
+at the foot of the cliff. From the windows can be seen, gleaming out in
+the darkness, the bright lights of the Goodwin light-ships, which guard
+those fatal sands--sands so fatal, that when the graves give up their
+dead, few churchyards will render such an account as theirs, not only
+as to the number of the dead, but also that the Sands are a battle-field
+which entombs the brave and strong, who go down quick to their grave,
+quick from the full tide of life and strength, from the eager stern
+deadly contest in which, to the last, all their strong energies were
+fully engaged.
+
+Men who, a few hours before, were reckless and merry, anticipating no
+danger and ready to laugh at the thought of death; who, if homeward
+bound, were full of joy as they seemed almost to stand upon the
+threshold of their homes; or by whom, if outward bound, the kisses of
+their wives, which seemed still to linger on their cheeks, and the soft
+clasping arms of their little ones, which seemed still to hang about
+their necks, were only to be forgotten in the few hours of terrible life
+struggle with the storm, and then again to be keenly remembered in the
+last gasping moment, ere the Goodwin Sands should find them a grave
+almost within the shadow of their homes.
+
+There is a sudden report; surely the firing of a gun, a wreck, a vessel
+on the Sands--watch, yes, there! A rocket streams up from one of the
+light-vessels, and the gun and the rocket five minutes after, form the
+signal that calls to the life-boat for assistance. The breakers on the
+Sands could be clearly seen from the shore during the day, as they rose
+and fell like fitful volumes of white eddying smoke, breaking up the
+clear line of the horizon, and tracing the Sands in broken broad leaping
+outlines of foam.
+
+Yes! and now, amid those terrible breakers, somewhere out in the
+darkness, within five or six miles, near that bright light, there are
+twenty, thirty, fifty, you know not how many, of your fellow-creatures,
+struggling for their lives.
+
+Ah! listen to the storm blast, with what dread force it rushes by, what
+a dirge it seems to moan; and well it may, for if the gale lasts only a
+few hours, and there is no rescue, the morning may be bright and fair
+and calm, and the sea as smooth as a lake, but nothing of either ship or
+crew shall any more be seen.
+
+But, thank God! there will be a rescue! You know that already brave
+hearts have determined to attempt it; that strong ready hands are
+already at work in cool, quick, preparation; that, almost before you
+could urge your way against the tempest down to the head of the pier,
+the steamer and life-boat will have fought their way out against the
+storm and darkness upon their errand of mercy.
+
+"God have mercy upon the poor fellows at sea; upon the shipwrecked in
+their dismal peril; upon the brave Storm Warriors speeding out in danger
+and hardship!" this is the prayer that indeed often finds utterance,
+when the sleeper is awakened in the dark hours of the night by the
+howling of the wind or the boom of the signal gun. And at Ramsgate the
+prayer may be uttered fervently indeed by those, who, when they hear the
+signal of distress, know that the endangered vessel is experiencing all
+the dread dangers of the Goodwin Sands, for the vessels wrecked upon
+them have indeed, if the weather is bad, but a poor prospect of ever
+sailing the broad seas again.
+
+The Goodwin is a quick-sand, and it is this, as well as the tremendous
+sea that beats upon it in heavy weather, that makes it so terribly fatal
+to vessels that get stranded on it.
+
+At low tide a portion of the sand is dry, and hard, and firm, and can be
+walked on for a distance of about four or five miles; but as the water
+again flows over any part of it, that part becomes, as the sailors say,
+"all alive," soft and quick, and ready to suck in anything that lodges
+upon it. Suppose a vessel to run on with a falling tide, where the sand
+shelves, or is steep, the water leaves the bow and the sand there gets
+hard; the water still flows under the stern, and the sand there remains
+soft a longer time; down the stern sinks lower and lower; the vessel
+soon breaks her back, or works herself deeper and deeper by the stern;
+as the water rises she fills and works and still sinks deeper in the
+sand every roll she gives, until at high tide she is, perhaps,
+completely buried, or only her topmasts are seen above water.
+
+Other vessels, if the sea is heavy, begin to beat heavily, and soon
+break up.
+
+Lifted up on the swell of a huge wave, as it breaks and flies away in
+surf and foam, the vessel thumps down with all its weight upon the
+sands, the timbers give and strain, the seams open; she soon ceases, as
+she fills with water, to rise upon the wave; great gaps are torn from
+the bulwarks; the decks burst open with the air seeking to escape from
+the hold, and as the sea rushes over the vessel, each roll she gives
+wrenches her more and more; the masts fall over the side; her cargo
+floats and washes away, and speedily, even in a few hours, she is in a
+torn and shattered condition, completely wrecked and destroyed. The
+broken hull is full of water and lurches heavily to and fro with each
+wave, rolls and slightly lifts and works, until it has made a deep bed
+in the Sands in which it is soon completely buried--so that many vessels
+have run upon the Sands in the early night, and scarcely a vestige of
+them been seen in the morning.
+
+By way of illustration, let me tell what happened one dark stormy night
+some few years back. The harbour steam-tug _Aid_ and the life-boat had
+started from Ramsgate early in the day, to try and get to the _Northern
+Belle_, a fine American barque, which was ashore not far from Kingsgate;
+but the force of the gale and tide was so tremendous, that they could
+not make way against it, and were driven back to Ramsgate--there to wait
+until the tide turned, or the wind moderated.
+
+About two in the morning, while they were making ready for another
+attempt to reach the _Northern Belle_, rockets were fired from one of
+the Goodwin light-vessels, showing that some vessel was in distress on
+the Sands. They hastened at once to afford assistance, and got to the
+edge of the Sands shortly after three in the morning. Up and down they
+cruised, but could see no signs of any vessel.
+
+They waited until it was daylight, and then saw the upper portion of the
+lower mast of a steamer standing out of the water. They made towards it,
+but found no one was left, and no signs of any wreck floating about to
+which a human being could cling.
+
+They concluded, that almost immediately upon striking, the vessel must
+have broken up, sunk, and been buried in the quick-sand. Poor fellows!
+poor fellows! a sharp, sudden death: would that the vessel had held
+together a little longer. Away, then, now for the _Northern Belle_.
+
+They had not made much way ahead when the captain of the _Aid_ sees a
+large life-buoy floating near. "Ease her," he cries, and the way of the
+steamer slackens. "God knows but what that life-buoy may be of use to
+some of us." The helmsman steers for it; a sailor makes a hasty dart at
+it with a boat-hook, misses it, and starts back appalled from a vision
+of staring eyes, and matted hair, and wildly tossed arms. They shout to
+the life-boat crew, and they in turn steer for the buoy; the bowman
+grasps at it, catches it, but cannot lift it, his cry of horror startles
+the whole crew, and some spring to his help; they lift the buoy and
+bring to the surface three dead bodies that are tied to it by ropes
+round their waists. Slowly and carefully, one by one, the crew lift them
+on board, and lay them out under the sail.
+
+The _Violet_, passenger steamer, had left Ostend about eleven the
+previous night; at two in the morning she struck on the Goodwin Sands; a
+little after three there was no one left on board to answer the signals
+of the steam-boat that had come to their rescue, and show their
+position; at seven there was nothing to be seen of the steamer, crew, or
+passengers, but a portion of one mast, the life-buoy, and the three
+pale corpses sleeping their long last sleep under the life-boat sail.
+Such are the Goodwin Sands.
+
+It was a storm-ridden November day, the weather was very threatening
+throughout; it was blowing hard, with occasional squalls from the
+east-north-east, and a heavy sea running. At high tide the sea broke
+over the east pier. As the waves beat upon it and dashed over in clouds
+of foam, the pier looked from the east cliff like a heavy battery of
+guns in full play. The boatmen had been on the look-out all day, but
+there had been no signs of their services being required; still, they
+hung about the pier until long after dark.
+
+At last they were straggling home, leaving only those on the pier who
+had determined to watch during the night, when suddenly some thought
+that they saw a flash of light. A few seconds of doubt, and the report
+of the gun decided the matter.
+
+At once there was a rush for the life-boat. She was moored in the stream
+about thirty yards from the pier. In a few minutes they had unmoored
+her, and got her alongside; her crew was already more than made up; some
+had put off to her in small boats, others had sprung into her when she
+came within a few feet of the pier. She was over-manned, and the two
+last in had to turn out.
+
+In the meantime, a rocket had been fired from the light-vessel. Many had
+been on the look-out for it, to decide beyond all doubt, which of the
+three light-vessels had fired the gun. It proved to have been the North
+Sands Head vessel that had signalled. The cork jackets were thrown into
+the boat, the oars and ropes overhauled, all things seen to be right,
+and the men in their places and ready for their start in a comparatively
+few minutes. The crew of the steam-tug _Aid_ had not been less active.
+Immediately upon the first signal, her shrill steam-whistle resounded
+through the harbour, calling on board those of her crew who were on
+shore, and her steam, which is always up, was rapidly got to full power,
+and in less than half an hour from the time of the firing of the first
+gun she was gallantly steaming out of the harbour with the life-boat in
+tow. As she went out a rocket streamed up from the pier head. It was the
+answer to the signal of the light vessel, and told that assistance was
+on the way.
+
+Off they went, ploughing their way through a heavy cross sea, which
+frequently swept completely over the boat.
+
+The tide was running strongly, and the wind right ahead; it was hard
+work breasting both sea and wind in the face of such a gale; but they
+bravely persevered, and gradually made head-way.
+
+They steered right for the Goodwin, and having approached it, as near as
+they dare take the steamer, they worked their way through a heavy sea
+along the edge of the Sands, on the look-out for the vessel in distress.
+
+At last they make her out, and, as they approach, find two Broadstairs
+luggers riding at anchor outside the Sands.
+
+The Broadstairs men had heard the signal, and the wind and tide being
+in their favour, they soon ran down to the neighbourhood of the wreck.
+On making to the vessel, the Ramsgate men find her to be a fine-looking
+brig, almost high and dry upon the Sands.
+
+Her masts and rigging are all right; the moon, which has broken through
+the clouds, shines upon her clean new copper; and, so far, she seems to
+have received but little damage.
+
+A grand thing for all hands, for owners, underwriters, crew and boatmen,
+the men think, if they can only get her safely off when the tide rises,
+and bring her into harbour; a fine vessel and perhaps valuable cargo
+saved, and a pretty bit of salvage, which will be well earned and nobody
+should grudge, for the boatmen have to live, as well as to save life.
+
+Efforts have already been made for the vessel's relief. The
+_Dreadnought_ lugger had brought with her a small twenty-five feet
+life-boat. The _Little Dreadnought_, and this boat with five hands, had
+succeeded in getting alongside the brig.
+
+The steamer slips the hawser of the Ramsgate boat, and anchors almost
+abreast of the vessel, with sixty fathom of chain out.
+
+There is a heavy rolling sea, but much less than there has been, as the
+tide has fallen considerably. The life-boat makes in for the brig,
+carries on through the surf and breakers, and when within forty fathoms
+of the vessel, lowers the sail, throws the anchor overboard, and veers
+alongside. The captain and some of the men remain in the boat, to fend
+her off from the sides of the vessel, for although it is shallow water,
+the tide is running over the Sands like a sluice, and it requires great
+care to prevent the boat getting her side stove in. The rest of her crew
+climb on board the brig. Her captain had, until then, hoped to get his
+vessel off, as the tide rose, without assistance, and had refused the
+aid of the Broadstairs men; but now he realizes the danger that his
+vessel is in, and very gladly accepts the assistance that is offered.
+
+One of his crew speaks a little English, and through him the captain
+employs the crew of the life-boat and the Broadstairs men, to get his
+ship off the Sands.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER IX.
+
+THE WRECK ABANDONED, AND THE LIFE-BOAT DESPAIRED OF.
+
+ "Alone upon the leaping billows, lo!
+ What fearful image works its way? A ship!
+ Shapeless and wild ...
+ Her sails dishevell'd, and her massy form
+ Disfigured, yet tremendously sublime:
+ Prowless and helmless through the waves she rocks,
+ And writhes, as if in agony! Like her,
+ Who to the last, amid o'erwhelming foes,
+ Sinks with a bloody struggle into death,--
+ The vessel combats with the battling waves,
+ Then fiercely dives below! the thunders roll
+ Her requiem, and whirlwinds howl for joy!"
+
+ _Crabbe._
+
+
+The boatmen, as soon as they get on board the brig, find that she is in
+a very perilous position, but have hopes of getting her off.
+
+At all events they will try very hard for it. She is a fine new and
+strongly-built Portuguese brig, belonging to Lisbon, and bound from
+Newcastle to Rio, with coals and iron. Her crew consists of the captain,
+the mate, ten men, and a boy.
+
+She is head on to the Sand, but the Sand does not shelve much, and her
+keel is pretty even. The wind is still blowing very strongly and right
+astern. The tide is on the turn, and will flow quickly: there is no time
+to be lost; the first effort must be to prevent the brig driving further
+on the Sand.
+
+With this object in view the boatmen get an anchor out astern as quickly
+as possible; they rig out tackles on the foreyard, and hoist the bower
+anchor on deck; they then slew the yard round, and get the anchor as far
+aft as they can; then shift the tackles to the main yard, and lift the
+anchor well to the stern; shackle the chain cable on, get it all clear
+for running out, try the pumps to see that they work; and then wait
+until the tide makes sufficiently to enable the steamer, which draws six
+feet of water, to get a little nearer.
+
+They hope that the steamer will be able to back close enough to them, to
+get a rope on board fastened to the flukes of the brig's anchor, and to
+drag the anchor out, and drop it about one hundred fathoms astern of the
+vessel. All hands will then go to the windlass, keep a strain upon the
+cable, and each time the vessel lifts, heave with a will--the steamer,
+with a hundred and twenty fathoms of nine-inch cable out, towing hard
+all the time. By these means they expect to be able, gradually, to work
+the vessel off the Sands.
+
+But they soon lose all hope of doing this; it is about one o'clock in
+the morning; the moon has gone down; heavy showers of rain fall; it is
+pitch dark and very squally; the gale is evidently freshening again; a
+heavy swell comes up before the wind, and as the tide flows under the
+brig she begins to work very much, for now the heavy waves roll in over
+the sand, and she lifts, and falls with shocks that make the masts
+tremble and the decks gape open.
+
+The boatmen begin to fear the worst. The life-boat is alongside, with
+seven hands in her; she is afloat in the basin that the brig has worked
+in the sands, and it takes all the efforts of the men on board to
+prevent her getting under the side of the vessel and being crushed.
+
+The wind increases as the tide flows, and the brig works with great
+violence, now, as she rolls and careens over upon her bilge, she
+threatens to fall upon, and destroy the life-boat The captain of the
+boat hails the men on the brig to come on board the boat, and get away
+from the side of the vessel as fast as they can. The boatmen try to
+explain the danger to the Portuguese, but they cannot understand. Hail,
+after hail, comes from the boat, for every moment increases the peril,
+but the Portuguese captain still refuses to leave his vessel. Any moment
+may be too late; the boatmen are almost ready to try and force the
+Portuguese over the side, but they cannot persuade them to stir; and as
+they will not desert them, they also wait on; wait on while the ship
+rolls, and works, and groans, while the seas fly over her, and at any
+moment she may break up. Suddenly a loud sharp crack, like a crashing of
+thunder, peals through the ship.
+
+The boatmen jump on the gunwale, ready to spring for the life-boat, for
+she may be breaking in half; no, but one of her large timbers has snapt
+like a pipe-stem, and others will soon follow.
+
+The Portuguese sailors make a rush to get what things they can on deck;
+altogether they fill eight sea-chests with their clothes. These are
+quickly lowered into the life-boat. Her captain does not like having her
+hampered with so much baggage, but cannot refuse the poor fellows, at
+least, a chance of saving their kit. The surf flies over the brig, and
+boils up all around her. The life-boat is deluged with spray, and her
+lights are washed out; the vessel still lifts and thumps and rolls with
+the force of the sea. Time after time the snapping and rending of her
+breaking timbers are heard; at each heave she wrenches and cracks and
+groans in all directions--she is breaking up fast. Make haste, make
+haste! for your lives be as quick as you can! The chests are all
+lowered, the boy is handed into the boat, the Portuguese sailors follow,
+the boatmen spring after them, and the brig is abandoned.
+
+We have said that it was about one o'clock in the morning when the
+squalls came on again, with heavy rain and thick darkness. The steamer
+had remained at anchor, waiting for the tide to rise, when, with the
+water deeper, she would be able to get nearer the brig. But as the gale
+freshens there is a dangerous broken sea where she is riding, and she
+begins to pitch very heavily. She paddles gently ahead to ease her
+cable, but it is soon evident to the men on board her, that if they are
+to get their anchor at all they must make haste about it.
+
+They heave it up, and lay to for the life-boat.
+
+The sea increases so rapidly that the _Dreadnought_ lugger is almost
+swamped, and has to cut her cable without attempting to save her anchor,
+and to make with all speed before the gale for Ramsgate. The _Petrel_
+lugger springs her mast, which is fished with great difficulty, and she,
+too, makes the best of her way to the harbour.
+
+The wind continues to increase, the gale is again at its height, and a
+fearful sea running. Wave after wave breaks over the steamer's decks,
+but she is an excellent boat, strongly built and powerful; and her
+captain and crew are well used to rough work.
+
+Head to wind and steaming half power, she holds her own against the
+wind, and keeps, as far as her crew can judge, in the neighbourhood of
+the wreck and of the life-boat. As time passes, and the crew of the
+steamer can see nothing of the boat, they get anxious. The wreck must
+have been abandoned long before this; has the boat been unable to get
+away from her? is the boat swamped or stove? and are all lost? They
+signalize again and again, but in vain; they can obtain no answer. They
+cruize up and down as near the edge of the Sands as they dare, hoping to
+fall in with the boat. Now they make in one direction, and now in
+another, as in their eagerness and apprehension the roar of the storm
+shapes itself into cries of distress, or as a darker shadow on the sea
+leads them into the hope that at last they have found the lost boat. All
+hands keep steadfastly on the look-out, and get greatly excited; the
+storm becomes truly terrible; but they forget their own peril and
+hardships in their great anxiety for the safety of the crew of the
+life-boat, and of the poor fellows who were on the wreck.
+
+Their anxiety becomes insupportable, heightened as it is by the horrors
+of the night.
+
+Through the thick darkness, the bright light of the Goodwin light-vessel
+shines out like a star. With a faint hope the crew of the steamer
+wrestle their way through the storm and speak the light-vessel.
+
+"Have you seen anything of the life-boat?" the captain of the steamer
+shouts out. "Nothing! nothing!" is the answer. It seems to confirm all
+their fears, and they hasten back again to their old cruising
+ground--they will not lessen their exertions, or lose any chance of
+rendering assistance to their comrades. It is still pitch-dark, and the
+storm rages on--the hours creep by, O how slowly!
+
+How they long for the light! All hands still on the watch! and as the
+first grey light of dawning comes, it is with straining eye-balls they
+seek to penetrate the twilight, and find some signs of their lost
+comrades. It is almost broad daylight before they can even find out the
+place where the wreck was lying.
+
+With all speed, but little hope, they make for it; and then indeed their
+great dread seems realized. The brig is completely broken up, literally
+torn to pieces. They can see great masses of timber, and tangled
+rigging, but no signs of life. Nearer and nearer they go and wait for
+the broad daylight; but still nothing is to be seen, but shattered
+pieces of wreck, moored fast by the matted rigging to the buried
+remains of the hull, and tossing and heaving in the surf.
+
+Some of the men fancy they can see fragments of the life-boat heaving
+about with the other wreckage, but whether it is so or not, the end
+seems the same, and after one last careful but fruitless look around, to
+see whether there are any signs of the life-boat elsewhere on the Sands,
+sadly they turn the steamer's head away from the dreary fatal Goodwin,
+and make for the harbour.
+
+They grieve for brave comrades tried in many scenes of danger, and think
+with faint hearts of the melancholy report they have to give, and it is
+but little consolation to them in the face of so great a loss, to
+remember that they, at all events, have done all in their power, and
+that they have nothing to reproach themselves with.
+
+To return to the life-boat men; all hands have deserted the brig, and
+there are now in the life-boat thirteen Portuguese sailors, five
+Broadstairs boatmen, and her ordinary crew, consisting of thirteen
+Ramsgate boatmen, altogether thirty-one souls. The small _Dreadnought_
+life-boat has been swung against the brig by the force of the tide, and
+is so damaged that no one dares venture in her. The tide is rising fast,
+the gale blowing as hard as ever, the surf running very high and
+breaking over the vessel, so that one constant torrent of spray and foam
+is falling with no light weight, or small volume, upon the life-boat
+which is under the lee of the brig, and the men have no protection from
+the falling sheets of spray. The vessel is rolling heavily, she has
+worked a bed in the sands, which the run of tide has somewhat enlarged,
+and in this she half floats, rolling from side to side with fearful
+rapidity and violence.
+
+The life-boat is afloat within the circle of the bed; the brig threatens
+to roll over her. "Shove and haul off, quick! Shove and haul off," are
+the orders. Some with oars, pushing against the brig, others hauling
+might and main upon the brig's hawser, they manage to pull the boat two
+or three yards up towards the boat's anchor, and to get her a little
+farther off from the side of the brig. Now she grounds heavily upon the
+edge of the basin that has been worked in the sand by the brig. "Strain
+every muscle, men; now, or never! now, or never! for your lives pull!"
+and pull and strain they did. No! not one inch will the life-boat stir;
+she falls over on her side, the surf and seas sweep over her, the men
+cling to the thwarts and gunwale; all but her own crew give up all
+thoughts of hope; but they know the capabilities of the boat and do not
+lose heart--Crash! the brig heaves, and crushes down upon her bilge;
+again and again she half lifts upon an even keel and rolls, and lurches
+from side to side; each time that she falls to leeward, she comes more
+and more over and nearer to the boat.
+
+This is the danger that may well make the stoutest heart quail. The boat
+is aground--helplessly aground; her crew can see through the darkness of
+the night the yards and masts of the brig swaying over their heads; now
+tossing high in the air as the brig rights, and now falling nearer and
+nearer to them, sweeping down over their heads, swaying and rending in
+the air, the blocks, and ropes, and torn fragments of sails, flying
+wildly in all directions. Let but one of the swaying yards but hit the
+boat, she must be crushed and all lost. The men crouch down closer and
+closer, clinging to the thwarts as the brig falls to them; casting dread
+glances at the approaching yards; all right once more; another pull at
+the cable--hard, men, hard; over again comes the brig; stick to it, men,
+stick to it, my men; crushed or drowned it will be soon over if we
+cannot move the boat; another pull, all together; again, and again, they
+make desperate efforts to stir the boat, but she will not move one inch;
+they must wait, and if needs be, wait their doom; and as they wait the
+danger each moment increases.
+
+It is a fearful time of suspense, this waiting aground on the dread
+Goodwin, in the darkness and wildness of the storm, half dead with cold
+and the ceaseless rush of surf over them, and watching in the shadowy
+darkness the swaying masts of the rolling brig, swinging nearer and
+nearer, and how will this question of life and death be decided? Which
+will happen first? will the tide flow sufficiently to float them, or
+will the brig crush them with her masts and yards before they can get
+beyond her reach.
+
+The men can do nothing more in the dark wild night and terrible danger;
+each minute seems an hour; they almost forget to try and protect
+themselves from the wind and spray, and they watch the brig as if
+spellbound, as she rolls nearer and nearer; each moment the position
+gets more desperate.
+
+Any one hit? as the flying blocks hanging from the yard-arms rattle over
+the heads of the men in the boat. No! but a few feet nearer and we
+should all have been crushed--a turn or two more and we shall be
+finished. There is a stir among the men; the moment seems come; they
+prepare for the last struggle. Some are getting ready to spring for the
+flying rigging of the brig, as it sways over their heads, hoping thus to
+get on board the wreck if the life-boat is crushed up. "Stick to the
+boat, men! stick to the boat, men, it's our only chance," the coxswain
+cries out, "the brig must soon go to pieces, while we may yet get clear;
+stick to the boat!" And the brig, which had quivered while lying on her
+side as if coming bodily over, while the dark yards hovered over the
+crouching men, lifted again, and once more the men breathe with a sigh
+of relief; for that time they quite expected the boat to be crushed and
+pinned where she lay.
+
+At this moment the boat trembles beneath them, lifts a little on the
+swell of the tide that is beginning to reach her, and grounds again.
+
+It is like a word of life to the men, and instantly all are on the
+alert, they get all their strength on the hawser, and as the boat lifts
+again, and comes a little more on an even keel, they draw her a yard or
+two nearer to her anchor, but not any farther from the brig, and over
+again the brig slowly rolls; again and again they make desperate efforts
+to get beyond the reach of her dark side, and swinging yards and masts,
+but it is long before they can do so: at last they succeed as the water
+flows still more, and now they ride to their anchor a few yards beyond
+the reach of the brig, which they watch break up, and listen to the
+groaning and rending of her timbers, and the flapping of her torn sail
+and tangled rigging. Both the wind and tide are setting with all their
+force right upon the Sands, and the captain of the boat sees what is
+before them; where they are now at anchor will soon be one wild rage of
+broken sea. To get away from the sand in the face of the fierce gale and
+tide is impossible; and so there is no alternative, they must beat right
+across the Sands, and this in the wild fearful gale, and terrible sea,
+and pitch dark night, and what the danger of this is, only those who
+know the Goodwin Sands, and the dread seas that sweep over them, can at
+all imagine.
+
+They ride at anchor for some time, waiting for the tide to rise
+sufficiently for them to get over the Sands. They see the lights of the
+steamer shining in the distance, outside the broken and shallow water;
+but there is no hope of assistance from her: their lanterns are washed
+out, they cannot signalize; and if they could, the steamer could not
+approach them.
+
+The sea is breaking furiously over them. Time after time the boat fills
+as the broken waves wash clean over her, but instantly she empties
+herself again, and rises to her water-line. The gale sweeps by more
+fiercely than ever. The men are nearly washed out of the boat, and worse
+still, the anchor begins to drag. The tide has made a little, and they
+are being driven each moment nearer to the wreck; there may be water
+enough to take them clear; at all events, there is no help for it, they
+must risk it. "Hoist the foresail; stand by to cut the cable. All
+clear."--"Ay, Ay!"--"Away then."
+
+And the boat quickly heads round, and then, under the power of the gale
+and tide, leaps forward, flies along; but only for a few yards, when,
+with a tremendous jerk, she grounds upon the Sands. The crew look up,
+and their hearts almost fail them, as they find that they are again
+within reach of the brig.
+
+Her top-gallant masts are swaying about, her yards swing within a few
+feet of them, her sails which have blown loose and are in ribbons, beat
+and flap like thunder over their heads. Their position seems worse than
+ever; but they are not this time kept long in suspense. A huge breaker
+comes foaming along; its white crest gleams out in the darkness high
+above them, a moment's warning, it breaks over them and swamps them, but
+all are clinging might and main to the boat.
+
+Another breaker comes streaming along; it swamps them again in passing,
+but now the volume of the wave seizes the boat, up it seems to swing it
+in its mighty arms, and to bodily hurl it forward; and then the boat
+crashes down on the Sands as the wave breaks, and grounds them with a
+shock that would have torn every man out of her, if they had not been
+holding on.
+
+But one great peril is passed; the mighty swing of the huge waves has
+carried them yards forward, and they are clear of the wreck; but at
+that moment they are threatened with another danger almost as terrible.
+The small _Dreadnought_ life-boat has been in tow all this time; it has
+not been wise to have her in tow, but she belongs to the Broadstairs
+boatmen, and neither they nor the Ramsgate boatmen like to abandon her.
+
+As the Ramsgate boat now grounds, the smaller boat comes bow on to her,
+sweeps round, and gets under her side; the two boats roll and crash
+together; each roll the larger one gives, each lift of the sea, she
+comes heavily down on the other boat; the crash and crack of timbers are
+heard; which boat is it that is breaking up? Both, if this continues,
+must be very speedily destroyed. Some of the men get out the oars and
+boat-hooks, and push for their very lives, thrusting and striving their
+utmost to free the _Dreadnought_, which is so dangerously thumping and
+crashing under the quarter of the larger boat. It is a terrible struggle
+in that boiling sea, with the surf breaking over them. But all their
+efforts seem in vain, the boats still crash and roll together; one of
+them is breaking up fast. "Oars in," shouts the coxswain; "over the side
+half-a-dozen of you--take your feet to her;" and some of the brave
+fellows spring over, clinging to the rail of the deck of the high
+air-boxes that are at the bow and stern of the Ramsgate life-boat. Again
+and again, all together, a fierce struggle, but without success; a big
+wave comes rolling on, it washes over them, but as the larger boat
+lifts, the men blindly thrust out with their feet, and the
+_Dreadnought_ is pushed clear. The men scramble, or are dragged back
+into the Ramsgate boat; the tow-rope is cut, and the _Dreadnought_,
+almost a wreck, is swept away by the tide, and is lost in the darkness,
+while, most mercifully, the Ramsgate boat still remains uninjured.
+
+A third time they are providentially saved from what seemed almost like
+certain death; and yet they have only commenced the beginning of their
+troubles, for is there not before them the long range of sands, with the
+broken fierce waves and raging surf, and many a fragment of wreck, like
+sunken rocks studded here and there, upon any one of which, if they
+strike, it must be death to them all?
+
+The boat is still aground upon the ridge of sand. She lifts, and is
+swept round, and grounds again broadside to the sea, which makes a clean
+breach over her. The Portuguese are all clinging together under the lee
+of the foresail, and there is no getting them to move. The crew are
+holding on where they can; sometimes buried in the water, often with
+only their heads out. The captain is standing up in the stern, holding
+on by the mizen-mast; sometimes he can see nothing of the men as the
+surf sweeps over them. He orders the chests to be thrown overboard, but
+most of them are already washed away; the rest are unlashed from their
+fastenings, and lifted as the men can get at them, and the next wave
+carries them away. Heavy masses of cloud darken the sky; the rain falls
+in torrents; it is bitterly cold; the men can do nothing but hold on;
+the tide rises gradually; suddenly the boat lifts again; it is caught
+by the driving sea, and is flung forward. There is no keeping her
+straight, the water is too broken; her stern frees itself before the
+bow, and round she swings; her bow lifts a little; onward she goes a few
+yards, and grounds again by the stern; round sweeps the bow, and with
+another jerk she comes broadside on the Sands again, lurching over on
+her side, with the terrible surf making a clean sweep over the waist. It
+is a struggle for the men to get their breath, the spray beats over them
+in such clouds. This happens time after time. The captain calls the men
+aft, that the boat may be lightened in the bow, and thus be more likely
+to keep straight. Most of the boatmen come to the stern, but the
+Portuguese will not move, and even some of the boatmen are so exhausted
+with the violent exertions they have made, and by the beating of the
+waves, that they are almost unconscious, and only able to cling to the
+gunwale and thwarts of the boat with an iron, nervous grasp, and are
+thus just able to save themselves from being washed out of her. As the
+coxswain notices their exhausted state, he expects each time as the big
+waves wash over them to see some of them leave go their hold and be
+carried away; and although he makes as light of it as he can, and tries
+to cheer them up, he himself has very small hope of ever seeing land
+again.
+
+The sands on the sea shore, if there has been any surf, appear at low
+tide uneven with the ridges or ripples the waves have left on them. On
+the Goodwins, where the force of the sea is in every way multiplied,
+and the waves break and the tide rushes with tenfold power, the little
+sand ripples of the smoother shore become ridges of two or three feet
+high.
+
+It is on these ridges that the life-boat so continually grounds. As the
+tide rises she is swept from one to the other by the long sweeping
+waves; she is swung round and round in the swirl of the cross-seas and
+rapid tide, thumping and jerking heavily each time that she strands. All
+this is in the midst of darkness, of bitter cold, and of a raging wind,
+surf, and sea, until the hardship and peril are almost too much to be
+borne, and some of the men feel dying in the boat.
+
+One old boatman afterwards thus described his feelings. "Well, sir,
+perhaps my friends were right when they said I hadn't ought to have gone
+out--that I was too old for that sort of work"--he was then about sixty
+years of age--"but, you see, when there is life to be saved, it makes
+one feel young again; and I've always felt I have had a call to save
+life when I could; and I wasn't going to hang back then; and I stood it
+better than some of them after all. I did my work on board the brig, and
+when she was so near falling over us, and when the _Dreadnought_
+life-boat seemed knocking our bottom out, I got on as well as any of
+them; but when we got to beating, and grubbing over the Sands, swinging
+round and round, and grounding every few yards with a jerk that bruised
+us sadly, and almost tore our arms out from the sockets--no sooner
+washed off one ridge, and beginning to hope that the boat was clear,
+than she thumped upon another harder than ever, and all the time the
+wash of the surf nearly carrying us out of the boat--it was truly almost
+too much for any man to stand. There was a young fellow holding on next
+to me; I saw his head begin to drop, and that he was getting faint, and
+going to give over; and when the boat filled with water, and the waves
+went over his head, he scarcely cared to struggle free. I tried to cheer
+him a bit, and keep his spirits up. He just clung to the thwart like a
+drowning man. Poor fellow, he never did a day's work after that night,
+and died in a few months.
+
+"Well, I couldn't do anything with him, and I thought that it didn't
+matter much, for I felt it must soon all be over; that it couldn't be
+long before the boat would be knocked to pieces. So I took my life-belt
+off, that I might have it over all the quicker; for I knew that there
+would be no chance whatever of life if the boat once went, and I would
+have it over all the quicker, for I didn't want to be beating about
+those sands alive or dead longer than I could help; the sooner I went to
+the bottom, the better, I thought. When once all hope of life was
+over--and that time seemed close upon us every moment--some of us kept
+shouting, just cheering ourselves and one another up, as well as we
+could; but I had to give that up, and I remember hearing the captain
+crying out, 'We will see Ramsgate yet again, my men, if we steer clear
+of old wrecks,' And then I heard the Portuguese lad crying, and I
+remember that I began to think that it was a terrible dream, and
+pinched myself to see if I was really awake; and I began to feel very
+strange and insensible. I didn't feel afraid of death, for, you see, I
+hadn't left it to such times as that to prepare to meet my God. And if
+ever I spent hours in prayer, be sure I spent them in prayer that night.
+And I just seemed going off in a kind of dead faint, and felt very
+dream-like, and as if I couldn't hold on any longer; and as I felt this
+I thought, in a feeble sort of way, of my friends ashore, and bid them
+good-bye like, for I knew that I should be soon washed out of the boat,
+when I looked up, and the surf was curling up both sides of the boat,
+and I was going to throw myself down on the thwart, that the seas might
+beat upon my back, and I should never have lifted it up again, when I
+saw a bright star. The clouds had broken a little, and there was that
+blessed beautiful star shining out. Yes, truly it was a blessed
+beautiful star to me; as it caught my eye it seemed, in my weak state,
+to lay a strange hold upon me; to gather all my attention, and to call
+me back to life again. And I began to have a little thought about seeing
+my home again, and that I wasn't going to be called away just yet. And I
+straightened myself up a little, and laid a firmer hold upon the boat,
+and lifted my head to look for the star after each time the seas beat
+over us, and I kept my eye upon it whenever I could; and I cannot
+explain how it was, but looking for and watching that star kept me up,
+and when I got ashore, I seemed at first not much worse than the best of
+them. But for seven whole days after that I lost my speech, and lay
+like a log upon my bed; and I was ill a long time--indeed, have never
+been right since, and I suppose at my age I never shall get over it. But
+what is more, I believe something of the same sort may be said of most
+of those that were in the boat that night. One poor young fellow is
+dead, another has been subject to fits ever since, and not any of us
+quite the men we were before, and no wonder when you think what we
+passed through.
+
+"I cannot describe it, and you cannot, neither can any one else; but
+when you say you've beat and thumped over those sands, almost yard by
+yard, in a fearful storm on a winter's night, and live to tell the tale,
+why it seems to me about the next thing to saying that you've been dead,
+and brought to life again."
+
+The coxswain of the life-boat, brave Isaac Jarman, was chosen for that
+position for his fortitude, skill, and daring, and well did he sustain
+his character that night, never for one moment losing his presence of
+mind, and doing his utmost to cheer the men up. The crew consisted of
+hardy, daring fellows, ready to face any danger, to go out in any storm,
+and to do battle with the wildest seas; but the horrors of that night
+were almost too much for the most iron nerves.
+
+The fierce freezing wind, the almost pitch darkness, the terrible surf,
+and beating waves, and the men unable to do anything for their safety;
+the boat driven, almost hurled, by the force of the waves from sand
+ridge to sand ridge, and apparently breaking up beneath them each time
+she lifted on the surf and crushed down again upon the Sands, besides
+the danger of her getting foul of any old wrecks--how all this was lived
+through seemed miraculous. Time after time there was a cry of "Now she
+breaks up! she can't stand this! all over at last!" Another such thump,
+and she is done for, and then the boat would writhe, almost on her beam
+ends, while the waves beat over, until she was again lifted and thrown
+forward to crash down and ground again; and all this lasted for about
+two hours, as almost yard by yard they beat from ridge to ridge over the
+sands.
+
+Suddenly the swinging and beating of the boat cease; she is in a very
+heavy sea, but she answers her helm and keeps her head straight. At last
+they have got over the Sands and into deep water; the danger is passed,
+and they are saved. With new hopes comes new life. Some can scarcely
+realize their comparative safety, and still keep their firm hold upon
+the boat, expecting each second another terrible lurch and jerk upon the
+Sands, and the heavy rush and wash of the seas. No: that is all over,
+and the boat, in spite of her tremendous knocking about, is sound, and
+sails buoyantly and well.
+
+The crew quickly get further sail upon her, and she makes way before the
+gale to the westward. The Portuguese sailors lift their heads. They have
+been clinging together and to the boat, crouching down under the lee of
+the foresail during the time of beating over the Sands; they notice the
+stir among the boatmen, and that the terrible jerking and thumping of
+the boat and the rush of sea over her have ceased; and they also learn
+that the worst is passed, and that the danger is at an end.
+
+Long since did they despair of life; and their surprise and joy now know
+no bounds. Bravely on goes the life-boat, making for the westward. The
+Portuguese are very busy in earnest consultation. The poor fellows have
+lost their kit, and only possess the things they have on, and a few
+pounds that they have with them. Soon it becomes evident what the
+consultation has been about. "Coxswain!" one of the boatmen cries out,
+"they want to give us all their money!"
+
+"Yes! yes!" said the interpreter, in broken English, "you have saved our
+lives! Thank you! thank you! but all we have is yours; it is not much,
+but you take it between you;" and he held out the money. It was about
+17_l._
+
+"I, for one, won't touch any of it," said the coxswain of the boat. "Nor
+I!" "Nor I!" others added; "put your money up."
+
+The brave fellows will not take a farthing from brother sailors, whom
+they know to be poor, much like themselves; and in a few words they make
+them understand this, and how glad they are to have saved them.
+
+The life-boat makes good way, and soon runs across the Sands through the
+Trinity Swatch Way, and, without further adventure, she reaches the
+harbour about five o'clock in the morning. The crew of the brig are
+placed under the care of the Portuguese Consul, and the boatmen go to
+their homes, to feel for many a long day the effects of the fatigues
+and perils of that terrible night.
+
+During all this time the steamer has been cruising up and down the edge
+of the Sands, vainly searching for any trace of the life-boat; and soon
+after daylight she made, as has been already described, for the harbour.
+Her captain and crew are half broken-hearted, and scarcely know how they
+shall be able to tell the tale of the terrible calamity that seems so
+certainly to have happened. Suddenly, as the mouth of the harbour opens
+to them, they see the life-boat. They stare with amazement, and can
+scarcely believe their eyes. "Astonished," said the captain of the
+steamer, describing his feelings, "that I was; never so much so in my
+life, as when I stood looking at that boat. I could have shouted and
+cried for very wonder and joy; you might have knocked me down with a
+straw." Thus the captain of the steamer described his feelings. It was
+the same with all the crew; and as the steamer shot round the pier and
+heard that all were saved, and the life-boatmen all right, the good news
+seemed to more than repay them for the dangers and anxieties of the
+night.
+
+Thus did the crew of the gallant life-boat and of the steamer help to
+earn that night the noble reputation that belongs to our boatmen and
+sailors at large--testimony to which was given, on one occasion, by a
+foreign captain, who said, "Ah! we may always know whether it is upon
+the English coast that we are wrecked, by the efforts that are made for
+our rescue."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER X.
+
+SIGNALS OF DISTRESS--OUT IN THE STORM.
+
+ "And the coming wind did roar more loud,
+ And the sails did sigh like sedge;
+ And the rain poured down from one black cloud,
+ The moon was at its edge.
+ The thick black cloud was cleft, and still
+ The moon was at its side;
+ Like water shot from some high crag,
+ The lightning fell with never a jag,
+ A river steep and wide."
+
+ _Coleridge._
+
+
+Wild weather on land! wild weather at sea! fear and trembling, and
+earnest prayers, in many a quiet home, for loved ones at sea, who must
+be within reach of the gale that hurries so fiercely by.
+
+How impressive it is to lie awake listening to the storm--to hear the
+rush of the wind, now moaning in the chimney, now thundering at the
+windows against which the rain beats and hurtles; to fancy or to feel
+that the house trembles shaken in the rude power of the blast, or, if
+near the sea-shore, to hear the waves breaking on the beach, a
+half-suppressed tumultuous uproar, like the faintly heard riot of a
+distant angry mob. To get farther to sea in one's thoughts, and to
+picture a noble ship with close-reefed topsails running before the gale,
+or beating away from the dread neighbourhood of dangerous sands or
+coast, while the pilot, anxious and watchful, and the crew, eager and
+alert, peer through the darkness to catch the welcome guidance of some
+bright warning light, or are on the watch to detect the fainter light of
+some ship that is steering her course perilously near; the passengers
+all the time wistful and anxious, asking many questions, and receiving
+cheering answers, but given with that unreality of tone that makes the
+hearer fear the sound, more than he can believe the sense; or to imagine
+a vessel at anchor, the cables swinging out at their full length, the
+sails all closely furled, but the gale beating against the hull, and
+masts, and yards, with a power that threatens to sweep the ship and her
+living freight to a speedy destruction; to picture the ship lifting, and
+pitching, and surging, in a cloud of spray, the hungry waves leaping at
+it, as if to devour it before its time, the anchors yielding foot by
+foot, or the cable giving, and the hungry sands waiting in a terrible
+rage of foam and sea under the lee.
+
+In the morning to look from tall cliffs upon a golden beach, upon the
+fretting surf that lines it, upon the sea bright with sunshine, smooth
+browed, but like a great giant rolling his huge limbs in uneasy sleep;
+quick with great billows rising and falling in restless heavy long lines
+of waves. Then to look at the distant Goodwin Sands, and to watch the
+white leaping surf, fangs in the jaws of death, still gnashing and
+mumbling after their midnight meal, in which they ravened perhaps on a
+goodly ship, and mangled many brave sailors, and weeping women and
+trembling wondering children; unless their victims were snatched from
+their grasp by the brave Storm Warriors who rush into their midst in the
+very fiercest of their strife, and wrestle with them for their prey.
+
+Such pictures are often suggested by the midnight gale, and such
+after-scenes are witnessed in the morning's calm at Ramsgate, as at many
+another spot on the bold coast of our sea-girt island home, where each
+howling wind that rushes on breathes the trumpet-blast that calls to the
+struggle of life and death.
+
+It was a tempestuous wintry day early in December, a few years ago, when
+the scenes occurred which the following will be an attempt to describe:
+
+During the whole of the day the wind has been blowing hard from the
+west-north-west. The weather has been very unsettled for some little
+time, squally with the cloud-scud low, and swiftly flying past; now the
+weather is becoming worse, and the blasts are more frequent and more
+fierce, rapidly growing into a heavy gale. The Fitzroy's signal hangs
+ominously from the flag-staff, giving a warning of the dangerous winds
+which may be expected.
+
+The Downs anchorage is crowded with shipping, so much so, that the
+lights of the vessels anchored there throw a glare upon the darkness of
+the night, such as is shed by the lights of a populous town.
+
+Every now and then a vessel leaves the fleet, and, running before the
+gale, seeks surer refuge; or perhaps a homeward-bound ship swiftly
+threads her way through the crowd of vessels, the crew half rejoicing in
+the gale, which at every blast bears them nearer home.
+
+On Ramsgate Pier rumours of disasters at sea, bring the watchful lookers
+on together in anxious gossip; many partially disabled vessels have
+already found refuge in the harbour, and now a schooner is brought in by
+some Broadstairs boatmen. When they boarded her in answer to her signals
+of distress, they found that the mate with a woman and child alone
+remained on board. The schooner had been in collision during the
+previous night, and whether the rest of her crew had escaped to the
+other vessel, or had been lost overboard, was left a matter of dread
+uncertainty.
+
+As it is a stirring sight to see the vessels making through the heavy
+seas for the harbour, so it is an exciting, and withal a gallant, sight
+to watch the luggers heavily freighted with anchors and chains, to
+supply vessels that have slipped their cables, bearing away bravely in
+all the rush of the storm, upon their errands of daring enterprise.
+
+The afternoon creeps on; it is half-past three, a puff of smoke is seen
+coming from the Gull light-ship, but the wind is too strong, and in the
+wrong direction, for the report of the gun to be heard. The signal is,
+however, at once accepted, and soon the steamer and the life-boat are
+away in the storm.
+
+They make for the light-vessel to learn for what, and in which direction
+their services are required. A squall of thick rain hides the Downs and
+the south end of the Goodwin Sands from view. Suddenly the squall
+clears away, passing rapidly to windward, and now from the pier and
+cliff, although not yet from the lower level of the steamer's deck, or
+from the life-boat, the vessel that is in danger is seen.
+
+A large light schooner has driven from her anchorage, and is now
+dragging perilously near the Goodwin Sands. She is too near, with the
+wind as it is, to have any chance of escaping by slipping her cable and
+sailing clear of the Sands; she is driving fast, and the large flag,
+that she has hoisted as a signal of distress, can be very distinctly
+seen from the cliff. The watchers on shore, by taking her bearings, see
+how rapidly she is dragging her anchors and nearing her doom; and the
+nature of the tremendous sea she is in is also very evident.
+
+She is light, buoyant, and lifts to every wave; she looks like a gallant
+charger taking a succession of desperate leaps, as first her bow is
+thrown high in the air, and she then rides for a moment high upon the
+top of the wave, and then again her stern is thrown high, and her bow is
+almost buried as the huge short wave passes under her. Repeatedly those
+who are watching her from the shore, have their fears aroused that her
+straining cables have at last parted, and that she is in full career for
+the waiting deadly Sands. It is an alarming sight. The lookers-on from
+the cliff only take their eyes off her to look occasionally at the
+steamer and life-boat as they are making their way to her rescue.
+
+The steamer rolls and plunges on--nothing daunted, nothing disturbed,
+by all the buffeting she gets; the life-boat rises like a cork to every
+wave, and plunges through the crests as she feels the drag of the
+steamer, while the foam spreads out on either side like a fan, and the
+scud and spray fly over her in a cloud.
+
+The steamer and life-boat make their way to the Gull Lightship, where
+they learn that a schooner has been seen in distress, bearing
+south-south-west, supposed to be on the South Sand Head.
+
+On through the giant seas and driving surf, in the very teeth of the
+gale, they make gallant way, and are about to take up a position from
+which the life-boat can dash in through the broken water to the rescue
+of the crew.
+
+A large Deal lugger is beating up to windward from the neighbourhood of
+the Sands, they speak her, and learn that she has rescued the crew of
+the schooner.
+
+The lugger, one of the finest of all the noble boats that sail from Deal
+beach, had, some time before the schooner got into such a dangerous
+position, sheered alongside her, at no slight risk, and as she shot by,
+the crew had jumped into her, forgetting in their hurry and excitement
+the flag of distress which they had left flying high, pleading still,
+and not in vain, for help that was no longer needed. Nothing can be done
+for the schooner; driving fast, she soon begins to thump on the Sands;
+darkness settles down upon her, the fierce waves have her for their
+prey, and in the morning not one remaining fragment of her is to be
+seen; she has been torn utterly to pieces, and what the tide has not
+swept away, the Sands have completely buried.
+
+The steamer and life-boat, when they leave the schooner to her fate,
+make for a barque, which, with main and mizen masts cut away, seems,
+although she is in great danger, to have a chance of weathering the
+storm.
+
+The wind is too heavy, and the tide too strong, for the steamer to be
+able to tow her into a safer position; her crew have already made their
+escape, and she is left in turn, but not, as it proves, to meet the fate
+of the schooner, for she successfully rides out the gale.
+
+A further cruise round the Sands, to see if their services are required
+by any distressed vessel, and they make again for Ramsgate, which they
+reach about half-past six. The steamer and life-boat are moored, ready
+for any fresh call which may be made for their services, the probability
+of which seems very great, and all the men remain on the alert.
+
+In such a storm anxious watchers are on the look-out at all the stations
+round the coast. Boatmen under the protection of boat-houses, or boats,
+or grouped together at friendly corners, are keeping a steadfast watch
+upon the seas. One or two every now and then take a few strides into the
+open for a wider range of view, and then back again to cover. The
+coastguard-men, sheltered in nooks of the cliff, or behind rocks, or
+breasting the storm on the drear Sands as they walk their solitary beat,
+peer out into the darkness watching for those signals from the sea--the
+gun flash, or the gleam of the rocket, which while they speak hope to
+the imperilled, tell to those on shore of lives in danger--of those who
+must speedily be rescued, or must die.
+
+Or the watchers listen for the dull throb of the signal gun, the sign of
+wild warfare, and struggles for life mid the charges and conflicts of
+breaking waves and dashing seas, a signal that the waiting Storm
+Warriors instantly accept, and rush into the contest to snatch their
+dying brethren from the arms of the enemy that is too strong for them.
+
+Sometimes the telegraph wires speed the message of distress along the
+coast, as happened one stormy New Year's Eve, when a ship was seen off
+Deal beach in almost a blaze of light, burning tar-barrels, and firing
+rockets to tell of her distress; an intervening fog seemed to prevent
+the look-out on board the light-vessel seeing her, and some boatmen on
+Deal beach, who could not possibly get their boats off the sands in the
+face of the strong gale blowing straight on shore, put their halfpence
+together to pay for a telegraph message--the messages were dearer then
+than they are now--and sent their swiftest runner to telegraph to
+Ramsgate; and after all, there was some unfortunate mistake, and fatal
+delay, and a telegram at last sent for further particulars, which was
+answered with a demand for urgent speed, and away then flew steamer and
+life-boat, and they neared the wreck, and rounded to, to send the
+life-boat in, when some of the boatmen thought they heard an agonising
+shriek, and others thought it was only the wail of the storm; but they
+looked, and the great green seas swept over the wreck, turned her right
+over, and she was seen no more, and twenty-eight lives went to their
+account. A piteous New Year's tale it was that was told next morning; a
+boat's crew got away from the ship soon after she struck, and battling
+through the broken seas, made way before the wind to Dover, and they
+told the story, that the lost vessel had picked up a shipwrecked crew,
+who were thus a second time wrecked, and at the second time lost; and
+that more of the crew would have come away in the boat, and in other
+boats, but it was a great risk, and there was a Deal pilot on board who
+pointed out the danger; and said that the Ramsgate life-boat was certain
+to be out to their rescue, they might be sure of her; and so they stayed
+and lighted tar-barrel after tar-barrel, and fired rocket after rocket;
+and when the sea washed their signal fires out, and swept the decks,
+they took to the rigging, and waited for the life-boat; and as they
+waited the poor Deal pilot could watch the light on the beach, by the
+house where slept his wife and eight children, who were to call him
+husband--father--no more.
+
+The life-boat men scarcely liked to speak of the agony and
+disappointment it was to them to be thus just too late; no fault of
+theirs, poor fellows; they would, if they could, have sooner swum to the
+wreck, if that were of any use, than have been too late to save the poor
+perishing lives.
+
+There was an official inquiry into the matter made by the authorities in
+London, and it was decided that no one was to blame; that it was one of
+those unfortunate occurrences which never would have happened, like
+many others, if people could only be as wise before an event as they are
+after, and which no one could regret more than those who were in any way
+the unfortunate, and of course most unintentional, agents of bringing it
+about.
+
+And now to proceed with the adventures of the life-boat on the night in
+question.
+
+About a quarter past eight in the evening, the harbour-master of
+Ramsgate receives a telegram. It tells its tale in its own short way,
+and the harbour-master learns that round the stormy North Foreland, some
+miles to westward of Margate, the _Prince's_ light-ship is firing guns
+and rockets, and that the _Tongue_ light-ship is repeating the signals.
+
+The vigilant coastguard-man who had first noticed the signals hurried to
+Margate with the tidings; but there the fine life-boats are powerless to
+help. The wind is blowing a hurricane from west-north-west, and drives
+such a tremendous sea upon the shore that no boat whatever could
+possibly get off and work its way out to sea; it would merely be rolled
+back upon the beach in the attempt.
+
+The coastguard at Margate at once saw how impossible it would be to
+render the required aid from Margate, and hastened to send a telegram to
+Ramsgate calling for help. The harbour-master there receives it, and now
+hurried action at once takes the place of wistful anxious waiting.
+
+For hours the steamer and life-boat have quietly rested in the sheltered
+harbour, lifting gently to the small waves that have been playing
+against their sides. The men for hours have been gazing out into the
+darkness, watching for signals, and listening to the roar of the gale,
+and to the murmur and tumult of the tumbling waves. The expected
+challenge comes. Ready! all ready! is the answer, and they rush to
+action at once, without waiting for one moment to consider whether a
+challenge to such strife should, or should not, be accepted.
+
+They know the hardships and peril of the work upon which they are
+called; but they know the other side of the question also; and it would
+make many comparatively useless lives as noble as are the lives of many
+of these poor boatmen, if all would only consider the result of good
+work, as well as the labour, and forget the trouble, or personal
+hardships of the labour, in the keen hope to realize the desired result.
+And these boatmen, as they have been crouching down under shelter of the
+pier wall, watching the progress of the storm, have had many a memory,
+and many a vision, to occupy their thoughts and stir their anxious
+courage; memories of brave fellows plucked from the very grasp of death;
+and visions of that which they well know how to picture; brother sailors
+perhaps clinging to the spars of a shattered wreck, while the wild waves
+leap around and only a few fragments of creaking yielding timber shield
+the poor men from their fury, and from death.
+
+They know the power of the waves to tear the strongest ships to pieces
+in a few hours, and are ready, all ready, for any stern deadly wrestle
+with the fury of the storm, for the rescue of those who stand in such
+dread need of help.
+
+The order is given, and the usual rush to the life-boat takes place.
+
+The regular Ramsgate boatmen have not, this time, the race for the boat
+all to themselves; the _Adder_ revenue-cutter is in the harbour, and two
+of her men get into the life-boat, and with ten boatmen and the
+coxswain, the crew is made up. The men on board the steam-tug _Aid_ are
+prompt as usual, and within half-an-hour from the giving of the order
+the steamer and life-boat are out to the rescue, again fighting their
+way through broken seas, and breasting the full fury of the gale.
+
+Imagine the picture that was shrouded in the thick darkness of that wild
+night.
+
+The steamer is strong and powerfully built, and has never failed in any
+of her struggles with the storm, but has in every part worked true and
+well; and this when failure in crank, rod, or rivet, might have been
+death to many lives. Seek to imagine this brave little steamer at her
+perilous work. Thrown up and down like a plaything by the mighty sea,
+now half buried in the wash of surf, or poised for a moment on the broad
+crest of a huge wave, and again shooting bows under into the trough,
+rolling and pitching and staggering in the storm, but still battling on
+true to her purpose. Still onward and onward she goes; the beat of the
+paddles, the roar of the steam-pipe, the throb of the engines, mingling
+with the hoarse blast of the gale, and the lash and hiss of the surf
+and fleeting spray; while to the watchers on shore, her light flitting
+here and there as she rolls and tosses, alone tell of her progress.
+
+The life-boat is almost burrowing her way through the spray and foam.
+Each man bends low on his seat, and holds fast by thwart or gunwale. The
+wind has changed, and the boat is being towed in the face of the gale
+and sea, and does not ride over the waves as easily as she would if she
+were under canvas only, but is dragged on and on, plunging through the
+crests of the seas. "It was just like as if a fire-engine was playing
+upon my back, not in a steady stream, but with a great burst of water at
+every pump," said one of the men whose station was in the bow.
+
+It is a wild sea; the waves and surf that break against the bows of the
+big ships that are at anchor in the Downs send their spray flying high,
+almost to the topmast heads; so it may well be imagined how the heavy
+seas nearly smother the steamer and life-boat as they breast all their
+force, heading against the gale. Now the waves rush over the bow, and
+again a cross wave catches the side of the boat, throws her almost on
+her side, sweeps bodily over her; while she pitches and rolls with a
+motion quick as that of a plunging horse. But the men know her well, and
+trust her thoroughly; and with a firm hold and stout hearts they
+resolutely journey onwards.
+
+Now, the wind veers a little, and the high cliffs somewhat break its
+force, and the men feel less the power of the gale; but still the wind
+is almost directly ahead, and the ebb tide is running against them with
+great strength. Every yard of advance is won by a struggle with the
+seas, as the steamer _Aid_ pants and beats her way onward. But still it
+is won, and all hands are content. At last they get round the North
+Foreland, and begin to feel that they are nearing the scene of action.
+
+The rain ceases, and the clouds of flying scud lift a little. It is
+still pitch dark, but free from mist and rain--clear dark, as they call
+it.
+
+The men see the Margate Pier, and the town lights, which shine out
+steadily and clearly; and it seems to them a strange contrast as they
+look from their rough post of danger, action, and hardship, upon the
+town resting in quiet peace, unconscious of the storm.
+
+They make for the _Tongue_ light-ship, which is stationed about nine
+miles from Margate. Every five minutes the darkness of the horizon is
+broken by the flash of a rocket which is thrown up by the light-ship. It
+goes flying up against the gale, and bursting, gives a moment's gleam as
+its stars caught by the fierce wind, pass away, floating in a short
+stream of light to leeward. The steamer's crew make for the light-ship,
+looking anxiously the while in all directions for any signal which may
+guide them more directly to the vessel in distress; but they see none,
+and so speed on towards the light-ship.
+
+As the steamer passes her on the lee side, as slowly and as near as
+possible, the coxswain is told that signals had been seen from the high
+part of the Shingle sand bank, supposed to be from a large vessel in
+distress.
+
+The life-boat in turn sheers near the light-vessel in passing, and
+hears the same report.
+
+Again they urge their way, struggling onward in the gale; but they can
+see no sign of a vessel, and no vestige of a wreck.
+
+Perilous and anxious is the work as they feel their way along the very
+edge of the dangerous Sands; the roar of the gale is too great for any
+cries of distress to be heard. The hull of the vessel may be overrun
+with the seas, and the crew, clinging to the masts or rigging, be
+utterly unable to give any signals by firing guns or rockets, or by
+showing lights; and the night is so dark, that from the life-boat they
+can only see a few yards ahead. The men are most anxiously on the
+look-out; each time that the boat rises high upon a sea, they try their
+utmost to peer through the darkness by which they are surrounded. No!
+the breakers gleam white, and the steamer's light is tossing to and fro
+with every pitch and roll of the vessel; but nothing more can they make
+out. And the anxiety of the men, both on board the steamer and the
+life-boat, becomes greater and greater; they do not like to leave the
+neighbourhood of the Sands without thoroughly examining it, fearing that
+in doing so they may leave behind them, to a despair rendered more
+terrible, and to a death rendered more bitter by the false hopes that
+had been excited, some poor fellows clinging desperately to a few
+fragments of trembling wreck. But still they can see nothing and can
+hear nothing of either wreck or crew; either the vessel must have gone
+utterly to pieces, or the men on board the _Tongue_ light-ship have
+been mistaken in the position of the signals they have seen.
+
+As the men are listening intensely for the faintest signal or cry of
+distress, they fancy that they hear the booming of a distant gun, fired
+at intervals. Now in a lull in the storm they hear it more distinctly,
+and see in the far distance the flashing of a rocket-light. Watching and
+listening still, they soon discover that the _Prince's_ and _Girdler_
+light-ships are at the same time repeating signals of distress. They
+must give up their present search, and hasten to the rescue where such
+urgent demands are being made for their help. Their consolation is, that
+at all events they can do nothing more in the utter darkness in
+searching for the wreck, which they have been already so long looking
+for in vain; and before daylight, or soon after, they can probably be
+back to resume their search after having, as they hope, done good work
+in the interval. At all events, they must be off; and off they go,
+leaving, as it proved, a crew of storm-beaten men in as desperate a
+position as it was well possible for men to be. They think it best to
+make for the _Prince's_ light-ship first, and on arriving there they are
+told that a large ship has been seen making signals. They think that she
+is on the Girdler Sands, but she may be on the Shingles. Away again in
+the darkness they speed on their noble mission. At last they plainly
+discern a light on the south part of the Shingles; they make for it, but
+only to be again disappointed. It is the light of the steam tug _Friend
+of all Nations_, which is lying-to under the lee of the Shingles to be
+protected from the rush of the seas. But here they are somewhat repaid
+for their efforts, for they learn beyond doubt that the vessel in
+distress is a large ship on the Girdler Sands; and more than this, that
+another large ship, disabled and in great distress, had been seen
+driving down the Deeps, a very narrow channel between the Shingle and
+the Long Sand. It must have been signals from this latter vessel which
+had been seen by the men on board the _Tongue_ light-ship. They are
+unwilling to pass on their way to the Girdler without making an effort
+to find the vessel which had been seen in such great distress, and
+which, in every probability, had gone ashore somewhere in the
+neighbourhood. So they make a cruise in the direction of the Deeps. They
+search narrowly, but in vain, and at last hurry away as the Girdler
+light-ship still continues to fire heavy guns. At last their long,
+persevering, and hazardous search is crowned with success. Upon nearing
+the Girdler light-ship, they see on the Sands the flare of blazing
+tar-barrels; they know these must be the signals made by the vessel that
+has run on the Sands. At once every man forgets all about his many hours
+of exposure to wet, cold, and exertion, and wakens up to full strength
+and vigour; and all begin at once to make preparations for going into
+the rescue.
+
+The steamer is obliged to steer clear of the broken water, not only
+because of the danger of grounding, but also because of the wildness of
+the seas as they break upon the Sands, as their surf would be quite
+sufficient to sweep her decks and swamp her. She skirts the breakers and
+tows the life-boat well to windward. The men on board the boat watch
+their opportunity; and as soon as they find themselves in the right
+position for reaching the wreck, they cast off the tow-rope, and the
+wind and sea at once swing the boat's head round, and she plunges into
+the midst of the broken water which is rushing over the Sands.
+
+It is a desperate strife of waters, and into the very thick of the fray,
+straight as an arrow, the boat rushes. The strength of the gale is so
+great, the men only dare to hoist a close-reefed foresail; but swiftly
+it bears the boat along. At times the boat is so overrun with broken
+water and surf that the men can scarcely breathe. They, however, cling
+resolutely to the boat, and again and again she shakes herself free of
+water, and the men straighten themselves for a moment, draw a few long
+breaths, when again they meet a tangle of broken waves. Down into the
+trough of the troubled seas the boat plunges, and over her and her crew
+the waves again rush in all directions; and thus she undauntedly works
+her way to the wreck.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XI.
+
+THE EMIGRANT SHIP.
+
+ "Borne upon the ocean's foam,
+ Far from native land and home,
+ Midnight's curtain, dense with wrath,
+ Brooding o'er our venturous path.
+ While the mountain wave is rolling,
+ And the ship's bell faintly tolling:
+ Saviour! on the boisterous sea,
+ Bid us rest secure in Thee."
+
+ _L. H. Sigourney._
+
+
+It is one o'clock in the morning; the moon gleams out through the gulfs
+in the dark deep clouds which sweep swiftly across her path.
+
+The men see a large ship hard and fast on the Sands and in a perfect
+boil of waters. The tremendous seas surge around her, and as they wildly
+leap against her shake her from stem to stern; the spray is flying over
+her in great sheets, and mingles with the dark masses of smoke, which
+rise in thick clouds from the flaming tar-barrels, while smoke and spray
+are swept swiftly to leeward by the force of the wind. The vessel is
+making all possible signals of distress; the fierce gale has driven
+her, at each lift of the sea, higher and higher upon the Sands, until
+she has reached the highest part, and there has grounded fast. As the
+tide fell the waves could no longer lift the ship, and let her crash
+down upon the sand, else long since she would have been utterly broken
+to pieces.
+
+The boat makes in for the ship, the people on board see her, and cries
+and cheers of joy greet her approach. The foresail is lowered, the
+anchor thrown overboard, and the boat fast sheers in towards the vessel,
+which they find to be an emigrant ship crowded with passengers.
+
+The cable goes out by the run, and is too soon exhausted, for with a
+jerk it brings the boat up within sixty feet of the vessel. As the poor
+emigrants see the boat stop short, their cries for help are frantic, and
+sound dismally in the boatmen's ears, as slowly and laboriously they
+haul in the cable, and with much trouble get up their anchor, before
+making another attempt to get alongside the ship. In the meantime they
+answer the cries of the people with shouts to encourage them, and the
+moon shining out, the emigrants see that they are not deserted. The sea
+is so heavy, and the boat's anchor has taken so firm a hold, that it is
+a long time before they can get it up; at last they succeed, and now
+sail within fifty fathoms of the vessel, before they heave the anchor
+overboard again.
+
+It is necessary if they are to windward of a vessel to let the anchor
+down as far as possible from her, that they may get plenty of sea-room
+when they haul up to it again, so that when they set sail they may have
+space enough to sail clear of the vessel upon which the seas would throw
+the boat bodily, if they did not allow themselves room to steer a course
+which shall be clear of her.
+
+They let the cable out gradually and drop alongside; they get a hawser
+from the bow, and another from the stern of the vessel, and by these
+they are enabled to keep the boat moderately well in position, the man
+on board hauling and veering on the ropes, and upon the boat's cable
+attached to the anchor, so as to keep the boat sufficiently near without
+letting her strike against the sides of the vessel, and this, in the
+broken seas and rapid tide, is a matter of no small difficulty. The ship
+is the _Fusilier_, bound from London to Australia; her captain and pilot
+shout out to the men on board the boat, "How many can you carry? we have
+more than one hundred souls on board, more than sixty women and
+children." And it is with no little dismay that the terrified passengers
+look down upon the boat half buried in spray, and wonder how she could
+by any possibility be the means of rescuing such a crowd of people. The
+men answer from the boat that they have a steamer near, and that they
+will take off the passengers and crew in parties to her. Two of the
+life-boat men, as the boat lifts on the top of a sea, make a sprint,
+catch hold of the man-ropes and climb on board the ship. "Who comes
+here?" shouts the captain, as the two boatmen, clad in their oilskin
+overalls, with their cork belts on, and pale and half exhausted with
+their long battling with wind and sea, jump from the bulwarks amid the
+excited passengers who crowd the deck. "Two men from the life-boat," is
+the reply, and the passengers throng round them, seize them by the
+hands, and some even cling to them with an energy of fear, that requires
+considerable force to overcome. The light from the ship's lamps and the
+faint moonlight reveal the mass of people on board, and the terrible
+state of exhaustion and fear that most of them are in; some are deadly
+pale and terror-stricken, their eyes wildly staring, and trembling in
+every limb; some are in a fainting condition, and are supported by
+friends, who half forget their own terrors in their efforts to console
+the sufferers who seem to need it most; the wild shrieks of some of the
+poor women pierce the gale, while others of the passengers are quiet and
+resigned, but their pale and firm looks and clasped hands suggest the
+depth of the emotions that they are at such pains to control. It has
+been a long long night of terror and most anxious suspense, and many of
+those who have held up bravely during its hours of danger and almost of
+despair, now break down at the crisis of the life-boat's arrival. But
+the night has not been one of unreasoning fear with all. There are those
+on board who, filled with a calm heroism, have by their example of holy
+faith exerted great influence for good among their
+fellow-passengers--one woman especially, who has been for some time
+employed by a religious society in London, visiting among the poor,
+proves herself well fitted for scenes of danger and distress. Gathering
+many around her, she read and prayed with them; and often as the wild
+blasts shook the vessel to the keel, there mingled with the roar of the
+storm the strains of hymns, and many poor creatures gathered consolation
+and confidence as they were led to look, from their own perfect
+helplessness and weakness, to the Almighty arm of a loving God; and
+many, who had already learnt to know and to feel those truths which take
+the sting from death, were encouraged to draw nearer to place their full
+reliance upon the sufficient atonement of Him who has declared, "I am
+the resurrection, and the life: he that believeth in me, though he were
+dead, yet shall he live: and he that believeth in me shall never die."
+Thus there was light in the darkness and songs in the night, and the
+voice speaking mid the tempest said, "Peace, be still;" and many felt,
+although the warring elements still raged, a calm, which recklessness
+may assume, but which faith alone can give at such an hour. This is no
+fancy sketch, no effort to drag in a bit of attempted pathos. One
+hundred immortal souls were momentarily expecting the summons which
+should launch them into eternity; and a most terrible shade in the
+tragic picture it would indeed have been, had not any of that throng
+been prepared for the summons by the exercise of earnest humble
+faith--if by all of them the expected messenger, who seemed to linger
+minute by minute upon the threshold, was dreaded only with a despairing
+fear, as the King of Terrors, if not any were prepared to welcome him
+calmly as the messenger of Peace.
+
+But now the life-boat men are upon the deck--a prospect of safety dawns
+upon all--a wild scene of excitement for a moment prevails, and there is
+a rush made for the gangway of the ship. Mothers shriek for their
+children; husbands strive to push their wives through the throng, and
+children are trodden down in the rush.
+
+It is a few moments before the excitement ceases, and the captain can
+exercise any authority; but the emigrants, checked for a minute, regain
+self-control, fall back from the side of the vessel, and await for
+orders.
+
+"How many will the life-boat carry?" the captain asks the life-boat men.
+"Between twenty and thirty at each trip," is the answer. "There is a
+very nasty dangerous sea and surf over the Sands, if too crowded we may
+get some washed out of her."
+
+It is at once decided, as a matter of course, that the women and
+children shall be taken first, and the crew prepare to get them into the
+boat.
+
+Two sailors are slung in bow-lines over the side of the vessel to help
+the women down. The boat ranges to and fro in the rush of the tide, the
+men do their utmost to check its sheering, hauling and easing in turn
+the hawsers which are passed from the ship to the bow and stern of the
+boat, but there is no keeping her for one moment steady; now she veers
+right away from the vessel as far as the cable will let her, and again
+comes in upon a rush of sea as if to crush herself against the wreck; up
+she is lifted on the crest of a wave to almost the level of the ship's
+deck, and down again plunges as the wave passes, many feet below, and
+leaves a deep and dismal gulf of tumbled sea and foam between her and
+the ship.
+
+It is a terrible scene; the crowd of helpless frightened people, and the
+comparatively small boat, tossed wildly in the rage of maddened waves,
+their one hope of rescue; and it is dangerous and difficult work getting
+the people into the boat; it would have been quite difficult and
+dangerous enough if all had been active and resolute sailors accustomed
+to scenes of danger, but how much more so, when a large proportion of
+those to be saved are helpless women, some aged and infirm!
+
+The women who are mothers are called first; one is led to the gangway,
+and shrinks back from the scene before her. The boat is lifted up on a
+big wave, the men stand on the thwarts with outstretched arms, ready to
+catch her if she falls, but the next moment the boat drops into the wild
+waste of water many feet below, and is half covered with a rush of foam.
+
+No wonder that the poor woman shrieks with terror, and seeks to struggle
+back on to the deck of the vessel; no time for persuasion, she is urged
+forcibly over the gangway, and now hangs in mid-air, held by the two men
+who are suspended over the side by ropes; as the boat rises again, the
+boatmen, who stand ready to catch her, cry, "Let go!" The two men do so,
+but the woman, in her terror, clings to one with a frantic grasp, and
+the next moment, as the boat falls away from the side of the vessel--oh!
+must she not fall into the sea? for the man to whom she is clinging
+cannot hold her as she is; one of the active prompt boatmen sees her
+danger, makes a spring, grasps her by the heel, drags her from her hold,
+catches her in his arms in her fall, and both of them roll over into the
+boat, their fall broken by the men who stand ready to catch them. The
+half insensible woman is quickly passed to the stern of the boat and
+thus she is saved. Now, they are ready again, for all are anxious that
+not a moment shall be lost; the number to be rescued, and the time that
+must of necessity be occupied in going to and from the steamer, makes
+every minute a question of life and death.
+
+Again, up the boat rises; the woman who is being urged forward makes a
+half spring, and is got into the boat without much trouble.
+
+The next time the boat rises she does not come well alongside, she
+rather falls short and sheers off. A woman is being held over the side
+by the two men: "Don't let go, Jack; don't let go!" the woman struggles,
+the position of the men is so awkward that they cannot hold her firmly,
+and she is struggling from their grasp, while the mad waves leap below,
+and if she falls she must at once be swept away by them, and down she
+does fall, but at that moment the boat sheers in again, just enough to
+enable one of the men to grasp the clothes of the woman and to drag her,
+as she falls, on to the side of the boat, and she too is saved.
+
+Again to work; another woman, she is sobbing, and cries out piteously,
+"Oh! don't shake me; be careful, don't hurt me!" Poor creature! she is
+very near her confinement; down she falls from the hands of the men who
+are holding her into the arms of the boatmen, and rolls over into the
+bottom of the boat. Some of the husbands on board throw blankets down to
+the poor half-dressed women in the boat; the blankets are rolled into
+bundles that the wind may not carry them away. Some of the women in the
+boat are crying aloud for their children; a passenger rushes frantically
+to the gangway, cries, "Here, here!" and thrusts a big bundle into the
+hands of one of the sailors, who supposes it to be merely a blanket
+which the man intends for his wife in the boat. "Here, Bill, catch!" the
+sailor shouts and throws the bundle to a boatman who is standing up in
+the boat; he just succeeds in catching it, as it is in the point of
+falling into the sea, and is thunderstruck to hear a baby's cry proceed
+from it, while there is a shriek from a woman, "My child! my child!" as
+she springs forward, and snatches it from him, which tells, indeed, of
+the greatness of the danger through which the poor little thing has
+passed. In spite of all the boatmen's care and labour the boat every now
+and then lurches with a tremendous thump against the ship's side, and
+would be stove in but for the massive cork fenders which surround her,
+and still she is leaping and tossing about; now high as the main chains
+of the ship, now low in the trough of a big sea, the hollow of which is
+so deep that it leaves but little water between the bottom of the boat
+and the sands; but with all eager haste the men work on, and at last,
+after many hair-breadth escapes, and some heavy falls, thirty women and
+children are got on board, and the boat is declared to be full.
+
+The boatmen cast off the hawsers from her bow and stern, and begin to
+haul in hard upon the cable. They draw the boat up to the anchor with
+much difficulty, for as the range of cable gets shorter, the boat jerks
+and pitches a great deal in the rush of the short waves, and in the
+swing of the tide. The anchor is up at last; the sails are hoisted; the
+boat feels her helm, gathers way swiftly, and shoots clear of the ship.
+A faint and half-hearted cheer greets them as they pass astern of the
+vessel; the remaining passengers watch them with wistful and somewhat
+anxious glances as they plunge on through sea and foam. Away the boat
+bounds before the fierce gale--on through the flying surf and boiling
+sea--on, although the waves leap over her and fill her with their spray.
+
+Buoyantly she rises and shakes herself free, staggering as a cross wave
+mid the broken water dashes itself against her bows; tossing her stern
+high as she climbs the waves' tall crests, then pitching almost bows
+under as the rolling waves pass under her stern; and lurching heavily on
+her side as she sinks into the trough of the sea. It is, in spite of
+their hope, a dread time for the poor women and children on board her,
+with those whom they love as themselves, left, they almost fear, to
+perish on the wreck, and while to themselves death at every moment seems
+very near; trembling with cold and excitement, they crowd together, and
+hold on to the boat, to each other, to anything; it is hard to think of
+safety while the boiling seas foam so fiercely around, ready, it seems,
+at any moment to overwhelm and bury the boat in their fierce waves. And
+the poor women take a more convulsive and firm grasp, as every now and
+then the men see a giant cross sea heading towards them, and give a
+quick warning cry--"Hold on!" and the sea comes with a clean sweep over
+the boat, almost washing them out of her.
+
+The steamer, as has been said, towed the life-boat well to windward,
+that she might have a fair wind before which to run in for the wreck,
+but as soon as the life-boat left the steamer, away she speeded round to
+the other side of the Sands, to leeward of the wreck, that the boat
+might again have a fair wind to her as she comes from the wreck, and she
+now lays to, awaiting the boat's return.
+
+On she comes; the broken water is now passed; the air is full of scud
+and spray, but the cross seas overrun her no longer; she is in deep
+water, and the exhausted emigrants begin to raise their heads and look
+about them; they could not have endured that continual breaking of the
+waves and rush of water over them much longer; how their hearts lift
+with joy as they hear the cheering voices of the men, and have the
+lights of the steamer pointed out to them, shining bright and near!
+
+Thus, with thirty women and children, their first sheave of the harvest
+to be gathered from death, the life-boat men run their boat alongside
+the _Aid_. The steamer is put athwart the seas, to form a break-water
+for the boat, which comes under her lee; the roll of the steamer, the
+pitching of the boat, the wild wind and sea, with the darkness of the
+night only faintly broken by the light of the steamer's lanterns, render
+it a somewhat difficult matter to get the women out of the boat. As the
+boat rises the men lift up a woman and steady her for a moment on the
+gunwale, two men on the steamer catch her by the arms as she comes up
+within reach, and she is dragged up the side on to the deck. There is
+here also no time for ceremony; a moment's hesitation, and the poor
+creature might have a limb crushed between the steamer and the boat. As
+each woman is thus got on deck, two men half lead half carry her to the
+cabin below.
+
+One woman struggles to get back to the boat, crying for her child, the
+men do not understand her in the roar of the gale, and she is gently
+forced below; again the rolled-up blanket appears, it is handed into the
+steamer, and is about to be dropped upon the deck, when half-a-dozen
+voices shout out, "There is a baby in the blanket!" and it is carried
+down into the cabin, and received by the poor weeping mother with a
+great outburst of joy.
+
+"God bless you! God bless you!" she exclaims to the man, and then
+blesses and praises God out of the abundant fulness of her heart.
+
+Some of the poor women are completely overcome by the reaction which
+takes possession of them now that they find themselves in safety; they
+had been comparatively calm and resigned during their hours of hardship
+and danger; now they realise the nature of the peril to which they have
+been exposed, and in which many whom they love are still placed. Some
+throw themselves on the cabin floor, weeping and sobbing; some cling to
+the sailors, begging and entreating them to save their husbands and
+children who are on board the wreck; while others can do little else
+than offer up some simple form of prayer and praise to God.
+
+Instantly that the boat is freed from her passengers she drops astern of
+the steamer, and is towed round the sands, to get again into position to
+make a second trip to the vessel; and when the straining cable is let
+go, and her sail hoisted, she heads round, gathers way, and bounds in
+like a greyhound through the troubled sea towards the wreck. A slant of
+wind comes and drives her from her course, and she fails in reaching the
+ship, and makes for the open water. The steamer speedily picks her up,
+tows her into a more favourable position, and the boat soon gets again
+alongside the vessel.
+
+There are still on board more women and children than will fill the
+boat, and they have to leave some half-a-dozen behind. All the old
+difficulties in getting the women down the side of the vessel into the
+life-boat are repeated, although the wind has now fallen a little. They
+make for the steamer, and as each new comer is handed down into the
+cabin, the anxiety of those who are eagerly looking for some loved one
+is great indeed, and the meetings again, after so dread a separation,
+are naturally very affecting.
+
+For the third time the boat makes to the ship, and now brings away the
+remaining passengers. The cabin of the steamer is full of women and
+children in every stage of exhaustion and excitement; and they are all
+very thankful to God for the full answer vouchsafed to the earnest
+prayers of the previous night.
+
+It has taken more than three hours to get the emigrants on board the
+steamer; there has been additional delay created by the boat twice
+failing to reach the ship, but this very delay, which at the time seemed
+so unfortunate, was, under God's providence, the means of saving further
+life.
+
+The life-boat again makes for the _Fusilier_ to see what the crew of the
+vessel will do, whether they will abandon the vessel at once, or wait to
+see the result of a change in the weather which seems to promise. They
+get alongside; the gale has gone down very considerably, and the tide
+has been falling fast for some time. The ship being light, has not
+received so much injury from the thumping on the ground as they
+anticipated; and, as she is high up on the sands, the tide has left her
+the sooner, so that she has settled down in shallow water, and there is
+now, therefore, no immediate danger; although, should the wind get up
+with the returning tide, she may be very speedily beaten to pieces.
+
+The captain of the ship thinks that if the wind goes down she may
+possibly be got off at the next high tide, as she has not been much
+knocked about; but while he is unwilling to abandon the vessel while
+there is a chance of her being rescued, he feels the greatness of the
+risk, and wishes the life-boat to remain alongside him. It is nearly
+day-light; the night is clear, and the wind still blowing very hard,
+although the fierceness of the gale seems expended.
+
+The life-boat makes her way to the steamer, and takes orders to be given
+at Ramsgate to send luggers with anchors and cables, that every effort
+may be made to get the ship off, if the weather continues to moderate.
+The boat then returns and lies by the ship, while the steamer, heavily
+freighted with rescued emigrants, makes the best of her way towards
+Ramsgate.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XII.
+
+THE RESCUE OF THE CREW OF THE "DEMERARA," AND THE EMIGRANTS' WELCOME TO
+RAMSGATE.
+
+
+ "Eternal Father, strong to save,
+ Whose arm hath bound the restless wave,
+ Who bid'st the mighty ocean deep
+ Its own appointed limits keep;
+ O hear us when we cry to Thee
+ For those in peril on the sea."
+
+ _Hymn._
+
+
+ "Now we must leave our fatherland,
+ And wander far o'er ocean's foam;
+ Broken is kinship's dearest band,
+ Forsaken stands our ancient home.
+
+ "But one will ever with us go,
+ Through busiest day and stillest night;
+ The heavens above, the deeps below,
+ Stand all unveiled before his sight."
+
+ _Hymn._
+
+
+The emigrants describe their perils to the men on board the steamer, and
+mention that during the previous evening, while their ship was driving,
+and some time before she struck, they saw a large ship in great
+distress, and drifting fast in the direction of the Sands, but that as
+darkness set in, they lost sight of her.
+
+The crew of the steamer keep a sharp look-out for this vessel, or for
+any signs of her. She is evidently the one of which they had already
+heard, and of which they had been in search before they discovered the
+_Fusilier_.
+
+After some time they discover part of a mast and other wreckage
+entangled in the Sands, and can only conclude that the vessel has gone
+utterly to pieces, with the loss of all hands, during the night; they
+must speed on, and get the poor emigrants cared for on shore with all
+possible haste. But for the delay that had been occasioned, the steamer
+would have been far on its way to Ramsgate by this time, while it was
+yet too dark for them to see any distance; now in the grey light that
+increases rapidly they can search for any other signs of wreckage. As
+they proceed down the Prince's channel, and get near to the
+light-vessel, they see the small remnant of a wreck, which they think
+may be the bowsprit and jib-boom of a vessel dismasted and on her beam
+ends; they get nearer to her, and find that she is well over on the
+north-east side of the Girdler or Shingle Sands. Some of the crew wish
+to launch the steam tug's small life-boat, eighteen feet long, and make
+in through the surf to the wreck, to which they think they can see some
+of the crew clinging; but it is considered too great a risk to take so
+small a boat through such a broken sea, and it is agreed that they had
+better go back for the large life-boat.
+
+They put back, and passing to leeward of the _Fusilier_, strike the flag
+half-mast high, as a sign that the boat is to join them. This she
+speedily does, and they together make for the newly-found wreck; as they
+approach her, they can see that she is a vessel on her beam ends, with
+only her foremast standing. The life-boat makes in for her; the men
+wonder greatly that the vessel has held together so long, for she is
+broken and torn almost to pieces; the copper is peeled off her bottom,
+the timbers are started, rent, and twisted; the planking is wrenched
+off, almost all the cargo is washed out of the shattered hull, and here,
+and there, the light is to be seen through her bottom; there remains now
+little more than the skeleton of the ship that a few hours before, taut
+and trim, had buoyantly bounded over the seas; and where was her gallant
+crew that had so bravely sailed her then? The foremast, feebly held in
+position by a remnant of the deck, lies stretched a few feet above the
+water. The crew and pilot have been lashed to it for many hours, and
+have, for that time, seemed to be trembling over a fearful and yawning
+grave; the heavy waves foam up and beat against the hull, and the doomed
+ship is, bit by bit, being torn further to pieces. The crew, as they
+cling on, hear the timbers creaking and snapping; the deck was blown up
+as the water covered it, by the force of the confined air, and its
+fragments have been swept away in the swift tide.
+
+The heavy waves make a greater and greater breach over the ship; at
+times the ship lifts a little from the mere force of the blows given by
+the tremendous seas; at any moment the foremast may break off short,
+and the wreck be rolled right over. The mast quivers at every shake and
+heave of the wreck; the fierce tide rushes five feet beneath where the
+trembling sailors cling, over whom the waves are continually breaking.
+An hour passes, and the men are to their wonder still spared; another
+and another hour, but they have no means of giving any signals of
+distress, and there seems no room whatever for hope. How can there be?
+they ask each other. Suddenly they make out a steamer's lights in the
+distance, and watch them with a wistful curiosity; to their astonishment
+the steamer seems to make directly for them, and then to cruise
+backwards and forwards within a few hundred feet of them.
+
+A few of the trembling sailors shout out once or twice, but the rest
+smile grimly at the idea of any voice being heard, even a few yards off,
+in the roar of such a gale.
+
+They watch the steamer's lights in a very agony of suspense, but without
+any hope that they themselves can be discovered in the darkness.
+
+They see a smaller light some distance astern of the steamer, and
+imagine it to be that of a life-boat. As they hopelessly watch the
+movement of the vessels, they hear the dull throb of heavy guns from the
+distant light-ships. They see the faint flashes of light from the
+rockets: they know that these signals are calling to the steamer and
+life-boat to speed on elsewhere, to the rescue of other drowning ones;
+yes, the steamer, in answer to these signals, is leaving them, and
+abandoning her vain search, and with a deepening despair they watch her
+lights grow fainter and fainter, and at last disappear in the distance.
+So they are left alone in their desolation, while the wild winds roar
+and the hungry waves rage around them.
+
+The moon goes down, the darkness deepens, the gale rushes by more
+furiously than ever; then comes a slight lull, and a faint light streaks
+the horizon. They tighten their grasp upon the trembling mast and torn
+rigging, and speak a few words of hope.
+
+They may yet witness another sun-rise; for in the dull grey light of the
+early dawn they can see faintly a steamer in the distance. She is
+approaching, but her course will hardly bring her near enough to
+discover them, lying as they are up on one torn mast only just out of
+the water. How intensely they watch her! and many an earnest beseeching
+prayer is uplifted, and from some hearts that were withal not much
+accustomed to prayer. Eagerly! eagerly! they watch her! How some feebly
+speak words of hope, while others will not be aroused out of their
+despair! Thank God! she changes her course, and makes in directly for
+the Sands, upon the edge of which their frail wreck rests. They may all
+begin to hope again, and joy comes in upon them like a flood. They shout
+aloud, and wave a rag of canvas, the only means of signalling that is
+left to them. The steamer sees them, she dips her flag as a signal that
+they are seen; and then, to the unspeakable horror of the poor men,
+slowly turns round, and steams away full speed in the direction from
+which she came. An agony of fear again comes over the poor fellows;
+they feel that they cannot be altogether deserted. Upon reflection,
+they see that no ordinary boat could live through the surf which
+separates them from the steamer; and the steamer would only have been
+herself wrecked if she had come any nearer the Sands. She must have gone
+for a life-boat. How long will she be away? They shudder as the creaking
+mast trembles beneath them; and look with heart dread at the yawning
+gulf of wild waters which gapes a few feet below; and they cannot but
+have a dismal fear that the steamer on her return with assistance, may
+find no vestige left either of them, or of the remnant of wreck to which
+they cling.
+
+A short time, which however seems long indeed to them in their great
+suspense, and they again see the steamer, and soon they can make out, to
+their great joy, that she has the life-boat in tow. Still the flying
+surf beats upon them, and drives them, with its sheer weight, still
+closer to the mast; still the water rages around, while they cling with
+all desperate energy to the quivering shrouds; they are cold, and
+drenched, and exhausted, but they are full of hope; their hearts are
+lightened, their strength seems to return, the long hours during which
+they have seemed hopelessly face to face with death are passed, for the
+life-boat is near, and her gallant crew are speeding to their rescue.
+
+The life-boat comes swiftly on, running before the still heavy gale; now
+rising like a cork to the mounting seas, or plunging boldly through the
+surf and broken water. Her men forget the long night-struggle of
+fatigue and danger through which they have passed; much noble,
+self-denying, and dangerous work have they done, but they have still
+noble work to do--more lives to save, by the help of God--and with cool
+determination they cheerfully proceed to their new labours.
+
+They find the water more and more broken as they near the ship; the
+waves are flying high over the lost vessel; the ebb-tide is running
+strongly. From the breaking seas, and from the position of the wreck,
+now on her broadside with her keel to windward, they cannot anchor on
+the windward side and let the boat drop gradually in upon the wreck,
+their only chance is to run with the wind abeam right in upon the
+fore-rigging. It is true that there is considerable danger in this, but
+at such times the life-boat men cannot stop to calculate danger, and
+must be ready oftentimes to risk their own lives in their attempts to
+save the lives of others. They, therefore, charge in straight amid the
+floating wreckage, and the boat hits hard upon the iron windlass, which
+is still hanging to the deck of the vessel.
+
+A rope is thrown round the fore-rigging, and the group of exhausted
+sailors shout with joy as they greet the glad friendly faces of the
+life-boat men coming in upon them out of the storm of desolation that
+rages around. The crew, sixteen in number, including the pilot and a boy
+of about eleven years of age, are to the last extent exhausted and
+feeble, and slowly drop one by one from the mast into the boat, and
+leave to its fate the last storm-torn fragment of the _Demerara_, which
+has been for so many hours their only hope.
+
+"Oars out, and pull hard; let us get clear of all this wreckage before
+we have a hole knocked in the boat's bottom," and every boatman strains
+his hardest; soon they are clear; now a moment's delay ere they hoist
+the sail, and a great shaking of hands all round, and warm greetings,
+and heartfelt thanks from the saved ones, and the boat's sail is again
+hoisted, and away they make through the surf.
+
+It is now nearly ten o'clock in the morning; they soon reach the
+steamer, which is waiting to leeward. The emigrants have been watching
+the movements of the boat with the keenest interest; their feelings of
+sympathy are moved to their very depths, by the fact of their having
+passed so lately through similar scenes of danger and rescue.
+
+They crowd the deck, and shout after shout greets the boat; the women
+cheer at the top of their voices, and welcome, with outstretched arms,
+alike the rescued and the rescuers.
+
+One warm-hearted Irishwoman seizes the coxswain's hands in both hers,
+and shakes them with might and main, sobbing out, as the tears roll down
+her cheeks, "I'll pray the Holy Father for you the longest day that I
+live."
+
+The steamer is literally crowded with rescued people; the cabins are
+given up to the women and children, and the poor people half forget
+their present misery in great thankfulness for their safety; they are
+wet and cold, and trembling with excitement and with the effects of
+their long hours of fear and exposure; the cabin is small and crowded to
+the extreme; the steamer rolls and pitches tremendously, as she makes
+her way through the cross seas which still run high and broken, though
+the height of the tempest is past.
+
+It is no unusual occurrence for a crowd of people to be grouped at the
+pier-head, watching with interest for the appearance of one of the many
+steamers which, with flags flying in token of goodly freight, and with
+gay appearance, as fitly betokens holiday time, makes swiftly for the
+harbour; but with a deeper interest than ever is excited by such holiday
+scenes is the steamer waited for now.
+
+It is one of those bright, genial winter mornings of which Ramsgate has
+so goodly a share. Many persons have been attracted to the pier to take,
+on that pleasant promenade, a good instalment of the fresh breeze, and
+to watch the sea, bright with sunshine, and the waves glistening and
+flashing in their turmoil of unrest.
+
+Intelligence spreads that the steamer and life-boat have been away all
+night, and are now every minute expected to round the Point and appear
+in sight.
+
+Great is the feeling of gladness, and deep the satisfaction, as the
+gallant _Aid_ appears with her flags flying, and flags flying too at the
+life-boat's mast-heads, telling the glad tale of successful effort. The
+crowd rejoices greatly in the good work done; and as the steamer comes
+nearer it is seen that never on a summer's day did steamer bear a fuller
+freight of holiday-seekers than does the _Aid_ now bear of those who
+have been rescued from deadly peril.
+
+From the pier the crowd look down upon the multitude on board, and feel
+that that throng of fellow-beings have been just snatched from death,
+and a thrill of wonder and gladness passes through the on-lookers, and
+combines with that half formed sense of fear, which a realization of
+danger recently escaped either by ourselves, or by others, always gives.
+
+The crowd waves, and shouts, and hurrahs, and gives every sign of glad
+welcome and hearty congratulation, and as the steamer sweeps round the
+pier-head, the pale upturned faces of one hundred and twenty rescued
+men, women, and children, smile back a glad acknowledgment of the
+welcome so warmly given. It is a scene almost overpowering in the deep
+feeling that it produces. The emigrants land; they toil weakly up the
+steps to the pier, all bearing signs of the dangers and hardships
+through which they have passed.
+
+Some are barely clothed, some have blankets wrapped round them, and all
+are weary and worn and faint with cold and wet and long suspense. There
+are aged women among the emigrants; some who had been unwilling to be
+left behind when those most dear to them were about to seek their
+fortunes abroad; others had been sent for by their friends, and to them
+the thoughts of the terrors and trials of a sea-voyage had been overcome
+by the longing to see, once again before they died, the faces so long
+loved and so much missed; to see perhaps the grand-children upon whom,
+although they had never looked, yet they had thought of until they had
+become almost part of their daily life. It is piteous to see these aged
+women totter from the steamer to the pier.
+
+And young men and young women are of the number; they, crowded in the
+race at home, determined to seek in a wider field to make better way.
+
+Here a poor stricken woman looks wistfully upon the white face and
+almost closed eyes of the baby in her husband's arms. This is the child
+that was so nearly lost overboard as it was thrown into the boat wrapped
+up in a blanket; the mother's fears were not realised--the baby speedily
+recovered.
+
+It now becomes the glad office of the people of Ramsgate to bestir
+themselves on behalf of those suddenly thrown upon their charity.
+
+The agent of the Shipwrecked Fishermen and Mariners' Society at once
+takes charge of the sailors. Accommodation is found for the emigrants in
+houses near the pier, and a plentiful meal at once supplied; many of the
+residents busy themselves most heartily; clothes, dresses, coats, boots,
+and all necessary garments are most liberally given; the people are
+ready to _spoil_ themselves on behalf of the poor emigrants.
+
+And thus warmed, fed, clothed and consoled by the heartfelt sympathy
+that is so evidently and practically manifested, the poor emigrants
+recover in a wonderfully short space of time from the state of physical
+and nervous exhaustion to which they had been reduced; but they are
+never likely to forget the terrors of the night, or the debt of
+gratitude they owe to the gallant Ramsgate life-boat men, who so nobly
+effected their rescue.
+
+Subscriptions in the meantime have been raised in the town to pay all
+expenses, and to put into the hands of the poor emigrants some little
+ready money.
+
+One of the shipping agents has telegraphed to the owners of the ship,
+and been empowered to provide the emigrants all needed board and
+lodging; he does so, and on the next morning forwards them to London. A
+crowd of Ramsgate people bid them good-bye at the station, and receive
+grateful acknowledgments of the kindness and sympathy that have been
+shown, and they from their hearts wish their poor friends God speed.
+
+The emigrants were cared for in London by the owners of the _Fusilier_.
+The weather moderating the morning after the wreck, the emigrants'
+things were got out of the vessel and sent on to them; and the owners of
+the _Fusilier_ soon obtained another ship, in which they forwarded their
+passengers, and they had a prosperous voyage to Melbourne.
+
+The _Fusilier_ was ultimately got off the Sands, but no vestige of the
+_Demerara_ was ever again seen.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIII.
+
+THE WRECK OF THE "MARY"--GALES ABROAD.
+
+ "Yet more! the billows and the depths have more!
+ High hearts and brave are gathered to thy breast!
+ They hear not now the booming waters roar,
+ The battle-thunders will not break their rest.
+ Keep thy red gold and gems, thou stormy grave!
+ Give back the true and brave!"
+
+ _Mrs. Hemans._
+
+
+The year was fast dying out. Inland the wild winds did little to disturb
+the progress of Christmas preparations, or the happiness of Christmas
+gatherings. The blasts swept ragingly along, and the last of the dead
+leaves were torn from the withering branches. The stalwart trees battled
+sturdily in the woods; but many a stout veteran that had long laughed at
+storms, at last was bowed in the grasp of the gale, and fell prostrate,
+or, like a fainting giant, leant with arms all abroad against his
+fellow-strugglers in the strife.
+
+In the towns there was much wondering gossip at the force of the wind,
+and here and there some trivial disasters to record; but for all its
+rage and bluster, the gale did not gather on shore many trophies of its
+strength, and swept moaningly out to sea, to find in the yielding waters
+a more ready ally, as it would visit with its wrath man and his works.
+
+The brave ships that were caught by the gale were prepared to accept the
+accustomed challenge. It overtook the tall vessels, and then the
+swelling sails garnered the force of the wind and held it captive, and
+made it speed the swift ship along.
+
+It fell with its full strength upon the stout ships riding at anchor,
+and moaned through the shaking rigging, and by the swaying masts and
+yards, while the groaning cables shuddered in every link, and the strong
+anchors grappled the ground with a tighter and tighter grasp, and held
+the good ships safe, in spite of the raging wind and rush of sea, safe
+from the greedy waiting sands, or cruel rocks.
+
+Thus on the tempest-lashed ocean all was life, and energy, and conflict;
+and the dying year, as its closing hours sped away, had at sea the
+howling winds and seething waves to sing its dirge, and storm weary
+sailors, and storm-beaten ships to mark its close.
+
+Ships from the Thames, from the east coasts of England and Scotland,
+from all northern Europe--ships sailing under every flag, and bound to
+all ports, gathered day by day in the Downs anchorage, where they waited
+for the strong south-westerly gales to give place to a more favourable
+slant of wind, that they might pursue their way down Channel; but still
+the strong adverse winds prevailed. But while the outward-bound ships
+were thus obliged to halt in their course, the homeward-bound ships came
+foamingly along, their masts bending like whips under the small spread
+of canvas they were alone able to carry. Like white-winged gulls they
+fled over the leaping seas, and threaded their way through the crowded
+anchorage of the Downs.
+
+The careless sailors laughed at the heavy blasts of wind which in their
+force only hurried the good ship on, and thus gave the crews a better
+prospect of realising their hopes of being in Old England on the near
+Christmas tide, to spend it with their friends on shore, and share in,
+and by their presence greatly add to, all the pleasures of the season.
+
+But the smaller vessels at anchor in the Downs began to ride uneasily,
+the force of the gale fell on them with unchecked fury, the swift tide
+pressed them sore, and raging seas broke over them again and again.
+Their anchors began to drag; the breakers on the Goodwin Sands leapt and
+foamed dangerously near to leeward; there was also danger of collision
+if their anchors continued to drag, the ships in the Downs being so
+crowded together. Yes, there must be a flight from the Downs on the part
+of many of the smaller craft. Some vessels make for Ramsgate harbour,
+not many, as the charges are now so high and restrictive as almost to
+make it cease from being a harbour of refuge. Other vessels make for an
+anchorage round the North Foreland; a dangerous experiment this, as it
+frequently happens that a sudden lull comes in the southerly gale, and
+in a short time the wind chops right round, and begins to blow from the
+northward harder than ever. It was so on the occasion of which we are
+writing. If a strong fort, under which a fleet was anchored for
+protection, suddenly fell into the hands of the enemy, a greater change
+would not be wrought in the position, as to the safety of the vessels,
+than is occasioned by this sudden shift of wind to the vessels in the
+Margate Roads. The high cliffs which have been their shield now become
+their deadly peril. It had been desirable to gain their shelter, it is
+now a necessity to escape from their neighbourhood as soon as possible.
+And so, on this occasion, as the wind chopped round all was at once
+astir; some ships succeeded in regaining their anchors, others had no
+time or power to do so; some were driven ashore; twenty or thirty
+vessels had to slip their cables, and as, with no anchors on board, the
+captains did not dare to remain in the neighbourhood of the Sands or
+land, these vessels were hauled on a wind, and like a flock of weary
+frightened birds went staggering out into the North Sea.[1] The
+hovelling-luggers from Ramsgate, Margate, Deal, and Broadstairs are out
+during the gale; they go in chase of the ships that have fled from their
+anchorage; they place men on board such vessels as need them, either to
+act as pilots, or to assist the weary crews. Some of the luggers receive
+orders to fetch anchors and cables for such vessels as have lost theirs,
+and away they go plunging and speeding through the seas, making for the
+nearest port where they can find agents to supply them; and then out
+again with all speed, heavily laden, with anchors and chains, in search
+of the vessels which have employed them, and which have, likely enough,
+been driven by the force of the gale, far from the position in which the
+luggers left them.
+
+At midnight the gale gathers increased force; the dark heavy clouds seem
+to settle lower and lower, and as the snow-squalls sweep by, the air and
+sea seem one confused mass of flying foam and snow.
+
+The storm rages at Ramsgate Pier with all its fury; the pier stands an
+advanced fortress unmoved by the fierce attack of the waves, and it is
+well manned by brave boatmen, the reserved guard of the storm--Storm
+Warriors ready to sally forth to rescue life at the first signal of
+danger. One or two waggons, heavily laden with chains, and trucks with
+anchors, are being drawn down the pier by the struggling horses, the
+spray in heavy volumes washing over all.
+
+Luggers in the harbour, and alongside the pier, are rolling and pitching
+in the rough tumble of the miniature sea that the gale arouses even
+there.
+
+An anchor is hanging from the crane, a lugger beneath it is tossing up
+and down; the men are doing their utmost to guide the anchor in its
+descent into the boat as she plunges about; it is perilous work for all
+hands; it seems a marvel that it can be done without staving in the
+boat, or crushing the men.
+
+A group of boatmen are crouching under shelter of the wall of the pier,
+near the life-boat; the night wears away--it is three o'clock in the
+morning.
+
+A boatman makes his way to the pier-head; he finds the coxswain of the
+life-boat on the look-out.
+
+"Well, Jarman, a heavy gale this."
+
+"A heavy gale indeed, Gorham; it is blowing great guns and no
+mistake--a terrific sea, too; just the night for our work, and I shall
+not be surprised if some is cut out for us, and pretty stiff too, before
+the morning."
+
+"Likely enough, it is a sort of touch-and-go night for the Goodwin. I
+noticed before dark several vessels riding in the Gulls; now the wind
+has cast in so heavily from the north, it will go hard with some of
+them, I fear.
+
+"Yes, I noticed them; they must have a bad time of it now; it is to be
+hoped that the anchors will hold; it will be almost sudden death for any
+poor fellows whose ships touch the Goodwin to-night; why, with the sea
+that must be now raging there, it would take in a ship almost at a
+mouthful."
+
+"True enough, coxswain; I have been very anxious about them all
+night--cannot help thinking about them." And it is supposed that the
+boatman's fears were very terribly justified. One vessel was wrecked in
+the way we are about to tell; and very grave fears were felt as to the
+fate of several others; when the morning came, not one of the vessels
+that had been noticed the evening before as being anchored in such a
+dangerous position was to be seen, and yet it was almost certain that
+not any of them could have got away in safety.
+
+Fishing-smacks that had been lying-to not far from the North Foreland
+saw the fleet of vessels driven from the Margate Roads, and afterwards
+saw several of them flying signals of distress, and apparently in a
+sinking condition; but from the extraordinary force of the gale, the
+fishermen could render no assistance, and the weather was too dark and
+thick for the signals for help to be seen from the light-vessels, or
+from the shore; moreover, a good deal of wreckage was seen floating
+about in the morning, and the mast-head of one vessel was discovered
+standing out of the water upon the Goodwin, the last seen relic of some
+unknown ship and crew.
+
+Among the vessels observed during the afternoon to be at anchor in a
+very perilous position in the Gull Stream, and making very bad weather
+of it, was the _Mary_, a schooner of about 170 tons; she had been a
+Dutch galliott, had a cargo of coals on board, and was bound from
+Shields to Dieppe.
+
+There was one fine young man on board, David Fullarton. Life seemed more
+especially dear to him, as he was engaged to be married; the
+arrangements for the wedding had been made; he had been busy in
+preparing a home; and a short voyage from Shields to Dieppe and back,
+would do something towards the expenses, and he would not be long away;
+and so there were bright memories to look back upon, bright hopes before
+him; but this terrible storm seems to cover all with its shadow. As soon
+as darkness sets in, and the gale shows signs of increasing in force,
+Fullarton becomes very anxious, and keenly alive to the danger the
+schooner is in; time after time he entreats the captain to have the
+masts cut away, that the vessel may ride more easily, and be less
+exposed to the fury of the wind. "Do! captain, pray do! for the sake of
+our lives let it be done! we are dragging our anchors--we are fast
+driving on the Sands;" and again he begs the captain to signal for
+assistance. "Why not! why not? you will do it too late, captain, too
+late!" the poor fellow cries in his restlessness and distress.
+
+The night grows on, and its terrors multiply; the intense darkness, the
+wild sea, the howling winds moaning and wailing through the rigging, the
+hoarse roar and thunder of the breakers raging on the near Goodwin
+Sands.
+
+At last, the captain feels that the schooner is in great danger, and
+orders the crew to set a tar-barrel on fire; they hasten to do
+so--Fullarton working with eager haste; but the wash of the sea over it
+and the heavy wind will not let it burn; they fill the barrel with tow
+and tar, and grease, and at last get it to flare up with a fierce flame
+that resists the storm; the watch on board the Gull light-ship had
+noticed before dark the danger of the vessel, and had been keenly on the
+look-out in her direction for signals of distress; on Ramsgate Pier,
+also, an anxious look-out had been kept for some hours, the boatmen
+expecting disasters in that quarter.
+
+It is a little before four in the morning; the men on board the
+light-vessel see the signal of distress, and fire a gun and send up a
+rocket to convey to the shore the tidings that help is wanted.
+
+The boatmen at once commence preparations with all energy, they arouse
+the men asleep in the watch-house on the pier, a man hurries to give the
+harbour-master notice, the crew of the steamer _Aid_ get ready for sea,
+the harbour-master hurries down the pier and gives the men orders to
+start on their merciful and perilous errand.
+
+Away they go in the teeth of the hurricane, clearing their way through
+the leaping foaming waves and the clouds of heavy spray.
+
+The town and harbour lights gleam out in the darkness, but there is no
+looking back for them on the part of the men, and there may be none;
+until by God's mercy, their work is successfully finished, and then
+doubly will the lights shine out a glad welcome on their triumphant
+return home.
+
+The lights they now look for are the beacon fires of warfare; calls to
+conflict and peril; guides into the thickest of the dread battle-field.
+As the life-boat lifts on the curl of a wave, the crew see the
+flickering flame of the signal-fire that is burning so fiercely in the
+tar-barrel on the wreck; they make in for the signal at once, pass
+through the Cud channel; snow-squalls come sweeping by, adding to the
+cold and darkness, and shutting out from their view all lights on the
+Sands; the men are eager and excited in their quick sympathy for the
+shipwrecked crew--eager to brave all the dangers of the lashing seas
+which they know must be leaping and tearing about the wreck. And they
+well realize the deadly peril the poor shipwrecked seamen must be in,
+and think little in their struggle onward of all the hardships they
+themselves are enduring.
+
+For about forty minutes they battle their way, and then find themselves
+near the wreck; the signal flame from the burning tar-barrel leaps, and
+flickers, and burns low, and is almost extinguished by the spray; the
+life-boatmen watch it anxiously, for they know that if the crew of the
+vessel cannot succeed in keeping it alight, it will be almost impossible
+for them to find the vessel in the darkness of the night; the crew of
+the schooner also feel this to be the case, and bring clothes and
+bedding, and all the tar and oil they can get at, and by great exertions
+manage to keep the fire burning.
+
+FOOTNOTE:
+
+[1] NOTE.--_Extract from Newspaper._--"Five vessels wrecked off
+Margate:--On Friday evening there were about one hundred and fifty
+vessels anchored in the Margate and North Foreland Roads, where they
+were sheltered from a south-westerly gale. Suddenly, about one o'clock
+on Saturday morning, a violent gale sprung from the north-east, and the
+vessels in the Roads were compelled to slip their anchors and seek the
+nearest shelter. Rockets and flares were seen displayed in all
+directions from the numerous distressed vessels. The Broadstairs
+life-boat and the Margate life-boat, the _Quiver_, put to sea. Four
+vessels were driven ashore, three in the Main, and one in Margate Bay,
+and the crews of three were saved by the Broadstairs life-boat. Another
+vessel was run down off the North Foreland, and it is reported that
+another has gone to pieces on the Tongue Sand, and, it is feared, with
+all hands."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIV.
+
+THE WRECK OF THE "MARY"--A STRUGGLE FOR DEAR LIFE.
+
+ "Sleep on; thy corse is far away,
+ But love bewails thee yet;
+ For thee the heart wrung sigh is breathed,
+ And lovely eyes are wet."
+
+ _G. D. Prentice._
+
+
+"Now, my men, make ready!" the coxswain cries; "we've got our work
+before us."
+
+The night is wild, and dark, and bitter, blinding snow, and sleet, and
+storm-wrack rush along on the wings of the gale.
+
+The Sands are alive with the rolling breakers, the fierce dash and
+seethe of the waves upon them add to the roar of the tempest; never was
+a battle-field more full of raging foes than is that into the midst of
+which our Storm Warriors are about to rush; never was band of men more
+beset by foes, more helplessly, hopelessly beset, than are the crew of
+the _Mary_; how shall they be plucked from the midst of ten thousand
+raging waves? any one of which would swamp an ordinary boat; it can only
+by any possibility be done by such a boat as the life-boat, and only by
+such men as the life-boatmen.
+
+And now the men settle to their work.
+
+The mainsail and mizen are already close reefed, they are got ready for
+instant hoisting. The steamer lashes through the seas towing the boat
+farther to windward, the hawser is let go, the men hoist the sails as
+fast as they can in the leaping rolling boat; she feels the force of the
+blast, lays over on her side, down with the helm, she rights, her head
+comes round, and in through the boiling seas she makes for the wreck.
+
+Each boatman has his life-belt on, and as the seas break more fiercely
+over the boat, the men twist the life-lines round their arms, so that if
+some huge wave, rushing over the boat, should wrench them from their
+hold, and wash them out of the boat, or that the boat should upset in
+the curl of a breaker, that they may have the better chance of getting
+back to her.
+
+Each time that the boat lifts on the top of a wave they can make out the
+signal-fire on board the wreck, as the boat falls in the trough of a sea
+they speed swirling along, through a very gauntlet of hungry waves which
+leap upon her, as wolves would leap upon a strong horse; but she throws
+them off, as the horse might the wolves in the impetus of his speed and
+power.
+
+"Ready in the bow?"
+
+"Ay! Ay!"
+
+"Ready all?"
+
+"All ready."
+
+"We are nearing the wreck," a plunge forward on a big wave, and the
+dismasted vessel is seen only a few fathoms off.
+
+"Over with the anchor, down with the mainsail; keep up the mizen, to let
+the boat sheer, and now for the wreck."
+
+The life-boatmen are near enough to her to see by the fitful blaze of
+the tar-barrel that she is a small schooner, with a high stern, and that
+she is totally dismasted, and they recognise the Dutch-looking craft
+that they had watched during the afternoon; they catch the gleam of the
+pale faces of the crew, who are clinging to the gunwale.
+
+Poor fellows! how they gaze out in the darkness; death, death, so near
+from the raging storm, from their sinking ship, from the terrible Sands
+on which the wreck of their vessel will be torn piecemeal by the strong
+fierce waves in so short a time.
+
+How they cry out with hope, as they first catch sight of the lights that
+are shining out in the gloom, and drawing nearer and nearer! it may be
+only the lights of some vessel as badly off as they are: they will not
+think so; they are on the Goodwin, the signals have been made, and
+answered from Ramsgate; if the life-boat can save them, they will be
+saved, and this small light dancing so wildly in the storm, and drawing
+nearer out of the dread darkness of the wild night, may be the light of
+the life-boat, and they will not despair.
+
+It _must_ be the life-boat! no other boat could come in through the seas
+as that boat has done; and now as she nears, the light is reflected on
+her blue-and-white sides, and they hear the men shout, and the poor
+fellows pass from despair to hope, and cling harder than ever to the
+gunwale of the wreck, as the seas wash over them.
+
+On board the life-boat they veer out the cable rapidly; many fathoms run
+out, but still they seem to get no nearer the wreck, on the contrary,
+the wreck is getting farther and farther from them.
+
+As the life-boatmen made the vessel out in the darkness, they supposed
+her to be hard and fast on the Sands, and as they neared, and could see
+how the waves were beating over her, this appeared still more to be the
+case, but it proves not to be so; the tide is much higher than usual,
+and the wreck, with two long lengths of chain-cable dragging over her
+bows, is drifting over the top of the Sands, and with the force of the
+gale, and in the strength of the tide, drifts faster than the men on
+board the boat are able to veer out the cable.
+
+"Hold on the cable, the wreck is drifting, we must up anchor; to it, my
+men, hard and fast as you can."
+
+This getting in the life-boat cable and anchor is terrible work; the
+wild seas are literally raging over the boat; it was bad enough when the
+boat was under weigh, running before the wind, bounding along with the
+waves in their flight, and thus escaping much of their fury.
+
+But now the boat is head to the seas, she meets them as they rush on
+with all their force, and she wrenches and jerks at the cable with a
+power that threatens to tear her to pieces.
+
+As many men as can lay hold of the cable do so; they cling on to the
+boat with their legs round the thwarts; they give the hawser a couple of
+turns round the bollard--a timber head in the fore part of the boat used
+for towing purposes; a huge wave passes; the boat falls in the trough of
+the sea; as she falls the strain of the cable lessens; "Haul, and with a
+will, my men, haul!" they get a fathom or two of cable in; the curling
+crest of a broken wave falls on board, almost smothering the men, and
+filling the boat; she droops and staggers under the weight of water; the
+men in her as they cling to the thwarts are up to their necks, the
+air-tight compartments in the boat lift her, the valves in the floor
+open, she empties herself in a few seconds; a huge short wave curls on,
+she rises to it, buoyant as ever; it catches her under the bows, throws
+her high in the air, as if it would turn her end-over-end; the men cling
+to the hawser for a breathless moment; it checks the boat, the wave
+breaks over the boat in a cloud of spray and foam; the boat drops; the
+men shake their heads free of the water; again a loud shout from the
+coxswain; "Haul, haul, your hardest, my men, hand over hand!" they get
+in a few more feet of the strong rope, and so much nearer to their
+anchor; and then hold on with straining muscles for another dread
+struggle with the next huge sea; hardly time for a few quick breaths,
+and here the sea comes, like a terrible monster, with shaking mane and
+gnashing teeth; it foams along, gleaming out of the darkness and
+straightly leaps upon them; and thus amid all the wild turmoil of the
+raging breakers, with the boat thrown violently here and there in the
+might of the seas, with the waves breaking over her in such quick
+succession that the men can scarcely find time to breathe, does the
+fight go on in order to recover the anchor and cable; the men had no
+thought of themselves; they had but to cut the cable and run before the
+gale, and the fierce strife would be over; no! they must, at all costs,
+recover the anchor and cable, or they will not be able to save the crew,
+and they will fight and wrestle for it to the end. At last the cable
+shortens, another pull and the boat is right over the anchor, she lifts
+on a sea, the anchor is torn from its hold, and lifts with her: in with
+it, make it fast, hoist the sails, the boat's head pays round, and she
+is again steered for the wreck. As the boat runs before the wind and
+seas, the men, who are thoroughly exhausted, have a few minutes of
+comparative rest.
+
+The time occupied by the life-boat men in recovering their anchor has
+been a dread time indeed, for the poor shipwrecked crew.
+
+With their shattered and slowly-sinking vessel staggering and shuddering
+beneath their feet, the heavy seas thundering against her and breaking
+over her, each one threatening to be the final one which shall sweep
+them all to destruction; the men seemed to be each moment on the verge
+of death.
+
+The storm howls around them, their only ray of hope proceeds from the
+life-boat light, which shines feebly through the mist, and suddenly the
+boat has halted short in her course towards them; why, they can scarcely
+understand; but one thing they are sure of, that it is no failing
+courage on the part of the men; it is impossible that they should be
+left to perish in their distress.
+
+Their one effort now is to keep the tar-barrel in full blaze, and
+cruelly the wind and seas seem to do their utmost to destroy this their
+last hope, and leave them without the signal which alone can guide the
+life-boat to their rescue.
+
+Fullarton, poor fellow, is working with an excited energy, burning in
+the barrel everything that he can lay hands on, that is at all likely to
+feed the flame.
+
+He had left home a few days before, so full of hope and joy, and glad
+anticipation; they had had bad weather, and anxious watches, and
+sleepless nights since they sailed, and now the poor fellow is almost
+overwrought by work and watching, and broken down with dread anxiety.
+"It is not for myself so much, not for myself, as for my poor girl," he
+says to his mates; they, kind fellows, amid their own cares and
+anxieties, and memories, and fears, do what they can to cheer him up.
+
+Now as the life-boat comes rushing in through the seething seas, and
+breaks out from the darkness into the light of the fire which they
+succeed in keeping burning on the deck of the schooner, it is
+Fullarton's voice that is heard in piercing tones above the roar of the
+gale. "Be as quick as you can! be as quick as you can! we are sinking
+fast."
+
+Yes! it is very evident that the vessel must soon founder; the wild seas
+are rushing over her; her deck is almost level with the surface of the
+water; at any moment she may refuse to lift to the rise of the sea, and
+with one plunge sink bodily down.
+
+The coxswain of the life-boat sees that the schooner is still drifting,
+and decides upon not anchoring the boat, but tries to run alongside the
+wreck, which is being kept head to the seas and wind by the drag of her
+chains. The boat runs alongside within a few feet; the grappling-irons
+are thrown on board, they catch in the gunwale of the wreck, the boatmen
+take turns with the lines round the thwarts, and begin to haul the boat
+slowly up to the wreck; it is hazardous work, for she is deeply laden
+with coals, and is half full of water; she is buried in the seas, and
+labouring very heavily; the men are afraid that in the rush of some
+cross sea the boat will be tossed bodily on to the wreck.
+
+The boat lifts up on the crest of a towering wave; there is a tremendous
+strain upon the stout grappling-lines, a moment's lull in the rush of
+the broken water. "Haul in hard upon the lines, get her alongside, now,
+my men; sharp, my men!" the coxswain shouts; and then to the vessel's
+crew: "Be ready to jump directly we are near enough!" "Aye! Aye! all
+right, all right!" the crew cry, excitedly, and crouch ready to spring
+upon the gunwale, and over into the boat. "Be ready all! be ready all!"
+the coxswain again cries, as he tries to sheer the boat near enough for
+the men to jump on board. "Now! now! Stop! hold on, hold on all for your
+lives!" A tremendous breaker comes gliding on like a dark snow-crowned
+wall, deluges the men with the foam and spray that flies from its
+crest, lifts the boat in its strong grasp, the grappling-lines snap
+like threads, and the boat is swept on in the rush of the wave far away
+from the wreck; the boatmen look back, and in the glare of the
+signal-fire they can see the pale white faces of the despairing and
+terrified sailors, and as the boat is driven on through the dark wild
+seas, the cries of the poor fellows can be for some time heard
+penetrating the tumult of the storm.
+
+Before the boat was driven away from the vessel, at the moment of the
+ropes parting, the coxswain, seeing that the boat would be carried away,
+shouted at the pitch of his voice, "Have ropes ready!" the crew heard
+the words; and are consoled in the depth of their disappointment; they
+know that they are not to be deserted, that while ship and life-boat
+both last, attempt after attempt will be made for their rescue. But how
+long will the wreck float under them? this is the terrible question, and
+they call out, and this is the cry that the boatmen hear indistinctly:
+"We are sinking fast! We are sinking fast!"
+
+The swirl of the sea and the tide, and the force of the gale, drive the
+boat far away to leeward; the men hoist her sails again, heave her to,
+and then try to stay her, and make in again directly for the wreck; but
+she misses stays, as the seas come rushing over her, and they have to
+wear her round. They battle on, and are speedily ready for their third
+attempt, thankful to find that the poor labouring wreck is still afloat.
+
+They run the boat close under the schooner's port-quarter; the sailors
+are all ready with the required ropes; they throw one on board the boat,
+and the men in the boat succeed in throwing two strong lines on board
+the wreck; once more the order is to haul in close alongside.
+
+And again the boatmen see the white faces of the almost drowned and
+exhausted men light up with hope. Fullarton especially is full of joy in
+the reaction of his feelings; he almost feels saved, and is very
+excited. Cautiously the boatmen work, doing their utmost to prevent the
+boat being dashed against the wreck; now they are just alongside; two
+minutes more, and all are saved; no, a heavy sea comes foaming along,
+and as it breaks fills the boat and rushes over the ship, which staggers
+under its weight; the ropes which fasten the boat to the ship, jerk and
+wrench, but still hold; the boat lifts, clears herself of water, the men
+breathe again. Another tremendous wave comes rushing along, another, and
+then several in quick succession; the men cling with all their force to
+the thwarts; heavy volumes of water beat down upon their backs; the boat
+plunges, and is wrestled here and there in the strong tumult of the
+waves; the ropes seem ready to tear the masts and thwarts to which they
+are fastened out of the boat; at last one rope parts; another gives the
+moment after; the boat rises on the crest of a wave, she heels over, the
+third rope breaks under the tremendous strain, the boat springs forward
+and is torn away from the vessel, and is rapidly swept away under her
+stern; a loud shriek is heard, it is from poor Fullarton; the boatmen
+see him as he stands between them and the glare of the flame; he throws
+up his clasped hands in despair; the next moment he wildly rushes along
+the deck, for a second balances himself on the gunwale, crouches and
+springs with all his force towards the boat--a heavy thud; he hits the
+bow of the boat as she is driving away stern first; a cry from the
+boatmen, "Man overboard!" as he sinks a huge wave rolls over him, and
+bears the boat farther away; Jarman, the coxswain, seizes a life-buoy
+and jumps upon a thwart ready to throw it to the man when he rises; a
+blast of wind catches Jarman, nearly tumbles him overboard, and throws
+him down into the bottom of the boat, wrenching the life-buoy from his
+hand; the drowning sailor is again lost to sight in the trough of the
+sea; he is swimming and struggling hard, but the boat, although without
+sails, is being driven faster than he can swim; the men see his wild
+desperate efforts, as he plunges and springs forward with outspread arms
+as if to grasp at the boat; he is lifted high on the crest of a wave; it
+curls him over, and with a cry he falls head first, and is buried in the
+trough of the sea; once more they make out his figure as he springs up
+on the top of a wave between them and the signal-fire; once again they
+hear his cry of despair, and he is lost to them, and to all dear to him
+on earth for ever.
+
+It is all over in a few seconds; the hardy boatmen shudder and feel sick
+at heart: so suddenly, so terribly, so swiftly has the strong man died;
+and to see their brother sailor thus perish within a few yards of them,
+beaten under by the boiling waves so quickly that they were utterly
+powerless to aid, is indeed, terrible to all. But not a moment is to be
+lost, any one of the mad seas which rush so continually over the wreck
+may founder her with its weight, or sweep the exhausted men out of her.
+The wreck cannot by any possibility float much longer; how can the men
+be saved? The life-boat is now right astern of the vessel, which is
+drifting slowly towards them; the seas run with such violence, swaying
+the wreck in one direction and the boat in another, that it is evidently
+useless to attempt to fasten the boat alongside the wreck, and the
+coxswain determines to adopt a new plan. The boat is right astern of the
+wreck, which is slowly drifting towards them; the coxswain of the boat
+will anchor the boat right in her path, and try to sheer alongside as
+she drifts past, and thus get the crew out of her. "Over with the
+anchor; veer out as little cable as she will ride to; hold on, stand
+ready all!"--and they anxiously watch the approach of the wreck.
+
+On the wreck comes straight for them; the boats mizen sail is hauled
+flat to help the boat sheer out of the ship's way; they must manage
+skilfully or she will drive right over the life-boat; the helm is put
+hard up; the mizen catches the wind; the boat sheers, the wreck just
+misses her; the boat is close to her starboard quarter. Down helm, and
+the boat sheers in close alongside, the men in the bow pay out the cable
+quickly to let the boat float alongside the ship, "Jump when we near!"
+they cry to the crew; "jump for it! be steady, but do not lose a
+chance!" a sea throws the boat within a yard of the wreck, three men
+spring on board; a moment, and the next rush of sea sweeps the boat away
+and buries them all in foam. As the sea overruns the boat, the boatmen
+cling to the sailors who have sprung on board, to prevent their being
+washed out of her. "Have we got all?" "No, only three, one is left!"
+"Look out, then, my men; in we go again! the lee-tide is running very
+strongly--the cable is paying out fast."--"There is only about ten
+fathom of cable left," the men in the bow shout to the coxswain; he
+sheers the boat in, they can just make out the figure of a man at the
+stern of the vessel; they cry out to him: "Be ready; 'tis your last
+chance; you must jump for your life; we shall hardly have time to come
+in again;" they close in alongside; a heavy sea knocks down the men in
+the bow who are paying out the rope; at that moment the man on the wreck
+makes a desperate leap for the boat, he falls among the men; the end of
+the cable runs out into the sea. "Rope gone!" is the cry, but the man is
+saved; the ship is on the point of sinking, and they at once lose sight
+of her in the dark night. It is the captain who is last on board the
+boat; he looks round with thankfulness upon the life-boatmen and upon
+his saved crew: "But where is Fullarton?" he asks. "The man who jumped
+for the boat when the ropes parted."
+
+"He fell short of the boat, and we could not save him," is the sad
+answer.
+
+"Poor fellow, poor fellow! he was so terribly anxious, he could not
+wait. Oh! that he had only waited with us! but he was almost in despair
+before the boat came, and seeing you break away the second time was too
+much for him." And afterwards he told them the drowned sailors piteous
+story--what a good fellow he was, and that it was because he was to be
+married upon his return home that he was so anxious, and felt life to be
+doubly dear to him.
+
+It is about seven o'clock in the morning; the day breaks wild and cold,
+and dismal as weather can well be. The faint light of the dawn scarcely
+makes its way through the thick clouds of flying spray and foam and
+half-frozen snow that drive fiercely along.
+
+A dread suggestive picture as witnessed from the cliffs on shore is that
+of the Goodwin Sands in a storm--the raging mountains of white surf
+springing high in the air, and breaking into clouds of spray, and the
+waves racing along the Sands in foaming rollers, strong to sweep
+anything before them: to watch this from the shore at a distance of six
+miles is enough to make one shudder, so terrible a picture does it give
+of wild, hungry, irresistible power and rage, but what must it be for
+those who have to encounter this turbulent sea in the very thick of its
+strife; in a boat almost buried by the waves, clinging to the thwarts,
+the life half beaten out of them; and yet, hour after hour enduring all
+hardship, and sternly battling with all resistance--and all this the men
+in the life-boat have yet to endure.
+
+The boat is on the top of the south end of the Sand, and in the fiercest
+strife of the wild sea, a foaming wilderness of water all around them;
+the waves seem mad in the very fury of their contest; they rear up and
+clash together with a roar and hiss; rush swiftly on; recoil as swiftly
+back; now meet others in their full onward swoop and contend for
+mastery; leap high in angry curling crests, then fall with thunder
+tones, but only to form in serried ranks, and rush swiftly again into
+the wild race and conflict.
+
+No ordinary boat could endure this for a minute, the first of these mad
+curling waves would engulf her at once; the life-boat alone can contend
+with such broken battling seas, and come out a victor from the strife.
+
+The men crowd aft that the boat may run better before the gale; they put
+oars out on each quarter to help the boat steer, and to prevent her
+broaching to, for if she does, the curl of the wave is so strong that
+she will be rolled over, and probably many of her crew and passengers
+lost, for although she would right again directly, all could not expect
+to get back to her in such a sea; she is full of water; the seas break
+over her in such quick succession, that she has no time to free herself,
+but she bounds on, and on, and soon, but not without much danger, the
+men escape from the broken water and reach the outer part of the Sand.
+
+The boat is now put under fore-sail and mizen, both close reefed, hauled
+to the wind and pressed through the seas, to be certain of making the
+land, from which the gale is blowing so strongly.
+
+The boat heels over under the pressure of her canvas, one gunwale is
+buried in the seas; the rescued men have never been in a life-boat
+before, and feel much alarmed.
+
+"Ah! Geordie, man," says the captain to the mate, "this is queer sort
+of sailing; it's sailing under water altogether;" and the men afterwards
+confessed, that not knowing what a life-boat could do, they expected
+every moment that she would capsize, and felt themselves in almost as
+much danger in the boat as they had been on board the wreck. It takes
+the boat about an hour and a half of this hard driving through the seas
+to beat up against the gale and get near to the land; the men then find
+themselves not far from the South Foreland light, between Deal and
+Dover. The ships in the Downs are many of them in great danger, driving
+from their anchorage, and some with signals of distress flying.
+
+An English man-of-war is at anchor there; as the life-boat flies under
+her stern, the men on deck give a hearty cheer in honour of the Warriors
+of the Goodwin Sands. A large Dutch ship is next passed, all her crew
+crowd aft, and with much energy they also cheer the brave boatmen.
+
+Some large Deal luggers are cruising about; the men on board see with
+much surprise the flag flying at the life-boat mast-head, telling the
+tale of triumph, that a crew had been rescued; for they declared in
+speaking about it afterwards, that they thought it a mere impossibility
+to get a crew off the Goodwin in such a night, and through such a
+terrific sea.
+
+The life-boatmen begin to be uneasy about the steamer; they saw her last
+about five in the morning, with the Goodwin Sands close under her lee,
+and facing the full force of the gale.
+
+They think that she will have run down the Sands and be waiting for
+them; they put the boat about, and run out a little, hoping to meet her;
+after they have laid-to for about half an hour, waiting for the steamer,
+a heavy squall strikes the boat, and carries away her mizen-mast; they
+at once wear her head round to the land, and run into St. Margaret's
+Bay. The men fear that if they leave the protection of the high cliffs,
+the boat, as she is now partially disabled, may be blown over on the
+French coast by the force of the gale, and they therefore run down under
+the cliffs to Dover. Here they find further evidence of the terrible
+nature of the gale; ships are being towed into the harbour disabled; the
+sea is making a clean breach over the cross wall; part of the esplanade
+has been washed away, and the mail packets have been driven back in
+distress; hundreds of people, hiding in sheltered places, are watching
+the fury of the sea; they have for some time seen, with much interest,
+the gallant life-boat, with her flag flying, making for the harbour, and
+many come down the pier to welcome her. The life-boat, as she shoots
+round the head of the pier, meets the strong wind in all its force; she
+has lost her mizen-mast, anchor, cables, and has scarcely a spare fathom
+of rope left; she is fast being driven out again to sea, when they
+manage to get a rope to her from the pier, and many willing hands clap
+on, and tow her slowly along; in the meantime the harbour-master sends
+the steam-tug to her help, and the boat is soon safely moored in the
+inner harbour, and the men who have for so many hours encountered such
+great hardship and peril are once more upon dry land.
+
+The shipwrecked crew are well cared for by the agent of the Shipwrecked
+Mariners' Society; the life-boatmen go to the Sailors' Home, and under
+the influence of a hearty welcome and substantial cheer, speedily
+recover from the effects of their long exposure and fatigue.
+
+The coxswain hastens to telegraph to the authorities at Ramsgate the
+safe arrival of the life-boat at Dover, and there is great satisfaction
+felt there at the assurance of the boat's safety.
+
+While the life-boat was in among the breakers, battling with the seas,
+and disentombing, we may almost say, the terrified sailors from the
+hungry grave which yawned around them, the steamer kept her ground, as
+near as possible to where the captain thought the life-boat was at work,
+and just clear of the surf.
+
+They waited hour after hour, but no signal came from that fierce
+battle-field; the hoarse blast of the storm, the many-voiced roar of
+waters, overwhelmed all other sound; the darkness of the night, the
+clouds of sleet and foam engulfed all in gloom. The crew of the steamer
+waited on in much anxiety, and not free from great peril.
+
+The daylight broke, a grey flood of misty light rolled back the greater
+darkness, but they could see no signs of the life-boat; they could make
+out by-and-by a few spars tossing wildly among the leaping seas and a
+tangled portion of wreck; they steam in as near to it as they dare, and
+with their glasses watch closely every shadow, or spar, or mass of
+wreckage, but see no signs of life; the sea is silent as to the fate of
+the crew, and after a careful and vain search, the captain of the
+steamer, feeling sure that if the life-boat has succeeded in getting
+clear of the Sands, she must have been forced by the gale to run to
+Dover for shelter, he determines to make the best of his way there.
+Jarman, the life-boat coxswain, sees the steamer making for the harbour,
+and hastens to the pierhead; one wave of his arm tells the whole story
+of success and safety.
+
+The crew of the life-boat and of the steamer alike realize the
+responsibility of their work, that it is indeed one of life and
+death--that they must not be out of the way when wanted if they can help
+it; for that any delay may be fatal to some dying crew, who are perhaps
+straining their eyes in vain searchings for their one earthly hope, the
+life-boat.
+
+All hands at once prepare for their return to Ramsgate; back round the
+stormy South Foreland again; and home to be greeted, as such conquering
+heroes should be greeted, with smiles of welcome from hundreds of faces
+brightening up with hearty sympathy, and with ringing cheers that tell
+alike of admiration for courage, and of gladness for their return;
+cheers that know no reserve, as they welcome those who come triumphant
+from the battle-field--cheers for those who come not from death-dealing,
+in however good a cause, but from life-saving--leaving none to echo
+their shouts of victory with the wailings of defeat.
+
+The following letter will prove an apt and not uninteresting conclusion
+to the story, as it expresses the deep gratitude of the men who were
+saved, and gives in simple heartfelt language their tribute of thanks,
+and their declaration of admiration for the gallant and self-denying
+efforts by which their rescue from otherwise certain death had been so
+nobly effected.
+
+
+ "_119 Church St., North Shields. Capt. Shaw, Harbour-master,
+ Ramsgate._
+
+ "DEAR SIR,
+
+ "I, the undersigned master, and likewise the crew of the _Mary_,
+ which were saved by the gallant coxswain, Mr. Jarman, and his crew
+ on the morning of the 21st inst., which I do believe to be
+ unrivalled, for my idea is they used every effort to save the young
+ man which was drowned, but it was in vain; we all beg to return a
+ vote of thanks to Mr. Jarman and his crew; likewise to you, dear
+ sir, which has everything in such order and discipline for the
+ rescue of life; and may the Lord bless them all, and look over
+ them, when trying their uttermost efforts to rescue their
+ fellow-men from a watery grave!
+
+ I cannot express my feelings good enough to reward the brave
+ fellows' attendance. My love to them all, and I will make a letter
+ appear in the public press after I get myself settled, therefore I
+ beg to conclude."
+
+ "From your grateful Friend,
+
+ "WILLIAM FOREMAN, Master.
+ "C. H. MOORE, Mate.
+ "JOSEPH COLLINS, Carpenter.
+ "THOMAS ATCHINSON, A. B."
+
+
+To which letter the harbour-master returned answer, stating how
+gratifying it was to all connected with the life-boat and steam-tug that
+such gallant and skilful exertions should have reaped such success; the
+sympathy and great regret that was felt for the loss of their young
+shipmate; and that there were at Ramsgate, at all times both by day and
+night, gallant boatmen ready and willing to risk their lives when called
+upon to perform such perilous undertakings.
+
+And, readers, can we do better than often, and especially when gales are
+abroad, echo the prayer offered for the life-boatmen by the rescued
+master of the _Mary_.--"The Lord bless them all, and look over them when
+trying to rescue their fellow-men from a watery grave!"
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XV.
+
+DEAL BEACH.
+
+ "Then courage, all brave mariners,
+ And never be dismay'd,
+ While we have bold adventurers,
+ We ne'er shall want a trade;
+ Our merchants will employ us
+ To fetch them wealth, we know;
+ Then be bold--work for gold,
+ When the stormy winds do blow."
+
+ _M. Parker._
+
+
+Few places in the world, if any, have proved the scene of more daring
+sailor-life than Deal beach. Generation after generation of boatmen have
+passed away, having spent their lives, from early boyhood, in continuous
+strife with the swift tide, strong seas, and rolling surf that race
+through the channels off Deal, and break upon the Goodwin, or upon the
+Shingle beach.
+
+Other antagonists the old days used to provide, and the young men's
+hands grew hard with handling the bow, or spear, or javelin, or the
+musket, cutlass, or boarding-pike, as well as with handling the tiller
+and the ropes.
+
+In the days of old, the Northern Sea Kings were, to the east coast of
+England, like clouds on the horizon, ever threatening a storm, but
+without any indication as to where the storm would break.
+
+The coast of Kent was especially open to their attacks; they came down
+like wolves on the fold; a bright sunny morning, a bowling northerly
+breeze, a few specks on the horizon standing out darkly with the clear
+dawn behind them.
+
+A few hours, and the Norsemen were at work; a fishing-village, wrecked
+and half buried in ruins, some of its stout defenders lying gashed and
+ghastly among its smoking embers; trembling fugitives still hurrying
+inland with a few of their lighter and more treasured goods, and the
+marauders holding swift and triumphant debauch upon the shore, as with
+rude cries of mirth and victory, they prepare to start seaward again
+before time can be found to gather forces to make any attack upon them,
+or any efforts can be made to regain the plunder the hardy robbers have
+obtained, or to revenge the slaughter they have worked.
+
+The Romans, when they were lords of the land, felt the necessity of
+resisting these roving Sea Kings in a determined and organised manner;
+they formed nine military stations along the coast, and placed all under
+the command of an officer, to whom they gave the sounding title of Count
+of the Saxon Shore.
+
+Four of these stations were in Kent--Reculver, Richborough, Dover, and
+Lymne. Remains of the Roman fortifications still bear witness that they
+were intended in defence from an enemy whose power was not lightly
+esteemed.
+
+This military organisation of the Romans was afterwards developed into
+the establishment of the Cinque Ports and their respective members, the
+jurisdiction of which embraced a coast line from Reculver to Hastings.
+
+The inhabitants of the Cinque Ports well earned and fully obtained great
+honour in the old days. The free men of the ports were styled barons,
+and held rank among the nobility of the kingdom. They stood the vanguard
+of defence against all England's continental enemies, and their service
+is thus described by Mr. Boys in his 'History of Sandwich':
+
+"The inhabitants were always on the watch to prevent invasion; their
+militia were in constant readiness for action, and their vessels stout
+and warlike, so that, in Edward the First's time, they alone equipped a
+fleet of one hundred sail, and gave such a blow to the maritime power of
+France as to clear the Channel of those restless and insidious invaders.
+The state depended upon them for the safety of its coast-line and towns,
+and their services went by no means unrewarded; an encouragement they
+had always been accustomed to receive, and this for commercial as well
+as for warlike enterprise, as by the wisdom of our Saxon ancestors, a
+merchant who had at his own expense three times freighted vessels with
+home produce was entitled to the rank of thane or baron. The Barons of
+the Cinque Ports walked in procession at the coronations of the kings
+and queens, and at the feast of the coronation had an especial table
+allotted to them in Westminster Hall at the right of the king; this
+privilege was preserved up to the time of the coronation of George the
+Third."
+
+All this is evident and sufficient testimony of the nature and extent of
+the services of our coast heroes in defence of their country; and still
+the enterprise and daring continue, and bold, vigilant warfare goes on,
+although defence against a foreign foe has long ceased to be its first
+consideration. In later times, indeed, the revenue officers
+unfortunately, and to no small extent, took the place of the foreign foe
+in the minds and labours of by no means a few of the boatmen and
+inhabitants of these towns situated so conveniently adjacent to the
+Continent; and the enterprise and labours of the boatmen were no less
+daring, if less patriotic than in former days, and smuggling was
+elevated into as organized a business as fishing is now: one writer
+rather quaintly remarks, "Yet even this smuggling is not without its
+utility, for however the revenue may suffer, it gives birth to a very
+intrepid race of seamen, who are of the greatest service in relieving
+others from the dangers which befall shipping on this coast in bad
+weather."
+
+Certainly the boatmen of Deal beach are not now, and probably never have
+been, surpassed for skill and daring.
+
+If they can by any possibility get their famous luggers out to sea, no
+hurricane daunts them; their splendid boats glide over the seas,
+escaping the broken water--now high on the wave, now buried in the
+trough--and look like so many strong-winged gulls, as they seem almost
+to play with the storm.
+
+Falconer, in his 'Shipwreck,' pays the following tribute to the skill
+and courage of the boatmen:
+
+
+ "Where e'er in ambush lurks the fatal sands,
+ They claim the danger, proud of skilful bands!
+ For while, with darkling course, the vessels sweep
+ The winding shore, or plough the faithless deep;
+ Or bar, or shelf, the watery path they sound
+ With dexterous arm, sagacious of the ground.
+ Ceaseless they combat every hostile wind,
+ Wheeling in mazy track with course inclined;
+ Expert to moor where terrors line the road,
+ Or win the anchor from its dark abode."
+
+
+Let us take a peep at Deal beach, and try to realize some of the scenes
+that are there to be witnessed.
+
+Suppose a fine clear winter's day. A gentle south-westerly breeze has
+been blowing on and off for several days; many ships have found their
+way out of the Thames, or have beaten down helped by the tides from the
+North Sea, and having reached the Downs there ride safely at anchor; the
+ships-boats, or the galley punts, as the small Deal boats are called,
+are doing the little work that is to be done, and the large luggers are
+drawn high upon the beach.
+
+The boatmen are lounging about the beach here and there, or they are
+smoothing the shingle down with shovels, where the tide has heaped it
+up, to give the luggers a fair run down into the sea in the event of
+their being wanted; tanned sails are spread abroad upon the shingle
+drying, women hang about knitting and watching the ships at anchor for
+any signal for a boat; at times there is a move down the beach to help a
+boat that is coming ashore out of the surf and to drag it up high and
+dry.
+
+The wind gets a slant to the south-east as the tide ebbs, and at once
+all are alert in the fleet of ships at anchor in the Downs, that have
+been waiting for a fair breeze. There is a hurry to the beach of all
+officers, sailors, or passengers that may be ashore; the last supply of
+fresh provisions is taken on board those ships on which the Captain can
+afford to be luxurious: you can hear the orders shouted, the capstans at
+work; jibs are set, topsails loosened, the anchors got up and catted,
+the sails let fall, and away the ships go down Channel; a fresh
+northerly breeze bowls along and lasts some days, the outward bound
+ships go flying through the Downs with top-gallant sails set; and except
+that they land a few pilots, there is nothing whatever for the Deal men
+to do.
+
+At last a change of weather promises, the homeward-bound are to have a
+turn; the outward-bound must anchor in the Downs and wait a while. The
+French coast shows out clearly, the gulls are whirling about uttering
+shrill plaintive cries; the boatmen watch the sunset, greyish white
+streaky clouds are gathering in the west, the sun looks _sheer_, is the
+boatmen's word for it, and as the long rays of light break through the
+clouds--ah! yes, we shall have a change of wind and weather. "The sun is
+setting up his backstays." "Bright _skies_ make dirty ways;" and before
+daylight closes the men overhaul their luggers and see that everything
+is ready for a sudden start, should their services be needed.
+
+A mizzling rain comes on, the wind is round to the westward and
+freshening; some of the vessels which have been among the last to pass
+Deal bound to the southward, give up the hope of getting down Channel in
+the face of the freshening breeze, and return to find anchorage in the
+Downs.
+
+It is a likely night for work, and the boatmen get ready for a cruise;
+everything is prepared to launch one of the large luggers; she is now
+drawn up high upon the beach; her crew of fifteen men hasten to get
+ready for sea. It is a dark and squally winter's morning, about one
+o'clock; fourteen of the men are now on board, each at his station; one
+man stands ready to cut the lashing of the stop which holds the boat in
+position on the ways; they wait till a squall passes; the word is given,
+the lashing cut, the man springs to the gunwale of the boat, and climbs
+on board. Scarcely has he tumbled over the side when the boat rushes
+down the greased ways and is launched into the surf; the mizen is
+already set, the foresail is hoisted with all speed, and the boat speeds
+on her way seaward.
+
+As the day comes the breeze freshens, and many luggers are cruising
+about, speaking the vessels at anchor, or the vessels running through
+the Downs, ready to offer any assistance in their power; upon some of
+the vessels they put men to pilot them into Ramsgate harbour, or round
+the North Foreland into the Margate Roads.
+
+Or if the wind has blown heavily, there will be generally some vessels
+that have lost their anchors and cables, and the boatmen will receive
+orders to supply fresh ones.
+
+There is sometimes a degree of surprise expressed at the amount claimed
+by a boat's crew for taking an anchor and cable off to a vessel in
+distress; it requires some knowledge of the work to appreciate its
+danger, and how hardly and well the money awarded is generally earned.
+
+Consider, as an example, the case of the _Albion_ lugger, as it happened
+during the gale, some of the incidents of which we are about to relate.
+
+The _Albion_ during her cruise meets with a vessel which is driving
+before the increasing storm; she has lost both her anchors and cables,
+and the lugger receives orders to supply her from the shore; the hardy
+crew receive the order gladly, put the lugger round, and beat through
+the heavy seas, making for Deal. They have to force the boat against
+wind and tide, and much skill is required to prevent her being filled by
+the rising seas which sweep around her; now she rushes upon the beach,
+the surf breaks over her and half fills her with water; with a
+tremendous thump and shake, she strikes the shore with her iron keel.
+
+As the wave which bore the lugger in upon the beach recedes, a man
+springs overboard from the bow with a rope in his hand; many catch hold
+of the rope, and haul their hardest to keep the boat straight, head on
+to the beach; there is a stem strap--a chain running through a hole in
+the front part of the keel; a boatman watches his opportunity, and as a
+wave sweeps back, rushes down and passes a rope through the loop of the
+strap; the other end of this rope is fastened to a powerful capstan,
+which is placed high up on the beach. "Man the capstan! Heave with a
+will," and the strong men strain at the capstan bars until the capstan
+creaks again. There is no starting the lugger; she is so full of water
+from the surf breaking on the beach, that she is too heavy for the men
+at one capstan to move her; ropes are led down from two other capstans,
+and rove through a snatch block fastened to a boat on the beach; all put
+out their strength, round they tramp with a "ho! heave ho!" and slowly
+the lugger travels up the beach, and is safe from the roll of the
+breakers. The men get the water out of her, haul her higher up on to a
+swivel platform, turn her round head to the sea, and the leading hands
+hurry away to inquire about an anchor and cable. The agent supplies them
+with such as seem suitable for the size of the vessel, and which will
+perhaps weigh together about seven tons.
+
+There is no small amount of labour attached to getting the anchor and
+chain cable on board the lugger, but in a short time all are again ready
+for sea.
+
+The gale has rapidly increased in force, and a frightful surf is running
+on the beach; the roar of the breakers on the shingle, the howling of
+the storm, the gleam of white foam, shining out of the mist and gloom,
+all picture the wildness of the storm, but the undaunted boatmen do not
+hesitate; all is ready, the signal given, the boat rushes down the steep
+ways, and is launched into the sea. A breaking wave rolls in swiftly,
+it meets the bow of the lugger in its rush, fills her; for a moment the
+big boat runs under water, and then is lifted and twisted like a toy in
+the grasp of the sea, and is thrown in the heave of the wave broadside
+on to the beach; a cry of horror from all on shore, and a rush down to
+aid the crew, who are all--there are fifteen of them--struggling in the
+surf; now the men are washed up by the wave, and feel the ground, and
+stagger forward; now they are caught again by a breaker and rolled over;
+it is for each of them a terrible battle with the fierce seas; here, one
+gets on his feet and stumbles forward, he is caught by the men on shore
+and dragged up the beach; there, a man is lying struggling on the
+shingle, trying in vain to rise, exhausted and confused; two men seize
+his collar and pull him forward a yard or two, then get him to his feet,
+and he escapes the next wave, which would have washed him out to sea
+again. Now all the men seem to be saved; names are shouted--do all
+answer? no! there is one missing; all rush to the water's edge, and gaze
+into the darkness; eagerly watching each shadow mid the surf; there he
+is! no! yes it is! there lifting on the surf; there rolling over:
+"Quick, quick, form a line!" and the brave boatmen grasp each other's
+hands with iron strength and form a chain, the lowest of the four or
+five men at the sea end of the chain being in the water; the waves
+battle with them, but sturdily they persevere; at last the body is
+within the reach of the seaward man, he grasps it, the men are dragged
+up the beach, and the poor insensible man is carried ashore. Alive? or
+dead? they cannot say, and with a great fear in their hearts they carry
+him hurriedly up the beach, and soon, to the great joy of all, he gives
+signs of life, and gradually recovers.
+
+In the meanwhile the poor boatmen on the beach have nothing that they
+can do, but watch their fine boat, which was worth five hundred pounds,
+being torn, and hammered to pieces in the surf, plank after plank is
+wrenched from her, now with a loud crash she is broken in half, the two
+halves part, the anchor and cable fall through her, they can see part of
+the fore-peak with one side torn away, floating in the breakers; soon
+that also is rent to pieces, and nothing but fragments of the boat float
+in the surf, or are strewn about the beach, and the boatmen,
+heavy-hearted, but thankful that they have escaped with their lives, go
+slowly to their homes, to rest for a few hours, and recruit their
+strength, and then to be ready to form part of the crew of any other
+boat, and at the first summons to rush out again to the encounter with
+the stormiest seas.
+
+In a narrative of adventure and conflict with the seas that rage over
+the Goodwin Sands, it would not be well to refrain from bearing
+testimony to how readily, how gallantly, the men of Deal, of
+Broadstairs, of Walmer, and of Kingsdown, as well as of Ramsgate, man
+their respective life-boats, whenever the call is made for their
+services, and race out to the scene of action, full of hardihood, of
+skill, of courage--true Storm Warriors, ever ready to dare all and do
+all that they may rescue the drowning from a watery grave.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVI.
+
+THE LOSS OF THE "LINDA," AND THE RACE TO THE RESCUE.
+
+ "A sudden crash, the mast is gone,
+ And with it goes all hope;
+ No longer can the fated crew
+ With the surging waters cope.
+
+ "Now they commit their souls to God,
+ As men about to die;
+ For vain seems all the help of man
+ In this extremity."
+
+ _G. Ward._
+
+
+At daylight, in the morning after the destruction of the _Albion_
+lugger, the weather grows worse and worse; the grey misty gloom that
+hangs over the sea is scarcely broken by the swift gleams of light that
+find a faint way through the fast drifting clouds.
+
+And the weather continues to grow more tempestuous still as the night
+grows on. Many ships come scudding northward before the gale; they make
+the South Sand Head light, and steer their course for the narrow Gull
+channel that runs between the Goodwin and Brake Sands. The South Sands
+Head light-ship is moored at the southern extremity of the Goodwin
+Sands; it is about three miles from the South Foreland light.
+
+In thick misty weather, which so often prevails in the Channel during
+westerly gales in winter time, it is often very difficult for vessels to
+make either of these lights.
+
+And as the edge of the Goodwin Sands is very steep at this part, and has
+deep water close to it, keeping the lead going scarcely affords
+sufficient protection, for between two casts of the lead a vessel
+running fast may well pass out of deep water on to the Sands, and there
+be lost.
+
+So it often happens that vessels running through the Downs in such
+weather, suddenly find themselves in a position of great peril.
+
+On the night in question, the men on board the light-ship keep an
+especially vigilant watch, as the darkness of the night adds to the
+gloom which spreads its folds over the raging sea, and the direction and
+force of the wind, and the many ships that are flying before the gale,
+suggest the probability of disaster.
+
+About midnight, the men on watch make out, in the lift of the mist, a
+fine brig not far from them, driving before the gale, and making
+straight for the Sands; the alarm is given, and a gun at once fired to
+give the unfortunate crew warning of their danger.
+
+The look-out men fancy, by the changing of the position of the brig's
+lights, that the crew are making an effort to alter the vessel's course,
+and to weather the Sands; but it is too late! nothing can save her! The
+crew of the light-ship lose sight of her in the darkness, and make all
+ready to signal for the life-boat to come to the rescue of her crew;
+they wait a minute or two, watching, in the direction they think the
+brig must strike, for the usual signals of distress, and almost
+immediately see the bright flare of a tar-barrel; they fire a signal-gun
+from the light-ship, and its warning voice booms loudly above the storm;
+then they send up rockets; the shipwrecked are thus encouraged to hope,
+while the ready boatmen on shore are called to action.
+
+The signals are seen at the Walmer life-boat station, one mile from
+Deal; and at the Kingsdown station, three miles from Deal; at both
+places the call is promptly and eagerly obeyed; the life-boats are got
+ready with all haste; they are speedily manned and launched, and
+struggle their way through the boiling surf, which is rolling upon the
+beach. They spread all the canvas they can stagger under, and the two
+boats fly before the gale straight for the light-ship; there they learn
+the position in which the signals of distress were seen, and cruise
+round the edge of the Goodwin in all the fierce tumble of sea, and skirt
+the ring of surf which marks where the rollers are breaking with
+terrible force upon the Sands; but they can obtain no guide, no clue to
+where the wreck is; no signal light shines out of that drear darkness
+pleading for help, and no sound can the men hear, listen as they will,
+other than the ceaseless roar of the storm. Still the brave boatmen will
+not abandon the search, and for some hours the boats continue their vain
+efforts.
+
+The crew of the Kingsdown boat determine at last that further search is
+useless, and as it is not possible for them to beat back to their
+distant station in the teeth of the gale, they run for Ramsgate,
+arriving there just before dawn. The Walmer boat continues cruising in
+the neighbourhood of the Sands until after daylight, when her crew,
+seeing no signs of the wreck, also determine to make for the shore.
+
+The seas have been steadily increasing in violence, and are now running
+very high, and as they curl and break, the crest of each wave is caught
+by the fierce wind, and dispersed in a cloud of spray.
+
+Bravely the boat sails on through the troubled seas; she is constantly
+overrun by the waves, and filled with water, but each time she speedily
+regains all her buoyancy, and bounds on over the seas. The men have
+almost too much confidence in her, as if no amount of sea and wind could
+possibly capsize her; they carry on a press of canvas, until the stout
+masts bend and the ropes strain again, and they make the sheet fast; but
+now a fierce huge wave comes rushing along, catches the boat broadside
+on, lifts the boat high on its crest, and then completely curls her over
+and passes, leaving the boat capsized, and all the men struggling in the
+water.
+
+But it is however only a passing victory, after all, that the sea can
+boast over the life-boat; at once she rights herself, gets rid of the
+water that fills her, and rides upon the seas as bravely as ever.
+
+Happily all the men have on their cork jackets, and in them they float
+breast high; never was there such a wild dance as they now seem to
+dance; tossed high and poised for a moment on the cone of a leaping
+wave, again engulfed in the hollow trough of a sea, with a wall of
+tumbling water all around; rising and falling in quick succession, their
+arms beating broken time as they struggle to swim towards the boat,
+which begins to drift fast away; it is fortunate that some of the men
+have retained hold of the life-lines, the ends of which are fastened to
+the boat, by these they haul themselves alongside her, and all soon
+succeed in getting on board.
+
+Away again through the Downs, across the high rolling seas, making for
+the shore, but their troubles are not yet at an end; a blast of wind,
+fiercer than its fellows, strikes the sail, the boat careens over; at
+that moment a huge wave leaps on the boat, strikes it with such force
+and so high, that it fills the sail with water and drives the boat
+bodily over, and the second time she is capsized, and the men, before
+they have recovered from the exhaustion caused by their former struggle,
+are the second time plunged into the sea, to find themselves battling
+for their lives with the waves. The cork jackets keep them afloat as
+before, but the waves run over them, and they are almost smothered in
+clouds of foam, until they are thoroughly worn out by the rush and beat
+of the seas which break over their heads. Up and down, tumbling here and
+there in the turmoil of the seas, pale and gasping for breath, almost
+too faint to make any struggle to regain the boat, becoming rapidly
+unconscious; this time the wild dance mid the raging seas becomes truly
+too much like a dance of death.
+
+Happily a powerful Deal lugger is near the scene of the disaster; her
+crew at once do their best to pick up and return to the life-boat those
+of the men who are themselves unable to gain it.
+
+The life-boat, self-righted, is floating high on the waves quite ready
+for action as soon as her crew can again take charge of her, and speed
+her on in her course.
+
+The men are, at last, all once more on board, the boat is again got
+under weigh, and speeds safely to the land.
+
+But how, all this while, fared the unfortunate crew of the vessel, in
+the vain effort to render assistance to whom the life-boat men had
+incurred such hardship and peril.
+
+The unfortunate ship was the brig _Linda_: the captain fancied the ship
+was in a safe course, free from any immediate danger; the storm fog was
+too thick for them to see the land, or any of the numerous signal lights
+that guard the coast, but they kept the lead going, and sped on before
+the gale; suddenly all hands are alike startled and terrified by the
+loud report of a gun fired quite close to them, and at seeing the light
+of a light-vessel very near; they at once realize their danger, for they
+know that the dread Goodwin Sands must be right under their lee; with
+frantic haste they attempt to wear the ship, but it is too late; as she
+feels the helm she plunges in among the surf, crashes upon the Sands,
+and the great seas begin to fly over her; the ship must be lost, it is
+beyond all hope that she can be saved; is there any hope for the crew?
+They will not despair, or be lost without making what small efforts they
+are able to obtain assistance; they know, from the violence with which
+the ship rises and thumps upon the Sands, that she must very speedily go
+to pieces. They get a tar-barrel, fill it with canvas, grease, and rags,
+light it, and have the satisfaction of seeing it flare up with a
+brilliant flame; that, at all events, must sufficiently penetrate the
+surrounding darkness and gloom to make known their distress to the
+neighbouring light-vessel.
+
+Again, and almost immediately, they hear the loud boom of the gun; but
+as previously it seemed to them the signal of death, so now it affords
+them a faint--a very faint hope; rockets too are fired by the
+light-vessel; surely the signals will be heard and seen on shore, and
+the life-boat will come out in search of them; but where will they be
+then? There is no time--no time; the seas are washing over the deck, the
+fierce fire of the tar-barrel is at once extinguished, and the men
+hasten to take refuge from the sweeping seas in the cross-trees and
+shrouds of the masts. Seven men spring to the foremast shrouds, and
+climb to the cross-trees, the captain and four men cling to the
+mainmast; time after time the vessel lifts and falls with a crash that
+wrenches her from stem to stern, and makes all her timbers groan and
+rend, and nearly shakes the sailors from their hold. Now the ship begins
+to work and writhe, the timbers break with loud reports, planks are
+wrenched from her side in the fierce tear of the sea, stout iron bolts
+are torn from their hold and twisted like so much thread--the ship is
+breaking up fast; the masts sway about, the men have to hold on their
+hardest to prevent being shaken into the sea, so are they tossed and
+swung about in the roll of the mast and the sway of the vessel. Each
+wave leaping higher than those that have gone before, seems to claim
+them for its prey; everything on the deck is swept away; the deck itself
+opens, the water gets down into the hold, and soon the deck breaks up,
+and pieces float away in the wash of the sea; the bulwarks are torn off,
+and now a piece of the side of the vessel is wrenched away; the vessel
+must be torn to fragments in a few short minutes, and death seems very
+near to all the crew.
+
+A tremendous wave rushes over the wreck, a crash louder than a thunder
+peal; the foremast has broken off close to the deck, it falls over; a
+few loud despairing cries, and the seven poor fellows who clung to the
+mast are hurled into the sea, and are at once lost in the wild rage of
+water.
+
+The five men on the mainmast shudder in their terror and despair, and
+cling closer and closer to the mast as it sways and jerks from side to
+side; there may be a few minutes yet to live; they think of home and
+wife and children, and hold on the more convulsively while the seas
+break over them with increasing violence; it takes but a short time, and
+the wreck beneath them seems in absolute fragments; the poop-deck is
+wrenched up, and a large piece of it is torn away; at the next sea the
+wreck heels over, the mainmast is carried away, and the captain and the
+four men are hurled from it into the sea; the captain is thrown against
+a large fragment of deck with such force that both his legs are broken;
+he, however, manages to hold on to the piece of wreck, the other four
+men are also swept to it, and there cling; they find themselves
+surrounded by the hundred fragments of wreck into which the stout brig
+has been so rapidly torn.
+
+The tide sweeps away the piece of deck to which the five men are so
+desperately clinging--away from the scene of the sad, swift, tragedy,
+and, by God's mercy, into an eddy of the current away from the surf and
+breakers which are thundering down in all their fury upon the Sands, and
+which would have swept the poor sailors at once to destruction if their
+frail raft had come within their reach. Away in the rough but not now
+broken seas the men are borne, their only hope the shattered, heaving
+piece of wreck that forms their raft; the horrors of the dark night are
+added to by the roar of the breakers as they crash down upon the Sands,
+and the poor sailors know not but that at any moment they may be met by
+some fresh eddy of the swift tide, and swept into the midst of that
+fatal surf. The fierce gale howls over them, the men are exhausted and
+hopeless, but they manage to lash the captain to the piece of wreck, his
+two broken legs make him faint and sick with agony; and on and on they
+float during the long dreary hours of the night.
+
+They pass the Gull light-ship, watch its bright and, to them, mocking
+light, then they are carried to the north-east of the Sands; there they
+meet the changing tide, and it sets them to the southward, and, to their
+great joy, away from the fatal Goodwin, away in the direction of Calais,
+the seas still wash over them. The agony of the captain is almost
+unendurable, as every wash of the sea, every heave of the frail piece of
+wreck jars his broken legs; the men have their nails torn from their
+fingers with the desperate energy with which they clutch the smooth
+timbers of the piece of deck on which they are lying. Hour after hour
+passes, and for fifteen hours they thus float about, cold and wet, and
+wounded, and faint with hunger and thirst; the poor fellows become
+almost unconscious, and can only just manage to hold on mechanically to
+their frail support; the morning passes, and they have no energy to look
+for a passing sail, and no means of signalling if they saw one.
+
+Suddenly a loud shout surprises them, and they lift their heads and see,
+with boundless joy, a large cutter almost alongside the raft; they seem
+called back from death, and begin to arouse themselves from the swoon
+into which they were all so rapidly sinking.
+
+The cutter is a pilot-boat from Antwerp; they are got on board her not
+without much difficulty, so helpless are they, and so high is the sea
+still running; the kind-hearted Belgians have every pity for the most
+miserable condition of the poor men, and do all they can to restore
+them; as soon as possible the pilots land them at Deal, and they are
+taken to the hospital and receive all possible medical care and
+attention; they soon revive, the captain's broken limbs are set, and he
+ultimately recovers; and while they mourn over the sad loss of their
+comrades, they cannot feel too much wonder, or be too deeply thankful,
+for their own most marvellous escape.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVII.
+
+THE RESCUE OF THE CREW OF THE "AMOOR."
+
+ "No wild hurrahs accompany
+ The deeds these men do dare;
+ No beat of drum, no martial strain,
+ No spirit stirring air.
+
+ "But in the cold and darksome night
+ They combat with the blast;
+ And gain, by dint of hardihood,
+ The victory at last.
+
+ "Then let us pay the honour due
+ To such devoted strife;
+ Where gallant men so nobly risk
+ For fellow men their life."
+
+ _G. Ward._
+
+
+We left, in our last chapter, the Kingsdown life-boat making for
+Ramsgate harbour, and the Walmer life-boat, after a couple of upsets,
+making for Deal beach. The Kingsdown boat reached Ramsgate about seven
+o'clock in the morning, the gale still blowing very heavily.
+
+Shortly after seven o'clock signals are heard from the Gull light-ship;
+and the coxswain of the Ramsgate life-boat receives orders from the
+harbour-master to proceed at once to sea,--the steamer as usual taking
+her in tow: the sea is very heavy, and the air thick with rain and
+spray. The steamer and life-boat work their way out through the storm,
+and find a brig riding at anchor in the Gull stream, not far from the
+light-ship; she has a flag hoisted at her peak as a signal, and they
+make for her; the crew tell them, that shortly before, in a lift in the
+storm, they saw a ship on the north-west spit of the Goodwin; the
+life-boat cruises in the direction pointed out, but the crew can see
+nothing of the wrecked vessel, so they proceed to the Gull light-ship,
+hoping there to obtain further information. The men find the crew of the
+light-ship anxiously watching for their approach; they crowd aft as the
+steamer and life-boat passes under the stern of the vessel, and make
+signals to describe the position of the wreck; the boatmen soon discover
+it, and as soon as they have been towed into the right position for so
+doing, slip from the steamer, and make in for the stranded vessel.
+
+It is now nearly low tide. As they approach, they find that the wreck is
+high and dry on a ridge of sand: nearer still, and they see a man
+walking towards them on the sand, waving a large shawl; the life-boat is
+steered towards him, and choosing a place where the surf is breaking
+with less force, they run the boat on to the sands; three of the crew
+jump overboard and wade through the surf; they join the man on the
+Sands, and make for the wreck; the heavy seas have driven the Sands into
+high ridges, and the gullies between these are waist-deep and full of
+running water, with the sand soft and quick at the bottom; through these
+deep gullies the men have to wade.
+
+Arriving at the wreck, they find it to be that of a brigantine, named
+the _Amoor_. At about eleven o'clock of the night previous, in the dark
+mist and heavy gale, she had run on the Sands at nearly high tide, the
+sea immediately ran over the vessel, and the crew had no time to make a
+single signal of distress, but had directly to climb up into the main
+rigging to prevent being washed overboard. Fortunately the ship was stem
+on to the Sands, with her stern to the wind and tide, and she kept
+straight--and as she was laden with coals, she kept upright on her keel.
+As the tide rose, the waves in their rush lifted the wreck and carried
+her gradually on and on, letting her fall after each lift with a heavy
+shock that made it difficult for the men to retain their hold. Then the
+seas broke over her so heavily that the men feared that they would be
+washed even from their position in the main rigging, and managed to get
+on to the foremast; here they found more shelter. For about four miles
+did the ship thus beat over the Sands, and the men felt, with a great
+and deep thankfulness, that if they had had the guidance of her
+themselves, they could not have kept her more straight in her course
+along the narrow high ridge of the sand than she was kept by God's
+providence, for if the vessel had been carried to the right or to the
+left of that narrow ridge of sand, she would have got into deep water,
+and then must have sunk immediately, so much was her hull shattered,
+and all her crew would of necessity have been at once drowned.
+
+But the agony of mind and the suspense endured this time by the men was
+something terrible. They could scarcely feel any hope that the wreck
+would long sustain the terrible shocks that she was receiving. They
+looked down upon the mad waves as they raced by, and each one seemed a
+ready grave; there was nothing to be done, no fierce struggle for life,
+which in its excitement should lessen the terrors of the apparently
+approaching death, only to cling on and wait in the darkness.
+
+And now they feel that the end must soon come, for they hear the surf
+roaring near; it is roaring on the edge of the Sands, the waves rushing
+in from the deep water and breaking upon the Sands, and this right in
+the path along which their vessel is being driven yard by yard. A little
+more and she must be plunged in this surf, and then a few yards, and she
+must sink in deep water; and as thousands upon thousands have earnestly
+prayed that they might be kept off these deadly sands, so these poor
+sailors now earnestly seek that they may be left on them, until daylight
+comes, and their pitiable position may be seen, and they have a chance
+of being saved.
+
+They are now within a quarter of a mile of the end of the sand, but the
+tide is falling rapidly, and the wreck lifts less and less; at last, to
+the great joy of all her crew, she grounds heavily and ceases to lift.
+She is swung round broadside to the tide, and falls over on her side,
+and then works and crashes almost to pieces. The water now soon leaves
+her, and she becomes high and dry, and speedily the men can leave the
+wreck and stand upon the sand; the surf rages around them at a short
+distance; it is only for a few hours that where they now stand will be
+dry, and then the sea will rage over the sand again with all its fury.
+The captain is a bold, active determined man; he will throw away no
+chance of safety; something must be done before the return of tide, and
+he will lose no time. The captain and crew can form no opinion as to
+where they are; the vessel is an absolute wreck, beaten by this time
+almost to fragments, they have no means of signalling their distress,
+and it seems that their only chance will be to make a raft out of the
+many shattered pieces of timber that are hanging about the wreck; the
+boats have long since been destroyed and washed away. The shipwrecked
+crew have only their knives to work with, but they commence with all
+energy, wrenching away the broken timbers from the deck and sides of the
+vessel, cutting away the ropes, lashing the timbers together. But with
+their utmost efforts they can make but slow progress, and they feel that
+their raft, when as hastily completed, as it must be, will be but a
+frail support in the rage of waters with which it will have to contend,
+as soon as the sea again beats over the Sands; but still on that dry
+knoll of sand, in almost pitch darkness, with the wind howling by them,
+and the roar of the breaking waves all around, the men work on and on.
+The poor storm-beaten, wearied men, feel faint and exhausted, but spare
+no labour, slack no energy, for the tide will turn with the dawn, and
+then, as an enemy creeping up to destroy them, will, in its speedy
+advance, give them short time for labour, and scant mercy, when it once
+seizes them as its prey. The dawn has broken, the tide is rising, and
+each man is inspired to fresh exertions. Suddenly, they are all startled
+by the loud report of a gun, fired at no great distance from them. What
+is it? What is it? they all cry. Soon a rocket goes whizzing up into the
+grey misty clouds. Is it a signal from some unfortunate vessel in
+distress similar to that which they are in? At all events that feeling
+of intense and hopeless solitude which almost overcame them, seemed
+disturbed, and whilst they eagerly work on, they at the same time keep a
+sharp look out in the direction from which the signals have been given;
+they are soon able to make out that it is a light-vessel that is
+signalling; this fills them with hope; they must have been seen by the
+watch on board, and it is on their account that the signal must have
+been made; but still they will not abate any of their efforts, the
+life-boat may not be able to reach them, or she may not be out in time
+to save them; at all events, with the tide creeping up as it is, they
+will not lose a chance, and go on busily constructing the raft. They
+have made considerable progress, having lashed a good many spars
+crosswise, and pieces of bulwark over them, when they discover a
+steamer's smoke not far off, and soon after make out a boat, which must
+be a life-boat, making in over the seas towards them; one man makes for
+the edge of the Sands, and soon the boat grounds not far from him, and
+three boatmen wade towards him.
+
+The boatmen, when they reach the raft, find the men getting some
+provisions on to it, but all the stores have been under water during the
+night, and are spoilt. The joy of the shipwrecked men at the arrival of
+the boatmen is intense. "Thank God! that you have come," said the
+captain; "I did not at all expect that any of us would have been alive
+this morning."
+
+A strange meeting it seems, in that wild stormy morning, there, on the
+centre of the Goodwin Sands, where the waves had raged so furiously a
+few hours before, and would in a few hours rage so furiously again;
+there, where the shipwrecked had expected to die a tragical death, the
+sailors and the boatmen stand greeting each other; the life-boatmen
+rejoicing almost as much at being there ready to save the poor sailors,
+as they are at the prospect of being saved; the ship's crew look down
+upon their raft, and feel indeed what a poor protection it must have
+proved in the storm which they would have had to encounter.
+
+The crew of the wrecked vessel, now that the excitement of working with
+such fierce energy at the raft is over, begin to feel the reaction, and
+feel thoroughly exhausted, and look so worn and weather beaten, as if
+the death shade, which had seemed to hover over them for so many hours,
+had left its impress upon the countenance of each.
+
+A few more words of greeting and thankfulness between the castaways and
+the rescuers, and all prepare to find their way across the Sands to the
+life-boat. The life-boatmen first climb on board the wreck, to see if
+they can find any small things which they can save for the men, but
+every moveable thing seems to have been washed out of the vessel; they
+find the cabin broken and crushed up, but manage to drag a few of the
+captain's clothes out of it; they find a dog on board, which they save.
+And now all turn their backs upon the wreck.
+
+The shipwrecked sailors have become very feeble, and some of them are
+scarcely able to drag their limbs along, and require to be held up on
+both sides as they wade through the shallow channels of water, many of
+which they have to cross on their way to the boat.
+
+They hurry on as fast as they can, for the weather is very uncertain,
+and a mist or snow-squall coming on would put them in the greatest
+possible peril, for they would in that case very speedily be lost among
+the gullies, which are half filled with water, and which stretch in all
+directions across the Sands at low water; and the boatmen know what it
+would be to be lost there; with the sand getting soft and quick beneath
+their feet as the tide rose, and with the narrowing belt of surf each
+moment drawing nearer and nearer, there to wander hopelessly for a short
+time, then to be scarcely able to move as the sands grew quick, and then
+to fall an easy prey to the fierce sweep of the first breaker that
+rolled in upon them. It is no wonder that the boatmen look with dread
+upon the increasing gloom of the morning, and hurry the men on as much
+as possible; they make out the life-boat, and with much difficulty and
+exertion they get to the edge of the Sands.
+
+The life-boat is at anchor with ten fathoms of chain out; the heavy
+breakers are rolling in and lifting her with such violence as they sweep
+on, that at each lift she drags her anchor, and beats further and
+further over the spit of sand upon which the waves are expending their
+first fury. The surf flies over the boat, fills her, and then rages on
+in clouds of foam. The men on board are anxiously looking for the return
+of their comrades with the shipwrecked crew, and greatly rejoice as they
+see the groups of men struggling across the Sands to the boat. They soon
+make out how exhausted the shipwrecked men are, and feel that it will be
+very hard work for them to wade through the surf to the boat. Some of
+the boatmen get life lines ready to throw to any that may be overpowered
+and thrown down by the wind and tide, others jump overboard to go to the
+assistance of the enfeebled sailors. It is bitterly cold, and the water,
+as they wade through it, feels as if it would freeze them through and
+through; they bring off the shipwrecked crew one by one, the more
+exhausted of them being supported on both sides between two life-boat
+men; at last all are on board, but they cannot yet leave the sands; they
+must wait until the water is high enough to float the life-boat over the
+ridge which surrounds her. All are shivering with cold and wet; they
+crouch in the boat and protect themselves as well as they can from the
+flying surf; a long weary hour is thus passed; the tide rises
+sufficiently, sail is set, and the life-boat makes for the steam-boat,
+and is greeted with cheers--cheers that are heartily answered. The
+shipwrecked sailors, who had had during the night no hope of again
+giving a cry of joy on earth, join in as lustily as they can, in that
+cry which, sounding over the wild seas, tells of noble deeds in
+struggling to save life, and of happy and most blessed results. That
+although the storm still swept furiously by, and although the waves
+still rushed madly around the shipwrecked, that they were now safe in
+the safety afforded by the noble life-boat. So safe, indeed, that it was
+not too soon for the poor sailors to rejoice in their rescue, and to
+express with heartfelt cheer their gratitude to the brave men who had
+rescued them from their position of deadly peril.
+
+The steamer does not take long in towing the boat to Ramsgate, where all
+receive the usual warm greeting, and the shipwrecked the needful care.
+
+The crew of the wrecked vessel, the _Amoor_ of Elswick, are Germans;
+their consul takes care of them, and sends them to the Sailors' Home.
+
+They proved so thankful for the rescue effected, that they wrote to
+their home authorities, and the life-boat men soon received from the
+Grand Duke of Mecklenburg Schwerin an expression of gratitude and
+admiration for their conduct, accompanied by a Silver Medal, a
+Certificate of Merit, and ten shillings each man.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XVIII.
+
+THE RESCUE OF THE CREW OF THE "EFFORT"--THE DANGERS OF HOVELLING.
+
+ "All where the eye delights, yet dreads to roam,
+ The breaking billows cast the flying foam
+ Upon the billows rising; all the deep
+ Is restless change; the waves so swelled and steep,
+ Breaking and sinking; and the sunken swells,
+ Not one, one moment, in its station dwells."
+
+ _Crabbe._
+
+
+The famous old life-boat _Northumberland_ had done her work, and had
+done it nobly and well. Staunch, and true, she had breasted the hardest
+gales, stemmed the fiercest seas, and had been the means of rescuing
+hundreds of perishing men, women, and children from that which, without
+her, and the brave hearts and strong hands that sailed her, must have
+been swift, certain, and terrible death; but at last her time had
+come--weather beaten, wrenched, and worn, with her thousand battles with
+the gales, she was condemned as being no longer to be intrusted with the
+precious lives that she contained, as she went forth to contend with the
+wild seas that rage over the Goodwin Sands.
+
+The _Bradford_, a very powerful and excellent boat presented to the
+Life-boat Institution by the good people of Bradford, and by the
+Institution appointed to Ramsgate, had not yet been sent down, and a
+smaller boat called the _Little Friend_ was occupying her place for the
+time.
+
+But it was a clear fine morning, with the waves fretting and fuming
+somewhat, but dancing and gleaming brightly in the sunshine; it had been
+squally during the night, and at times had blown very hard, but the
+morning promised better, and the life-boat was rocking gently at her
+moorings, no one thinking it likely that her services would be required
+for some time.
+
+But the boatmen must be doing something, if only drawing their bow at a
+venture, and now the _Champion_ is getting ready for sea; she is one of
+the Ramsgate hovelling-luggers, a noble boat of twenty-two tons, fit for
+any weather. In summer time she is fitted as a pleasure-boat, and, as
+such, takes many a holiday cruise; but now she is in winter gear, and
+ready for rougher scenes and harder work.
+
+The more threatening and heavy the weather, the greater the probability
+of disaster occurring, or having occurred, then the more ready are her
+crew to work their way out to the Goodwin Sands, and to cruise round
+them on the look-out for vessels in distress; they dare not take the
+lugger into the broken water--there a life-boat alone can live; but
+still she is a grand sea-boat, one that will stagger on with a ship's
+heavy anchor and chain on board, through weather bad enough for
+anything--a boat that is well suited for the hard and dangerous service
+which employs her during the winter months.
+
+Her crew consists of ten men; the men get no regular pay, but any
+salvage or reward for services they may obtain is divided into fourteen
+shares: the boat takes three and a half shares for her owners, one half
+share goes to the provision account, as the crew when on board are
+supplied by the owners with provisions, and one share is given to each
+of the men--this is the ordinary arrangement. Complaints are sometimes
+made of the amounts charged by these men for services rendered; but the
+cases of a good hovel are few and far between; and often the luggers put
+out to sea, night after night, throughout a stormy winter, hanging about
+the Sands, in wind and rain, and snow and mists, the men half frozen
+with the cold, and half smothered with the flying surf and spray, and
+often week after week they thus suffer and endure, and do not make a
+penny-piece each man; working their hardest, without any other result,
+than that of getting more and more into debt at home, and almost tempted
+to become disheartened with it all, hardly able to hope against hope;
+then at last, perhaps, comes a chance--a big ship is on the tail of a
+sand bank; they render assistance and get her off; if she had remained
+there another tide she would probably have been knocked to pieces: they
+have saved thousands of pounds' worth of property; and the captain, and
+the owners, and the underwriters, all look aghast, and cry out with
+indignation, when they ask perhaps a sum that will give them ten or
+fifteen pounds a man--do something to pay the scores that have been
+growing month after month, something to requite them for the weary
+watching, and labour, and suffering, that they have had so many weeks in
+vain.
+
+No! let those who grumble at the demands made on such occasions, feel
+fully assured that they know many easier, more pleasant, and more
+profitable ways of making money, than by hovering around the Goodwin
+Sands throughout the nights of a stormy winter, on the look-out for
+vessels in distress. The following tale will illustrate, in its simple
+narration of actual facts, some of the dangers to which the men are
+exposed when on such service.
+
+On the morning in question a haze floated over the Goodwin Sands,
+preventing anything being made out from the shore; wherever the haze
+lifted a little, the men on the look-out on the pier closely watched the
+break in it with their glasses; for the channels on either side of the
+Sands are so narrow and the tides so strong, that it is an easy matter
+for a ship-master to lose his bearings in thick weather, and to run his
+ship on the Sands.
+
+A squall passes over the Sands, driving the mists before it, and the men
+on the pier make out that a vessel is ashore on the Goodwin; she is
+completely on her broadside, and the boatmen, looking through powerful
+glasses, can see that men are walking about on the side of the wreck.
+The harbour-master is immediately informed; he knows that the _Champion_
+lugger is out there, but the surf may be too great for her to be able to
+render assistance, and he gives directions that the life-boat shall be
+at once manned. The steamer soon takes the life-boat in tow, and they
+proceed through a comparatively smooth sea to the vessel. Upon arriving
+there, they find that the _Champion_ lugger has succeeded in sending in
+her small boat, and in taking the men off the wreck.
+
+But as the boat makes off to the lugger's she loses an oar, and the tide
+is running with such strength that the boat's crew cannot stem it, and
+are driven back in the direction of the Sands; the life-boat men see the
+danger the boat will get into if she is carried into the broken water,
+and at once give chase.
+
+The men on board the lugger's boat are, not unnaturally, anxious to have
+the honour of saving the crew without the assistance of the life-boat,
+and they persevere in their efforts to reach the lugger; suddenly the
+wind flies round to the north-east, and a heavy squall sweeps along
+accompanied with snow and sleet; it becomes very thick and dark, the
+lugger's men think the squall will soon pass, and although their boat is
+only sixteen feet long, and has eleven men on board, they still work
+away striving to get back to the lugger. But the wind increases in
+force, and the sea begins to make rapidly, the little boat gets into
+shallow water and thumps heavily on the edge of the sand; then the
+boatmen and the shipwrecked crew realize the danger they are in. The
+wrecked sailors begin to shout to the life-boat men to come to their
+help, and the boat's crew see that they cannot get away from the Sands
+by themselves; in fact, that without the aid of the life-boat they must
+all then and there perish, and they are glad to make for the life-boat
+with all speed. The sailors and some of the boat's crew get on board the
+life-boat, two or three hands remain in the small boat, which is taken
+in tow by the life-boat, and they start in search of the steamer; but
+the weather becomes more and more thick, and they can see nothing of
+her; in fact, can only see a few yards before them. Now to their dismay
+they find that they have come away without a compass, and the wind has
+shifted so frequently and rapidly, that they cannot guess at its
+direction, and therefore cannot tell which way to steer; they are on the
+top of the Sands, and in very shallow water, and the boat often touches
+the ground with a great jerk as she sails along. Now, and again, she
+grounds bow on and is swung round and round by the tide. The tide as it
+is low water runs through so many channels and swatch ways that its
+direction does not at all help the men to tell the course they are
+steering; and so, as a mere matter of guess-work, and that they may keep
+the boat's head in one direction, they put her on the wind, and after
+being beaten about a good deal by the broken seas, succeed in getting
+into deep water; but not until they have been entangled for four hours
+among the Sands.
+
+After sailing for about half an hour, they discover the Gull light
+looming red out of the thick mist. They then soon make out the
+_Champion_, and put her crew on board her. The lugger's men want the
+shipwrecked crew to accompany them, but they are too content with the
+life-boat, and refuse to move; the steamer comes up and takes the
+life-boat in tow. Again the wrecked sailors cannot be persuaded to leave
+the life-boat for her, and as soon as the boat is in tow, and they are
+well under weigh, the wrecked sailors begin to tell their tale.
+
+"The name of our wrecked vessel is the _Effort_; it is now several days
+since we sailed from the Forth, bound for Rotterdam, and ever since we
+have had a a terrible time of it, nothing but gale after gale, the wind
+flying about in all directions, until you can guess we were pretty well
+tired of all this beating about in the North Sea; what with the wind
+driving us first in one direction and then in another--what with
+contrary tides and thick weather--we soon lost our reckoning, and must
+have been caught in the lee drift of the tide, and thus got carried on
+to the Goodwin Sands. We grounded heavily, at once felt the danger we
+were in, and hoisted lamps as signals of distress, but we knew that
+these could not be made out at any distance in such thick weather, and
+hurried to get a tar-barrel on deck to set fire to it, and make a good
+blaze; but our vessel was very light--she rolled from side to side
+almost yard arms under, and suddenly capsized altogether. At once, and
+with difficulty, we made for the weather-rigging, and were glad to find
+that not any of the crew were lost as she fell over. We lashed ourselves
+to the rigging. We knew to our great joy that the tide was falling; had
+it been rising we must have very soon been overrun by it, the vessel
+broken up, and every man of us lost. We were in danger enough as it was,
+for the brig soon after she capsized was caught by the tide, and worked
+round with her deck towards the seas; and as the heavy seas broke over
+her and came rushing up the deck, they fell on us with terrible weight,
+and beat us and crushed us against the ship's rail, so that we were
+forced to unlash ourselves from the rigging, and what to do we did not
+know, till one of us said, 'Our only chance is to lash the end of the
+ropes round our waists, and let go the rigging as the waves come,' and
+so we did; and terrible work it was. As the waves came we slackened the
+ropes and went away a little with them, and as they passed, half
+smothered as we were, hauled ourselves back to the rigging and held on a
+bit; and then, when the next wave came, we let go, and were all adrift
+in the wash again; our hands were almost torn to pieces with the strain
+on the ropes, and grasping at the side of the vessel." And they shewed
+where their hands were torn, with the nails almost drawn from the finger
+ends. "You see, too, how our clothes were nearly dragged off us; it was
+indeed an awful time. We encouraged each other as well as we could, but
+soon became too exhausted to speak much, and just went struggling on.
+The topmast heads were right down in the Sands, and every moment we
+expected the masts would break off short, and then the vessel would have
+rolled over, and it would have been death to us at once--but while there
+was life there was hope, and so we held on, just hoping against hope,
+and so we would not despair, but seemed to gather a little bit of
+courage, again and again struggling to prolong, for a few minutes, the
+life of which we saw so little chance of at last saving; but the tide
+was still falling, and if we could only live through all the wash of the
+sea, until it had gone down a bit, there was just one more chance for
+us.
+
+"Well, we stood it for about two hours, I should think, the seas
+breaking over us continually, when we began to feel that they were
+getting less heavy, and ran less and less up the deck, and over the
+vessel. And at last, although half dead with breathlessness and fatigue,
+from the exertion and the constant rush of the waves over us, we were
+able to drag ourselves up on to the broadside of the vessel, and then we
+threw ourselves down full length, to try and recover our strength a
+little."
+
+It was with no slight degree of interest and sympathy that the life-boat
+men listened to the tale of the poor fellows; three of whom were married
+men, and they described how the thoughts of the loved ones at home,
+while it added to their agony, yet nerved them time after time to fresh
+efforts to struggle free from the seas that overran them.
+
+One man grew very excited as they told the dismal story. His limbs and
+features worked, the horrors of the past night came upon him in all
+their force, and as the waves dashed over the life-boat, he fancied
+himself again being washed off the side of the wreck, and springing up
+he shouted, "Let me drown myself, let me drown myself, I can stand it no
+longer!" and tried to throw himself into the sea. Three men seized him,
+held him down and tried to pacify him, but still he struggled,
+shouting,--"I cannot stand it! I cannot stand it! let me go! let me
+go!" He soon became somewhat quieter, from exhaustion, but the men did
+not feel it safe to let go their hold upon him, until they got into the
+harbour.
+
+It was now about half-past four in the afternoon, and the life-boat work
+for the day was done, the shipwrecked crew staggered to the Sailors'
+Home; wondering much to find themselves still alive, after the dread
+perils, and terrible struggles, and exhaustion, of the previous night.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XIX.
+
+THE HOVELLERS, OR SALVORS, SAVED. THE "PRINCESS ALICE" HOVELLING LUGGER.
+
+ "When they who to the sea go down,
+ And in the waters ply their toil,
+ Are lifted on the surge's crown,
+ And plunged where seething eddies boil,
+
+ "Then with Thy mercies ever new,
+ Thy servants set from peril free;
+ And bring them, Pilot wise and true,
+ Unto the port where they would be."
+
+ _Hymn._
+
+
+No sooner has the life-boat started in the morning, in answer to the
+signal from the Goodwin light-vessel, than the master of the _Princess
+Alice_ gathers a crew of twelve men, and follows as fast as possible in
+the wake of the life-boat.
+
+A fine south-westerly breeze is blowing and the noble lugger bowls along
+at a great speed, and reaches the neighbourhood of the Sands about a
+mile and a half behind the life-boat. The lugger brings to an anchor
+just outside the Sands, and her crew, finding that the weather has
+somewhat moderated, and that the sea has gone down with the tide,
+determine to send six of their men in their small boat into the wreck,
+to see if they can save any cargo or rigging; the men get to the wreck
+without much difficulty, and find her right over on her broadside, with
+her yard-arms buried some feet in the Sands; the top-gallant mast is
+gone; her rigging and all her top-hamper, a tangled mass, is floating
+and washing about in a deep hole which the eddy of the waves, beating
+against the wreck, has worked.
+
+The men climb on to the side of the vessel, and then lower themselves
+down from the weather-rigging across the deck, which is lying almost
+upright on its side, that they may look into the hold; the hatches are
+off, and they find that the hold is quite empty, everything washed out;
+it is difficult to get into the captain's cabin, as the vessel is
+completely on her side, or there may be things there worth saving; they
+will see to it by-and-by, and now they proceed at once to save what
+rigging they can. The three men on the vessel get their knives and
+choppers to work, and commence cutting away, when suddenly it begins to
+get dark, a heavy squall threatens, and a storm of snow and hail comes
+driving along before the wind.
+
+The men in the boat shout out, "It begins to look bad; do you not think
+that we had better be leaving, and get out of this?"
+
+But the men busy in the rigging are somewhat excited over their work,
+and answer back, "It is only a squall, a mere spoon drift, and will soon
+work round;" the wind, however, rapidly increases, and sweeps by in
+such violent gusts, that the men on the ship's side are nearly blinded
+with the snow, and can no longer hold on against the wind; well! they
+are willing to work hard and risk much, to save what they can from the
+hungry Goodwin Sands, even if that which they save will give them only a
+few shillings a man; but if they cannot, they cannot; it is not the
+first time, by very many, that they have returned with nothing but
+danger and labour for their pains.
+
+"Look sharp, men, look sharp; do you want to drown us all?" "Come down
+at once," is the cry from the boat; and the men lower themselves down
+over the slippery side of the vessel, into the small boat, which is
+leaping and tossing about in the waves which begin to surge up with some
+violence.
+
+"Now, men, oars out and away with a will; I doubt we have left it quite
+long enough." "Aye! Aye! too long, I fear." "Well! time enough to think
+that when we find it so." "Which way are you going?" they ask the
+coxswain. "I don't suppose there is much choice, there will be less surf
+running at the back of the Sand, and the lugger is sure to expect us to
+come out there, now that the sea has got up; so round with her, and pull
+hard."
+
+And away, as for their lives, the men pull, the little boat seethes
+through the troubled water, urged by her powerful crew; and they soon
+near the edge of the Sand, and are making for deep water. "Easy all,
+men! do you hear that?" And to their dismay, they hear the surf beating
+heavily, right ahead of them. "Didn't I tell you so?" "Hold your
+tongue--our work is to get out of this, not to grumble while in it."
+"Right enough then, and I am your man; but what next?"
+
+"Pull ahead a little, and let's look at them;" and doing so, they see
+huge waves rolling in out of the deep water upon the shallow Sands,
+mounting up, curling over, and breaking, washing back, meeting other
+breakers foaming up against them; in fact, a sea of raging water
+surrounding the Sands; a sea in which their little boat would be swamped
+at once, and in which, indeed, no ordinary boat could float, and only a
+life-boat could possibly pass through.
+
+As they mount on a wave they can see the lugger, riding safely just
+outside the surf, only a quarter of a mile off, waiting for them; but
+that quarter of a mile it is impossible for them to pass, and equally
+impossible for the lugger to get any nearer to them.
+
+"Well, my men, there is no help for it here; we cannot get off the Sands
+this way, that's certain."
+
+The seas begin to break heavily over the boat; the men keep her head to
+the waves, or she would be at once rolled over, so rapidly is the swell
+setting in; as it is, she begins to fill with water, and they have to
+continue bailing her; they must let her drift back, pulling easy to keep
+her head straight, and each wave carries them some distance further from
+the edge of the Sand. As soon as they get clear of the rollers and the
+surf, they rest on their oars, and consult what is to be done; it all
+seems very hopeless, but it is no good waiting where they are; and so
+they determine to return again to the wreck, as to their only place of
+safety, and this indeed but for a very short time.
+
+They get to the wreck, and lay under shelter of her hull, not knowing
+what to do; never did men seem in more terrible plight, the wreck could
+afford but the scantiest shelter to the crew who hopelessly clung to her
+the night before; then the tide was falling, but now the tide is rising;
+each moment the great rollers that are rushing in upon the Sands break
+nearer and nearer; soon they will rush over the wreck, cover her
+completely, and rend and tear her to fragments. What can be done? To
+remain where they are is certain death, to attempt to escape in their
+small open boat seems death, equally certain. Well, it is better to die
+doing than to die waiting; but never have men held consultation under
+more apparently hopeless circumstances; the boat the men are in is the
+boat the _Princess Alice_ generally carries on her deck, between the
+masts; she is about eighteen feet long, and four broad, fine boat enough
+for her size; but she seems more than sufficiently filled by the six
+powerful men who are in her, and if she should be caught in the roll of
+one of the big waves, she will at once be capsized, or fill with water,
+and sink, leaving her crew but a few gasping moments of vain struggle
+with the boiling seas.
+
+And the seas rage round them every moment nearer and nearer. Some of the
+men think that if they can drag the boat for about a mile over the crown
+of the part of the Sands that is still dry, and thus get out to windward
+of the North-west Spit, that they may find more shelter there for a
+time, and if they do find it somewhat smoother there, will perhaps be
+able to work their way through the surf; but upon a snow-squall, which
+for a time had darkened all around them, clearing away, they find that
+the breakers are throwing up as much surf there as anywhere else, and
+all hope of rescue in that direction is gone; and the conviction settles
+down upon them all, that there seems indeed no possibility of escape;
+but still they kept cool, and quiet, and undaunted, prepared to do their
+utmost, calmly and skilfully, up to the last moment, letting no chance
+go by; at all events, they will stop where they are no longer, as the
+breaking seas are closing in upon them fast.
+
+The Goodwin Sands are about nine miles long; in the middle of them there
+is at low water a large lake, which is called on the chart "Trinity
+Bay," but which is known to the boatmen as the In-sand; the men row in
+the direction of this lake, and row over the sand-banks which surround
+it, as soon as the tide has flowed sufficiently to enable them to do so;
+now they find themselves in completely smooth water, and are safe; but
+for how long? a short hour or so, for the hungry waves are following
+them up fast, still higher and higher comes the tide, and a furious surf
+begins to rage over the banks that for a time protect the lake.
+
+Well do the men know how short a time of rest remains to them; they hear
+the beat of the heavy waves thundering near, they see the gleam of the
+surf, the sea begins to boil up around them, the circle of safety gets
+each moment more narrow, their dread ruthless enemy is on them again,
+and the men brace themselves for a life-and-death struggle, for with
+such a struggle they are face to face.
+
+"Now, my men, to it again! look out all!" and each man grasps his oar
+hard, fixes his eye upon the steersman, James Penny, watches his every
+sign, and listens to his every word; for in the struggle that is before
+them any mistake may be at once fatal to all.
+
+The big waves roll in, fast following each other, and the boat meets
+each one head on, and rises to it; the surf flies over the men, and into
+the boat; "Bale away, Penny! bale away! or she will swamp!"--and fast
+the steersman bales; he has one hand on the tiller, and is watching the
+direction of every wave, and shouting to the men, on which side to ease,
+on which to pull a little harder, to keep the boat's head straight to
+the waves; for if but one wave catches the boat on the side it will roll
+her over at once, and all must perish; they must row sometimes harder in
+a lull, sometimes gently when a high roller comes, to avoid its breaking
+upon them, or to prevent their burying the boat's bow in its steep side.
+
+The coxswain sees a tremendous wave rolling on; a few smaller ones come
+first; up the boat flies, down again, again mounts high, and again falls
+down; "Steady all, look out, half a stroke hard starboard side, easy
+port, now easy all--easy all;" the men stop pulling, and lay their oars
+flat on the water to steady the boat; the great wave rolls on, the
+boat's bow is tossed high, nearly on end, the men lean back as far as
+possible, but can scarcely keep their seats, or prevent being thrown
+bodily forward upon the coxswain; the boat falls with a heavy plunge;
+there is a moment's lull. "Now a stroke, or two, my men;" and they
+gently press the boat forward and make a little way; "Easy all, head her
+to it, here she comes," and up again they mount upon the crest of a
+wave, and are again nearly turned end-over-end, but, happily, fall on an
+even keel as the wave passes, and at once prepare themselves to meet the
+next sea, and thus meeting wave after wave, overcoming danger after
+danger, they go drifting slowly with the tide. The men do not dare at
+any time to pull hard for fear of rowing the boat under, they make
+therefore but little way ahead, not more than half a mile, or so, an
+hour, but they are carried slowly by the tide down Trinity Bay in the
+direction of the Downs.
+
+The boat has been nearly full of water all this time, from the surf and
+spray that have broken into her, but she happily has a belt of cork
+round her, underneath the thwarts, or she must have long since been
+swamped, but this, with the constant baling of the coxswain, has kept
+her afloat.
+
+The men have been able to remain in the bay until the tide has risen
+greatly, and it is now high water over the Sands, and the water being
+deeper, the seas do not break nearly as heavily as before; they are
+mounting seas, not running seas. The mounting sea swells up and comes
+pushing along, like a hill of water, steep on both sides; its crest is
+caught by the wind and is driven away in clouds of spray and foam, but
+a boat meeting it has time to rise, and float over it; but a running sea
+is much more dangerous; its base is caught and retarded by the Sands; it
+comes along, its sides steep as a wall, its crest curling more and more
+over until it breaks, and the upper portion of the wave falls with a
+mighty crash, with perhaps tons of water in its volume; it would be
+impossible for any boat but a life-boat to contend for a moment with
+such a rushing breaking sea as this, and the little boat the six men are
+in, with its heavy freight, would be swamped, beaten under water and
+rolled over by the first such sea she met; but if the men can only steer
+clear of these breakers, and keep the boat's head so as to meet the
+mounting seas bow on, and manage to bale her constantly so as to keep
+her a little free from water, they may live through it all yet; with
+this hope they labour on steadily, bravely, and hour after hour they
+thus contend with the storm; the boat is now coming to the worst of the
+water--to the steep edge of the Sand--and the men feel that, for a time,
+the danger must increase, and all brace themselves up again, prepared
+for any further effort, or care, that may be required.
+
+The steersman, who has been steering and baling the boat for about four
+hours, suddenly lets the bowl with which he is baling fly from his hand;
+he gives a cry of horror, the men cannot help repeating it, for is not
+this likely to be a death-stroke to them all? The men at once realize
+the dread increase of danger this misfortune creates.
+
+To keep the boat afloat without baling is impossible; the surf breaks
+into her continually; the men cannot bale with their southwesters, for
+they must keep rowing; they require both hands, and to exert all their
+strength to free their oars from the seas, and to keep the blades from
+being blown up into the air, as the force of the gale catches them;
+while the steersman must of necessity keep one hand on the tiller; and
+all must continue labouring without one moment's cessation to keep the
+boat's head straight to the seas.
+
+Most happily the bowl is a wooden one, and there it is floating a few
+yards from them; they watch it wistfully, as they, and it, are tossed up
+and down by the quick waves; back the boat down upon the bowl they
+cannot, for it is on their broadside, and drifting away on the tide
+faster than they are floating: it would seem, that it must be an easy
+matter to pick up a bowl that is floating only a few yards from the
+boat; but not so now, for every moment, racing swiftly after each other,
+the waves come rushing on. It is strange as they watch the bowl to feel
+that their lives depend upon their recovering it, and yet how likely
+they are to perish in the attempt, and thus the men casting anxious
+glances at the bowl keep steadily to their work; they allow no word of
+fear or discouragement to be spoken; they must have mind, nerve, and
+muscle in full play; if a word of hopelessness is let fall, "Don't speak
+like that--don't speak like that, stick to your oar!" they must be words
+of encouragement, or no words at all, and in grim silence, except for
+the few words of direction shouted out by the coxswain, the men wait
+their fate. Suddenly the coxswain cries, "Here is a lull, round with
+her, sharp!" The men on the starboard side give a mighty pull; the men
+on the port back their hardest; one pull all together, the bowl is
+within reach; the coxswain grasps it with a hasty snatch! "Round! round,
+with her quick, quick!" and the eager men get her head straight to the
+seas again, before the waves have time to catch the boat broadside on
+and roll it over. All breathe again; they have another chance of life.
+Thank God! thank God!
+
+They now pass away from the Sands and get into the Gull stream, but the
+wind has chopped round and continues to blow a fierce gale; the sea is
+running very high and broken; and in that rough sea they are still in
+extreme danger on account of the smallness of their boat, and so many
+men being in her, and they have to proceed with the greatest care and
+caution.
+
+As they get into the Gull stream they see vessel after vessel running
+with close-reefed topsails before the gale; the boatmen hail them but
+they get no answer: one little sloop affords them slight hope, for she
+is evidently altering her course, but after a moment's apparent
+hesitation, away she goes again before the gale, and abandons them to
+their fate. The captain of the little vessel related afterwards, how in
+the height of the storm he saw some poor fellows in a small boat, and
+had a great wish to try and save them, but the sea was running so high
+that he felt it was impossible to heave his vessel to, and so had to
+leave them, and that they must have been driven on the Sands and lost.
+This sloop was about a quarter of a mile from the boat, and the men do
+not again get as near to any other ship, and as vessel after vessel
+passes, and the night begins to grow dark, the position of the men
+becomes more and more hopeless--and they all feel that if no vessel
+picks them up, they must soon be blown in again upon the Sands, and
+there perish.
+
+All of the men, except one, are married; the man in the bow has a wife
+and five children, and it is his thoughts of them that keep him nerved
+to his work, for although weak, exhausted, and almost fainting, he still
+sticks to his oar and feebly paddles on; the only single man in the boat
+is his brother-in-law; and his mind keeps running as much upon what his
+sister will do, as a widow with five children, as it does upon the
+thoughts of his own probable fate; and so although the men will not
+permit themselves to lament or bemoan their almost certain fate, for
+fear of weakening their own nerves or discouraging each other, each has
+his solemn conviction of what must soon happen, and is in his own breast
+thinking of death, and bidding "Good-bye," to the loved ones who are
+resting those few miles away.
+
+The Downs had been full of ships at the commencement of the storm, but
+as the wind increased in violence and blew right through, the anchorage
+was no longer safe, and vessel after vessel slipped her cable and ran
+before the gale; until at last only one vessel, a large American ship,
+remains at anchor. The boatmen make her out when they are about half a
+mile from her, and find, to their great joy, that she is almost
+directly in the path in which they are drifting; to get alongside her is
+their last hope, for although the tide is now carrying them against the
+wind and from the Sands, the tide will very soon turn, and then with the
+tide, and before the wind, they will be swept with terrible speed right
+in upon the Sands, and must there at once perish, and it will be
+impossible for them to row against the tide, as all their efforts will
+still be required to keep the boat bow on to the seas.
+
+Whenever, after the passing of a few of the largest of the waves, there
+comes a comparative lull, or smooth, and they dare press the boat, they
+pull a few strokes and shoot ahead, and thus manage to get exactly in
+the path of the American ship.
+
+As they drop slowly towards her they shout time after time, but cannot
+make themselves heard; and it is getting too dusk for them to be seen at
+any distance; the seas are running alongside the ship almost gunwale
+high, and it is impossible to get nearer to her than within fifty yards.
+Hail after hail the men give, still they get no answer; they can see a
+man on the poop, but he evidently neither sees nor hears them, and their
+last chance seems slipping away, for they are fast drifting past the
+vessel. "Get on the thwart, Dick, and shout with all your might!" the
+coxswain says to the man pulling stroke-oar; "I'll hold you," hauling in
+his oar, and catching it under the seat; the man springs upon the
+thwart, and balancing himself for a second, hails with all his force.
+
+"The man is moving, he hears us; hurrah!" is the glad cry in the boat.
+They can see that he is looking about in astonishment, wondering from
+where the voice from the sea came. They all shout together; he sees
+them, waves his arm, and hurries along the poop; other men come
+hastening up, called by him, and look with astonishment at the little
+boat so full of men, being tossed about in that wild sea. The boat
+drifts by the ship, they venture a pull or two and get her under the
+stern of the vessel, shooting her a little across the seas; they then
+pull a little harder to try and keep her position, risking a little more
+to keep near the ship--indeed the vessel somewhat protects them from the
+rush of the seas.
+
+The coxswain sees a man on the vessel throw something overboard--it is a
+coil of rope with a life-buoy attached; they make it out as it floats
+near, and manage to get it on board. The pilot is the man who first saw
+the boat, and has got the life-buoy and thrown it over to them. The
+captain of the vessel is now on deck; he orders the men to send down a
+rope from each quarter of the vessel, and to try and keep the boat
+directly astern of the centre of the ship, for if the boat sheers to one
+side or the other, and any of the big waves which are racing by the ship
+catch her on her broadside, she must go over at once.
+
+So they shout to the men in the boat, "Hold on--we will send you another
+rope," and soon another life-buoy with a rope attached, comes floating
+by; they get it on board, and seeing directly the object for which it is
+sent, haul the ropes over each bow, and strive to keep the boat in
+position; but still they are in great danger; their safety hitherto has
+been in floating with the waves, yielding to them as they rolled on;
+but now as she is moored to the ship, the little boat has to breast the
+waves, and at times is tossed high with her bow in the air, and again
+plunged down, smothered with spray, and in danger every moment of being
+overturned; indeed it is only by the skilful manoeuvring of the captain
+that the boat is kept safe at all. He has stationed six men on each
+quarter of the ship; they hold the ropes to which the boat is fastened;
+and as the big waves press the boat, the men slacken the rope, and let
+the boat go with the seas, pulling her up again between the waves,
+hauling on one rope, and slacking the other if the boat sheers too much
+on one side. The difficulty now is how to get the men out of the boat,
+for they dare not haul her up closer to the vessel, as she will not ride
+with a shorter scope of rope. They send another rope down to the boat,
+with a bowline knot made in it for the men to sit in, and then shout to
+the men, "We will haul you on board, one at a time."
+
+There is a moment's question as to the order in which the men shall go,
+for each feels that at any moment the boat may sink under them; it is
+quickly decided that the men shall leave the boat in the order in which
+they sit, and one after another, they plunge into the waves, and are
+hauled on board through the seas.
+
+All safe at last! and very soon the boat fills and turns over, and hangs
+there held by the ropes till the morning. As soon as the men have shaken
+the water a little from their clothes, and have wiped their eyes and
+faces somewhat clear, the captain says, "I suppose you have come from
+the barque that was riding near at the beginning of the gale, and which
+I missed after a squall, and which must have foundered." (It was
+supposed that two or three ships went down with all hands that night).
+"No, sir; we have come from no barque, we were blown away from a wreck
+some hours ago, near the North Sands Head, and have drifted right over
+the Goodwin."
+
+"Impossible! impossible! no boat could live in such a sea, and over the
+Sands, impossible!"--"It is true, sir; we are Ramsgate boatmen and
+belong to a lugger; we went in from her on to the Sands to a wreck, and
+could not get back to her again." And the captain declares that their
+escape has been wonderful indeed. The feelings of the men at finding
+themselves safe are perfectly overwhelming; the reaction after those
+long hours of almost hopeless and constant struggle; it is too much for
+them, especially added, as it is, to the condition of physical
+exhaustion to which they are reduced. Some of them can scarcely speak;
+one of them, realizing the almost miracle by which they have been saved,
+leans against the boom, repeating in a broken voice, "What, I saved! I
+saved--I saved! one of the worst! one of the worst!" Another can only
+think of the words he had so often repeated to one of his mates, who had
+seemed almost dying during the night. "Come, cheer up! come, cheer up!
+stick to your oar, keep up your heart, man," and he continues for some
+time repeating these words in a strange dreamy way.
+
+The coxswain, upon whom the chief anxiety and greatest stress of mind
+had fallen, for he had hour, after hour, to sit watching every sea as it
+rolled to them and meet it with the tiller, felt more than the others
+the effect of the night's work; he soon after fell very ill, was nigh to
+death's door, and did not recover his strength for a twelvemonth. The
+captain, officers, and crew of the American ship are full of sympathy
+and kindness.
+
+The captain takes the men into his cabin, and gives them each a little
+brandy, then offers them dry clothes, and orders beds to be made up for
+them in the cabin: the clothes and the bed the men think too kind, but
+the beef-steak supper and the glass of grog all round, as soon as they
+have eaten a little, is not to be refused; and the hardy fellows are
+soon sound asleep on the cabin-floor, with all their perils for a time
+forgotten. In the morning the gale has greatly abated; the men have a
+hearty breakfast provided by the hospitable captain: their boat is by
+his orders hauled up, baled out, and as everything has been washed out
+of her, the captain lends them oars, and they start for Ramsgate, giving
+their most hearty thanks for the great skill with which they were got on
+board the ship and saved, and for the kindness they have received on
+board.
+
+When the crew of the _Champion_ lugger had put the men she had saved
+from the wreck on board the life-boat, they found that they could not
+well get back to Ramsgate in the then state of the wind and tide, and
+they were forced to run for Dover.
+
+The men on board the _Princess Alice_ remained in the greatest state of
+anxiety as to the fate of their comrades who went into the wreck in
+their little boat, and waited on, and on, in the position in which the
+boat must come to them, if she clears the Sands; hour after hour she
+cruises backwards and forwards, her crew keeping most anxious watch, and
+then runs down the back of the Sands, thinking it possible the boat
+might get out somewhere there; the gale increases; the night comes on;
+the high tide has swept over the whole of the Sands with its wild seas
+long before this, and they can only conclude, which they do most
+positively and sorrowfully, that their companions in many a hard
+struggle--their friends since childhood--have been lost, overwhelmed in
+the rage of the sea on the Goodwin. They therefore give up the search,
+and now regard their own safety, and they also find that they cannot
+reach Ramsgate, but must make away for Dover.
+
+Arriving there, they at once telegraph the sad news to Ramsgate, that
+they have lost six hands; news that creates the greatest excitement in
+the town. The next morning the _Princess Alice_ starts at daylight for
+another cruise round the Sands, hardly with the hope of finding their
+lost comrades, but possibly fragments of the boat may be found; but they
+search in vain, and feeling their fears to be altogether confirmed, they
+steer for Ramsgate. There the arrival of the lugger is most anxiously
+awaited, and the report of the men increases the excitement, and sorrow,
+and sympathy, which had been created by the telegraph sent the night
+before, and now that the names of the missing men are known, there is
+sad, sad, grief among their supposed widows, and orphans, and their
+friends.
+
+In the meanwhile the boatmen, having left the American ship, row
+steadily toward Ramsgate. They see a lugger making for the harbour; this
+proves to be the _Champion_. The lugger takes the men on board, and the
+boat in tow, her crew rejoicing over their friends whom they had
+supposed to be drowned. They hoist the lugger's flag in token that they
+are bearers of good news, and speed towards Ramsgate. The lugger's
+approach with her flag flying excites the curiosity of the men on the
+harbour, and a crowd hurries down the pier to watch her arrival. And, as
+soon as the men missing from the _Princess Alice_ are recognised, the
+cheers and excitement are wild in the extreme, and men speed off at
+their hardest to bear the good news. One poor woman in the midst of her
+agony and mourning for her husband, and surrounded by her weeping
+friends, is surprised by her door being burst violently open, and at
+seeing a boatman almost dropping with breathlessness, gasping, and
+gesticulating, and nodding, but trying in vain to speak; and it is some
+seconds before he can stammer out "All right! all right! your husband is
+safe, coming now!"
+
+A little subscription was got up by the men and their friends, in order
+to give to the captain of the American ship and the pilot a small
+testimonial of the appreciation of their skill and hospitality. The men
+took the borrowed oars back and presented their thankofferings, in the
+shape of a silver cigar case each, to the captain and pilot.
+
+And as the men told the story of the despair and grief that had existed
+among the wives and children at home--of the tears of sorrow that were
+turned into tears of gladness--of the rejoicings that took place upon
+their return, the brave and feeling American captain shared the emotion
+of the men as they told their tale, and was much overcome as he thanked
+them for their present, saying,--he should value it as long as he lived,
+and ever be deeply grateful that he had in any way been the instrument
+of saving such honest and brave fellows, and of restoring them to their
+wives and families.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XX.
+
+THE SAVING OF "LA MARGUERITE"--(A HOVEL).
+
+ "The spirit of the storm pursued
+ Their long and toilsome way;
+ At length, in ocean solitude,
+ He sprang upon his prey.
+ 'Havoc!' the shipwreck-demon cried,
+ Loos'd all his tempests on the tide,
+ Gave all his lightnings play."
+
+ _J. Montgomery._
+
+
+The case of _La Marguerite_, a small French brig that was rescued from
+great peril by a Margate lugger, assisted by the Ramsgate steamer and
+life-boat, will perhaps convey a sufficient idea of the difficulty and
+danger that frequently occur in rescuing vessels from positions of
+peril, and in bringing them in their damaged condition safely into port.
+
+_La Marguerite_, a small French brig of 187 tons, is owned by her
+captain, an honest and brave French seaman, and represents to him a
+great part of the savings of many years' hard work and economy.
+
+She is bound from Christiana to Dieppe with a cargo of deals; her hold
+is full, and her deck piled up and hampered with cargo almost to the
+level of her gunwale.
+
+But on she goes rolling through the seas, with a fair wind and fine
+weather, and her crew suffer only that amount of discomfort which must
+always be the case when the deck of a vessel is so crowded with cargo.
+
+The fresh breeze increases in force, and threatens a storm; the men
+close reef the topsails and speed on their way; they make the Orfordness
+light on the Essex coast, and then, correcting their course, steer for
+the Knock and Galloper lights, which are stationed to guard sands so
+named, and which are situated about eighteen miles from the North
+Foreland. The breeze lulls a little, and they shake out a reef in the
+sails; it is now getting somewhat thick--they soon make out a couple of
+lights, but they shine so dimly through the mists that the crew conclude
+that they are only fishermen's lights, and shaking out another reef,
+they run fast before the wind, carefully steering their course by the
+compass; but all this time a strong set of tide has been carrying them
+to the northward and westward; this they have not discovered, and are
+quite unaware that they are getting into a dangerous neighbourhood.
+
+The captain is on deck; he is well-pleased at the prospect of making a
+rapid voyage, and seeing that the night is likely to be wet and squally,
+he gives his crew an extra glass of grog all round and goes below,
+taking a last look at the compass, and feeling fully assured that they
+are steering a straight course home.
+
+In an hour or two the men on deck have their attention aroused by a
+hoarse murmur which seems right a head of them, and which sounds like
+the noise of waves breaking upon the shore. They look at the compass,
+their course is correct, they cannot account for it; a couple of men run
+forward, and soon see distinctly a white line of foam gleaming out in
+the darkness, and make out the flash of the breakers as they leap high
+in the air; they are terror-stricken at the sight, and, with a loud cry
+of "Breakers ahead! breakers ahead!" they rush to the hatchway and shout
+to the captain to come on deck at once; he, poor man, rushes up and
+hurries to the wheel, round it flies, but before he can get the brig's
+head round, she mounts upon a breaker, is thrown forward and grounds
+heavily upon the Sands.
+
+Where are they? Where can they be? What horrible mistake have they made?
+they think they must have run somewhere on the mainland, on the Kent
+coast; one man proposes to swim ashore with a rope, but the seas come
+sweeping over them with a degree of violence, that quite does away with
+any thought of making such an attempt. They hurry to the long boat to
+try and get it out, but it and the only other boat which is in the brig
+are speedily swept over board by the seas. The vessel is on the edge of
+the sands and feels all the force of the waves as they roll in and leap
+and break upon the bank; with every inrush of the seas she lifts high
+and pitches, crashing her bow down on the sands, each time with a thump
+that makes her timbers groan, and almost sends the men flying from the
+deck.
+
+As the big waves recoil and leap against her in all directions she
+rolls heavily, while her masts sway, and her yard-arms almost touch the
+water on either side.
+
+The tide is rising, and as she lifts she beats each time a yard or two
+over the Sands; the timbers, piled upon her decks, speedily break loose
+and are washed away; the hull is writhing and working very badly--her
+seams open; and so heavily does she strike, that time after time the
+captain thinks that she must soon break up. This thrashing over the
+Sands lasts for about twenty minutes, when they find that she is in deep
+water, but completely water-logged, and torn and wrenched almost to
+pieces; her rudder is knocked away, and if her cargo were anything but
+deals she would sink at once, and all would be instantly drowned; as it
+is, so long as her timbers will hold together her cargo will keep her
+afloat, and her crew are comparatively safe. But she is by no means a
+strongly-built vessel, and could not by any possibility stand much more
+of the thumping and wrenching which she has just gone through, while
+beating over the Sands.
+
+The captain is still unable to make out where they are; they get a heave
+of the lead, and find that they are in thirteen fathoms of water; it
+must be a sandbank in the middle of a channel that they have just beaten
+over--they had better anchor at once for fear the ship should be driven
+upon another bank.
+
+"Is the anchor clear?"
+
+"No," cries the mate. (It is neglect of such matters as these that loses
+many a fine ship.)
+
+"Get the anchor and cable clear, then, as quickly as you can, or we
+shall be on the sands again; for although the brig is water-logged, the
+wind is driving her fast, and the tide is running with great speed."
+After some delay they get the anchor overboard, and the brig rides to
+it, head to wind.
+
+The men gather together in the stern of the vessel, and group round the
+captain, and as there is no work to be done to keep up their excitement,
+they the more fully realize their danger, and begin to express their
+fears.
+
+They speak of their wives and children, and bemoan their own probable
+fate.
+
+The captain is the greatest sufferer, and the bravest hearted of them
+all.
+
+"Look at me!" he replies. "Have not I got a wife? Have I not got six
+children? Do I want to be taken from them, any more than you do from
+yours? Besides, this is my own ship, you know that, and you know that
+she is all I have got--all I have worked and saved for; if I lose her, I
+lose all I have, and am a poor man again; you may be sure I'll do all I
+can to save the ship and our lives too."
+
+But the men watch how severely the brig pitches in the heavy seas. The
+cable strains as if it would tear itself out of the ship, and the men
+are afraid it will part, or the anchor drag, and think the ship would
+ride more easily if her masts were cut away; they urge the captain to
+have it done; but the ship is not insured, and he, poor man, knows how
+great must be the expense of repairing her if she is saved, and
+naturally does not wish to increase that expense by losing her masts,
+so for some time he resists their entreaties; but at last is forced to
+give an unwilling consent to have the foremast cut away. The carpenter
+seizes the hatchet, a few heavy blows, and a great notch gapes in the
+mast, they cut the weather shrouds, and after the ship has given two or
+three heavy rolls, the mast goes over with a loud crash, falling well
+over the side clear of the vessel; one man receives a nasty gash in the
+cheek, from a splinter from the falling mast, but is not much hurt. They
+cut the rigging of the mast from the vessel, and the mast is speedily
+carried astern by the tide.
+
+The brig certainly now rides more easily; the night passes on, and very
+long and weary the hours seem. The vessel sinks lower and lower in the
+water, right down, indeed, to her deck lining. The captain and the crew
+know how weak she is (like some of the small timber ships, she has no
+lower hold beams), and they fear that as she is full of water, the
+buoyancy of the timber cargo may break up her deck, for she is almost
+all to pieces already, and if the deck bursts, she will break up at
+once.
+
+All hands, therefore, watch eagerly for the daylight, and as soon as
+they are able to see, begin to make a raft; there are a goodly number of
+eleven-feet deals stowed on deck which have been jambed too tight to be
+washed away by the seas, and the crew begin to lash these together as
+rapidly as they can, although, from the rolling and pitching of the
+vessel and from the seas washing so frequently over the deck, it is a
+matter of great difficulty to do so.
+
+As soon as it is daylight the wreck is seen from Margate, and all is at
+once astir down by the jetty and the pier; the life-boat is speedily
+manned and gets under weigh, and two fine luggers race with her to get
+first to the vessel.
+
+But it is a long beat to windward, and against a fresh gale and strong
+tide, and it is doubtful whether either of the boats will be able to
+reach the wreck, at all events, before the turn of the tide, or at the
+least, slack water. The luggers have, as a matter of course, a
+sufficient amount of ballast on board, and are in good sailing trim. The
+life-boat cannot be so heavily ballasted, or she would sink when filled
+with water, or beat to pieces when grounding on the Sands among the
+broken seas; the luggers therefore, make to windward much better than
+the life-boat can, and leave her astern, the life-boat crew soon find
+that it will be impossible for them to reach the wreck, and return to
+Margate; the luggers persevere, and one of them runs alongside the brig
+in fine style; the men on board the other lugger think that the brig is
+drifting and not at anchor, they therefore make too far to leeward,
+astern of her, and cannot beat up into position again.
+
+The men from the first lugger spring on board the wreck; they find that
+she is greatly damaged, and working very heavily as she rolls gunwale
+under; they think she would ride easier with her remaining mast gone,
+and try to persuade the captain to let them cut it away, but he stoutly
+refuses his permission, and the Margate men make the best of it, as it
+is.
+
+They get the anchor up, and passing a hawser on board the lugger, seek
+to tow the brig away from the Sands; knowing the Sands as well as they
+do, they hope to be able to get clear of them and get the brig into deep
+water; but it is very difficult work, for with her rudder gone there is
+no power of steering her, and the weight of the lugger is scarcely
+sufficient to keep her head straight: they make a little progress,
+however, the tide being somewhat in their favour, but the tide is on the
+turn, and they will soon be driven back into their old position, if not
+in worse, and the men begin almost to despair of saving the vessel, when
+to their great satisfaction they see the Ramsgate steamboat and
+life-boat making their way round the North Foreland.
+
+The coastguard officer at Margate, when he saw that the Margate
+life-boat could not reach the brig, and knowing that if any sea got up
+where the vessel was, that the luggers could be of no use, telegraphed
+to Ramsgate that a vessel was on the Knock Sands.
+
+The steamer and life-boat get under weigh at once, and proceed as fast
+as possible to the rescue; there is a nasty sea running off Ramsgate,
+but it is not until they get to the North Foreland that they feel the
+full force of the gale--here the sea is tremendous, and as the steamer
+pitches to it, the waves that break upon her bows fly right over her
+funnel--indeed she buries herself so much in the seas that they have to
+ease her speed considerably to prevent her being completely overrun by
+them.
+
+No one on board the boat knows where they are being towed; "a telegram
+from Margate," was the first news "the life-boat wanted;" and then in
+the hurry and excitement to get under weigh with all possible speed, no
+one on board had thought of asking for further particulars.
+
+The life-boat plunges on, and her crew are ready for the work whatever
+it is, and wherever it is. As they round the North Foreland they see a
+brig, with her foremast gone, in tow of a lugger.
+
+The boatmen cast off the steamer's tow-rope and make for the brig; they
+run in close under her lee, and venture too near to her; she is rolling
+so heavily that her yard-arm comes right over the boat, and the loose
+ropes swaying about catch in the boat's mast; they cannot get the mast
+down, and the brig hangs so heavily they fear that she is going to
+capsize right upon them; an active fellow severs the entangled rope with
+a hatchet, the brig slowly rolls up again, and the life-boat drops
+astern.
+
+The boatmen get on board the brig; there are six of the lugger's men on
+board; they find that the lugger is quite unable to make any way with
+the wreck, and as the tide is on the turn, the vessel is in great peril,
+for the Sands are just under her lee; no time must be lost, they signal
+to the steamer to come at once, the life-boatmen take a hawser on board
+her, and she begins to tow the brig away from the Sands; but the brig's
+rudder is gone, and she is sheering right and left, jerking the hawser
+at the end of each sheer with a strain hard enough to break it, and the
+foremast being cut away, the men cannot carry sail to steady her; she
+must be steered by the boats.
+
+The life-boat and lugger drop astern, each having a rope from the
+opposite quarter of the wreck. The steamer moves ahead, and as the brig
+begins to sheer in one direction, both boats steer in the opposite
+direction, and turning their broadsides to the vessel as much as
+possible, hang with all their weight, and try and keep her stern
+straight; then as the vessel sheers again in the other direction, away
+the boats immediately make across her stern, to check her on the other
+side.
+
+It is difficult and perilous work, this swiftly sheering across the
+brig's stern in the heavy tumble of sea and strong gale, for the boats
+can carry no sails to steady them, or they would not be able to sheer
+quickly from one direction to the other; and thus they are in constant
+danger of coming into violent collision with each other, and once they
+strike together very heavily.
+
+The French crew on board the brig are utterly exhausted with fatigue and
+excitement, and are quite ready to leave their vessel in the hands of
+the English boatmen. The men get the anchor and cable clear and ready
+for use if wanted; it is of no good attempting anything with the pumps,
+for the wreck is water-logged; and away the brig goes plunging and
+rolling with the seas washing over her decks, which are scarcely out of
+the water, and the two boats sheering and tossing astern, all being
+towed by the gallant little steamer.
+
+As the brig gets good way on her, it is easier to steer her by means of
+the boats; but still they do not dare attempt to take her through the
+narrow Cud channel, they therefore find their way through the Gull
+stream, and round the small Brake-buoy, and then make up for the
+entrance of Ramsgate harbour. But the tide has not been long on the
+flood, and the strong northerly wind is checking it; and so they doubt
+whether there is water enough to take her into the harbour, and wait
+until they can see the red light showing on the west pier-head; this is
+the signal that there is ten feet of water at the harbour mouth; the
+weather is so thick that they cannot for some time see the light, and it
+has been up for at least an hour before they can make it out.
+
+They regret every moment's delay, for although it is of no use
+attempting to enter the harbour before there is abundance of depth of
+water, yet the tide is making more and more strongly every minute, and
+it will be a matter of increasing difficulty to steer the brig, in her
+present helpless condition, across the strong tide, and through the
+heavy seas, into the narrow entrance of the harbour.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXI.
+
+THE WRECK BROUGHT IN.
+
+ "God keep those cheery mariners!
+ And temper all the gales,
+ That sweep against the rocky coast
+ To their storm-shattered sails."
+
+ _P. Benjamin._
+
+
+As they tow the wreck near to the harbour they shorten the steamers
+hawser to give the brig less scope for sheering; and as there is not
+room for both the lugger and the life-boat to hang astern and help the
+brig steer, the life-boat casts off and makes in to the harbour.
+
+In spite of the rough cold night, the interest in life-boat work is too
+great for all sympathisers to be driven away from the pier-head; and
+there is a crowd there ready to watch the boat's return, and to welcome
+the men with a cheer.
+
+The steamer approaches cautiously, the brig's head is straight, and she
+seems well under command; a couple of minutes more and all will be safe,
+when suddenly the rush of tide catches the wreck on the bow; she
+overpowers the lugger which is towing astern; round her head flies; she
+lurches heavily forward, and strikes the east pier-head just outside the
+bend; crash goes her jibboom; in vain the steamer tows its hardest, she
+is in the grasp of a strong tide and leaping sea, and again she pitches
+and plunges heavily against the pier: with a terrible wrench her
+bowsprit breaks off short; again, and again, she strikes as she drifts
+round the pier; her figurehead is crushed, her stem broken and twisted,
+her forefoot torn off, and sweeping round she grounds on the Sands
+almost alongside the pier, on the outer side, grinding and rubbing her
+sides against the massive granite walls at each heave and work of the
+sea.
+
+The change of scene on the pier is very sudden, and very great; at one
+moment the people were cheering the crews of the life-boat and steamer
+upon the apparently successful ending of their labours; the next, and
+the work of the brave fellows seems almost more than undone; and there
+is quick dread peril, and deadly strife, and a wild outcry of fear, and
+a very wildness of excitement, in the place of apparent safety and
+congratulation. The people on the pier can look down upon the men on
+board the brig, can see them clinging to the wreck as the seas break
+over them, can hear the brig grinding and thumping against the pier as
+if she would at once break up.
+
+Some of the lookers-on run for the life-buoys, which are hanging upon
+the parapet of the pier and on the pier-house, and throw them down to
+the men on board the brig, others get ropes, and throwing one end down,
+shout to the men to make themselves fast, that they will haul them up.
+
+The poor Frenchmen are almost paralysed by the scene and by
+excitement--they cannot make it out; the harbour-master, Captain Braine,
+has enough to do; he sees the danger of the men on board the brig, but
+he sees more than this, he sees the danger of the crowd at the
+pier-head, for the brig's mainmast is swaying backwards and forwards,
+coming right over the pier as the vessel rolls, and threatens to break
+and come down upon the people as the brig strikes the pier; and if it
+does, it will certainly kill some, perhaps many.
+
+The women are shrieking, men shouting, some running about here and
+there, all anxious to do something, and yet not able to render any
+assistance.
+
+The French sailors are making themselves fast to the end of the ropes
+that have been thrown on board, but the harbour-master sees the great
+danger the men will be in, of being crushed between the wreck and the
+pier, if they make the attempt to be hauled up, the vessel is rolling so
+quickly, and the seas are so heavy, he therefore shouts to them not to
+try it, and the boatmen hold them back.
+
+But still the French sailors struggle to get hold of the ropes, crying
+out, "Much danger, much danger! What shall we do? what shall we do?" The
+outcry of the people on the pier naturally adding greatly to their
+excitement.
+
+During this time, which has occupied but very few minutes, the steamer
+still keeps hold of the hawser. She has been swung against the inside of
+the pier by the strain of the wreck upon her cable, and by the eddy of
+the tide, while the wreck has been beating against the outside; now she
+steams out again with all speed, gets her head round, brings a gradual
+strain upon the hawser, and makes every effort to tow the brig away from
+the pier and off the Sands; after a few seconds of hard tugging the brig
+begins to move, and they get her into deep water again.
+
+But during this time the crew of the Margate lugger have been in equal,
+if not greater, danger than the men on board the brig.
+
+As soon as the men on board the lugger saw the brig sweep and crash
+against the pier, they cast off their tow rope, but before they could
+hoist any sail, the way they had on the boat, and the rush of the tide,
+carried the lugger almost between the vessel, as she swung round, and
+the pier; the men, however, escaped that danger, and indeed death, but
+the boat was swept to the back of the pier, and in the eddy of the tide
+was carried into the broken water; there she rolls in the trough of the
+sea; wave after wave catches and sweeps her up towards the pier as if to
+crush her against it; but each time the rebound of the water from the
+pier acts as a fender, and saves her from destruction; but she is an
+open boat, and if one big wave leaps on board it will fill her, and she
+must sink at once; and the seas around her are very wild, the surf from
+their crests breaks into her continually; the people on the pier see her
+extreme peril; some run to the life-boat men who are preparing to moor
+the boat, and shout to them to hasten out--that the brig is breaking up,
+and that the lugger will be swamped; before, however, the life-boat can
+get out, the brig is towed clear of the pier, and the lugger having
+gradually drifted to the end of the pier, the men are able to get up a
+corner of the fore-sail; it cants the lugger's head round; the men get
+the fore-sail well up; it fills, she draws away from the pier, and away
+from the broken water, and is clear.
+
+The steamer has the brig in tow, but now the wreck has no boats to help
+her steer, and she therefore yaws about with tremendous lurches.
+
+The boatmen have all this time been working their utmost; their danger
+and the scene of excitement around them having no other effect upon
+them, than to make them the more cool and determined to do everything
+they can to save the vessel and themselves.
+
+They rig up a stay-sail upon the tottering mainmast, and as soon as the
+steamer gets a little way on the brig, they try and steer by it, raising
+and lowering the sail as the brig sheers one way or the other, and doing
+their utmost to keep her head straight.
+
+A very heavy sea strikes her on the bow, and she lurches right across
+the tide; at that moment the steamer's hawser tightens and strains, and
+the whole weight of the brig as she lies broadside to the seas dragging
+upon the rope, it breaks in a weak place, where it has got chafed
+against the pier.
+
+The brig falls into the trough of the sea; the waves begin to make a
+clean breach over her; water-logged and helpless as she is, with her
+deck down almost to the level of the sea; the men on board can now do
+but little, for time after time, as the seas sweep her decks, they have
+enough to do to hold on; still the boatmen on board work when they can,
+for they see that their lives depend upon getting the vessel in tow of
+the steamer before she can strike the Dyke Bank, which is just under her
+lee.
+
+They make all haste to haul in the broken end of the cable; they already
+have a good part of the cable on board, which they hauled in when they
+were about making for the harbour.
+
+They tell the French captain to get all his men to work, and have the
+ship's hawser ready, but the brig rapidly drifts before the heavy gale
+and with the tide towards the Dyke Bank, over which the seas are running
+with fearful violence, the poor shattered wreck must indeed be very soon
+broken up altogether if she once strikes amid that terrible rage of
+waters, and there, too, the waves will sweep over her with a violence
+sufficient to sweep the men from her decks; they must expect the
+tottering mast to go at the first shock; there would be no refuge in the
+rigging, and the deck would be virtually under water; it is doubtful
+indeed if she strikes whether the men will be able to hold on, even
+while the life-boat, which is close at hand, can reach them.
+
+The life-boatmen had made out to the rescue of the lugger, but when they
+saw that she was out of danger, and that the brig was under tow of the
+steamer, they put back, but directly the harbour-master sees that the
+brig is again adrift, he hastens to order the life-boat out once more to
+the rescue. Many of the excited people on the pier throng round the
+harbour-master, and entreat him to order the life-boatmen to take all
+the boatmen and the crew off the wreck at once.
+
+But the harbour-master knows the boatmen too well to think that they
+will be content to leave the wreck, whatever the danger may be, while
+there remains a single chance of saving her; he therefore tells the
+life-boatmen to keep as near to the wreck as possible.
+
+The captain of the steamer, directly he sees the hawser break, realizes
+the deadly peril the wreck and those on board it are in; without a
+moment's delay, he orders his crew to haul in the broken end of the
+hawser, and as speedily as possible to back the steamer down to the
+wreck, which is now within one hundred yards of the Dyke Sand. She is
+rolling heavily broadside to the seas, which are making a clean sweep
+over her; the men on board are scarcely able to keep the deck for the
+wash of water, a few minutes more--two or three--and she will be right
+in upon the breakers; round the pier-head dashes the life-boat, leaping
+the seas as she is carried swiftly before the gale, she makes for the
+wreck, and is ready to plunge into the surf to the rescue of the crew
+directly the unfortunate vessel touches the Sands. But the steamer may
+yet be in time to save her: now she is close to her, and they throw the
+end of a rope on board the wreck; the boatmen on board fasten a cable to
+it, the steamer's crew haul it in with all possible speed, the steamer
+moves slowly a-head, the cable gets taught, the steamer tugs and
+strains, but it is with the greatest difficulty she can get the brig's
+head straight; now it comes slowly round, but as the wreck faces the
+tide, she sheers right and left; they see that the wreckage of her
+bowsprit and jibboom are right across her bow entangled in her
+cut-water; it is this that causes her to sheer so much, and to hang so
+heavily that the steamer cannot make any way with her, or keep her head
+straight for one moment.
+
+The English boatmen stand ready to hoist the stay-sail, as soon as the
+steamer can move her ahead, and keep her at all to the wind.
+
+The poor French sailors give way to much excitement in the wildness and
+peril of the scene; clasping their hands and shouting; and there is
+little wonder that their fears should be so aroused. "Hold! hold, good
+rope, for if you break, nothing can save the ship; in a short time she
+must be torn utterly to pieces by the waves now breaking so wildly,
+almost directly under her lee!"
+
+Each time the brig sheers heavily to one side or the other, she is
+brought up with a jerk that makes the steamer tremble from stem to
+stern, and tries the strength of the cable to the utmost.
+
+The life-boat continues to cruise round the brig, keeping as near as
+possible, but taking care to avoid her, as she sheers swiftly from side
+to side.
+
+Suddenly the wreckage clears itself from across the vessel's bow, and to
+the joy of all, the vessel ceases to sheer so violently, and rests for a
+minute straight in her course.
+
+The boatmen on board at once hoist the stay-sail; it steadies her, and
+she forges ahead, and they battle their way through the waves, round the
+west pier-head, and a little out of the rush of the worst of the seas;
+here, five brave fellows come off in a small boat, and bring a line to
+her from the pier; with this they haul the second hawser from the vessel
+to the pier; they get another hawser from the pier to the wreck, and as
+the tide is setting her in a direction away from the pier, they can hold
+her fast by these hawsers; the steamer now moves round the wreck, and
+gets a rope from her stern, but in the meantime they have made the
+life-boat's cable fast to the stern of the wreck, and passed it on to
+the pier; the crowd of people on the pier lay hold of it, and begin to
+pull their hardest, and succeed in moving the wreck fast astern; with
+such energy do they pull that the small cable breaks in their hands, but
+the steamer has by this time again got hold of the vessel, and tows her
+safely into the harbour, and the long hours of peril and of struggling
+against the storm are at an end.
+
+A miserable figure the poor wreck looks, when she is hauled up on the
+slip-way for repairs. Her masts are out of her, her bow crushed, her
+stern twisted and broken, the oakum is streaming out of her seams, her
+timbers are started, her rudder is gone, she looks truly the very wreck
+she is. Indeed, it was nothing but the fact of her being timber laden
+that prevented her going down immediately after striking the first time
+upon the Margate Sands, or has kept her afloat during any one of the
+many terrible struggles with the seas, that she has had since to endure.
+The brig was ultimately repaired, and sent to sea; but to whatever
+extent the general average upon the insured cargo contributed to the
+bill, the balance required must have made a sad hole in the poor
+brave-hearted captain's savings.
+
+The Margate and Ramsgate men got some few pounds each for salvage: the
+ship and cargo were not very valuable, and there were many to share the
+small amount awarded, so there was not much for each one. But the men
+were thankful, on account of the captain, as well as on their own
+account, to have saved the vessel through so much peril, and as a
+result, to have anything at all to share.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXII.
+
+THE WRECK OF THE "PROVIDENTIA."
+
+ "What dangers press'd, when seas ran mountain high,
+ When tempests raved, and horrors veiled the sky;
+ When prudence fail'd, when courage grew dismayed,
+ When the strong fainted, and the wicked prayed;--
+ Then in the yawning gulf far down we drove,
+ And gazed upon the billowy mount above;
+ Till up that mountain swinging with the gale,
+ We view'd the horrors of the watery vale!"
+
+ _Crabbe._
+
+
+A dark stormy December night had been followed by a gloomy morning, a
+heavy gale had been blowing for some hours from the north-east, and
+thick drifting snow-squalls still further threw heavy shadows over the
+sea, and added greatly to the perils of the dangerous navigation around
+the Goodwin.
+
+The men on Ramsgate pier said to each other, "It is _likely weather_."
+Likely for disaster and for the need of their services; they therefore
+keep a careful watch, but the snow and drifting fog-clouds shut out the
+Goodwin Sands and the light-vessels from their view, and so the men can
+only wait on, speculating upon the possibility of some unseen tragedy
+being worked out amid the darkness and the wrath of waters that surround
+the Goodwin.
+
+It is now after breakfast-time, about nine o'clock, the weather is too
+bad for much ordinary work to be going on, and so a large number of
+boatmen assemble in the look-out houses and at the head of the pier
+watching the storm.
+
+Many are the spy-glasses which are every now and then pointed seaward,
+scanning any break in the storm-drift; three or four men are at the end
+of the pier by the watch-house; one of them fancies that he can make out
+a dark line 'mid the grey gloom; he watches carefully, a sheet of fog
+lifts for a moment; "Yes, there is! I see a ship on the Goodwin!"
+
+"Where? Where?" and another man looks at the direction of his spy-glass,
+and points his own the same way. No; he can see nothing; and the man
+himself can now see nothing; it was just a glimpse, that was all, and
+the cloud closed in upon the Sands and wrapt them in darkness again.
+
+"But are you positive you saw anything?" they ask the man.
+
+"I am just as sure of it as I am that I am standing here."
+
+"What was she like?"
+
+"She seemed a large ship with only two masts standing, and high up on
+the Sands."
+
+"Well, if you saw her once, and are certain of it, once is as good as
+fifty times. Away then for the life-boat."
+
+Hurrying up the pier to give the alarm, they shout to some boatmen who
+are at work helping to stow cargo on board a Dutch steamer--the
+_Orient_: "A vessel on the Goodwin; Life-boat! Life-boat!" Immediately
+the men throw down whatever they have in their hands, spring to the
+gunwale, and are out of the ship, up the steps, on the pier, and running
+for the life-boat in a moment; and this to the intense astonishment of
+the Dutch mate, who had not heard the cry of life-boat. He runs along
+the deck on to the poop, and shakes his fist at the men, shouting after
+them, "You be bad men you! You be bad men! What for you run away? You
+come here work no more!"
+
+The honest-hearted fellow was, however, more than appeased, when he was
+told that it was to rush on board the life-boat; to go out in that wild
+dark storm and terrible sea to the rescue of life, that the men had so
+suddenly deserted their work and fled from the vessel.
+
+One of the pier men runs to the harbour-master, and reports that a large
+ship has been seen ashore on the Goodwin; the harbour-master hurries to
+the pier-head, but the lift in the storm has settled down thicker than
+ever; he can see nothing; he, and all with him, listen attentively for
+any report of a gun from the Goodwin light-vessels, but can hear
+nothing; they cross-question the man who saw the wreck. The
+harbour-master thinks he may have been mistaken--that it was probably a
+ship sailing through the Gull Channel that he saw. No! the man is
+positive that it was a ship on the Goodwin, and nothing else; and so
+the harbour-master, although they can hear no signal from the
+light-vessels, decides upon sending the life-boat, and orders the
+coxswain to proceed to sea.
+
+Rapid preparation for the start has been going on all this time; and
+very speedily steamer and life-boat are away in the dark storm speeding
+their way to the Goodwin Sands. They get to the North Sand light-ship
+about eleven o'clock, and find a very heavy sea running in the
+neighbourhood of the Sands, with frequent snow-squalls sweeping along.
+
+The men on board the light-vessel say that both they, and the men on
+board the Gull light-ship, have been making signals since daylight. (The
+roar of the storm, and the wind not being on shore, the guns were not
+heard, and the weather was too thick for any signals to be seen). They
+report that they had seen a ship on shore on the South-East Spit of the
+Sands.
+
+Away go steamer and life-boat, the crew of both alike eager to make up
+for lost time, and they soon discover the vessel they are in search of
+looming out in the mist.
+
+They see that she is a complete wreck, and that she is settled down upon
+the Sands, with her bow to the seas; her mizen-mast is gone close to the
+deck; the seas are running quite over her as they break upon her bow;
+they mount up and fly over her fore-yard and race along her deck,
+breaking again upon her deck-house, which they smother in foam.
+
+There are no sailors to be seen lashed to the rigging, and it is
+doubtful whether they can have found shelter anywhere on deck, so great
+is the rush of water over the ship. Indeed, the life-boat men think that
+it is very improbable that any of the crew can be left on board.
+Nevertheless, they determine to get on board the vessel, and see if they
+can find any poor exhausted seaman still clinging to some portion of the
+wreck.
+
+There is a very heavy sea running, and they have a short consultation as
+to the best method of getting alongside the vessel; they determine to go
+in upon the lee quarter, and make preparation for so doing. Now they
+make in for the wreck; they sail in swiftly; plunge in through the
+broken water; their anchor is all ready; they watch their distance. Over
+with it; lower the foresail; and they are about to run the life-boat
+right alongside the vessel, when the man in the bow shouts, "Up with
+your helm; up with it hard; sheer off, sheer off!" Up the helm is;
+swiftly the boat answers, and bears away from the vessel.
+
+The mizen-mast, which had been broken off short, has fallen over the
+quarter of the vessel, and become entangled in the Sands, and with the
+ship's side, and is standing out at right angles to the wreck, right in
+the way the life-boat was steering. If it had been night-time the boat
+would have been steered in right upon the wreck of the mast and yards,
+when in every probability she would have been stove and rolled over by
+the seas; the men would then have been washed out of her, and it would
+have been impossible for them to have got back to her again, against the
+rush of sea and tide and entangled as she would have been in the
+wreckage of the mast, she could not have floated down to them; as it is,
+this very catastrophe nearly happens, for the men hardly see the danger
+in time; it is a moment of great peril, for the boat is being tossed
+about violently in the broken water, and becomes somewhat entangled in
+the wreckage; the men lay hold of the cable, and haul upon it with all
+their strength, and do what they can to check the way of the boat, and
+help her head round; now they get a good cant out, they throw out some
+coils of the cable in one cast, they sheer out well, and get clear of
+the wreck of the mizen-mast; the seas catch the boat and drive it astern
+of the vessel, the cable runs out its full length and brings the boat up
+with a strong jerk. The men, on looking at the wreck, are glad to find
+that there are some of her crew still alive; they can see three men and
+a boy crouching down, under the shelter of the deck-house, but they must
+be but a small proportion of the original crew of the ship, for she is a
+large vessel, and must have had a crew of certainly not fewer than
+fifteen or sixteen men. "Thank God," say the life-boat men, "that they
+are not all gone, and that we are here in time to try and save some."
+
+The shipwrecked men have been crouching there for some hours, and have
+been getting more and more wretched, cold, wet, exhausted, and hopeless;
+every now and then they heard the loud boom of a gun from one of the
+light-vessels, but no life-boat came, and the wreck might at any moment
+break up; they at first felt confident that a life-boat would certainly
+soon come to their rescue, and had prepared for her coming by getting a
+life-buoy with a long line fastened to it, ready to throw overboard.
+
+But the hours passed by, the seas broke over the vessel with increasing
+violence, the storm grew more and more wild, they could not understand
+why the life-boat did not come, but she did not, and they began to
+despair of being saved.
+
+Suddenly, as they crouch under the deck-house in their hopeless misery,
+they see the life-boat swing round on the tide, and come up to her cable
+just astern of the ship; never were men more agreeably surprised; it is
+as a reprieve from death; and they feel their blood course again through
+their veins, their strength returns, and they start up ready for action;
+the life-boat men give them a cheer, which they answer with glad cries
+of welcome.
+
+The men on board the wreck throw the life-buoy and line to the life-boat
+men; there is a tremendous tumble of sea, the life-boat is flying about
+in all directions, and it is not for some time, and not until after much
+trouble, that they succeed in getting the life-buoy on board the boat.
+
+All hands lay hold of the rope, and do their utmost to haul the
+life-boat nearer to the wreck; but the heavy gale, the rush of the sea,
+and the strong tide, are all directly against her, her cable is
+straining to the utmost, and they cannot get her to move in the least;
+they struggle on, and on, but it is all in vain.
+
+"Pull, men, pull! now all together, as the seas pass; now, try and get
+a foot or two ahead." Not an inch, strain and pull as they will.
+
+"Look out! look out! let go; take care of yourselves!"
+
+Too late; a tremendous sea comes rushing over the vessel, right over the
+life-boat, beats her back with a wrench and jerk that tears one of the
+timber heads, to which the rope is fastened, right out of her, knocks
+down by its great weight five or six of the men, who are holding on to
+the rope, hurts two or three of them somewhat severely, and buries the
+boat in its very flood of water; for a moment she is swamped, and beaten
+right away from the wreck; she lifts again, in a few seconds rises to
+her water-line; she frees herself of water, the men spring to their
+feet.
+
+"Are all there? Are any washed out of her?" "All right! all right!"
+"Thank God! Now at it again, my men."
+
+Happily the anchor still holds, and the boat's cable brings the boat up.
+But what is to be done to save the poor crew? They feel that it is quite
+impossible for them to haul the boat any nearer to the ship.
+
+To their great surprise, they see the captain spring up from the lee of
+the deck-house, hurriedly take off his oilskin coat, throw it into the
+water, and then jumping on the gunwale, grasp the hawser that holds the
+boat, and slide down it into the boiling sea. A huge wave breaks over
+him, and washes him away from the rope; he now tries to swim to the
+boat, but the life-boat is not directly astern, the sheer she has to her
+cable that is fastened to the anchor which was thrown over some
+distance to the side of vessel, prevents her dropping right astern; and
+although the captain has but to swim a few yards out of the direction of
+the sweep of sea and tide, it is impossible for him to manage it. He is
+perfectly overwhelmed by the boil of sea, tossed wildly up and down,
+wave after wave beating over him, it is all that he can do to keep his
+head above water, and cannot guide his course in the least; the boatmen
+try all they can to make the boat sheer towards him, so as to reach him,
+or to throw him a rope, but it is impossible, they cannot get
+sufficiently near; and in a few seconds they see him swept rapidly by in
+the swift tide; Jarman, the coxswain of the boat, seizes a life-buoy,
+and throws it with all his force towards him; the wind catches it and
+helps the throw; it falls near him; he makes a spring forward and
+reaches it; the men gladly see that he has got it; they see him put his
+two hands upon one side as if to get upon it; as he leans forward it
+falls over his head like a hoop; he gets his arms through it, and
+shouting to the boatmen "All right," he waves his hand as if to beckon
+to them to follow him, and goes floating down in the strong tide and
+among the raging leaping seas in a strange wild dance, that threatens
+indeed to be a dance of death.
+
+It is with deep feelings of dismay and sorrow that the boatmen see him
+thus drifting away, sea after sea breaking over him; they think it
+impossible that he can live long; they watch him as far as they can see
+him; he rises now and again on a sea, and waves his hand to them, but
+soon disappears from their view, and they seem to have wished him for
+ever good-bye, for if they go after him at once they will not be able to
+get back to the ship again, perhaps for hours; and there are two men and
+a boy still on board whom they must not desert; they must do what they
+can for these poor fellows first, and then they will hasten away in
+search of the poor captain, although they have but little hope of then
+finding him alive, even if they find him at all.
+
+At once they are reminded of the dread peril the men on board the ship
+are in; for a tremendous crash like a peal of thunder startles them all;
+and looking round they see the tall mainmast of the ship fall swiftly
+over on the port side of the vessel.
+
+The men on board give a loud cry--the terrible crash and rend and shock
+of the falling mast appals them to the uttermost; it is as if the wreck
+was breaking to pieces in one vast wrench beneath their feet. The chief
+mate springs wildly to the starboard quarter, and seizes the end of the
+mainbrace, which is hanging there; he makes it fast round his waist; and
+with a rapid spring, and with arms outstretched towards the boat, he
+jumps into the sea; he is a fine powerful young man, and a very good
+swimmer; but what can he do in a tide and sea so tremendous that twelve
+strong men cannot haul the boat one foot against them? and so a fearful
+tragedy is worked out before the boatmen's eyes; they make every effort
+to sheer the boat towards the man, but in vain; the tide sweeps him at
+once away on the lee-bow of the boat; he struggles fearfully hard for
+his life; the sea takes him and throws him away to the full extent of
+the rope, which tightens round his waist; the strain of the rope draws
+him back a little; he falls in the trough of the sea; he is just in the
+thick of the surf, in the break of the waves, and they curl over him and
+beat him down beneath their weight, and then again the next rushing wave
+catches him and flings him out, till he is brought up with a jerk as the
+rope tightens, that seems almost to tear him in pieces; now he is thrown
+high in the air on the crest of a wave, now he is buried in a sea,
+rolled over and over; sheering here and there, as the tangled waves
+catch him, first on one side, then on the other, but never nearer the
+life-boat; every now and then he strikes out wildly as if to make a last
+effort, and cries aloud in his agony and despair. It is indeed a most
+piteous sight, and it moves the boatmen to the very heart; the poor
+drowning fellow so near and they unable to render him the least help.
+
+They cannot remain doing nothing, although they feel fully assured that
+all they attempt must be in vain; they haul with all their power on the
+cable to try and get nearer to the ship when they might sheer down upon
+the poor fellow; but the sea is raging over them as much as ever, and
+they cannot get the boat to move at all; the waves rush over the boat in
+rapid succession, and as they do so the men have to crouch down and
+cling with all their force to the thwarts, and struggle hard to prevent
+being washed out of her. As each sea passes, up they spring and again
+try to haul in the cable; the poor drowning sailor is ahead of the boat,
+on the starboard bow; if the line which he has round his waist were only
+a few fathoms longer he might be saved; it would be madness for any of
+the boatmen to jump overboard to get at him, they would be instantly
+swept astern of the boat, without a hope of saving him, and at great and
+useless risk of their own lives; they try and throw the lead-line over
+the rope which holds the poor fellow; hoping that if they can succeed in
+doing so, that he may manage to get hold of it, and loosing himself from
+the rope which fastens him to the ship, be hauled on board the boat; but
+the boat is pitching and tossing so much that it is hard work attempting
+to throw the line, but again and again they make the effort. "Now he
+rises on a wave: now try; heave with a will, well clear of his head. Ah!
+missed again; look out, hold on all;" a wave rushes over them, boat and
+all; another half-minute and they make another attempt; no! all in vain,
+each time it falls short; the struggle cannot last long; strong and
+young as the man is, his strength cannot possibly endure long in such a
+conflict; his cries grow more feeble and soon cease; they see him try
+and get back to the ship, climbing up the rope, but his strength fails,
+and he falls back; his arms and legs are still tossed wildly about, but
+it is by the action of the waves; his head drops and sinks; yes! it is
+all over!--all over! with him; and it is with intense sorrow that the
+boatmen realize that all hope of saving him is at an end--that he is
+dead.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIII.
+
+HARDLY SAVED.
+
+ "Much would it please you sometimes to explore
+ The peaceful dwellings of our borough poor;
+ To view a sailor just returned from sea,
+ His wife beside, a child on either knee,
+ And others crowding near, that none may lose
+ The smallest portion of the welcome news....
+ The trembling children look with steadfast eyes,
+ And panting, sob involuntary sighs;
+ And sleep awhile his torpid touch delays,
+ And all is joy, and piety, and praise."
+
+ _Crabbe._
+
+
+The second mate and cabin-boy still remain on board the wreck; they have
+watched with the greatest horror and dread the terrible death of the
+chief mate, and are themselves almost in absolute despair.
+
+The seas continue to wash over the ship with great violence; the
+deck-house, under the protection of which the sailors have been
+crouching, begins to break up, and wrench, and tear, and is carried away
+piecemeal; the second mate, as the wreck wrestles and writhes beneath
+him, under the rush of a huge wave, fears that it is going to break up
+altogether, that the ship's last moment is come, and he throws himself
+upon the rope by which the life-boat is made fast to the ship, and
+begins to make his way along it; it is almost level with the water, for
+the wreck has so worked herself down in the Sands that her gunwale is
+but four or five feet above the sea; the breakers rush over the poor
+fellow as he painfully struggles on; he is again and again buried by the
+waves, but he clings on; and half working his way, half carried by the
+seas and tide, he reaches the high bow of the life-boat, which is
+leaping, and falling, and jerking, tearing the hawser to which the
+sailor is clinging, up and down through the seas, as if trying its
+utmost violence to jerk him from his hold.
+
+But still he holds on, his hands convulsively clutching the rope as his
+body is being swayed and thrown violently about; he is exhausted, and
+breathless--he is half drowned; his face is pale as death, his jaw
+drops, he seems about to swoon; in another moment he will be gone; he
+gives a wild despairing look at the life-boat, and as the waves dash him
+against it, makes an effort to grasp it; the man in the bow of the boat
+has been watching his every movement, has shuddered with dismay as he
+saw the seas wash over him, expecting him to be carried away in the
+strong tide. No! he still grasps the rope, and at last is within reach;
+in one spring, and with a cry to his mates, "Hold me! hold me!" the
+boatman throws himself upon the raised foredeck of the life-boat, and
+with his body half stretched over the stem, he grasps the collar of the
+sailor; the drowning man throws his arm around the boatman's neck, and
+clings to him convulsively, by his weight dragging the man's head down
+and burying it in the water; but the brave fellow clings as hard to the
+half-dead sailor as the sailor does to him; the seas wash bodily over
+them and over the bow of the boat; up and down the boat plunges them
+both, but he still holds on; three or four of the boatmen have hold of
+his legs, and are doing their utmost to pull him back into the boat, but
+they cannot do so, and so the struggle goes on; it is only as the boat
+rises on a wave and throws her bow up in the air that the men can
+breathe.
+
+Now a shout of horror, and a cry--"Look-out! look out! sheer the boat,
+quick! quick! port--port your helm!" For right down upon the bow of the
+boat, tossing on the huge seas, and borne swiftly by the tide comes the
+wreck of one of the ship's largest and heaviest boats; it has been
+entangled in the mast, which is hanging over the side of the ship, but
+it has now washed free, and comes driving down as if to stave in the bow
+of the boat, and crush to death the two poor fellows hanging on to the
+side:--the boat sheers a little; a cross wave catches the wreckage, and
+it just sweeps clear. Thank God! is the cry of every man in the boat.
+
+The boatmen cannot get the two men in over the high bow of the boat, and
+the poor fellows are drowning fast; and so they drag the life-boatman by
+his legs along the side of the boat, he still clinging to the sailor,
+and get him to the waist of the boat where the gunwale is very low; some
+of the men can now catch hold of the sailor, they drag him on board, and
+the boatman is pulled in by his legs. The brave fellow is very
+exhausted by his great and gallant exertions; but he has saved the man's
+life, and that is every consolation to him; the mate of the vessel is
+almost unconscious. If the boatman had not clung to him as the seas
+broke over them both, he must have let go his hold and soon have been
+beaten under by the waves, for he was quite incapable of any further
+exertion.
+
+The boatmen again turn their attention to the wreck; they have been so
+much engaged with the two men struggling in the water, that they have
+not been able to think of the poor boy still clinging to the vessel in
+loneliness and fear.
+
+The deck-house has by this time been completely washed away, and no
+longer affords him any protection. The poor little fellow is clinging to
+the gunwale, holding on to the cleats; and he is calling out in good
+English, and in the most piteous tones, O save me! O save me! O do save
+me! He is only thirteen years old. The boatmen answer him back; and much
+as they have passed through, it affects them very deeply to see the poor
+child in his fear, and misery, and danger, to hear his cries and sobs,
+and not to know how to help him. Continually he is completely buried in
+the seas, and it seems wonderful that he can hold on; each time the
+waves rush over the wreck, the boatmen expect to find him washed away
+like a cork, but he still holds on, and again and again his piteous
+pleading voice is heard 'mid the roar of the storm--"O save me! O save
+me! O be quick and save me!"--"What can we do? What can we do?" the
+boatmen ask each other in tones of real sorrow and dismay; there is not
+a man among them who is not ready to risk his own life to save the boy,
+but nothing can be done. It is impossible for them to climb on board the
+wreck by the rope with which the life-boat is fastened to the vessel,
+for the wreck is now so overrun by the tide that the bend of the rope is
+continually under water, and the wreckage of the vessel's masts is
+washing over it; moreover, although it was possible for a man to come
+down the rope, the sea and tide making with him, it would be impossible
+for a man to work his way up the rope against such a tremendous rush of
+water and breaking surf as are continually sweeping over it. The steamer
+is not in sight, or they might be tempted to go to her, get towed to
+windward again, and try to run in upon the wreck and grapple her closer;
+but this would be almost impossible, so wild is the sea on the weather
+side, and on the lee side the wreck of one of the masts is flying about
+in the broken water in a way, which would at once prove fatal to the
+life-boat if she got entangled with it.
+
+And so all they can do is to wait on, till the tide slackens, when
+perhaps they will be able to haul the life-boat up to the wreck, and
+save the boy. But while the tide runs so fiercely they can only wait,
+and watch the poor little lad. They do not forget the captain of the
+vessel, they will go in search of him by-and-by, but they conclude that
+all life must have been beaten out of him long since; and they must not
+leave the living to go and search for the body of one whom they think
+must very certainly be by this time dead.
+
+A short time, and the tide rapidly slackens, an eddy comes rushing
+through some channel in the Sands, and the boat begins to sheer about
+wildly; and is soon in danger of being crushed against the wreckage of
+the masts, which is heaving and tossing about among the very heaviest of
+the seas.
+
+"We must make an effort soon," the coxswain cries; "make ready, my men;
+try and keep the wreckage clear; haul the boat up to the ship sharp,
+when I tell you: we will soon have the poor little chap."
+
+Scarcely are the words shouted out by the coxswain when some of the men
+give a cry--"What's that! look out! yes, he is overboard, washed over by
+that big sea. Where is he? where is he? There he is! No! only his cap,
+there he lifts on that sea--he is coming straight for the boat."--From
+the change and eddy of the tide, the rush of the sea past the boat is
+not nearly as rapid as it was, and the poor boy comes floating slowly
+from the ship; once or twice he has been rolled under by the waves, now
+he is on the surface again, and near the boat. "Here he comes! look! on
+that wave! Lost! no, he floats again; slacken the hawsers; now he is
+within reach, carefully, quick; now you have got him; he is making no
+effort, and floating with his head under water;" a boatman manages to
+hook his jacket with a long boat-hook, and pulls him towards the
+boat--gently the men lift him in, sorrowfully; and tears are in the eyes
+of more than one, as they look upon the small face. "Poor little chap!
+too late! too late! he is gone," they say--and think that the delicate
+little face and slender childlike form suggest that he is fitted rather
+for quiet home scenes, and home care, than for such scenes of hardship
+and peril as he has had to endure.
+
+"Now, my men," shouts the coxswain; "stations all! put the poor boy down
+here in the stern-sheets. If we do not look sharp we shall be driven
+upon the wreck, and likely enough all lost."
+
+"Ay! ay! all right. Get the foresail clear! All clear,--hoist as the
+boat sheers; stand by to cut the cable, and ship's ropes; hoist away!
+Now she pays round; cut the cable; all gone; round the boat flies; away
+she goes before the wind. Make all fast. Now come and look to the poor
+lad again;" and some of the boatmen with tender fatherly pity in their
+hearts, take up the little fellow. They chafe his hands and rub his back
+and limbs, and his chest over his heart, with strong rum, put a little
+rum to his lips, and persevering as well as they can, following the
+instructions given to all life-boat men, for recovering the apparently
+drowned, after about half an hour they have the joy of seeing him show
+signs of life; the men who can be spared from working the boat continue
+their care of him; his circulation returns, and he can drink a little
+water; some of the men take off their jackets which have been kept dry
+by their waterproof overalls, and wrap him up in them; they then spread
+the mizen sail above him, to prevent the seas breaking over him; and the
+poor lad lies quiet, gradually recovering his strength.
+
+During this time, the coxswain and the men have been consulting about
+the poor captain, who floated away with the life-buoy round him some two
+hours before; and they determine to run down the Stream-reach in search
+of him, dead or alive. But alive scarcely for one moment can they hope
+to find him.
+
+The Stream-reach or Stream-wreckage, as it is called, is where the
+currents setting down on either side of the Sands meet on the highest
+part.
+
+Most of the wreckage is washed up into it, and what remains of a lost
+ship or cargo will often be kept in this stream, and float away in one
+long line some miles to leeward. Along this Stream-reach, and in the
+heaviest of the seas, the men steer the life-boat, all keeping a keen
+look-out for the body of the lost captain.
+
+They look back at the wreck several times as they speed away; and they
+soon see the foremast of the vessel go over the side; the hull of the
+vessel seems also to heave over, and that is the last that is seen of
+the _Providentia_, for by the next morning her hull is completely torn
+to pieces, the lower part buried in the Sands, and the remaining portion
+utterly swept away.
+
+They run down the Stream-reach for about two miles; when one of the men
+fancies that he can see an arm waving. All look in the direction pointed
+out; and to their astonishment they see the captain in the life-buoy; as
+he rises on the sea, he shouts to them and again waves his arm.
+
+The coxswain at once steers the boat for him, but the seas are so heavy
+that they knock the boat to leeward, and they just miss him.
+
+The brave fellow shouts, "All right!" as they pass a few yards from
+him.
+
+The boatmen lose no time; they take the mizen-sail which covers the mate
+and lad, set it with all possible haste, shake out all reefs in the
+foresail, head the boat round, and sail well to windward of the captain;
+almost capsizing the boat under her press of canvas, so eager are they;
+they keep a good look-out for him, for the seas are leaping so violently
+that it is a hard thing to keep the poor fellow in view, and at last
+they lose sight of him altogether. As soon as the boat is well to
+windward they make across the Stream-reach, then sail down it, and soon
+catch sight of the captain again; they lower the mizen and run straight
+for him; soon they down with the foresail to lessen the speed of the
+boat, for fear they should over run him, and manage to drop gently down
+by his side.
+
+They lay hold of him and drag him into the boat; the exertion of being
+pulled in over the side of the boat, and the reaction after his fearful
+time of suffering and suspense, is too much for his remaining strength,
+and he seems dying in the men's hands; they try and get him to swallow a
+little rum, but he cannot do so, and faints.
+
+The men now set sail and make for the Gull light-ship; they see the
+steamer coming round the South Sands Head in search of them; she takes
+the boat in tow, and they proceed towards Ramsgate. In the meanwhile
+some of the men have been doing all they can for the captain, rubbing
+his back and limbs, and doing all they possibly can to restore his
+circulation; he soon gets a little better, and is able to tell them
+that his ship was a Russian ship, the _Providentia_, from Finland, and
+that he is a Russian Fin; this last fact enables the men to account for
+his wonderful powers of endurance in his long exposure to the beating of
+the waves and to the coldness of the water, for the Finlanders are the
+hardiest of all sailors. He also tells the men, that the _Providentia_
+was a full rigged ship of 700 tons, bound from Newcastle to the
+Mediterranean with coals. That they had run ashore about eleven or
+twelve o'clock the night before, in thick weather. That they made
+signals, which the light-vessels answered. That they had seen the
+light-vessels signal to the shore; and as he knew that he was near
+Ramsgate, he felt sure that the life-boat would come out to their
+rescue; he therefore tried to persuade the crew, eleven in number, to
+remain by the ship; but that they took the big boat, and left the ship
+in so heavy a sea that he feared they must all be lost (they were blown
+over on the French coast, and at last got into Boulogne). Upon reaching
+Ramsgate the captain, mate, and the boy were carried to the Sailors'
+Home, being too weak to walk, and were well cared for.
+
+The captain made a long statement as to the gallant services of the
+life-boat men, and of his deep gratitude to them.
+
+We may as well add, that as some of the men, who had run away so
+suddenly from their work on board the Dutch steamer, to make a rush for
+the life-boat, were walking upon the pier, they saw the Dutch mate
+hurrying to them, evidently in a state of excitement. Halloo! What's up
+now? think the men, remembering how the mate had shouted after them as
+they left the vessel. Halloo! What's up now? but the honest fellow comes
+to them, and shaking them heartily by the hands, says with deep
+feeling,--"Me sorry me called you bad men for running away from the
+steamer. You good men! you good men! _Me give you_ more work if me can."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXIV.
+
+SAVED AT LAST. THE FATAL GOODWIN SANDS.
+
+ "There are to whom that ship was dear
+ For love and kindred's sake,
+ When these the voice of rumour hear,
+ Their inmost heart shall quake,
+ Shall doubt, and fear, and wish, and grieve,
+ Believe, and long to unbelieve,
+ But never cease to ache;
+ Still doom'd, in sad suspense, to bear
+ The hope that keeps alive despair."
+
+ _J. Montgomery._
+
+
+Do we not often find in the winter evening that our warm rooms seem more
+cosy, and the flames to lap more brightly and closely round the
+half-consumed log, as a blast of wind moans in the chimney, and perhaps
+the cry of some poor street hawker tells its plain tale of toiling
+misery as it goes shiveringly along the streets? Do we not find our
+sensations of personal comfort increased, and our sympathy for the
+sufferer quickened, as the wintry gale and slashing rain beat against
+our well-shuttered windows, and suggest the hardships we should have to
+endure if we were less cared for and less protected?
+
+But if we may learn the deeper to realize our blessings, and the more to
+enlarge our sympathies, as we contrast our respective positions with
+such as are endured by many of the poor toilers on shore, truly still
+more may we do so as we consider the trials and hardships endured by
+many of the toilers at sea. Jamb down the window harder to prevent those
+few drops of rain bubbling in, draw the curtain closer and check that
+one breath of draught; and now think of those of your fellow-men who are
+breasting the storm in its wildest rage, out in the full perils and
+dense darkness of the night, where cruel winds and mad seas attack them
+in all their dread force; but neither daunt their courage, check their
+efforts, nor frustrate their skill; their errand is to save, and all
+personal considerations are lost in the grandness and hope of their
+enterprise.
+
+Thinking of these things, we shall not fail again and again to render
+our ready and full-hearted sympathy, not only for the shipwrecked,
+crying aloud in their quick peril and deep agony for rescue, but also
+for the poor brave-hearted boatmen of our coasts, who never hesitate to
+do all and to dare all when the prospect before them is that of saving
+life.
+
+Let us recall again some of the features in the lives of those whom we
+may well call the "Storm Warriors" of seafaring life, who not only find
+their bread upon the waters, but upon the most troubled waters of the
+most storm-lashed seas; who, the darker the night, the sterner the
+tempest, the more blinding the snowdrift, are the more full of
+expectation that their services will be required, and are therefore the
+more determined to urge their way out into the storm, to be ready to
+render aid at the first call for assistance, and perhaps to pluck a
+harvest of saved lives off the very edge of the scythe of death.
+
+Yes, my readers, I would once again carry you in thought far away from
+quiet home scenes and peaceful associations, from the pleasant nooks and
+sunny corners of memories which you delight to recall, upon which you
+love to let your thoughts half consciously ponder; but I ask you to take
+the joy of your home peace--the gladness of your blessings--with you,
+that you may be quickened in every chord of sympathy as you let me draw
+your thoughts away into the dread darkness, which is only broken by
+spectral sheens of light shed by flying foam, there to picture the
+rolling sea-mountains hurling along their avalanches of white spray; to
+listen to the dread discords of a howling tempest; to hover in fancy mid
+a scene of fierce turmoil and strife, where the elements in their rage
+seem to have cast off all bonds to their fury, and to have determined to
+sweep from their path every vestige of man and his works; and now to let
+your eyes centre upon a shattered wreck, to which are clinging a few
+storm-beaten sailors trembling upon the very verge of a grave.
+
+Are you practically interested in life-boat work, then you have a
+message to them in their hour of agony; you would have a message to
+many a loving wife and innocent child if they could now realize the
+danger of those they love, upon whom they depend. And your whisper is of
+rescue and of hope. Look where a fitful light gleams in the darkness;
+now rides high on the crest of a huge wave, now falls buried in the
+trough of the sea, shines out again, is hidden in a cloud of spray, but
+pressing on and on, getting nearer each moment to the shipwrecked.
+
+The light gleams from a life-boat in which a small band of men are
+battling,--battling on in the teeth of the fierce storm. No terrors stay
+them, no failures quell their courage and their zeal; are not fellow-men
+held captive and threatened with death by fierce and cruel seas? and
+shall they, the Storm Warriors, not be ready at every peril, and at
+every hardship, and against all difficulties to make in to their rescue.
+In such scenes we see the men actually at their work in their efforts to
+save life and property; but the life-boat work does not merely consist
+in doing the work at the moment of its necessity, but also in the
+unwearying watch and readiness for when that time of emergency shall
+come. Many a Ramsgate boatman leaves his poor, but warm and comfortable
+home, his humble and loving home circle, to pace Ramsgate pier for
+hours, and this, night after night, for many winter months, and for the
+mere chance of being among the first to make a rush for the life-boat
+when the signal is given to man her,--a chance that may not come a dozen
+times in the season, and which, when it does come, may afford indeed a
+grand opportunity for daring all and doing all for the saving of life,
+but not for doing much in the way of refilling the half-empty cupboards
+at home, or rubbing off the debts that have been gradually growing
+during the winter season.
+
+And in this, the last tale, I propose telling of the doing of the Storm
+Warriors, the Life Savers, who watch and struggle mid the fierce seas of
+the Goodwin Sands, I have deeds to relate done by our brave
+boatmen--acts of daring and determination--for which I claim a place
+amid the records of the bravest, grandest deeds of heroism of the age; a
+tale to tell which, unless I fail utterly in the telling--and this God
+forbid--I reverently pray, and pray it for the sake of noble deeds done,
+and for the sake of the good life-boat cause--a tale which must excite
+sympathy for those in suffering and in peril from the dangers of the
+sea; and sympathy and high esteem for the daring and unselfish workers
+of brave works;--a tale, the echoes of which may well stir, as a trumpet
+peal, stout hearts to perseverance and brave deeds, to do and dare all
+in God's name, and for the right, whatever storms of opposition may
+impede their onward course, and stand between them and their high and
+holy aim.
+
+The early days of the new year were bleak and cold; strong northerly and
+easterly winds swept over land and sea; people on shore spoke of the
+weather as being seasonable, but shuddered over the word.
+
+At Ramsgate, on the 5th of January, it was a fresh breeze from the
+east-south-east, and the anxious boatmen were as usual keeping a good
+look-out. About half-past eight in the morning, the booming of signal
+guns was heard; the signals came from both the Goodwin and the Gull
+light-ships.
+
+The boatmen, who had been watching all night in momentary expectation of
+such a signal, speedily manned the life-boat.
+
+The steamer, the _Aid_, was soon ready, with her brave crew full of
+courage and hardihood, and full of zeal as ever to second every effort
+made by the life-boat men in saving life. The steamer is steered for the
+North Sands Head light-vessel. As they were making their way across the
+Gull stream, they saw what proved to be a shipwrecked crew in their own
+boat; they took them on board the steamer, and found that they were the
+crew, eight in number, of the schooner _Mizpah_, of Brixham. The
+schooner had stranded on the Goodwin in a thick fog the night
+previously; the weather was still thick, and the men could give no
+account of the position of their vessel, and thought that it was
+hopeless to try and find her, and that it would be useless to try and
+get her off if they did find her, and so the steamer took the boat in
+tow and returned to Ramsgate.
+
+It proved afterwards that the vessel floated off the Sands at high
+water. A Broadstairs hovelling-lugger, while cruising about, fell in
+with her, and succeeded in bringing her into Ramsgate. The vessel and
+cargo were worth £6000 or £7000; the Broadstairs men obtained £350 as
+salvage. The life-boatmen were glad to take a few hours' rest after
+their night's watch and morning's work, they therefore found their way
+homewards, leaving, however, plenty of ready and able boatmen to watch
+on the pier, eager to make up another crew should a call for their
+services be made. The cold became hour by hour more intense, and the
+fresh breeze steadily grew; as the tide made, the sea broke over the
+pier in heavy clouds of spray, thundered down upon it, and poured over
+it in foaming cascades into the harbour.
+
+The evening grew on, the gale became terrific; heavy snow-storms went
+sweeping by, showers of freezing sleet rushed on before the wind, and
+the night was as dreary and dismal, as dark and cold, as night could
+well be.
+
+At about half-past ten the storm was in its full fury, and the sea a
+very howling wilderness of raging waters.
+
+At that moment the boom of a signal gun made itself heard, in spite of
+the roar of the wind and sea, and rockets were soon seen streaming up
+from the Gull light-ship.
+
+"The life-boat was manned with despatch," would be the short report the
+coxswain would afterwards make to the harbour-master. This means, that
+directly the signal was given, all was astir at the pier-head, the
+harbour-men on watch hurried themselves to lose no moment in getting the
+life-boat ready for sea; that the crew of the steamer also made all
+zealous speed; that the boatmen, in spite of the piercing cold and
+terrific gale, rush along the pier, hurry down the harbour steps, spring
+into the boat, and at once set to work in preparing her for sea, as
+readily as schoolboys bound down the school stairs and out on to the
+common for the joy of a summer holiday.
+
+It takes the steamer and life-boat about one hour and a half to urge
+their way through the terrible storm into the neighbourhood of the Gull
+light-ship; the crews speak her about one in the morning, and are told
+that the men on board saw, some time since, a large light burning
+south-east by south, but they had lost sight of it for about twenty
+minutes.
+
+The steamer at once tows the boat in the direction described; a careful
+look-out is kept; the snow-storms come down more darkly than ever, and
+the men find it bitterly cold, as they are continually overrun by the
+foam and spray, and by the broken crests of the waves, which are very
+wild and running mountains high; still on and on the brave fellows
+battle their way, but they can discover no signs of any signal-light.
+The crew hold a consultation as to what is best to be done; there
+appears no possibility of any of the crew of the vessel which gave the
+signals of distress being still alive; she must have broken up at once,
+in so tremendous a sea, and it would be impossible for any poor fellow
+to float clinging to any piece of wreckage in the midst of such a
+terrific turmoil of water. Still some other vessel may be in danger; the
+night is wild and dark enough for disaster after disaster to occur; and
+so the men determine to wait and watch for any signal of distress, and
+not seeing one, to remain in the neighbourhood of the Sands at all
+events until daylight, that they may feel sure before they leave the
+Sands that they are not turning their backs upon any whom they might
+leave to perish in the storm for want of their aid.
+
+And so, my readers, while most of you, if not all, were quietly in your
+beds (the wakeful ones of you perchance listening wistfully to the
+storm, and perhaps having your hearts moved to great pity and deep
+prayer for the poor fellows at sea), these brave boatmen, from choice,
+and not for the hope of money reward, but for the far dearer hope of
+saving life, waited on and on, by those gloomy storm-beaten Sands, a
+prey to all the fierceness of the gale, the raging seas, and deadly
+cold.
+
+Time after time the mad rushing waves break over the boat, burying her
+in clouds of spray and foam, or, coming in heavier volume still, bury
+her and the men for a moment or two completely under water. It is to the
+crew something more than intense discomfort; their sufferings become
+very great, yet they will not give in; they do all that they can to
+encourage each other, and still let the boat lay to.
+
+Willing as every man is to endure to the utmost, they soon find that it
+is getting beyond their strength; they feel as if frozen through and
+through, and are rapidly getting numbed and exhausted with the continual
+wash and beating over them of the heavy seas. There is no help for it,
+and unwillingly they make a signal for the steamer, and are towed back
+to Ramsgate, arriving between four and five in the morning.
+
+The name of the vessel that was lost during that terrible night was
+never known; the greedy Sands soon swallowed up every vestige of the
+ship; her name may perhaps be found among the missing ships at Lloyds'.
+Hope, doubtless, long lingered, may still linger, in many mournful
+homes; still the story be told to wondering children, how their father
+or their brother sailed on such a day from a foreign port, and has not
+since been heard of; but no clue has ever yet been found as to which of
+the many missing vessels it was that came to such sudden destruction in
+that dread night on the Goodwin Sands.
+
+Shall we linger another moment or two in thought over the poor fellows
+thus lost in the fierce seas. We fancy that the bronzing of a tropical
+sun was still ruddy upon their cheeks; a few weeks since they were ready
+to rest 'neath the shadow of the sails, and lie about the deck at night;
+and then speeding north they were met in the chops of the Channel by the
+rough welcome of a strong adverse wind, against which they sought, day
+and night, to beat their way, while the sails and cordage grew hard and
+stiff with frozen rain and spray.
+
+Favoured at last with a slant of wind, the vessel finds her way up
+Channel; the crew already feel the hardship and dangers of their voyage
+at an end, as they begin to count the hours until they shall be in dock;
+night falls as they pass the South Foreland. The wind goes moaningly
+back to the old direction; hour after hour it increases, a gale sweeps
+along in dread force, the blinding snow bewilders the pilot, who can
+now see no guiding light, and soon in the darkness of the night, the
+force of the wind, and the swirl of the tide, the vessel is driven
+through the raging surf on to the Sands.
+
+The crew make a rush for the boats; useless; they would not live a
+moment in such a boil of sea. The waves fly over the vessel, now lift
+her, and then let her crash with the force of all her weight down upon
+the Sands; now they beat with tremendous force against her, and shake
+her each moment to her keel; the captain burns a blue light, the spray
+washes it out, the men hasten to get a tar-barrel on deck, knock in the
+top, fill it with combustibles, and light it; it flares up, and for a
+time resists the rush of spray with which the air is full; the
+light-vessel sees the signal, fires a gun and a rocket; the life-boat
+starts upon her mission, but the waves close in upon the doomed ship in
+fierce hungry strife, lifting and crashing her down time after time; the
+decks are soon swept of everything that the force of water can tear from
+them, the tar-barrel is washed out; the men can no longer remain on the
+deck, but have to take refuge in the rigging, where they lash themselves
+to the shrouds, and they wait on in darkness and despair; a tremendous
+wave comes boiling along, it lifts the vessel, and almost rolls her
+over; the strong masts snap like reeds; the ship fills and sinks in the
+hole she has worked by her rolling and beating in the quicksand. Another
+half-hour, perhaps, and the life-boat is there; too late! only the
+tangled spars and cordage and broken pieces of wreck float near--tokens
+of the death and destruction that have been wrought: and a fine ship has
+been thus utterly and speedily destroyed--and all living things on board
+being swiftly engulfed, have found their graves in the strife of that
+deadly sea.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXV.
+
+SAVED AT LAST. WE WILL NOT GO HOME WITHOUT THEM.
+
+ "O, the most piteous cry of the poor souls!
+ Sometimes to see 'em, and not to see 'em; now
+ The ship boring the moon with her mainmast,
+ And anon swallowed with yest and froth;
+ How the poor souls roared, and the sea
+ Mocked them."
+
+ _Winter's Tale._
+
+
+As soon as it is daylight the coxswain of the life-boat and others of
+the boatmen feel very anxious; they fear that, when driven in by
+exhaustion on the previous night, they may, after all, have left some
+poor fellows clinging to a remnant of wreck; or perhaps have left a ship
+on the Sands, lost in the darkness of the night, and unable to make any
+signal of distress; the men cannot rest, and although the life-boat has
+only been in a few hours, the coxswain of the boat and the mate of the
+steamer go to the harbour-master, tell him their fears, and ask his
+permission to put to sea again and to search round the Sands.
+
+The permission is readily given--"Go by all means," and the men are
+encouraged to make their search. Ten fresh hands join the coxswain and
+the bowman of the life-boat; and soon after daylight they start on their
+dangerous and merciful mission.
+
+They are towed again by the steamer _Aid_, and make for the North Sands
+Head light-vessel, keeping a good look-out for the faintest signal of
+distress. The men discover nothing on the north side of the Sands, and
+they determine to work their way to the back of the Sands, on the French
+side, and there pursue their search.
+
+Soon they see in the misty distance what seems to be a large vessel on
+the south-east spit of the Sands; they tow with all speed in her
+direction; they are proceeding along the edge of the Sand, just outside
+the broken water.
+
+The waves are rolling along in all their fury, and beat down upon the
+Sands with tremendous force; the surf flying up in great sheets of foam,
+and the roar of the breakers is like loud quivering thunder; the scene
+is enough to make the stoutest heart quail; but, without one thought of
+flinching from whatever lies before them, the men cling to the life-boat
+as the seas break over them, and patiently bear all the cold and storm,
+and wash of water, as they are towed on nearer and nearer to the wreck.
+
+One of the men said afterwards, in answer to questions as to what his
+feelings were as he watched the tremendous seas, and knew that shortly
+he would be battling for his life in the midst of them, "Well, Sir, I
+think that at all such times a man must naturally have his inward
+feelings; soldiers say that they have theirs, and I am very sure that
+we have ours; a man can't help knowing the danger, and thinking about
+it, and feeling about it too; but we are not going to be made
+cold-hearted about it, or we shouldn't be out there. We can't help
+seeing that we've got hard work before us, and we determine by God's
+help to do it, and we won't flinch. We hope to save others, and feel
+that we shall do our best to do so, but at the same time we know that we
+may lose our own lives in making the attempt. We think about this
+sometimes as we are sitting in the boat, holding on against the wash of
+the seas, but when we get to the wreck we forget all about ourselves,
+and only think about saving the others."
+
+The seas become still heavier and heavier as they get nearer to the
+wreck and approach a more exposed part of the Sands; they now have to
+encounter one great rush of water, which, urged by the hurricane of wind
+and the strong tide, comes raging along in unbroken course through the
+Straits of Dover.
+
+At last they get within a short distance of the wreck, and find her to
+be a large barque. She has settled down somewhat on the Sands, has
+heeled over a good deal, and huge waves are foaming over her. The men
+look at the awful rage of sea, hear the tremendous roar with which the
+mountainous waves break upon the Sand, and say to each other, "We have
+indeed our work cut out for us."
+
+The boatmen can see no signs of any of the crew of the vessel being left
+on board. They may have been swept from the wreck, or have been lost in
+some vain effort to get to land in their own boat. The flag of distress
+is still flying, and the steamer tows the boat nearer to the wreck; they
+can now make out that the crew are crouching down under cover of the
+deck-house; while the huge waves make a complete breach over the vessel,
+and threaten every moment to wash the deck-house and the crew away.
+
+The steamer tows the boat up to windward. The life-boatmen feel their
+turn for the battle has come, and make every preparation; they get their
+sails ready to hoist, make the cable up all clear for paying out; the
+coxswain sees that they are now far enough to windward, the steamer's
+tow-rope is cast off; the boat lifts on a huge wave as the strain of the
+rope is taken off her, they hoist the sail, round she flies in answer to
+her helm, and she makes in for the wreck; they mount on the top of huge
+seas, go plunging down into the trough of the waves; the spray flies
+over them as the gale catches the crests of the towering breakers, and
+fills the air with clouds of flying foam; a minute more and they are in
+broken water; the seas rush and leap and recoil, fly high and fall in
+tangled volumes over the boat; she is tossed in all directions by the
+wild broken waves, and as she fills again and again with water, becomes
+almost unmanageable.
+
+The men have to cling with all their strength to the thwarts, but still
+the wind drives the boat on, and they get within about sixty yards of
+the wreck; the anchor is thrown out, the cable payed out swiftly; the
+sea is rushing with tremendous force over the ship; the boat sheers in
+under her lee-quarter; the boatmen cheer to the poor half-dead sailors
+who are crouching and clinging under shelter of the deck-house. All is
+hope; "A minute or two more," they think, "and we shall have saved
+them." A shout from the coxswain of the boat--"Hold on! hold on!" a
+glance upwards, a huge mountain of a wave comes rolling swiftly on, its
+crest curls over, breaks, falls upon the boat, the men and the boat are
+carried down by the tremendous weight of water. Some of the men seem
+almost crushed by the blow and pressure of the falling wave; they do not
+know whether the boat is upset or not, so is she rolled about in the
+whirl of the broken wave; they cling convulsively to her, she soon
+floats, lifted by her air-tight compartments, and she frees herself. The
+men breathe again; they find that the wave that buried them has taken
+the boat in its irresistible flood, and dragging the anchor with it, has
+carried it more than one hundred yards away from the ship.
+
+The men lift themselves up, clear their faces from the water, shake it
+from their clothes, and look at the vessel; they determine that, please
+God, they will yet save the crew. They give a cheer to encourage and
+give hope to the poor fellows, and without further thought of the dread
+danger they have but just escaped, prepare for another attempt.
+
+They hoist the sail quickly and get the boat's head round, and try and
+sheer her into the ship; but all their efforts are in vain, wave after
+wave breaks over them, the boat is tossed in all directions by the
+broken seas--sometimes the coxswain feels as if he would be thrown
+bodily forward on the men, as the waves lift the boat almost end on end.
+
+Again and again are boat and men overrun bodily by the rush of the
+waves, but the boat behaves splendidly, lifts buoyantly from under the
+weight of water; her undaunted crew bear up bravely, and all are once
+more ready for another struggle. They labour on, but without success;
+they cannot make their way back to the ship: they get the oars out, the
+waves and wind take them and send them leaping from the rowlocks, and
+out of the men's hands; they must give it up for this time.
+
+All their thoughts are for the poor shipwrecked crew, and the
+bitter--bitter disappointment they must feel. Again they cheer to them,
+and shout to them, to keep their hearts up--they will soon be at them
+again; and they make the best of their way back to the steamer. They
+have failed in their first attempt.
+
+The steamer again tows them into position, and they make for the second
+time boldly in for the wreck; the coxswain steers as near to the stern
+as possible, avoiding the danger of being washed over it on to the deck
+of the vessel, and thus crushed to pieces; they get nearer to the vessel
+than they did before; the shipwrecked crew begin to stir themselves, the
+boatmen are about to run the boat alongside, when again they are
+overwhelmed in the rush of a fearful sea, buried in its deluge of broken
+water, and the boat is again hurled away by the force of the waves, and
+carried many fathoms from the vessel; the anchor holds, but the tide is
+running more strongly than ever, and in the direction to carry them
+right away from the wreck; and so it is hopeless for them to try to get
+any nearer to her from where they are.
+
+The tide has risen and is nearly at its height; the vessel has fallen
+still more over upon her side; the lee side of the deck is completely
+under water, the top of the deck-house is just above the sea; the crew
+have been driven from their old place of shelter, they have lashed a
+spar across the mizen shrouds, and are all clinging to it, while the
+heavy waves beat continually over the poor fellows.
+
+It is with terrible agony that the crew on board the wreck witness the
+second failure of the life-boat: "She will never come again," the
+captain says, in a voice of despair; "the men cannot do it, the very
+life must have been washed and beaten out of them." Great is their
+astonishment to find that no sooner does the life-boat clear herself of
+the water that seems almost to drown her, no sooner do the men free
+themselves from the rush of the foam, which has for a time overwhelmed
+them, than they begin to cheer again, as if only rendered the more
+determined by their second defeat; the more courageous by the
+difficulties and dangers they had already endured; and the shipwrecked
+crew, encouraged by the hoarse cheers of the exhausted half-drowned
+boatmen, do not lose all hope.
+
+The boat is again towed into position, and for the third time makes in
+for the wreck.
+
+This time they throw the anchor overboard farther from the vessel than
+before, give longer scope to the cable, sail in well under the ship's
+stern, and again steer as near as possible to the vessel's lee-quarter,
+and lower the foresail.
+
+They are within a dozen yards of the ship; the bowman heaves a rope with
+all his force; it falls short of the men in the shrouds to whom he
+throws it, and the boat sweeps on; they check her with the cable, and
+bring her head to the ship abreast of her, but unhappily some distance
+off.
+
+The captain of the shipwrecked vessel had despaired of the boat being
+able to come in the third time; but when he saw her coming, he felt
+fully convinced that it was their last opportunity of being saved, and
+determined that if the boat were again swept from the wreck, that he
+would jump into the sea and try and swim to her.
+
+The boat comes and misses, and the crew of the boat see the captain
+hastily throw off his sea-boots, seize a life-buoy, and prepare to
+plunge into the sea: they shout to him not to do so, and to the crew to
+hold him back. "The tide in its set off the Sands would sweep him away;
+the seas would beat his life out of him: they will be back again soon,
+and won't go home without them."
+
+The steamer has followed the boat as closely as possible, running down
+close to the edge of the Sands, just clear of the broken water. The
+life-boat has swung out to the full length of her cable, and is in deep
+water; the men upon being beaten away from the wreck for the third
+time, look round for the steamer, and to their astonishment see her
+making in straight towards them.
+
+The men on board the steamer had watched with increasing anxiety and
+dismay the defeat of the successive gallant attempts made by the
+life-boat crew. They had grown more and more excited each time that the
+life-boat had returned to them, and feel now prepared to run almost any
+risk whatever to further help the life-boatmen in their brave but as yet
+unsuccessful efforts to save the crew.
+
+And so the steamer makes right in across the broken water, straight for
+the life-boat; a rope is thrown from the steamer, and is made fast in
+the life-boat; they now hope, with the steamer's help, to be able to
+sheer the boat right in upon the wreck.
+
+The boatmen have hold of their own cable, to which their anchor is fast;
+they gradually draw in upon this cable, and the steamer tries to tow the
+boat nearer and nearer to the vessel, and for the fourth time the
+life-boat makes in 'mid the wild raging seas for the rescue of the crew.
+
+The steamer ventures into the rage of the sea, and her position becomes
+one of very great peril; she rolls in the trough of the tremendous waves
+till her gunwales are right under water; the foam and spray dash
+completely over her, and tons and tons of water deluge her deck. They
+gradually approach the vessel; the life-boat sheers in; the seas and
+tide and wind catch her in their full power, and whirl her away again.
+
+A huge wave sweeps bodily over the steamer--she is in extreme danger;
+the life-boatmen watch her in the greatest alarm, fearing each moment
+that a wave will swamp her--but rolling, plunging, burying herself in
+the foaming seas, the steamer bravely holds her own, until to remain
+longer is certain death to all on board; and sorrowfully the crew of the
+steamer abandon their most gallant attempt, and make out of the rage of
+broken water.
+
+The life-boatmen rejoice to see the steamer get clear of the deadly
+peril, but they are scarcely in less peril themselves; they cut the
+steamer's tow-rope, and then find that they must cut their own cable, to
+avoid being dashed over the wreck; and away they go again driven on
+before the gale. They look at each other, but only read courage and
+determination in each other's countenances. Beaten off for the fourth
+time, not one heart fails, not one speaks of giving up the attempt, not
+one of the brave fellows has any such thought for an instant; their one
+consideration is what next shall be attempted to save the poor fellows
+from a speedy and terrible death, which indeed threatens them every
+minute. Thus the only question is, what they shall try next? and weak
+and exhausted, and almost frozen with cold, but determined, and full of
+courage and zeal as ever, their one anxiety is for the poor shipwrecked
+crew, whose peril increases each minute, and they prepare for a fifth
+effort for their rescue, strong still in their old determination--"that
+they will not go home without them."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVI.
+
+SAVED AT LAST. VICTORY OR DEATH.
+
+ "'Tis done--despite the winds--the roll
+ Of that storm-maddened fearful sea;
+ Bravery hath snatched each shivering soul,
+ O greedy death! from thee.
+ Then the rough seamen's hands they wring,
+ And some, o'erpowered by bursting feeling,
+ Their arms around them wildly fling,
+ While tears down many a cheek are stealing;
+ They bless them for their noble deed,
+ True saviours sent in hour of need."
+
+ _N. Michell._
+
+
+The ship's hull has now been for some time under water, and it is
+evident that the wreck is breaking up fast. She has coals and iron on
+board; this dead weight keeps her steady on the Sands, and prevents the
+waves lifting her and crashing her down, or she would long since have
+been torn and broken to fragments. As it is, the decks have burst, and
+the lighter portions of her cargo are being rapidly washed out of her;
+the sea in some places is black with coal-dust, and much wreckage,
+pieces of her deck and forecastle are being swept away by the tide.
+
+Each time that the men on board the steamer and life-boat look at the
+vessel, count the crew still in the rigging, and find that not any are
+missing, they think it indeed a wondrous mercy that all should still be
+safe, and get each moment more impressed with feelings of deep sympathy
+for the poor fellows, and with the greater eagerness to dare all to save
+them.
+
+Daniel Reading, the brave, skilful, and long-tried master of the
+steamer, is ill on shore, and so she is in charge of John Simpson, the
+mate; he and William Wharrier, the engineer, consult as to the
+possibility of making another effort with the steamer, for the tide is
+setting off the Sands with such force that they do not see how it is
+possible for the life-boat to get in to the wreck and save the crew, and
+they find that all the men on board the steamer are perfectly prepared
+to second them in any effort that they decide upon making.
+
+They get the mortar-apparatus ready, and again urge the steamer through
+the seas in the direction of the wreck; they hope to get near enough to
+the vessel to fire a line from the mortar into the rigging, to which the
+shipwrecked crew will attach a rope, and then hauling this rope on board
+the steamer, they will take it to the life-boat's men, who will by it be
+able to haul the boat through the seas to the wreck. Cautiously the
+steamer approaches; the tide has been for some time rising fast; the
+steamer does not draw much water; they are almost within firing
+distance; the waves come rushing along and nearly overrun the steamer;
+at last a breaker larger than the rest catches her, lifts her high upon
+its crest, and letting her fall down into its trough as down the side of
+a wall, she strikes the Sands heavily; the engines are instantly
+reversed, she lifts with the next wave, and being a very quick and handy
+boat, at once moves astern before she can thump again, and they are
+saved from shipwreck; and thus the fifth effort to save the shipwrecked
+crew fails.
+
+No time is lost; at once the steamer heads for the life-boat, and makes
+ready to tow her into position. Again not a word--scarcely a
+thought--about past failures, only eagerness to commence without delay a
+fresh attempt; the steamer is alongside the life-boat.
+
+"Look out, my men, here is another rope for you." "All right!" the
+boatmen answer as they catch the line, and haul the hawser into the
+boat.
+
+"All right! tow us well to windward, give us a good position, plenty of
+room, we must have them this time. All fast! away you go, hurrah!" The
+men watch the wreck as they are towed past her. "Oh! the poor fellows!
+to think we have not got them yet. Well, we have had a hard struggle for
+it, but, please God, we will save them yet--we will save them yet!"
+
+"Ah! look how that wave buries them all; there they are again, let us
+give them a cheer, it will help them to keep their hearts up." And as
+the boat rose upon a sea, they shouted and waved to the shipwrecked
+crew.
+
+"There, another breaker has gone right over her; how she heaves and
+works to it! Yes, and do you see how her masts are swinging about, and
+in different directions? they are getting unstepped and loose; she is
+breaking up fast, working all over--all of a quiver and tremble! Poor
+fellows! poor fellows! we have not a moment to spare. It must soon be
+all over, one way or the other!" Thus the men speak to each other; they
+are in a glow of eagerness and excitement, and can scarcely restrain
+themselves to get quietly to work. For as they watch the poor fellows,
+and time after time see the waves wash over them in quick
+succession--and as each wave passes, see them still clinging on--they
+almost feel as if they could jump at them to try and save them, and in
+their noble and gallant sympathy and determination lose all sense of
+weakness, and cold, and exhaustion.
+
+When describing their feelings, one of the men said, "We were thoroughly
+warm at our work, and felt like lions, as if nothing could stop us."
+
+It is in this spirit that they now consult together, as to the plan upon
+which they shall make their next effort. First one scheme is suggested,
+and then another, but these seem to give no better prospect of success
+than those that have been already tried in vain.
+
+At last one of the men proposes a plan which must indeed either prove
+rescue to the shipwrecked or death to all.
+
+"I tell you what, my men, if we are going to save those poor fellows,
+there is only one way of doing it; it must be a case of save all, or
+lose all, that is just it. We must go in upon the vessel straight, hit
+her between the masts, and throw our anchor over right upon her decks."
+
+"What a mad-brained trick!" says one.
+
+"Why, the boat would be smashed to pieces."
+
+"Likely enough; but there is one thing certain, is there not? and that
+is that we are never going home to leave those poor fellows to perish,
+and I do not believe that there is any other way of saving them, and so
+we must just try it. And God help us, and them!"
+
+Not a single word against it now!
+
+What, charge in upon the vessel in that mad rage of sea! Victory, or
+death, indeed!
+
+Most of the men on board the life-boat are married men with
+families--loved wives, and loved little ones dependent upon them.
+Thoughts of this, tender heartfelt thoughts of home, come to them.
+
+"Well, and so we have, and have not those poor perishing fellows also
+got wives and little ones, and are they not thinking of their homes, and
+loved ones, as much as we are thinking of ours; and shall we go home,
+having turned back from even the greatest danger, without having tried
+all it is possible to try; go home to our wives and little ones, and
+leave them to perish thinking of theirs? No! please God, that shall
+never be said of us."
+
+Such thoughts as these pass through the minds of some of the boatmen.
+And what think the poor nearly drowned crew of the unfortunate vessel.
+
+There they are clinging to the loose and shaking rigging; a few feet
+above the boil of the hungry and raging sea. They have seen effort after
+effort made, and effort after effort fail; they have watched the men do
+more than they ever dreamt it was possible for men to do; and they have
+watched the life-boat live, and battle with seas with which they never
+thought it possible a boat could for one moment contend; time after time
+they have thought that the boatmen were drowned, as they saw the huge
+curling waves break over the boat, swamp it, bury it in the weight of
+their falling volume of water, and for some seconds hide all from view;
+they have been watching the men persevere in attempt after attempt, when
+they thought that from sheer exhaustion it would be impossible for them
+to make another effort for their rescue.
+
+With equal wonder and admiration they watched the noble efforts of the
+steamer, marked how nearly she was wrecked, and when she failed, gave up
+all as lost; deciding in their minds that in such a rush of broken sea,
+strength of tide and gale of wind, that it is impossible for the boat to
+reach them, or for them to be saved, and all but one give up all hope.
+When the captain says in despair, "The life-boat can never make another
+effort," this man answers, "I have sailed in English ships; I have often
+heard about life-boat work, and I know that they never leave any one to
+perish as long as they can see them, and they will not leave us."
+
+"And look, here she comes again. O God help them! God help them!"
+
+Yes, here she comes again; the steamer had hastened to tow her well
+into position, well to windward of the wreck. "And here she comes
+again."
+
+Once more the boat heads for the wreck--this time to do, or to die; each
+man knows it, each man feels it. They are crossing the stern of the
+vessel; "Look at that breaker--look at that breaker--hold on, hold on,
+it will be all over with us if it catches us, we shall be thrown high
+into the masts of the vessel, and shaken out into the sea in a moment!
+Hold on all, hold on! Now it comes! No, thank God, it breaks ahead of
+us, and we have escaped. Now, men, be ready, be ready!" Thus shouts the
+coxswain. Every man is at his station, some with the ropes in hand ready
+to lower the sails; others by the anchor prepared to throw it overboard
+at the right moment; round, past the stern of the vessel the boat flies,
+round in the blast of the gale and the swell of the sea; down helm,
+round she comes; down foresail; the ship's lee gunwale is under water,
+the boat shoots forward straight for the wreck, and hits the lee rail
+with a shock that almost throws all the men from their posts, and then,
+still forward, she literally leaps on board the wreck. Over! over with
+the anchor; it falls on the vessel's deck; all the crew of the vessel
+are in the mizen shrouds, but they cannot get to the boat, a fearful
+rush of sea is chasing over the vessel, and between them and it. Again
+and again the boat thumps on the wreck as on a rock, with a shock that
+almost shakes the men from their hold.
+
+The waves soon lift the boat off the deck, and carry her away from the
+vessel. "Is even this attempt to be a failure? No, thank God! the
+anchor holds; veer out the cable; steadily, my men, steadily; do not
+disturb the anchor more than you can help; we shall have them now! we
+shall have them, all will be well; ease her a bit, ease her, see how she
+plunges, a little more cable; now for the grappling-iron; quick, throw
+it over that line; there you have it;" and they haul on board a line
+which had been made fast to a cork-fender, and thrown overboard from the
+wreck early in the day, but which the boatmen had never before been able
+to reach.
+
+They get the boat straight, haul in slowly upon both ropes; cheer to the
+crew: "Hurrah! mates, hurrah!" All is joy and excitement, but at the
+same time steady attention to orders; now the boat is abreast the mizen
+rigging, opposite to where the men are clinging. "Down helm, the boat
+sheers in; haul in upon the ropes, men, handsomely, handsomely;" the
+boat jumps forward, hits the ship heavily with her stern, crashes off a
+large piece of her fore-foot. The men are for a moment thrown down with
+the shock; two of the boatmen spring on to the raised bow gunwale, and
+seize hold of the captain of the vessel, who seems nearly dead, drag him
+in over the bows; two of the sailors jump on board; "Hold on all, hold
+on!"
+
+A fearful sea rolls over them, the boat is washed away from the vessel;
+the anchor still holds; they sheer the boat in again; they make the
+ropes fast, and lash the boat to the shrouds of the wreck, thus verily
+nailing their colours to the mast. No! they will not be washed away
+again until they have all the crew on board.
+
+A sailor jumps from the rigging, the boat sinks in the trough of the
+sea, the man falls between the boat and the wreck; a second more and the
+boat will be on the top of him, crushing him against the rail of the
+vessel, upon which the keel of the boat strikes and grinds cruelly; two
+boatmen seize him, leaning right over the gunwale to do so, they are
+almost dragged into the water; they are seized in turn by the men in the
+boat, and all are with difficulty got on board.
+
+Up the boat flies and crashes against the spar lashed to the rigging.
+"Jump in, men, jump in all of you. Now! Now!" In they spring, and
+tumble, falling upon the men, and all rolling over into the bottom of
+the boat. All are now on board--all on board! "Hurrah! cut the lashings,
+there, she falls away from the wreck; cut the cable, quick with the
+hatchet; all gone! all gone! up foresail." The seas catch the boat and
+bear her away from the wreck; away she goes with a bound, flying through
+the broken water; the heavy wind fills the sail; they are fairly under
+weigh, and with the precious freight for which they had fought so long
+and so gallantly, safely on board. Thank God! thank God! all are saved
+at last--_saved at last_.
+
+Now the boat is through the broken seas away from the terrible Sands,
+out in the deep water; the men have time to look at each other; and how
+gladly, and yes, how fondly, they do so. Strangers though they be, yet
+at that moment their hearts are warm to each other with more than a
+brother's love--all is gladness and thankfulness; they shake hands, the
+rescuers and the rescued, time after time.
+
+The saved crew are ten in number. They are Danes, and the wreck the
+Danish barque _Aurora Borealis_.
+
+Some of the sailors can speak a little broken English, and in such terms
+as they are able the poor fellows express the depth of their gratitude,
+and their wonder at being saved.
+
+The boat makes for the steamer, which is coming down rapidly to meet
+her; the crew of the steamer greet the life-boatmen with cheers! Who can
+describe the joy they all feel at the successful ending of their long
+battle with terrible danger and threatened death! and great indeed is
+their sympathy with the saved from death, for whom they and the boatmen
+have so willingly, and to the very utmost, risked their own lives.
+
+They lift the captain on board the steamer; he is thoroughly exhausted;
+they carry him into the engine-room, and in the warmth there, do their
+best to revive him, and he soon recovers. The Danish seamen will not
+leave the boat; the life-boat crew tell the mate that his men would be
+much more comfortable on board the steamer, that the seas will be
+washing over the boat all the way in; but no, as so frequently happens
+on such occasions, and as has been before noticed, the rescued men feel
+so grateful to the life-boatmen, that they are not content to leave the
+boat until they get to land. And the mate replies, "No! you saved us,
+you saved us; we thought you never, never do it; you had plenty trouble;
+we stop with you." And they would not desert their friends, their
+brothers indeed, who had done so much to save them.
+
+In Ramsgate the anxiety is very great.
+
+The steamer and life-boat have been out many hours, nothing can be seen
+of them in the mist that hangs over the Goodwin Sands.
+
+"Can anything have happened?" is the question that is restlessly put
+from one to another.
+
+It might well be so, in the terrific sea that must have been raging on
+the Goodwin in so fearful a storm.
+
+At about half-past two, hundreds of people are collected on the pier;
+for the news that the life-boat is out always spreads like wildfire
+through the town; and if there is any cause for anxiety on her account,
+the whole town soon shares the apprehension, and throngs of anxious men
+crowd the pier and harbour. Now the men who are anxiously on the watch
+make out something looming in the mist; and speedily the steamer and
+life-boat are seen, their flags are flying, glad sign of successful
+effort, of rescue effected; and great is the joy of all the lookers-on;
+steamer and life-boat speed between the massive granite heads of the two
+piers, and the crowd that looks down upon them as they come pitching and
+rolling along, greet them with cheer after cheer.
+
+The saved crew land, they are many of them very weak, and worn, and
+exhausted; but all around is welcome, and sympathy, and active service.
+
+They are taken to the Sailors' Home, where warm clothing, and beds, and
+goodly fare are ready for them, and the poor fellows soon recover; some
+of them before they attempt to take any rest insist upon writing to the
+loved ones at home, to tell of their safety, and of their rescue from
+apparently almost certain death.
+
+Doubtless these letters contain simple expressions of gratitude to God,
+and of deep love for the dear wife, of many many kisses for the sturdy
+little boy, or the laughing girl, for the children whose bright eyes
+seemed so often staring at them so wistfully out of the storm, and whom
+they never thought to see again; and doubtless contain also expressions
+of great admiration and thankfulness for the untiring courage of the
+English life-boatmen; and their full belief in the expression of one of
+their number who told them in the height of their danger, and in the
+very depth of their despair, "to take courage, for the life-boatmen will
+never leave us while they can see us."
+
+The Board of Trade, in recognition of the gallant services of the men,
+presented them with one pound each. The King of Denmark forwarded two
+hundred rix-dollars to be divided among them.
+
+The boatmen are all poor men, and these presents proved very acceptable;
+but the joy with all was, and will be while life lasts, that God had in
+His providence and mercy so crowned their perseverance with success, and
+enabled them to save their drowning brother sailors. While all who heard
+of the circumstances, declared that never by land or by sea was more
+gallant service rendered than was accomplished by these brave boatmen,
+who in the face of all danger, and of all hardship, determined to
+persevere to the death--determined that while the shipwrecked crew still
+remained alive, "They would not go home without them."
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVII.
+
+OF SOME OF THE LIFE-BOAT MEN.
+
+ "The rank is but the guinea-stamp;
+ The man's the gold for a' that."
+
+ _Burns._
+
+
+It may be that some of my readers who have followed the adventures of
+our Storm Warriors through their varied struggles and heroic deeds, and
+have felt sympathy more or less deep for the gallant life-savers, would
+like to know a little of one or two of the leading men among those who,
+during the last twenty years, or more, have done such good work in the
+Ramsgate life-boat on the Goodwin Sands.
+
+Gallant men who, time after time, have plunged their boat into the
+thickest of the fray, and heedless of hardship, heedless of peril,
+forgetful of self, intent only upon rescuing the distressed, have
+laboured on through the dark stormy nights, 'mid the rush of the waves,
+the howling winds, the fierce hurricane blasts, the spray, and sleet,
+and snow--encountering all dangers, and persevering through all
+difficulties, and repaid for all as they have brought home in the
+morning's light the brother sailors, or the passengers, whom they have
+been instrumental in saving from swift and terrible deaths.
+
+Quiet, broad-chested, steadfast-eyed men, who, by all the scenes they
+have witnessed, and by all the hardships they have suffered, and by all
+the thoughts of the shipwrecked ones that they have brought safely home,
+have it deeply written in upon their hearts: that (to use their own
+simple and noble expression) _they have a call to save life_.
+
+Well indeed would it be for the world if more of those to whom talents
+are given, and to whom stewardships are intrusted, and who stand
+watching the many who are in danger, overrun by the dark troubled waters
+of social life--wrecked in poverty, in misery, in ignorance--wrecked for
+want of true teaching, true guidance, true sympathy, true love--well
+would it be if more of these stewards of God's loans might have the same
+noble conviction written in upon their hearts: that they have _a call to
+save life_! Then would more lives grow noble by noble work, and become
+happy in the consciousness of the happy results, which God grants to the
+efforts of all those who humbly seek to live and labour for the good of
+others; grants to those who would sooner put to sea 'mid toil and peril,
+'mid self-sacrifice and opposition, rather than let the life-boats God
+has given for their use rot and canker upon the banks, while the cries
+of the despairing and the lost plead in vain from the dark storms and
+troubled waters at their feet.
+
+Yes, surely; the humble boatmen of our coasts, our "Storm Warriors,"
+afford a lesson by which many may well profit, in the noble
+self-sacrificing way in which they realize their mission--_that they
+have a call to save life_.
+
+"Who shall be the first coxswain of our new _Northumberland_ Prize
+Life-boat?" was the question asked by the Ramsgate Harbour Trustees some
+two and twenty years ago; and it was an important and anxious question;
+for the good boat required skilful handling to do efficient service, and
+if she failed in what was required and expected of her, the life-boat
+cause would receive a serious check.
+
+"No man better than James Hogben for the first coxswain; no man among
+them all holds a higher character for cool courage, and skill, and
+experience;" such was the answer. Hogben had been to sea since he was a
+lad; for some years he was sailing in a small vessel that traded between
+London and Ostend; then he sailed a little bit of a boat, of about
+fifteen tons, between Ramsgate and Dunkirk and Boulogne, winter and
+summer. Ask him about it now, and the dangers he used to run; and he
+shakes his head, and with a quiet smile tells you that, "He met with a
+good many very _whole_ breezes, very!" in that little craft of his.
+
+After that, he had nearly twenty years of hovelling; cruising about the
+Goodwin Sands in open luggers in the stormiest winter weather, till he
+almost knew the Sands by heart; and so James Hogben was appointed first
+coxswain of the Ramsgate life-boat.
+
+Each time that he and his crew went out in her they gained fresh
+confidence in her powers; and noble work the good boat did under his
+command; indeed from the time the _Northumberland_ life-boat began her
+career at Ramsgate to the time she was broken up, from December 1851 to
+July 1865, no fewer than two hundred and sixty-one lives were saved by
+her and the gallant Storm Warriors who sailed her, from vessels that
+were utterly lost; and nineteen vessels, with their crews, were
+extricated from the Goodwin Sands and brought safely into harbour.
+
+For nine years Hogben was coxswain of the life-boat, and then came that
+dread New Year's Eve, when doubts were thrown upon the telegram that
+came from Deal; and there was delay; and the life-boat got out to the
+south of the Goodwin Sands only in time for her crew to see the
+_Gottenburg_ overwhelmed by the waves, and to hear the last cries of the
+drowning men.
+
+Hogben had been out in the life-boat once before that day, and was
+exhausted and unwell; and he had a nasty fall in the boat, and hurt his
+knee badly, and soon fell seriously ill; his nerves were, for a time,
+utterly shattered, and he who had been remarkable for his dauntless
+courage became too nervous to walk even down the pier for fear of
+falling over.
+
+And although, after a while, he so far recovered as to be able to be
+employed as a boatman in the harbour, and as a watchman on the pier, yet
+he was never able to go to sea again; his iron constitution broken down
+by some thirty years of Storm Warrior life, during the last nine years
+of which he had been coxswain of the famous Ramsgate life-boat.
+
+Isaac Jarman was appointed coxswain in Hogben's room.
+
+Who among Ramsgate boatmen has been better known in his time than Isaac
+Jarman--or Mr. Jarman, as I suppose I ought to call him now? for is he
+not master of a thriving public-house, which he will take good care to
+keep respectable? and it will not be his fault if any of his customers
+wreck themselves by taking too much drink.
+
+But a yarn on Ramsgate pier with the life-boat coxswain, Jarman, was for
+some years quite an institution with many a visitor to Ramsgate, as well
+as with many an inhabitant.
+
+When I have known Jarman (it does not seem quite natural _Mistering_ my
+old boatman friend) to be out in the life-boat, enduring all the rage of
+the storm, and I have imagined the wild scenes 'mid the strife of waters
+through which he has been passing, another picture, one in very vivid
+contrast, has often presented itself to my mind.
+
+I have remembered the scene I saw one evening when I called upon him,
+and found him with his family at tea.
+
+"Come in, sir, come in; you won't disturb us: glad to see you."
+
+His wife and, I think, five little daughters were there, and the baby
+boy, the only son, was taken out of the cradle to be shown to me.
+
+And as Jarman dandled the little fellow in his strong arms he said,
+"Bless the boy! Bless the boy! he will make a life-boat coxswain some
+day, that he will;" and I felt that all the thoughts of the danger of
+the work was lost in the joy of saving life; I glanced at the mother,
+half expecting some expression of dissent; no, her smile showed that she
+was proud of her husband, and that all her sympathies were with him in
+his noble work, and that she was quite content that her only boy should
+in his day follow in his father's steps and be, like him, one of the
+gallant band of life-savers who guard our coasts.
+
+And I have often felt, that however much such pictures of happy
+home-circles dwelt in the heart of Jarman, and of his comrades, as they
+have struggled out through the dark storms, and rushed into conflict
+with the wild seas, yet that they have never caused them to turn back
+from any danger, or to lessen one single effort in their warfare to save
+life.
+
+Isaac Jarman was turned out into the North Sea almost from his cradle.
+
+His father, a boatman, got severely hurt on board a hovelling-lugger, so
+much so, that he was never fit for work again; as a matter of course,
+the family became very poor.
+
+Many hungry children to feed, and the arms once so strong now powerless
+to labour for them, no wonder that the cupboard was often empty, and the
+growing lads forced to do something for themselves as soon as they were
+able.
+
+And so Isaac Jarman, when a boy of twelve years old, was sent away to
+sea on board a small fishing-smack called the _Pledge_; she was only
+twenty-five tons, but used to sail long distances away to fish in the
+North Sea, in all weathers, summer and winter.
+
+The poor lad had all the clothing his parents could supply him with, but
+that was little more than he stood up in; no waterproof overalls, no
+sea-boots, the almost child had to rough it hardly enough; in bad
+weather wet through day and night, with no bed to lie upon, and no
+change of dry clothes; he used to throw himself down on the floor of the
+small cabin, and lie coiled up before the little fire that glimmered in
+the stove; the spray oftentimes washing down the hatchway and surging up
+against his back, so that he had to be content with being dry one side
+at a time; but strangely enough it agreed with him; as that rough life,
+with all its strong sea-breezes, and its abundance of good fish diet,
+does agree with many a little urchin, who, for sturdiness, is not to be
+surpassed by any luxury-lapped little fellow in the land.
+
+After Jarman had finished his apprenticeship in the fishing-smack, he
+was for some years in a collier, during which time he was twice wrecked.
+And after that for seven or eight years he worked as a Ramsgate boatman,
+always on the look-out in rough weather, day and night, with but short
+intervals for sleep, for a signal of distress from the Goodwin Sands,
+and a call for the life-boat; and so all his training well fitted him
+for the post of life-boat coxswain; and when the vacancy was made by
+Hogben's illness, Jarman was well chosen to fill the post. For ten
+years he continued coxswain of the life-boat, going out in her no fewer
+than one hundred and thirty-two times, and helping to save between three
+and four hundred lives.
+
+You may see many a medal that has been well won--and that is worthily
+worn--by veteran soldier or sailor, but you will find few that have been
+better won, or that are more worthily worn, than are the four medals and
+a clasp that our Storm Warrior Jarman has to show as records of his
+brave and self-sacrificing services; or the three medals that Hogben can
+display on high days and holidays; or those given to Reading, the brave
+master of the steam-tug _Aid_, and those worn by many another gallant
+boatman or sailor, who, at Ramsgate, or at other stations round the
+coast, have done true warrior service in saving life from shipwreck.
+
+After holding his post of coxswain for ten years, Jarman found the
+exposure too much for him: he was out nine times in one fortnight, five
+times in one week; he was seized with a very severe attack of
+bronchitis, from which he never thoroughly recovered, and had shortly to
+give up going to sea, and resign his position of coxswain.
+
+He had three brothers and a nephew brought up as sailors, all of whom
+have been drowned; well do I remember the night when his last brother
+was drowned.
+
+It had been blowing a heavy gale for three days and nights, with
+continual snowstorms; the vessels at sea were in terrible peril: they
+had no help for it but to drive blindly before the gale, unable to see
+any of the lights or buoys which mark the sands and shoals. I had heard
+that a Ramsgate collier was known to have sailed from the North some
+days since, and could not be far off; and it was with a sad heart and
+deep anxiety that I lingered on the pier that afternoon watching the
+storm. I saw the boatmen all ready on the look-out for any signal, but I
+felt, as they felt, that there could be but little hope of any vessels
+being able to run the gauntlet of the many sandbanks in that dark storm,
+or of being able to make any signals heard, or seen, if they got into
+danger.
+
+It was with a deep feeling of dread and apprehension that I left Jarman
+and his fellow-boatmen to their dreary and almost hopeless watch; and
+they watched on through the long dark hours of the night, ready at any
+moment to man the life-boat; but they could discover no signal--the roar
+of the storm was too great, the fall of snow too continuous. And yet
+during those sad hours while the boatmen crouched, sheltering themselves
+as well as they could--watching, and listening, and waiting, but in
+vain--the terrible tragedy was worked out; at daylight they saw a wreck
+in Pegwell Bay. Man the life-boat! No, too late, she is bottom up, her
+masts are gone; she must have been wrecked on the Brake Sand, and been
+rolled over and over by the tremendous sweep of the sea, and the tide.
+Yes, it is the Ramsgate collier that was expected, and that Jarman's
+brother commanded; and he and all his crew have miserably
+perished--perished within sight of home, and within half a mile or so of
+the life-boat men who were so eagerly watching and waiting for a call to
+their rescue, and to whom they could not make their danger known.
+
+And to this day you may see the sad record of the disaster in the
+remains of the hull of the wreck, washed high up on the shore in Pegwell
+Bay, and there half buried in the sand.
+
+A great grief to Jarman this sad loss of his brother; and the poor man
+left a widow and a large family of children; and when fine weather came,
+in the early summer, many a friend who had had pleasant chats with the
+life-boat coxswain on Ramsgate pier, was surprised to find him
+diligently cruising in and out of offices in London; he was canvassing
+for votes for the Merchant Seamen's Orphan Asylum, and he laboured on
+until he succeeded in getting two of his late brother's children into
+that famous institution.
+
+Charles Fish was appointed to succeed Jarman as coxswain, and the
+life-boat under his guidance continues to do good service; many times
+has he been out in her, and many times has he, through much hardship and
+danger, brought saved lives home. And may God in His mercy continue to
+shield and bless him and the brave men who sail with him, and aid them
+in their gallant efforts to pluck the shipwrecked and the drowning from
+all the mighty strife of waters, that battles with such deadly fury when
+the storms rage round the fatal Goodwin Sands.
+
+I cannot refrain from bearing my tribute of admiration to worthy Daniel
+Reading, a brave, skilful, modest sailor, the master of the steam-tug
+_Aid_; many and many a time has he rendered service, which for daring
+and skill could not be well surpassed, threading in and out of the
+Goodwin Sands 'mid terrible storms while seeking for the position of
+wrecked vessels, or making short cuts to tow the life-boat into
+position, that no time should be lost in her efforts to save the
+drowning crews.
+
+Yes! Reading, and James Simpson, the mate of the _Aid_, and William
+Wharrier, the engineer, who have been together more than twenty years,
+and have been out on almost every occasion that the life-boat has been
+called for, have all three of them done noble and gallant service time
+after time, and are indeed well worthy to be ranked among the Storm
+Warriors who have nobly fought in the great and good cause of saving
+life.
+
+And many another gallant fellow might I mention, whose name stands
+worthily on the Ramsgate life-boat roll-call; famous specimens of what a
+British sailor should be--full of daring and determination, and skill,
+and hardihood; men who are ready to encounter all danger, and to endure
+any amount of hardship, in answer to the holy call: to go forth and seek
+to save the shipwrecked and the perishing.
+
+
+
+
+CHAPTER XXVIII.
+
+THE NATIONAL LIFE-BOAT INSTITUTION.
+
+ "The quality of mercy is not strain'd;
+ It droppeth as the gentle rain from heaven
+ Upon the place beneath: it is twice bless'd;
+ It blesseth him that gives, and him that takes:
+ 'Tis mightiest in the mightiest; it becomes
+ The throned monarch better than his crown;..."
+
+
+Whatever interest my readers may have felt in the narrative of gallant
+deeds wrought at one life-boat station on the coast, must be intensified
+at the thought of the noble work that is going on all round our sea-girt
+land--that, at almost all dangerous places where vessels are likely to
+be in distress, or lives in peril, there are life-boats ready to be
+manned, and brave fellows ever anxious promptly to launch forth 'mid the
+wind and sea, and battle their way to the rescue of the perishing. Yes,
+thank God, the gallant old Anglo-Saxon blood is still to the fore; the
+spirit of our ancestors has not died out, and we may well believe, from
+abundant evidence continually arising from very diversified fields, that
+it has not even in the least degenerated; for at all times can men be
+found ready to go forth either by sea or land, to dare all that men
+should dare, and to do all that men can do, when duty calls them to
+labours of self-sacrifice, endurance, and courage.
+
+And to the old bravery is now added modern science and organization, and
+the British coasts are guarded by a volunteer navy, equipped and
+marshalled by the Royal National Life-boat Institution.
+
+Two hundred and thirty-three life-boats form, at present, the great
+storm fleet of the Institution; the boats are stationed at the most
+dangerous places on the coast, and are kept always ready for service.
+
+Those who are living inland may often notice how fast the high clouds
+are flying overhead, and may listen to the soughing of the rising wind
+among the branches of the trees; but no dread conflict is pictured by
+the swift onsweep of the clouds, and the murmur of the wind, fitful and
+angry though it at times is, scarcely seems to suggest scenes of
+terrible peril, and of warfare unto life or death; but watch the
+direction in which the clouds are flying; consider on what part of our
+coast it is that this fierce gale strikes; imagine the heavy sea that
+rolls in there, the foaming breakers, the air thick with spray, the
+sound of the deep-voiced waves as they thunder down upon the rocks over
+which they break; yes! and fancy that you can make out through the low
+flying mist that several vessels are in the distance trying to beat
+their way against the growing gale, and off the dangerous lee-shore, and
+then rejoice as you feel fully assured, if any of those struggling
+vessels are overwhelmed by the storm, that it shall not be without a
+gallant effort for their safety that the poor fellows who form their
+crews shall be left to perish, for you are convinced that there are, if
+a life-boat station is near, storm warriors keenly watching the scene,
+and that they are ready at any moment to launch the life-boat and do
+battle with the storm and seas for the lives of their brother-sailors.
+Yes! and it is one of old England's many glories that it should be so.
+
+"It is the soul that makes us rich or poor;" the old philosopher tells
+us, and we feel that it is as true of a nation as of an individual. And
+we count a nation rich with a true glory, that can point to many good
+works organized and carried out for great and good ends by the loving
+heartedness, generosity, unselfishness, and courage of its people. And
+among such works is life-boat work; there are the rich in soul who have
+the means and the open hand, and there are the many who are rich in soul
+and have the courageous and strong hand; and the hand generous with its
+wealth, clasps the hand generous with its labour and readiness for
+peril, and together they work out those noble results in which we all
+rejoice, and which the records of the Life-boat Institution so fully
+declare.
+
+And we should be less proud of our country if it were not so; indeed we
+are almost inclined to think it a matter of necessity that in our island
+home, where the history of our country is so interwoven with the
+triumphs of our sailors, either in contests with our enemies, in pursuit
+of discovery, or in the development of commerce, that our sympathies
+with our sailors should indeed be deep and practical, and that while we
+rejoice in the safety and the comfort afforded by their labours, that we
+shall ever be prepared to help them in the hour of their distress; and
+that there can be therefore little room for wonder that those who
+realize the enormous traffic that is carried on around our shores, the
+dangerous nature of our coasts, and the constant casualties that are
+occurring, should earnestly desire the welfare of the life-boat cause,
+and be ready to labour for its development.
+
+The history of the life-boat movement, and of the foundation and gradual
+development of the Life-boat Institution, are given in the earlier pages
+of this book. The present condition of the Society tells abundantly of
+the success it has enjoyed, and of the sympathy it has gained, until now
+it is able almost to girdle our land with life-boat stations.
+
+Every year there is published by the Board of Trade, a register of the
+number of wrecks that have taken place in the British Isles during the
+previous year; the Life-boat Institution publishes a wreck-chart
+compiled from these returns; each wreck is denoted by a black dot which
+marks on the map the place at which the wreck occurred; and a truly
+dismal appearance the map has. See how plentifully these black dots are
+sprinkled round the coast-line, here one, and there two, at other places
+half-a-dozen side by side, or growing in number to ten or twelve, and
+then increasing still more rapidly at the more exposed parts of the
+coast, or where dangerous sands are more directly in the highway of
+vessels, so that in such places there may be found twenty, thirty, or
+forty such marks, and at some localities even more than these, as at the
+Sands off Yarmouth, the Goodwin Sands, the Bristol Channel, and others,
+where line after line is required to find room for the number of wrecks
+to be thus recorded. For the past year no fewer than 1958 such marks are
+necessary to complete the dismal list, for such was the number of the
+wrecks that took place, within that time, in the seas that surround the
+British Isles. The months of November and December were especially
+fatal, heavy gales, thick weather, shifting winds, worked terrible havoc
+among the shipping; the coasts were strewn with wrecks; and the
+wreck-chart grew proportionally darker in its outline; and is it not a
+terrible picture that it presents, as we recognise that almost every
+mark speaks of a dismal scene of destruction and of peril, of ships with
+wild seas breaking ruthlessly over them, and of men clinging on, being,
+perhaps, beaten slowly to death by the constant rush of the heavy waves,
+until, unless rescued, the shattered wreck breaks up beneath their feet,
+and they are at once launched into eternity?
+
+But let us look again at the chart, and we find red marks on the coast
+lines opposite to the black dots which stud the sea; and wherever the
+sea is more dark with the signs of wrecks, there do we find the coast
+line opposite to such places pencilled the more abundantly with the thin
+red lines which mark the life-boat stations; and thank God that the red
+marks on this wreck-chart do now so often confront the black! for if the
+black colour speaks of death, the red colour speaks of life; if the one
+tells of terrible danger the other tells of gallant rescue; if the one
+pictures sailors clinging to a few spars, expecting death at every
+moment; the other pictures the Storm Warriors ready at their various
+stations to man the life-boat, and launch forth to wrestle nobly with
+the cruel seas, to snatch from them their intended prey.
+
+And moreover, if the one set of signs tells us of the dangers incurred
+by the tens of thousands of sailors who are helping to minister to the
+necessities, and comfort, and luxury of the population of England, the
+other tells of men and women with warm hearts and generous hands, who
+let their sympathies go out towards their sailor brethren, and plant our
+storm-ridden shores with life-boats that shall be for the rescue of
+those in peril; and who are glad also to encourage and reward the brave
+men who so often risk their own lives in their efforts to save the lives
+of others.
+
+And so famously has its work gone on, that the Life-boat Society can now
+report that the number of lives saved, either by the life-boats of the
+Institution, or by especial exertions for which the Society has granted
+rewards, presents the grand total of more than 22,000; and we are told
+that for these services the Society has granted 91 gold medals, 842
+silver medals, and more than £40,000 in money, so that now we may well
+say, that the Institution has truly become one of national importance,
+as it has ever been one of national necessity.
+
+Well indeed was it that Lionel Luken nearly a century ago, "In the
+morning sowed the seed, and in the evening withheld not his hand;" for
+although it was not given him to see the results of his labours, yet he
+commenced a work which has grown into its present noble proportions;
+while in contrast to all the apathy he met with, we can now point to a
+wide-spread and positive affection that the people of England feel for
+the life-boat cause; and in evidence of the hold that the work of the
+Society has now obtained upon the public mind we can point to its
+meetings, when its friends assembled have been found to rank among all
+classes of society, when those who are among the chief of the Royal
+personages of the land have been present, and have been surrounded by
+some of the first representatives of our aristocracy, of our army, of
+our navy, and of our commerce. Among the most memorable of such meetings
+was one held in the Mansion House in the year 1867, when the Prince of
+Wales occupied the chair--and the testimony he gave in favour of the
+Society found an echo, I am sure, in the hearts of all present. It was
+to the following effect: "My Lord Mayor, my lords, ladies and gentlemen.
+It affords me great pleasure to occupy the chair upon so interesting an
+occasion as the present. Among the many benevolent and charitable
+institutions of this country there are, I think, few which more demand
+our sympathy and support, and in which we can feel more interest, than
+the National Life-boat Institution. An institution of this kind is an
+absolute necessity in a great maritime country like ours. It is wholly
+different in one respect to many other institutions, because, although
+lives are to be saved, they can in those cases, in which this society
+operates, only be saved at the risk of the loss of other lives. I am
+happy to be able to congratulate the Institution upon its high state of
+efficiency at the present moment, and on the fact that by its means
+nearly 1000 lives have been saved during the past year.
+
+"I am happy also to be able to say, that life-boats exist not only upon
+our coasts, but that our example in this matter has been emulated by
+many foreign maritime countries, some of which have chosen to model
+their Institutions upon our own.... Half a century ago this Institution
+originated in this city. In 1852, the late Duke of Northumberland became
+its president. My lamented father was also the vice-president, and took
+the warmest interest in its prosperity. I am happy to say that the
+respected secretary, Mr. Lewis, occupied that position in 1850. He has
+held it ever since, and much of the success of the Institution is owing
+to his long experience; and the energetic manner in which he has
+directed its working has raised the Institution to its present high
+state of efficiency.
+
+"Before concluding my brief remarks, I call upon you once more to offer
+your support to so excellent an Institution. I congratulate you that it
+has arrived at so excellent a state, and I feel sure that you would be
+the last to wish it to decay for the want of support to its funds."
+
+Thus spake His Royal Highness, in 1867, and since then the Institution
+has developed more and mere, completing its organization, perfecting its
+system, and yearly in its noble results increasing its hold upon the
+affections of the country.
+
+And now, as I write the concluding lines of my book, the reality of the
+work related is deeply impressed upon my mind, for this morning my two
+little boys came running downstairs making the house ring with their
+cries of "The life-boat! the life-boat!" they had seen it from their
+nursery window. Yes, there she was, being towed by the steamer, the
+rough seas lashing over her; her flag was flying in triumph. I could see
+through my glass that there were about a dozen saved men on board the
+steamer; and as I have since learned, seldom have men more narrowly
+escaped than did those poor fellows, and seldom have men been saved by a
+greater exhibition of courage and perseverance than was displayed by our
+life-boat men while effecting their rescue.
+
+The _Scot_, a barque of 345 tons, bound from Sunderland to Algiers with
+a cargo of coals, after experiencing much stormy and thick weather, ran
+on the Kentish Knock Sand at five o'clock in the morning; the seas
+immediately began to break over her; the carpenter sounded the well and
+found two feet and a half of water in her hold, but as the waves lifted
+her, and plunged her down upon the Sands, she filled at once with water.
+The captain sent the steward into the cabin for the ship's papers; he
+found the water up to the cabin floor; he seized the box in which the
+papers were, and ran up on deck; a wave rushed over the vessel and swept
+him along the deck; he caught hold of a rope with one hand, but one of
+the sailors, overwhelmed by the same wave, threw his legs around his
+neck and nearly tore him from his hold; the wave passed and the two men
+were enabled to spring into the rigging: all hands had to take refuge
+there, for within five minutes of the vessel's striking she began to
+break up; the boats were washed away, the deck-house was torn to
+fragments and carried away piecemeal; the deck began to twist, and
+buckle, and open, and then was speedily ripped up by the force of the
+seas, and torn away plank after plank. The vessel broke her back and
+heeled over on the starboard side, and settled down upon the Sands; the
+men could not make any signal of distress, and if they could have done
+so, they were miles away from any life-boat, and at any moment the masts
+might give and they be plunged into the boiling sea. If the weather
+moderated some passing vessel might see them and be able to send a boat
+in to their rescue, but not while the gale lasted. The day grew on; many
+vessels passed the Sands, but not near enough to be able to make out the
+men in the rigging of the masts, which were only just above water; the
+weather grew worse and worse, the day was wearing away, and the night
+coming on; it was all very, very hopeless.
+
+At last a brig passed nearer to them than any other vessels had come;
+the mate said, "If they are looking at the wreck with a good glass, they
+may, perhaps, see us," and he stood up and waved to them. At that
+moment, most providentially, the pilot on board the vessel looked at the
+wreck through a glass, and saw the mate waving his south-wester cap.
+The brig soon after spoke a smack that was making in for the land, and
+the smack proceeded to Broadstairs and reported a wreck on the Kentish
+Knock, with the crew in the rigging, and that a life-boat was wanted for
+their rescue, for that no ordinary boat could live through the sea that
+was running over the Sands. At Broadstairs they felt that their own boat
+could never get there in time without the assistance of a steamer, and
+they telegraphed to Ramsgate. It was about six o'clock in the evening,
+the steamer _Aid_, with Reading in command, and the life-boat
+_Bradford_, with Fish as coxswain, and R. Goldsmith as second coxswain,
+at once made their way out into the gale and tremendous sea to the
+rescue of the shipwrecked crew.
+
+In the meantime the poor fellows on board the wreck waited on almost in
+despair, the ship each moment yielding to the force of the storm till
+the whole deck was washed away, and the masts were working more and more
+loose; happily she had wire rigging, which stood the heavy swaying and
+lurching of the masts better than the ordinary rope rigging would have
+done.
+
+It was piteous in talking to the men to hear them describe the condition
+of utter despair that they were in, and how little ground they could
+find for any hope whatever; piteous to hear the captain say, "There were
+just two planks of the deck left floating entangled in a rope, and I
+kept watching them, thinking that if the mast went I would try and swim
+to them, and float on them for the chance of being picked up by some
+vessel;" to hear the mate answer, "But I was just watching them too,
+with the same idea;" and the carpenter adds, "That was just the plan I
+had in my mind."
+
+And thus the ten men clung to the rigging and to each other, standing on
+the small crosstrees of one tottering mast, hour after hour. The day
+passed, still no signs of rescue; it became quite dark; it seemed
+impossible that they could ever see another day's dawn.
+
+They might perish at any moment! at any moment! and all ten of them.
+This was the conviction of each one. They told me how endless the dark
+hours of that terrible night seemed; and one man said, "That the thought
+that seemed ever present with him, was the bitter way that his little
+boy sobbed and cried when he bid him good-bye, and how he would cry
+again when he heard that 'Dadda was gone.'" At last there was a streak
+of dawn, but the mast had fallen over almost to a level with the water
+and seemed still yielding rapidly; they might see the sunrise again, but
+that was all; when one of the sailors cried out, "A steamer!" "What good
+can that be to us?" and they watch her without interest, for there seems
+little chance of her coming in their direction. "Ah! she is running down
+the edge of the Sands, and comes nearer, and nearer!"--"Well she can't
+help us if she does; no boat can come across the Sands to us in this
+surf--No! no." Shortly, a man cries, "She has a large boat in
+tow;"--"What! perhaps a life-boat! it may be that some passing vessel
+made us out yesterday and has sent a life-boat;" Oh, what a thought of
+hope, of joy, of life! "Can it be so? it is--it is! thank God it is--it
+is! Look, she has left the steamer and is coming in through the breakers
+straight towards us!"
+
+It is something to remember, the way in which one man said to me, as if
+almost unnerved by the remembrance, "Oh, what a beauty she looked! what
+a beauty she looked coming over those seas!"
+
+The steamer and life-boat had got out to the Sands after battling with
+the storm for a distance of twenty-six miles. At about 11 o'clock the
+night before, they spoke the Lightship on the Kentish Knock, and learnt
+the bearings of the wreck; but they found that it was impossible to
+discover her in the darkness of the night and storm, so after several
+vain efforts they lay to until the morning. As soon as it was light they
+went in search of the wreck, and the life-boat made in across the Sands,
+and it was then truly a great matter of heartfelt congratulation to the
+life-boat men that all their labour and perseverance had not been in
+vain; for to their great joy they could see the crew in the rigging.
+They anchored the boat as near to the wreck as they could venture, and
+then let the cable veer out until the boat was under the vessel's
+jib-boom. It was low-tide--the seas were not breaking over the wreck so
+violently as they had been; and the men were able to work their way out
+on to the bowsprit, and drop into the boat, and thus the ten men were
+saved, after being twenty-six hours holding on in the maintop of the
+wreck.
+
+The flood-tide was just making; all felt, that as soon as it rose and
+the wreck began to heave and work again, the mast would speedily go, and
+they realized to the full that they had only been saved just in time.
+
+The life-boat returned to the steamer as speedily as possible, and put
+the rescued men on board her. The shipwrecked men had not tasted
+anything for nearly thirty-six hours, as it was before breakfast time
+that they had run ashore, and they had been in the rigging for
+twenty-six hours. The life-boat got back to the harbour at 11 o'clock in
+the morning; the life-boat men had been in the open boat exposed to all
+the fury of the storm for nearly seventeen hours, and their exhaustion
+was very great. The kindness of some friends provided the weary and
+famished men with a good dinner at the house of their old comrade and
+friend, Jarman, and soon after a telegram came from Mr. Lewis, of the
+Life-boat Institution, to whom tidings of the rescue had been
+telegraphed, that the life-boatmen were to have a sovereign each, and a
+good dinner; but by that time they were all resting at home after their
+long hours of fatigue. Other friends made recognition by subscription of
+their noble services; and comfort was thus carried into the homes of our
+Storm Warriors after their gallant and triumphant efforts in saving
+life.
+
+The shipwrecked men were cared for in our Sailors' Home, and speedily
+recovered their fatigues. The captain told me he did not think they
+would have been alive one hour longer, if the life-boat had not come
+just when she did; and speaking of the life-boat, said with deep
+feeling, "Oh! she is a noble boat, and nobly manned; there could not be
+a kinder set of men!" And with these words of the brave and grateful
+sailor so recently and unexpectedly saved with all his crew, from that
+which seemed most certain death, I feel inclined to finish my book. But
+I will add one wish, namely, that we had a better Sailors' Home in which
+to receive the poor fellows who are brought ashore; 156 wrecked men were
+received into the Home at Ramsgate last year, 40 in one day; and a
+little house of £25, or so, rent, and its one sitting-room for the use
+of the men, only about sixteen feet by fourteen, and eighteen beds
+crowded together in small rooms is, of course, quite inadequate to
+afford the accommodation that we would wish to provide for the poor
+fellows brought in half dead with cold, with exhaustion, and with
+hunger, plucked by the Storm Warriors from the very jaws of death 'mid
+the rage of waters on the Goodwin Sands.
+
+God speed the life-boat! God guard the Storm Warriors!
+
+
+THE END.
+
+
+LONDON: PRINTED BY WILLIAM CLOWES AND SONS, STAMFORD STREET AND CHARING
+CROSS.
+
+
+
+
+ADVERTISEMENTS
+
+_Second Edition, Crown 8vo., price 5s._
+
+THE HISTORY
+
+OF
+
+THE LIFE-BOAT AND ITS WORK.
+
+BY RICHARD LEWIS,
+
+BARRISTER-AT-LAW, SECRETARY TO THE ROYAL NATIONAL LIFE-BOAT INSTITUTION.
+
+With Illustrations, and Wreck Chart.
+
+"To tell the story of a noble work--the work of the Life-boat,--was
+almost the privilege of Mr. Lewis, and he has told it
+admirably."--_Standard._
+
+"Though the book perforce contains many matters of sheer science, and a
+multitude of statistics, it is not by any means dry reading, and even
+the frivolously inclined will read with deep interest some of the
+chapters, more especially that of the Ramsgate Life-boat above alluded
+to."--_Land and Water._
+
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.
+
+
+BOOKS OF TRAVEL.
+
+ _SIR SAMUEL W. BAKER'S "ISMAILIA."_
+
+ A Narrative of the Expedition to Central Africa for the Suppression
+ of the Slave Trade. Organized by ISMAIL, Khedive of Egypt. With
+ Maps, Portraits, and numerous Illustrations. Two Vols., 8vo.,
+ 36_s._
+
+ _THE ALBERT N'YANZA GREAT BASIN of the_
+ NILE, and Exploration of the Nile Sources. By Sir SAMUEL BAKER.
+ With Maps and numerous Illustrations. Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo.,
+ 6_s._
+
+ _THE NILE TRIBUTARIES OF ABYSSINIA, and_
+ the Sword Hunters of the HAMRAN ARABS. By Sir SAMUEL BAKER. With
+ Maps and numerous Illustrations. Fifth Edition. Crown 8vo., 6_s._
+
+ _AT LAST: a Christmas in the West Indies_.
+ By the Rev. CHARLES KINGSLEY, Canon of Westminster. With numerous
+ Illustrations. Fourth Edition. Crown 8vo., 6_s._
+
+ _THE MALAY ARCHIPELAGO: the Land of the_
+ Orang-Utan and the Bird of Paradise. A Narrative of Travel. By
+ ALFRED RUSSEL WALLACE. With Maps and numerous Illustrations. Fourth
+ Edition. Crown 8vo., 7_s._ 6_d._
+
+ _GREATER BRITAIN._ A Record of Travel in English-speaking
+ Countries. By Sir CHARLES W. DILKE, M.P. With Illustrations. Sixth
+ Edition. Crown 8vo., 6_s._
+
+ _A YEAR'S JOURNEY THROUGH CENTRAL and_
+ EASTERN ARABIA, 1862-3. By W. GIFFORD PALGRAVE.
+
+ Sixth Edition. Crown 8vo., 6_s._
+
+ _A RAMBLE ROUND THE WORLD, 1871._
+ By M. le Baron de HÜBNER, formerly Ambassador and Minister.
+ Translated by Lady HERBERT. Two Vols., 8vo., 25_s._
+
+ _HOLIDAYS ON HIGH LANDS; or, Rambles and_
+ Incidents in Search of Alpine Plants. By the Rev. HUGH MACMILLAN,
+ LL.D., F.R.S.E.
+
+ _BY SEA AND LAND._ Being a Trip through Egypt,
+ India, Ceylon, Australia, New Zealand, America--All Round the
+ World. By H. A. MEREWETHER, one of Her Majesty's Council. Crown
+ 8vo., 8s. 6_d._
+
+ _STATION LIFE IN NEW ZEALAND._
+ By Lady BARKER. Third Edition. Crown 8vo., 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+ _MR. PISISTRATUS BROWN, M.P., in the Highlands._
+ New Edition. With Illustrations. Crown 8vo., 3_s._ 6_d._
+
+
+MACMILLAN AND CO., LONDON.
+
+
+
+
+
+End of the Project Gutenberg EBook of Storm Warriors, by John Gilmore
+
+*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK 42415 ***