登陆注册
7167600000010

第10章 THE MEN OF WHITBY

One night in January, 1881, during a tremendous storm, a brig struck on the sunken reefs within the southern arm of Robin Hood"s Bay. The crew got out the jolly-boat, and made her fast with a rope to the mast of the wreck. All night long they fought with the waves, the people on shore being entirely ignorant of their calamity.

Early in the morning the quarter-board of the vessel, driven ashore, was seen by the coastguardsmen, who gave the alarm; and it was then discovered that the brig had foundered during the night, and that the crew were still tossing about in their boat, exposed to the perils of a furious gale, a blinding snow- storm, and a heavy sea.

Now, at that time, the life-boat at Robin Hood"s Bay was old and unseaworthy. To put out in her was to incur swift and certain death. Neither could the brig"s boat possibly make shore through the terrible breakers, even had her crew known the lay of the reefs, through which there are but two narrow channels where a boat may pass.

What was to be done? The good people of Robin Hood"s Bay could not let shipwrecked sailors drown before their eyes, and no ordinary boat could live in such a sea. There was but onechance-the telegraph. They wired to Whitby, asking that the life-boat might be sent at once.

The Whitby men received the message after having been out five times during the night. They held a consultation.

The first suggestion was that the life-boat should be towed round to Robin Hood"s Bay, about ten miles, by steam tug; but this was impossible, as no tug could weather such a storm as then was raging.

The next suggestion was to man the life-boat and pull round. But, with the ebb tide and the furious gale against them, no boat"s crew in the world could have taken the boat to the wreck, even if there had been a hope of living in that tremendous storm. The brave men of Whitby looked at the great cauldron of the sea, where the swirling water and the shrieking spray and flying snow were blent in one great seething hell-broth and shook their heads despairingly.

All the time the crew of the foundered ship, cut off from all communication with the shore, were fighting their hopeless battle for life, looking to the land they could not reach, and praying for the aid which could not come. And then,-then, when all hope of going to the rescue seemed abandoned-out spoke some hero of the life-boat council on the Whitby beach, and said, "We will take her overland. "They would take the life-boat overland! Do you realize the magnitude of the task? The heroic audacity of the idea? Between Whitby and Robin Hood"s Bay there are six long miles of hilly country. A life-boat is a huge and ponderous vessel. Aterrific storm was raging. There was a hard frost, and the roads were deep with snow.

On the face of it, the project looked like madness. But there was a boat"s crew of sailors hoping against hope among the breakers; and British fishermen, having made up their minds to do a thing, bring desperate courage to face desperate emergencies.

The men of Whitby would take their life-boat overland ! The rumour spread. The crowd increased. The enthusiasm began to blaze. Old men, women, and children-the fathers, mothers, wives, daughters, and sons of fishermen-came out into the storm. The coxswain led the way to the boat-house, which was waist-deep in water, and the approach to which was swept every minute by the furious charges of the seas that rushed up the slips and over the pier.

It was all a noble sight ! The boat was dragged out. Ropes were made fast to it. A hundred, two hundred, three hundred men seized the ropes; a great crowd followed, pushing the carriage or turning the wheels. Through the falling snow and crackling ice, the flying spume and spray, the life-boat was dragged down the quaint old street and over the narrow, steep bridge.

At the turn of the road, a couple of horses were yoked on; a few yards up the hill, a couple more; a few yards farther, a couple more; and so, as the procession went, were men and horses added to win the way against wind and weather.

One mile out a couple of travellers met the party, vowed theenterprise was hopeless, told how the roads were one mass of ice and snow, how they themselves had left their traps and horses half buried in the drifts. To get to the bay, they said, was quite impossible.

Impossible! Whitby was aroused. Whitby had its blood up, the blood of the Vikings, who feared not steel, or storm, or fire! Impossible ! Whitby laughed !

Ahoy, there! A score of men! Two, three score of men, and quickly, with axes and bars and shovels. We will see about this snow, we men of Whitby; we will go, though the skies should fall.

The men were there-a hundred men with spades and axes; a hundred more with ropes and lanterns. They hewed the ice and cut the snow from the track; they grew more fierce and resolute the sterner grew the obstacles.

At every hamlet, at every farm and cross-road, they picked up volunteers. Farmers and carriers met them with their cattle. Soon they had thirty horses, and of men a regiment. They dragged the great boat by main force up the steep hills, and through the ruts and puddles. They tracked their way through drifts and hedges; they pulled up gates and broke down walls, and so, panting, straining, heaving like giants, they hauled the life-boat into the crowd at the top of the winding and abrupt declivity which leads to the beach of the bay.

Howl, winds; rage, hungry waves, around the fainting seamen in their broken boat! The Vikings are upon you, the men who brought the life-boat overland.

"Saved, saved to a man."

The steep road down to the shore is a mass of ice; the horses cannot stand upon it; the seas break fiercely over the wall. The men of Robin Hood"s Bay come forward. They lash the hind wheels of the carriage. They seize the ropes, the boat, the wheels, the sides- nine hundred lusty men-and they dash the thing down to the water with one mighty rush.

Then no time is lost. Swiftly the men of the crew are dressed, the boat is launched, and with a lurch and a plunge it leaps bodily into the storm.

But the fight is not yet over. The sea is tremendous; the coast is a mass of hidden reefs; and in a few minutes the life- boat is hurled back, beaten, to the shore, with all the oars on one side broken, and half the crew exhausted or disabled.

It is three hours now since the men of Whitby formed their grand and daring resolution. All that time the crew of the sunken vessel have been holding on in hopeless desperation,knowing nothing of the efforts made on their behalf; hearing nothing but the shriek of the tempest and the thunder of the waves; seeing nothing but the vast, dark hill-sides of water, the misty loom of the land, and the baffling veil of eddying snow- flakes, whirling, whirling.

Eight men of the life-boat"s crew are out of action; eight volunteers take their places. Eight oars are shattered; eight more are shipped from the damaged boat belonging to the bay. A pilot also, a fisherman of the village, goes aboard, and again the boat is rushed into the billows.

Rescue or death these men will win. The boat must go, shall go; the blood of the Vikings is on fire; they would in their present temper fetch their comrades ashore though hell itself should gape.

Out again into the mirk and fury. Out in the boat they have carried overland. Out under the eyes of all the gallant men and brave women of the village. Out in the teeth of the tempest, into the roaring, rolling, black-green valleys of the shadow of death. Now rising on the crest of some huge roller, now hidden from sight in some fearful, hissing pit, now hurled upon its beam ends by the sudden impact of a heavy sea, the Whitby boat fights its way towards the men who shall be rescued.

Not till the life-boat is close upon them have those desperate, clinging wretches any knowledge of the succour so heroically brought. Fainting with fatigue, perishing with cold, still they hold on-stubborn, but hopeless. They cannot see the life-boat, they cannot see the shore.

And now, now comes the glorious moment. We are upon them; we shall save them. No; they are giving way, they will be lost, and we within a hundred yards of them. The crisis is bitter in its intensity. The coxswain of the Whitby boat, Henry Freeman, turns to his crew, and in his great, deep voice cries, " Now, my lads, give them a rousing cheer "; and, over the scream of the gale, and over the roar of the sea, and over the hiss of the brine, goes up the Vikings" shout, the shout of victory !

Oh, it was a glorious day, a strife of giants, a triumph of heroes ! Imagine the delighted enthusiasm, the frantic excitement of the crowd when the shipwrecked crew was landed on that dangerous rocky shore, snatched from the very jaws of death-saved, saved to a man !-saved by the dauntless courage and magnificently heroic devotion of the fishermen of Whitby, who brought their life-boat overland.

Robert Blatchford

Not once or twice in our rough island story, The path of duty was the way to glory.

Tennyson

Author.-Robert Blatchford, born in 1851, is a living English journalist and author, sometime joint editor of The Clarion. His chief books are Merrie England, A Son of the Forge, Britain for the British, Not Guilty, TheSorcery Shop.

General-Look up Whitby on the storm-beaten coast of Yorkshire. C?dmon, the first English writer of note, and the sainted abbess Hilda, referred to in Scott"s Marmion, lived at Whitby. Find the dictionary meanings of "jolly-boat, " "quarter-board, " "brig, " " Viking, " "coxswain. " Visualize the scene at dawn, the overland journey, the final struggle, the triumphant ending. Do you like the short, sharp sentences, full of fire and enthusiasm? List such metaphors as "a strife of giants, " " the blood of the Vikings is on fire. " Where does the very sound of the words echo the sense?

同类推荐
  • 大师论管人

    大师论管人

    本书是对世界上最具影响力的众多思想家有关管人方面的贡献的巧妙总结,每一位管人大师的思想背景、主要的管人观点和大师间的交叉影响,都能在本书中找到答案。
  • 奥赛罗·李尔王

    奥赛罗·李尔王

    本书是莎士比亚著名的四大悲剧之一,是英国的一个古老传说,故事本身大约发生在8世纪左右。后在英国编成了许多戏剧,现存的戏剧除莎士比亚外,还有一个更早的无名氏作品,一般认为莎士比亚的李尔王是改编此剧而创作的。故事讲述了年事已高的国王李尔王退位后,被大女儿和二女儿赶到荒郊野外,成为法兰西皇后的三女儿率军救父,却被杀死,李尔王伤心地死在她身旁。
  • 每天都是精彩:英语诵读美文240篇(英汉对照)

    每天都是精彩:英语诵读美文240篇(英汉对照)

    《每天都是精彩:英语诵读美文240篇(英汉对照)》按照自然时间排序,每一月份收录的小品文风格各异、体裁不同,但却相辅相成、相得益彰,便于你把脉时光的步伐,体味四季的轮回。每篇小品文后都列有生词注音释义,便于你诵读记忆,扩大词汇量。
  • 从零开始学俄语这本就够

    从零开始学俄语这本就够

    本书针对没有俄语基础的人士写作,而这类人群却有着最强烈的学习需求。或为求职、或为留学。这是“零起点学外语”书系的一本,内容由浅入深,非常适宜初学者阅读。全书分为俄语基础入门、日常生活会话、校园会话、职场对话、应急俄语口语,内容简单实用,旅游、生活、留学一本就够!
热门推荐
  • 蜜宠成殇:三少的萌情小宠物

    蜜宠成殇:三少的萌情小宠物

    他说他什么也不缺,就缺一个真心实意爱他的女人。她说她什么都没有,只有一颗真诚的心。于是,爱情成立。为了他,她斗公爹,斗小叔,斗前任,斗准新娘,结果斗不过病魔的突袭。是老天嫉妒她太幸福?还是有人嫉妒她太滋润?于是……
  • 霸绝苍穹

    霸绝苍穹

    霸灵问:你是想当一个流氓,还是想当一个霸神?郑潜想了想说:流氓和霸神之间有什么区别?有,也没有。混异界,凭的就是一个霸气!而我呢,当一个霸绝苍穹的最强流氓,就可以了。本书等级:霸者,霸师,霸宗,霸王,霸皇,霸帝,霸神___________________________________________本书有点重口味,有点小暧昧,有些金手指,有点…读者的想像力是无比强大滴!
  • 战狼令

    战狼令

    沉睡千年的狼魂苏醒了,这是天神之意,亦是顾韦的宿命。这个世界,没有修炼,唯有联魂。宁静守护者,为善;黑暗之魂,为恶。这是狼与魂的故事,讲述了这大地的帝国兴衰,王朝更替,以宁静世界开始,以战争结束。这恶魔统治的世界,联魂者何去何从……一道战狼令,踏破黎明,守护宁静!
  • 本源法师

    本源法师

    只要给我一滴清水,我便能翻手为云,覆手为雨。只要给我一粒尘埃,我便能震动山河,扭转乾坤。但你要是给我一缕火苗,我却愿为你燃尽世俗。在一座名为苍木的城市,诞生出了一个被上天遗弃的孩子,风云变幻,光阴流逝,长大之后,少年却仍然踏上了一条强者为尊的道路…
  • 游世书

    游世书

    山岳金熔铸侠骨,秋水浺瀜砺精魂。一话数载春冬雨,半壶浊酒半卷书。
  • tfboys之我们一起追过的梦

    tfboys之我们一起追过的梦

    孙玥,秦洛依,韩梦璃三人从小一起长大,是三个好闺蜜,比闺蜜还好。三人一起在电视上认识了tfboys,从此就喜欢上了他们,无论他们在哪儿出演,她们就坐在一起看,后来她们一起踏上了追梦之路······三只会怎么做呢?他们会发生什么故事呢?让我们尽情期待吧!
  • 恋与制作人之惜拾光

    恋与制作人之惜拾光

    Eovler超能力者,恋与制作人中,你是喜欢温柔,迷人的许墨,还是高冷,帅气的白起,还是阳光,开朗的周棋洛,还是霸道总裁李泽言,在这里,恋与制作人,雨灵梦影视公司的许梦灵将会陪你度过这一切
  • tfboys之认识你

    tfboys之认识你

    我们第一次认识,就混熟了!说明我们有缘。——by王俊凯(苏青)我们的故事,从一次偶遇开始,慢慢的变熟了。——by王源(刘冰)认识你,我的性格变成暖暖的,不再像以前那样高冷。——by易烊千玺(夜言)
  • 冷哨

    冷哨

    有些泪为谁而流?佳人已逝,哭告苍天,独身一人,人近人远,冷暖自知。怀抱怀中越来越冷的亡妻尸骨,只此一路,一走到底。
  • 终身护卫之问鼎天下

    终身护卫之问鼎天下

    “但闻苍穹响,惊醒月下人。”这是方云第一次走进沈新月的世界。“我喜欢自由翱翔,但我更想靠在你的臂膀。”这是沈新月对方云最美的告白。“什么问鼎天下于我无关,我只愿做你的终身保镖,护你一世之颜,神挡杀神、佛挡杀佛。”这是方云对沈新月永恒的诺言。