BREAKING UP OF THE GREAT ICE PACK--IN THE NIPS--THE "CANNY SCOTIA" ON HER BEAM-ENDS--STAVING OF THE "ARRANDOON."
In the very midst of joy and pleasure in this so-called weary world, we are oftentimes very nigh to grief and pain.
See yonder Swiss village by the foot of the mountain, how peacefully it is sleeping in the moonlight; not a sound is to be heard save the occasional crowing of a wakeful c.o.c.k, or the voice of watch-dog baying the moon. The inhabitants have gone to bed hours and hours ago, and their dreams, if they dream at all, are a.s.suredly not dreams of danger.
But hark to that terrible noise far overhead. Is it thunder? Yes, the thunder of a mighty avalanche. Nearer and nearer it rolls, till it reaches the devoted village, then all is desolation and woe.
See yet another village, far away in sunny Africa; its little huts nestle around the banyan-tree, the tall cocoa-palm, and the wide-spreading mango. They are a quiet, inoffensive race who inhabit that village. They live south of the line, far away from treacherous Somali Indians or wild Magulla men; they never even dreamt of war or bloodshed. They certainly do not dream of it now.
"The babe lies in its mother"s arms, The wife"s head pillowed on the husband"s breast."
Suddenly there is a shout, and when they awake--oh! horror! their huts are all in flames, the Arab slavers are on them, and--I would not harrow your young feelings by describing the scenes that follow.
But a ship--and this is coming nearer home--may be sailing over a rippling sea, with the most pleasant of breezes filling her sails, no land in sight, and every one, fore and aft, as happy as the birds on an early morning in summer, when all at once she rasps, and strikes-- strikes on a rock, the very existence of which was never even suspected before. In half an hour perhaps that vessel has gone down, and those that are saved are afloat in open boats, the breeze freshening every moment, the wavetops breaking into cold spray, night coming on, and dark, threatening clouds banking up on the windward horizon.
When the first wail arose from the pack that announced the breaking up of the sea of ice, a silence of nearly a minute fell on the sailors a.s.sembled at the entertainment. Music stopped, dancing ceased, and every one listened. The sound was repeated, and multiplied, and the ship quivered and half reeled.
McBain knew the advantage of remaining calm and retaining his presence of mind in danger. Because he was a true sailor. He was not like the sailor captains you read of in penny dreadfuls--half coal-heaver, half Herzegovinian bandit.
"Odd, isn"t it?" he muttered, as he stroked his beard and smiled; then in a louder voice he gave his orders.
"Men," he said, "we"ll have some work to do before morning--get ready.
The ice is breaking up. Pipe down, boatswain. Mr Stevenson, see to the clearing away of all this hamper."
Then, followed by Rory and the doctor, he got away out into the daylight.
The ships were all safe enough as yet, and there was only perceptible the gentlest heaving motion in the pack. Sufficient was it, however, to break up the bay ice between the bergs, and this with a series of loud reports, which could be heard in every direction. McBain looked overboard somewhat anxiously; the broken pieces of bay ice were getting ploughed up against the ship"s side with a noise that is indescribable, not so much from its extreme loudness as from its peculiarity; it was a strange mixture of a hundred different noises, a wailing, complaining, shrieking, grinding noise, mingled with a series of sharp, irregular reports.
"It is like nothing earthly," said Rory, "that ever I heard before; and when I close my eyes for a brace of seconds, I could imagine that down on the pack there two hundred tom-cats had lain down to die, that twenty Highland bag-pipers--twenty Peters--were playing pibrochs of lament, and that just forenenst them a squad of militia-men was firing a _feu-de-joie_, and that neither the militia-men nor the pipers either were as self-contained as they should be on so solemn an occasion."
The doctor was musing; he was thinking how happy he had been half an hour ago, and now--heigho; it was just possible he would never get back to Iceland again, never see his blue-eyed Danish maiden more.
"Pleasures," he cried, "pleasures, Captain McBain--"
"Yes," said McBain, "pleasures--"
"Pleasures," continued the doctor,--
""Are like poppies shed, You seize the flower, the bloom is fled."
"I"ll gang doon below. Bed is the best place."
"Perhaps," said McBain, smiling, "but not the safest. Mind, the ship is in the nips, and a berg might go through her at any moment. There is the merest possibility of your being killed in your bed. That"s all; but that won"t keep _you_ on deck."
Mischievous Rory was doing ridiculous att.i.tudes close behind the worthy surgeon.
"What?" cried Sandy, in his broadest accent. "_That_ not keep me on deck! Man, the merest possibility of such a cawtawstrophy would keep me on deck for a month."
"A vera judeecious arrangement," hissed Rory in his ear, for which he was chased round the deck, and had his own ears well pulled next minute.
The doctor had him by the ear when Allan and Ralph appeared on the scene.
"Hullo!" they laughed, "Rory got in for it again."
"Whustle," cried Sandy.
"I only said "a vera--"" began Rory.
"Whustle, will ye?" cried the doctor.
"I can"t "whustle,"" laughed Rory. But he had to "whustle," and then he was free.
"It"s going to be a tough squeeze," said Silas to McBain.
"Yes; and, worse luck, the swell has set in from the east," answered the captain.
"I"m off to the _Canny Scotia_; good morning."
"One minute, Captain Grig; we promised to hoist up Cobb"s c.o.c.kle-sh.e.l.l.
Lend us a hand with your fellows, will you?"
"Ay, wi" right good will," said Silas.
There were plenty of spars on board the _Arrandoon_ big enough to rig shears, and these were sent overboard without delay, with ropes and everything else required.
The men of the _Arrandoon_, a.s.sisted by those of the _Canny Scotia_, worked with a readiness and will worthy even of our gallant Royal Engineers. A shears was soon rigged, and a winch got up. On a spar fastened along the c.o.c.kle-sh.e.l.l"s deck the purchase was made, and, under the superintendence of brave little Ap, the work began.
For a long time the "sh.e.l.l" refused to budge, so heavily did the ice press around her; the spar on her deck started though, several times.
"Worse luck," thought little Ap. He had the spar re-fastened. Tried again. The same result followed. Then little Ap considered, taking "mighty" big pinches of snuff the while.
"We won"t do like that," he said to himself, "because, look you see, the purchase is too much on the perpendicular. Yes, yes."
Then he had the spar elevated a couple of yards, and fastened between the masts, which he had strengthened by lashing extra spars to them.
The result of this was soon apparent. The hawsers tightened, the little yacht moved, even the pressure of the ice under her helped to lift her as soon as she began to heel over, and, in half an hour afterwards, the c.o.c.kle-sh.e.l.l lay in a very ignominious position indeed--beam-ends on the ice.
"Bravo!" cried Silas, when the men had finished their cheering. "Bravo!
what _would_ long Cobb say now? what would he say? Ha! ha! ha!"
Silas Grig laughed and chuckled till his face grew redder than ever, but he would not have been quite so gay, I think, had he known what was so soon to happen to his own ship.
Stevenson touched McBain on the shoulder.
"The ice presses heavy on the rudder, sir."
"Then unship it," said McBain.
"And I"ll unship mine," said Silas.
Unshipping rudders is a kind of drill that few save Greenland sailors ever learn, but it is very useful at times, nevertheless.
In another hour the rudders of the two ships were hoisted and laid on the bergs. So that was one danger past.