<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</SPAN><br/> <span class="small1">UNDER THE ROCK.</span></h2>
<p>For a while the power of the lightning seemed to quench the
wind almost, and one continuous roar of thunder rang around
the darkness. Then, with a bellow, the wind sprang forth
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_45">[Pg 45]</SPAN></span>
(like a wild bull out of a mountain), and shattered the rain and
drowned the thunder, and was lord of everything. Under its
weight the flat sea quivered, and the crests flew into foam, and
the scourge upon the waters seemed to beat them all together.
The whirlwinds now were past and done with, and a violent
gale begun, and in the burst and change of movement there
appeared a helpless ship.</p>
<p>She was bearing towards Pool Tavan, as poor Bardie's boat
had done, but without the summer glory and the golden wealth
of waves. All was smooth and soft and gentle, as the moonlight
in a glass, when the little boat came gliding with its baby
captain. All was rough and hard and furious as a fight of
devils, when that ship came staggering with its load of sin and
woe. And yet there had not been so much as twenty-four
hours between the two.</p>
<p>Not one of our little coasting vessels, but a full-rigged ship
she loomed, of foreign build, although at present carrying no
colours. I saw at once what her business was, to bring from
the West Indies sugar, rum, and suchlike freight, to Bristol, or
to the Dutchmen. This was in her clearance-bill; but behind
that she had other import not so clearly entered. In a word,
she carried negroes from the overstocked plantations, not to be
quite slaves (at least in the opinion of their masters), but to be
distributed, for their own Christian benefit, at a certain sum
per head, among the Bristol or Dutch merchants, or wherever
it might be. And it serves them right, I always say; for the
fuss that we now make about those black men must bring
down the anger of the Creator, who made them black, upon us.</p>
<p>As the gale set to its work, and the sea arose in earnest, and
the lightning drifted off into the scud of clouds, I saw, as plain
as a pikestaff, that the ship must come ashore, and go to pieces
very likely, before one could say "Jack Robinson." She had
been on the Sker-weather sands already, and lost her rudder
and some of her sternpost, as the lift of the water showed; and
now there was nothing left on board her of courage or common
seamanship. The truth of it was, although of course I could
not know it then, that nearly all the ship's company acted as
was to be expected from a lot of foreigners; that is to say, if
such they were. They took to the boats in a kind of panic
when first she struck among the sands in the whirlwind which
began the storm. There could have been then no great sea
running, only quiet rollers; and being but two miles off the
shore, they hoped, no doubt, to land well enough, after leaving
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_46">[Pg 46]</SPAN></span>
the stupid negroes and the helpless passengers to the will of
Providence.</p>
<p>However, before they had rowed a mile, with the flood-tide
making eastward, one of the boats was struck by lightning, and
the other caught in a whirl vorago (as the Spaniards call it),
and not a soul ever came to land, and scarcely any bodies.
Both these accidents were seen from Porthcawl Point by Sandy
Macraw through a telescope: and much as he was mine enemy,
I do him the justice to believe it; partly because he could look
for no money from any lies in the matter, and still more because
I have heard that some people said that they saw him see it.</p>
<p>But to come back to this poor ship: the wind, though blowing
madly enough (as a summer gale is often hotter for a while
than a winter one), had not time and sweep as yet to raise any
very big rollers. The sea was sometimes beaten flat and then
cast up in hillocks; but the mighty march of waters fetched
by a tempest from the Atlantic was not come, and would not
come in a veering storm like this. For it takes a gale of at
least three tides, such as we never have in summer, to deliver
the true buffet of the vast Atlantic.</p>
<p>Nevertheless the sea was nasty and exceeding vicious; and
the wind more madly wild, perhaps, than when it has full time
to blow; in short, the want of depth and power was made up
by rage and spite. And for a ship not thoroughly sound and
stanch in all her timbers it had been better, perhaps, to rise and
fall upon long billows, with a chance of casting high and dry,
than to be twirled round and plucked at, thrown on beam-ends,
and taken aback, as this hapless craft was being, in the lash of
rocky waters and the drift of gale and scud.</p>
<p>By this time she was close ashore, and not a man (except
myself) to help or even pity her. All around her was wind
and rocks, and a mad sea rushing under her. The negroes,
crouching in the scuppers, or clinging to the masts and rails,
or rolling over one another in their want of pluck and skill,
seemed to shed their blackness on the snowy spray and curdled
foam, like cuttle-fish in a lump of froth. Poor things! they
are grieved to die as much, perhaps, as any white man; and
my heart was overcome, in spite of all I know of them.</p>
<p>The ship had no canvas left, except some tatters of the fore-topsail,
and a piece of the main-royals; but she drifted broadside
on, I daresay five or six knots an hour. She drew too
much water, unluckily, to come into Pool Tavan at that time
of the tide, even if the mouth had been wide enough; but crash
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_47">[Pg 47]</SPAN></span>
she went on a ledge of rocks thoroughly well known to me,
every shelf of which was a razor. Half a cable's length below
the entrance to Pool Tavan, it had the finest steps and stairs
for congers and for lobsters, whenever one could get at it in a
low spring-tide; but the worst of beaks and barbs for a vessel
to strike upon at half-flow, and with a violent sea, and a wind
as wild as Bedlam.</p>
<p>With the pressure of these, she lay so much to leeward before
striking (and perhaps her cargo had shifted), that the poor
blackies rolled down the deck like pickling walnuts on a tray;
and they had not even the chance of dying each in his own
direction.</p>
<p>I was forced to shut my eyes; till a grey squall came, and
caught her up, as if she had been a humming-top, and flung her
(as we drown a kitten) into the mashing waters.</p>
<p>Now I hope no man who knows me would ever take me for
such a fool as to dream for a moment—after all I have seen of
them—that a negro is "our own flesh and blood, and a brother
immortal," as the parsons begin to prate, under some dark
infection. They differ from us a great deal more than an ass
does from a horse; but for all that I was right down glad—as
a man of loving-kindness—that such a pelt of rain came up as
saved me from the discomfort—or pain, if you must have the
truth—of beholding several score, no doubt, of unfortunate
blacks a-drowning.</p>
<p>If it had pleased Providence to drown any white men with
them, and to let me know it, beyond a doubt I had rushed in,
though without so much as a rope to help me; and as it was,
I was ready to do my very best to save them if they had only
shown some readiness to be hawled ashore by a man of proper
colour. But being, as negroes always are, of a most contrary
nature, no doubt they preferred to drift out to sea rather than
Christian burial. At any rate, none of them came near me,
kindly disposed as I felt myself, and ready to tuck up my
Sunday trousers at the very first sight of a woolly head. But
several came ashore next tide—when it could be no comfort at
all to them. And such, as I have always found, is the nature
of black people.</p>
<p>But for me it was a sad, and, as I thought, severe, visitation
to be forced on a Sabbath-day—my only holiday of the week—to
meditate over a scene like this. As a truly consistent and
truth-seeking Christian (especially when I go round with fish on a
Monday morning among Nonconformists), it was a bitter trial for
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_48">[Pg 48]</SPAN></span>
me to reflect upon those poor negroes, gone without any sense
at all, except of good Christians' wickedness, to the judgment
we decree for all, except ourselves and families.</p>
<p>But there was worse than this behind; for after waiting as
long as there seemed good chance of anything coming ashore,
which might go into my pocket, without risk of my pension,
and would truly be mine in all honesty—and after seeing that
the wreck would not break up till the tide rose higher, though
all on board were swept away—suddenly it came into my head
about poor Bardie and Bunny. They were worth all the niggers
that ever made coal look the colour of pipeclay; and with a
depth of self-reproach which I never deserved to feel, having
truly done my utmost—for who could walk in such weather?—forth
I set, resolved to face whatever came out of the heavens.
Verily nothing could come much worse than what was come
already. Rheumatics, I mean, which had struck me there,
under the rock, as a snake might. Three hours ago all the
world was sweat, and now all the air was shivers. Such is the
climate of our parts, and many good people rail at it, who have
not been under discipline. But all who have felt that gnawing
anguish, or that fiery freezing, burning at once and benumbing
(like a dead bone put into the live ones, with a train of powder
down it)—all these will have pity for a man who had crouched
beneath a rock for at least three hours, with dripping clothes,
at the age of two-and-fifty.</p>
<p>For a hero I never set up to be, and never came across one
until my old age in the navy, as hereafter to be related. And
though I had served on board of one in my early years, off La
Hague and Cape Grisnez, they told me she was only a woman
that used to hold a lantern. Hero, however, or no hero, in
spite of all discouragement and the aching of my bones, resolved
I was to follow out the fate of those two children. There
seemed to be faint hope, indeed, concerning the little stranger;
but Bunny might be all alive and strong, as was right and
natural for a child of her age and substance. But I was sore
downcast about it when I looked around and saw the effect of
the storm that had been over them. For the alteration of
everything was nothing less than amazing.</p>
<p>It is out of my power to tell you how my heart went up to
God, and all my spirit and soul was lifted into something
purer, when of a sudden, in a scoop of sand, with the rushes
overhanging, I came on those two little dears, fast asleep in
innocence. A perfect nest of peace they had, as if beneath
<span class="pagenum"><SPAN name="Page_49">[Pg 49]</SPAN></span>
their Father's eye, and by His own hand made for them. The
fury of the earth and sky was all around and over them; the
deep revenge of the sea was rolling, not a hundred yards away;
and here those two little dots were asleep, with their angels
trying to make them dream.</p>
<p>Bunny, being the elder and much the stronger child, had
thrown the skirt of her frock across poor little Bardie's naked
shoulders; while Bardie, finding it nice and warm, had nestled
her delicate head into the lap of her young nurse, and had tried
(as it seemed), before dropping off, to tell her gratitude by
pressing Bunny's red hands to her lips. In a word, you might
go a long way and scarcely see a prettier or more moving picture,
or more apt to lead a man who seldom thinks of his Maker.
As for me, I became so proud of my own granddaughter's goodness,
and of the little lady's trust and pure repose therein, that
my heart went back at once to my dead boy Harry, and I do
believe that I must have wept, if I could have stopped to look
at them.</p>
<p class="pmb3">But although I was truly loath to spoil this pretty picture,
the poor things must be partly wet, even in that nest of rushes,
which the whirlwinds had not touched. So I awoke them very
gently, and shook off the sand, while they rubbed their eyes,
and gaped, and knew no more of their danger than if they had
been in their own dear beds. Then, with Bardie in my arms,
and Bunny trotting stoutly with her thumb spliced into my
trousers, I shaped a course for Sker farmhouse, having a strong
gale still abaft, but the weather slightly moderating.</p>
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