""Can you reef or steer, or heave the lead?"

""No."

""Then what the devil _can_ you do?"

""I can read and write, and keep accounts."

""Oh, ho!--a reg"lar long-sh.o.r.e gemman!--the makings of a sea-lawyer!

And so you can"t do nothin" but read and write?"

""Yes, there"s one thing I can do, and am determined to do--to learn everything you will take the trouble to teach me. _You_ knew nothing before you were taught--how can you expect _me_ to do so?"

""Well, there"s reason in that, anyhow," said he; "and if so be you pays attention, why, there"s no saying but we may see _you_ a bosun"s mate some o" these days. But I say, young un, make your number. The poor gulpin doesn"t understand me"--(this was said half aside). "What"s your name?"

""Dalzell."

""Dalzell! Dalzell!" said he; "blow"d if that isn"t a Kelso name! Where d"ye hail from, eh?--where d"ye come from?"

""Scotland."

""Ay, that"s as plain as the nose on your face, whenever you open your mouth. Now, n.o.body would never go for to doubt me to be an Englishman by my lingo. But I"ll tell you a bit of a secret--I"m a Scotchman born and bred."

""Well, I can tell you a secret too, if you"ll promise not to tell it."

""Speak on, youngster. I"ll never blab till you give me leave. I"m as silent as the ship"s bell, as never speaks till it"s tolled."

""Well, then, _Telford"s_ a Kelso name, as well as Dalzell. Many a penny-bap have I bought, when I was at school, at old Jamie Telford"s; and, if I"m not mistaken, I"m speaking to his son."

""Did you know the old boy? Bless his old heart! Well, you"re right for once in your life, my boy; but how the devil did you find me out?"

""I"ve often heard the old man talk of his son Tom, the boatswain"s mate; and your name and your talking of Kelso together made me fancy you must be the man."

""Well, that beats c.o.c.k-fighting! Give us your hand, my hearty! I"ll stick to you through thick and thin, for the sake of the old town and them as lives in it, and if I don"t, call me a liar, that"s all, and see what I"ll give you. But who are _your_ people? I suppose that"s part o"

the secret you were going to tell me?"

""It was; and you will keep it?"

""In coorse; didn"t I tell you so afore?"

"I then told him my story, which he heard with great attention, and which evidently increased his respect for me. "I have often heard tell of your father," said he, "and for his sake I"ll do all I can for his son. I liked the looks of you before--I like you ten times better now; it shan"t be my fault if you don"t larn your duty. I"ll live to see you an _admiral_ yet--who knows? You"re right, however, to keep your story secret, for some o" these devil"s limbs would be jeering about your being a gemman in a cog, as they calls it, come to sea to wear out his old toggery."

"The good-hearted fellow kept his promise. Never had scholar a more zealous and indefatigable teacher, and never had teacher a pupil more anxious to avail himself of his advantages. We were detained for nearly three weeks, and I made the most of my opportunities. During the day, my friend Telford employed all his leisure time in initiating me into the mysteries of knotting and splicing, and in teaching me the names and uses of the various ropes; and at night, when there were none to laugh at my awkward exhibitions, he encouraged me to go aloft, and to learn to make active use of my hands and feet. When we went on sh.o.r.e on liberty, he used to hire a boat, and teach me how to handle the oar: in fact, my kind instructor neglected no means of teaching me how to make myself useful. My whole heart and soul were in the matter, and my progress was proportionably rapid; and I was cheered on to redoubled exertion by the kind encouragement of the first lieutenant, who complimented Telford highly on his success. Before the ship sailed, I was on a par, as to qualifications, with many who, without a similar stimulus to exertion, had been some time at sea. I could hand, reef, and--no, I couldn"t steer--but I knew all the marks on the lead-line, and had often taken a sly cast. I was constantly on the watch for instruction, always on the alert to start forward when any particular duty was required, and, by evincing a habitual desire to do my duty actively and well, I soon gained ground in the opinion of my superiors.

The caterer of the midshipman"s mess had been disappointed in his servant, and wished to promote me to that _high_ honour. I thanked him heartily for his kind intentions, but declined his offer; as I wished, I said, to learn my duty as _seaman_. This coming to the ears of the first lieutenant, increased his good-will towards me. "We shall make something of that young man yet," said he. A circ.u.mstance occurred a few days before we sailed, fortunate in its results as far as concerned me, but which might have terminated fatally. The captain"s son, one of our midshipmen, a fine boy of thirteen, had been forward on the forecastle with some orders, and, in returning aft again, stopped to look over the gangway. How the accident happened I know not, but he lost his balance, and toppled over into the water. The men were below at supper at the time, but I happened to have just come on deck, and had pa.s.sed him to go forward, when I heard the plunge, and, turning round, missed him from the deck. I instantly surmised what had happened, and, raising the cry of "A man overboard!" I dashed over after him. There was a strong tide running, and objects were indistinct in the dusk of the evening, but I fortunately caught sight of him, and reached him just in time, for he was sinking. By dint of great exertion, I contrived to support him while I edged down to a buoy, some distance astern, to which we clung till taken off by a boat from the frigate. The captain, who was on board at the time, thanked and praised me before the whole ship"s company for my gallantry, as he was pleased to call it, in saving the life of his son; and the boy, after whispering to his father, came up to me, and presenting me with his watch, begged that I would accept it as a mark of his grat.i.tude. I have it still. From that day, both father and son behaved with the most marked kindness to me, and took every opportunity of showing their good-will. For some weeks after we sailed for the Cape: nothing particular occurred beyond the regular routine of duty; but, at the end of that time, the captain wanted some one to a.s.sist his secretary, and the word was pa.s.sed round the decks by the master-at-arms, for those who were good writers among the crew, to send in specimens of their penmanship. I was one of the candidates. Our specimens were sent to the captain, and all the writers were ordered aft.

""Who is the writer of this specimen?" said the captain, pointing to mine.

""I am, sir."

""And is the motto your own?" (It was, "When a man"s foot is on the first step of the ladder, he should never rest till he reach the top.")

""Yes, sir."

""Indeed!--you seem to try to act on that principle. Go on as well as you have begun, and there is no telling where you may stop. In the meantime, you may act as a.s.sistant to my secretary." He then called the first lieutenant, Mr Barlow, and walked up and down the deck with him some time; after which Mr Barlow beckoned to me to come to him:--"Dalzell,"

said he, "Captain Edwards and myself have both had reason to be satisfied with you since you joined the ship, and, as you have proved yourself to be qualified to a.s.sist his clerk, we wish to keep you separate from the ship"s company, and to allow you to mess with the midshipmen, if they have no objection."

"I felt a flushing of the cheek and a fluttering of the heart. I felt that _the first step of the ladder_ was under my foot.

""I hope they can make no objection to me on account of character, sir; and my birth and education place me nearly on an equality with them."

""Ah! how came you to be here then? You took to bad courses, I suppose, and so your friends sent you to sea, to reclaim you: was that it?"

""No, sir. Misfortune and necessity brought me here, united with the love of the profession of a sailor. It is a duty, however, which I owe to you as well as myself, on the present occasion, to appear in my true colours; and to tell you a tale which I would otherwise have kept secret, and which is only known to myself and my kind friend and townsman, Telford, the boatswain"s mate." I then proceeded to relate to him what I have already told you. Both the captain and Mr Barlow appeared to be much interested in my narrative, and were pleased to compliment me upon my independence of spirit, and the clear and distinct manner in which I expressed myself. "After this," said Captain Edwards, "there can be no bar to your messing with the young gentlemen, as I suppose you have no objection to their hearing your story?"

""None whatever, sir."

""Begging your pardon, Captain Frederick," said Mr Barlow; "I know a midshipman"s berth too well, and he may tell of his birth and his misfortunes; but let him know the love, sir, and you"ll never hear the end of it."

""I daresay you"re quite right, Mr Barlow. Dalzell, I have no doubt you will be discreet in your communications, for your own sake."

"That same day I was admitted into the midshipmen"s mess, and was treated by them with the greatest kindness and consideration. My life was now a comparatively easy one, as I had hardly any duty to perform, except that of writing; but I determined in my own mind, if possible, to prove myself as quick as a clerk as I had endeavoured to do as a sailor.

I was fortunate enough, in my new capacity, not only to please my immediate superior, but to add to the captain"s good opinion of me. One stormy night, as we were nearing the Cape, I was letting go some rope on the p.o.o.p, the hands having been called out to reef topsails, when something fell heavily upon the deck almost close to my feet. The night was so dark that I could not distinguish what it was; but I thought that a coil of rope, or something of that kind, had been thrown out of the top by the motion of the ship, and I began to feel about, to discover what it might be. My hand touched something soft and warm, and at the same time I heard a faint groan. I immediately gave the alarm, and a quartermaster brought up a lantern, by the light of which we discovered the lifeless body of young Hawkins, one of our midshipmen. He had been up furling the mizzen-royal, had lost his footing, and been precipitated to the deck. Poor fellow! he never spoke again--that groan had been his last. A few days after his death, the captain called the hands out, and told me, before them all, that he had entered me on the ship"s books as midshipman, as a reward for my good behaviour; and he had no doubt that the same high sense of duty which had been the means of raising me to the quarterdeck would incite me to do credit to the appointment. He then told the ship"s company to obey my orders for the future as their officer, and then dismissed them. I was immediately surrounded by the midshipmen, all of whom cordially congratulated me upon my appointment, and resolved to have a jollification on the occasion. I was much amused with my old friend Telford, who took the earliest opportunity of touching his hat to me, and calling me Mr Dalzell.

""Why, Telford, what makes you so distant?" said I, offering my hand at the same time.

""No, sir, thank ye," said he; "I knows my place better nor that. If so be you likes to give us your flipper down in your cabin, well and good; but not here, sir--not afore the people--"twould look too free-and-easy like. I"m plain Tom Telford still; but you"ve got a handle to your name now, Mr Dalzell."

"My messmates laughed heartily, and Tom was desired to come down to the berth, where he shook me heartily by the hand, and wished me all manner of success, and then tossed off a tumbler of strong grog in the most approved fashion: nose invisible--eyes raised heavenward--out-stretched little finger--gurgling noise in the throat, ending with a suffocating gasp of enjoyment, and a sweeping over his mouth with the cuff of his jacket.

"I pa.s.s over a number of trifling incidents in my naval career, and shall proceed at once to the sad catastrophe by which I was deprived of my kind friend and benefactor, the captain, and of most of those with whom I had pa.s.sed so many happy days. We were lying at anchor in Table Bay, one fine afternoon in November, the 4th of the month. The weather was perfectly calm, but there was a heavy swell, and clouds had been for some time gathering to the northward, and many of our weather-Solomons predicted a storm. In the midshipmen"s berth, however, there were no croakers. It was the eve of the "Gunpowder Plot," and many a tale was told of boyish pranks, and of the bonfires and fireworks of schoolboy days. There was no care for the future, no antic.i.p.ation of evil; all was life, and thoughtlessness, and mirth. Alas! alas! how little did we think what one day might bring forth! At daylight of the 5th, it was blowing a heavy gale from the northward, a quarter from which there is no shelter in Table Bay. The sea came tumbling in in long and heavy surges, and the ship plunged deeply and violently. The hands were called out at ten o"clock--"Down yards and masts!" The fore and main yards were lowered, and the topmasts were struck, and the ship, relieved by the removal of so much top weight, rode more easily. At noon, so little apprehension was felt for the effects of the storm, that a salute was fired in commemoration of the day. The gale gradually increased in violence; and at half-past twelve, after a heavy pitch, the cry was heard, "The small bower has parted!"--"Let go the sheet!" was the order in reply, followed by the heavy plunge of the anchor. Such a mountainous sea was running at this time, that every soul on board seemed to antic.i.p.ate the fatal result that followed. The ship was pitching bows under, shipping green seas over all--the sky was murky black--vivid flashes of lightning burst from it almost incessantly--and the loud rattling of the thunder, every now and then, was heard far above the howling of the gale and the roaring of the sea. Every eye was fixed in eager anxiety on the cables, which every now and then were buried in the sea, and then, as the ship rose to the swell, were seen far ahead of her, high above the surface of the water, stiff and rigid as bars of iron.

"I know not how it happened, but, amid all the uproar around me, surrounded by faces which spoke but too plainly fears for the result, and conscious that our danger was imminent, I felt a kind of unnatural buoyancy of spirits, a secret conviction that, whatever might happen, I should escape unhurt. Telford stared at me, and muttered, "The lad"s fey, as they used to say in the North." At two o"clock, the best bower cable parted, and the spare anchor was let go, but the cable went almost immediately. Our danger was now most imminent; our sole dependence was on our sheet cable; and it was evident to all on board that _that_ could not long resist the heavy strain. Our ensign was now hoisted, union downward, that well-known signal of extreme distress; and the mournful booming of our guns seemed to our excited imaginations to be the knell of our pa.s.sing minutes. At seven o"clock, a cry was heard, which, like an electric shock, was pa.s.sed from one end of the ship to the other in a moment, stunning the most daring spirits with its dreaded import. The sheet cable had parted, and the ship was at the mercy of the wind and sea. An order was now given for every man to provide for his own safety, and a scene of the greatest confusion ensued. For about ten minutes, the ship continued to drive before the wind, and then struck, with a dreadful crash, upon a reef of rocks, broadside to the sh.o.r.e. The main and mizzen masts were immediately cut away, and the foremast soon after went by the board. To add to our horrors, the gun-room was discovered to be on fire, and in a short time the smoke came eddying up from the different hatchways in such volumes as to prevent any communication with the lower deck. Feeble would have been the efforts of man in opposing the devouring flame; but here, element was fighting against element, and the sea claimed the mastery; the vast bodies of water which were constantly dashing over the ship effected, in about ten minutes, what no human exertion could have performed, and we were saved from a fiery, to antic.i.p.ate a watery death. The scene on board the wreck was now awful in the extreme; every sea that broke over her swept away new victims; and those who were left clinging to life with the energy of despair, shuddered, as they missed their companions, in the antic.i.p.ation of their own approaching doom. Several of the crew, maddened by the horror of a slow and lingering death, plunged desperately into the jaws of their watery tomb, to put an end at once to their suspense; and others, in a vain attempt to reach the sh.o.r.e, were carried out to sea by the eddy, and perished miserably, crying in vain for help from their helpless shipmates. About half-past nine, the p.o.o.p was washed away, and forming a large raft, afforded a flattering prospect of deliverance.

Seventy or eighty of the crew jumped overboard, and, by great exertion, contrived to reach it. We who remained on board watched their motions with intense anxiety, and, for the moment, forgot our own danger in the contemplation of theirs. An involuntary shout burst from us, when we saw them reaching the raft in safety, and borne onwards towards the sh.o.r.e; but, alas! a heavy sea struck the floating wreck when only a short distance from the beach, and, turning it over and over, engulfed all its wretched occupants.

""Poor fellows!" said Telford, who was clinging to the ring-bolts by my side, "their cruise is up! They"ve reached their anchorage, and we may get our ground-tackle ready as soon as we like!"

""Oh no!" replied I; "while there"s life there"s hope, Telford. Keep up your heart, man--we shall weather this bout yet."

""Heaven in its mercy grant that _you_ may, Mr Dalzell! but there is a weight on _my_ heart, a dark feeling that my hour has come. I shall never see the bonny banks of Tweed again--never, never! If you should live, sir, to get back to Kelso, tell my good old father----"

""Hold on for your life!" shouted I, as a giant sea came rushing and roaring towards the wreck.

"It burst over us; and when, gasping and half-suffocated, I was able to open my eyes, I looked round--my poor companion was gone. A dark body was visible, for a moment, on the surface of the sea, some forty yards distant, and that was the last I saw of my kind friend Telford. Soon after this, the wreck gave a heavy lurch towards the sh.o.r.e, and then, as the sea receded, rolled back again, and separated into three parts. I caught hold of some part of the floating wreck, and, after being repeatedly washed off, and recovering my station, I contrived to lash myself securely to it, and then exhausted nature found relief in insensibility. When I recovered, I found myself lying on the beach, surrounded by the bodies of my unfortunate shipmates, and, raising myself on my knees, I breathed a silent thanksgiving to Heaven for my almost miraculous escape. Hearing a faint groan near me, I groped my way towards the spot whence the sound proceeded--the night was very dark, but a flash of lightning revealed to me the object of my search. It was the body of a seaman stretched upon his back--the right arm extended on the sand, and the left covering the face. At first I thought it was a corpse that lay before me, so stiff, so cold, so motionless did it seem to be; but, on putting my hand on the breast, I felt the pulsation of the heart, and in a few moments low stifled moanings were heard, like those of a person labouring under the influence of nightmare. I spoke to the sleeper, but without receiving any answer; but, the muttering still continuing, I shook him gently.

""Holloa!" shouted he, as he started to his feet.

"What was my surprise and delight, when I recognised the voice of Telford, whom I thought I had seen swallowed up by the waves.

""Telford!" said I, "is that you?"

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