It must have been eleven or twelve
o’clock before I awoke, and it seemed to me
in the flood of golden light which streamed into my
chamber that the wild, tumultuous episodes of the
night before must have formed part of some fantastic
dream.
It was hard to believe that the gentle
breeze which whispered so softly among the ivy-leaves
around my window was caused by the same element which
had shaken the very house a few short hours before.
It was as if Nature had repented of her momentary
passion and was endeavouring to make amends to an
injured world by its warmth and its sunshine.
A chorus of birds in the garden below filled the whole
air with their wonder and congratulations.
Down in the hall I found a number
of the shipwrecked sailors, looking all the better
for their night’s repose, who set up a buzz of
pleasure and gratitude upon seeing me.
Arrangements had been made to drive
them to Wigtown, whence they were to proceed to Glasgow
by the evening train, and my father had given orders
that each should be served with a packet of sandwiches
and hard-boiled eggs to sustain him on the way.
Captain Meadows thanked us warmly
in the name of his employers for the manner in which
we had treated them, and he called for three cheers
from his crew, which were very heartily given.
He and the mate walked down with us after we had broken
our fast to have a last look at the scene of the disaster.
The great bosom of the bay was still
heaving convulsively, and its waves were breaking
into sobs against the rocks, but there was none of
that wild turmoil which we had seen in the early morning.
The long, emerald ridges, with their little, white
crests of foam, rolled slowly and majestically in,
to break with a regular rhythm the panting
of a tired monster.
A cable length from the shore we could
see the mainmast of the barque floating upon the waves,
disappearing at times in the trough of the sea, and
then shooting up towards Heaven like a giant javelin,
shining and dripping as the rollers tossed it about.
Other smaller pieces of wreckage dotted the waters,
while innumerable spars and packages were littered
over the sands. These were being drawn up and
collected in a place of safety by gangs of peasants.
I noticed that a couple of broad-winged gulls were
hovering and skimming over the scene of the shipwreck,
as though many strange things were visible to them
beneath the waves. At times we could hear their
raucous voices as they cried to one another of what
they saw.
“She was a leaky old craft,”
said the captain, looking sadly out to sea, “but
there’s always a feeling of sorrow when we see
the last of a ship we have sailed in. Well, well,
she would have been broken up in any case, and sold
for firewood.”
“It looks a peaceful scene,”
I remarked. “Who would imagine that three
men lost their lives last night in those very waters?”
“Poor fellows,” said the
captain, with feeling, “Should they be cast
up after our departure, I am sure, Mr. West, that you
will have them decently interred.”
I was about to make some reply when
the mate burst into a loud guffaw, slapping his thigh
and choking with merriment.
“If you want to bury them,”
he said, “you had best look sharp, or they may
clear out of the country. You remember what I
said last night? Just look at the top of that
’ere hillock, and tell me whether I was in the
right or not?”
There was a high sand dune some little
distance along the coast, and upon the summit of this
the figure was standing which had attracted the mate’s
attention. The captain threw up his hands in astonishment
as his eyes rested upon it.
“By the eternal,” he shouted,
“it’s Ram Singh himself! Let us overhaul
him!”
Taking to his heels in his excitement
he raced along the beach, followed by the mate and
myself, as well as by one or two of the fishermen who
had observed the presence of the stranger.
The latter, perceiving our approach,
came down from his post of observation and walked
quietly in our direction, with his head sunk upon
his breast, like one who is absorbed in thought.
I could not help contrasting our hurried
and tumultuous advance with the gravity and dignity
of this lonely Oriental, nor was the matter mended
when he raised a pair of steady, thoughtful dark eyes
and inclined his head in a graceful, sweeping salutation.
It seemed to me that we were like a pack of schoolboys
in the presence of a master.
The stranger’s broad, unruffled
brow, his clear, searching gaze, firm-set yet sensitive
mouth, and clean-cut, resolute expression, all combined
to form the most imposing and noble presence which
I had ever known. I could not have imagined that
such imperturbable calm and at the same time such
a consciousness of latent strength could have been
expressed by any human face.
He was dressed in a brown velveteen
coat, loose, dark trousers, with a shirt that was
cut low in the collar, so as to show the muscular,
brown neck, and he still wore the red fez which I had
noticed the night before.
I observed with a feeling of surprise,
as we approached him, that none of these garments
showed the slightest indication of the rough treatment
and wetting which they must have received during their
wearer’s submersion and struggle to the shore.
“So you are none the worse for
your ducking,” he said in a pleasant, musical
voice, looking from the captain to the mate. “I
hope that your poor sailors have found pleasant quarters.”
“We are all safe,” the
captain answered. “But we had given you
up for lost you and your two friends.
Indeed, I was just making arrangements for your burial
with Mr. West here.”
The stranger looked at me and smiled.
“We won’t give Mr. West
that trouble for a little time yet,” he remarked;
“my friends and I came ashore all safe, and we
have found shelter in a hut a mile or so along the
coast. It is lonely down there, but we have everything
which we can desire.”
“We start for Glasgow this afternoon,”
said the captain; “I shall be very glad if you
will come with us. If you have not been in England
before you may find it awkward travelling alone.”
“We are very much indebted to
you for your thoughtfulness,” Ram Singh answered;
“but we will not take advantage of your kind
offer. Since Nature has driven us here we intend
to have a look about us before we leave.”
“As you like,” the captain
said, shrugging his shoulders. “I don’t
think you are likely to find very much to interest
you in this hole of a place.”
“Very possibly not,” Ram
Singh answered with an amused smile. “You
remember Milton’s lines:
’The mind is its
own place, and in itself
Can make a hell of Heaven,
a heaven of Hell.’
I dare say we can spend a few days
here comfortably enough. Indeed, I think you
must be wrong in considering this to be a barbarous
locality. I am much mistaken if this young gentleman’s
father is not Mr. James Hunter West, whose name is
known and honoured by the pundits of India.”
“My father is, indeed, a well-known
Sanscrit scholar,” I answered in astonishment.
“The presence of such a man,”
observed the stranger slowly, “changes a wilderness
into a city. One great mind is surely a higher
indication of civilisation than are incalculable leagues
of bricks and mortar.
“Your father is hardly so profound
as Sir William Jones, or so universal as the Baron
Von Hammer-Purgstall, but he combines many of the virtues
of each. You may tell him, however, from me that
he is mistaken in the analogy which he has traced
between the Samoyède and Tamulic word roots.”
“If you have determined to honour
our neighbourhood by a short stay,” said I,
“you will offend my father very much if you do
not put up with him. He represents the laird
here, and it is the laird’s privilege, according
to our Scottish custom, to entertain all strangers
of repute who visit this parish.”
My sense of hospitality prompted me
to deliver this invitation, though I could feel the
mate twitching at my sleeves as if to warn me that
the offer was, for some reason, an objectionable one.
His fears were, however, unnecessary, for the stranger
signified by a shake of the head that it was impossible
for him to accept it.
“My friends and I are very much
obliged to you,” he said, “but we have
our own reasons for remaining where we are. The
hut which we occupy is deserted and partly ruined,
but we Easterns have trained ourselves to do without
most of those things which are looked upon as necessaries
in Europe, believing firmly in that wise axiom that
a man is rich, not in proportion to what he has, but
in proportion to what he can dispense with. A
good fisherman supplies us with bread and with herbs,
we have clean, dry straw for our couches; what could
man wish for more?”
“But you must feel the cold
at night, coming straight from the tropics,”
remarked the captain. “Perhaps our bodies
are cold sometimes. We have not noticed it.
We have all three spent many years in the Upper Himalayas
on the border of the region of eternal snow, so we
are not very sensitive to inconveniences of the sort.”
“At least,” said I, “you
must allow me to send you over some fish and some
meat from our larder.”
“We are not Christians,”
he answered, “but Buddhists of the higher school.
We do not recognise that man has a moral right to slay
an ox or a fish for the gross use of his body.
He has not put life into them, and has assuredly no
mandate from the Almighty to take life from them save
under most pressing need. We could not, therefore,
use your gift if you were to send it.”
“But, sir,” I remonstrated,
“if in this changeable and inhospitable climate
you refuse all nourishing food your vitality will fail
you you will die.”
“We shall die then,” he
answered, with an amused smile. “And now,
Captain Meadows, I must bid you adieu, thanking you
for your kindness during the voyage, and you, too,
good-bye you will command a ship of your
own before the year is out. I trust, Mr. West,
that I may see you again before I leave this part
of the country. Farewell!”
He raised his red fez, inclined his
noble head with the stately grace which characterised
all his actions, and strode away in the direction
from which he had come.
“Let me congratulate you, Mr.
Hawkins,” said the captain to the mate as we
walked homewards. “You are to command your
own ship within the year.”
“No such luck!” the mate
answered, with a pleased smile upon his mahogany face,
“still, there’s no saying how things may
come out. What d’ye think of him, Mr. West?”
“Why,” said I, “I
am very much interested in him. What a magnificent
head and bearing he has for a young man. I suppose
he cannot be more than thirty.”
“Forty,” said the mate.
“Sixty, if he is a day,”
remarked Captain Meadows. “Why, I have heard
him talk quite familiarly of the first Afghan war.
He was a man then, and that is close on forty years
ago.”
“Wonderful!” I ejaculated.
“His skin is as smooth and his eyes are as clear
as mine are. He is the superior priest of the
three, no doubt.”
“The inferior,” said the
captain confidently. “That is why he does
all the talking for them. Their minds are too
elevated to descend to mere worldly chatter.”
“They are the strangest pieces
of flotsam and jetsam that were ever thrown upon this
coast,” I remarked. “My father will
be mightily interested in them.”
“Indeed, I think the less you
have to do with them the better for you,” said
the mate. “If I do command my own ship I’ll
promise you that I never carry live stock of that
sort on board of her. But here we are all aboard
and the anchor tripped, so we must bid you good-bye.”
The wagonette had just finished loading
up when we arrived, and the chief places, on either
side of the driver, had been reserved for my two companions,
who speedily sprang into them. With a chorus of
cheers the good fellows whirled away down the road,
while my father, Esther, and I stood upon the lawn
and waved our hands to them until they disappeared
behind the Cloomber woods, en route for the
Wigtown railway station. Barque and crew had
both vanished now from our little world, the only
relic of either being the heaps of debris upon
the beach, which were to lie there until the arrival
of an agent from Lloyd’s.