With dauntless hardihood And brandish’d
blade rush on him, And shed the luscious liquor
on the ground, ...though he and his cursed crew
Fierce sign of battle make, and menace high.
MILTON.
The information received from Mr Hardsett
induced our hero to break off his conversation with
Debriseau, and he immediately quitted the hut.
A party of men, wild in their appearance and demeanour,
were bounding down through the rocks, flourishing
their bludgeons over their heads, with loud shouts.
They soon arrived within a few yards of the shealing,
and, to the astonishment of Seymour and the boatswain,
who, with a dozen more, had resumed their clothes,
seemed to eye them with hostile, rather than with
friendly glances. Their intentions were, however,
soon manifested by their pouncing upon the habiliments
of the seamen which were spread out to dry, holding
them rolled up under one arm, while they flourished
their shillelahs in defiance with the other.
“Avast there, my lads!”
cried the boatswain “why are you meddling with
those clothes?”
A shout, with confused answers in
Irish, was the incomprehensible reply.
“Conolly,” cried Seymour,
“you can speak to them. Ask them what they
mean?”
Conolly addressed them in Irish, when
an exchange of a few sentences took place.
“Bloody end to the rapparees!”
said Conolly, turning to our hero. “It’s
helping themselves they’re a’ter, instead
of helping us. They say all that comes on shore
from a wreck is their own by right, and that they’ll
have it. They asked me what was in the cask,
and I told them it was the cratur, sure enough, and
they say that they must have it, and everything else,
and that if we don’t give it up peaceably, they’ll
take the lives of us.”
Seymour, who was aware that the surrender
of the means of intoxication would probably lead to
worse results, turned to his men, who had assembled
outside of the hut, and had armed themselves with spars
and fragments of the wreck on the first appearance
of hostility, and directed them to roll the cask of
rum into the hut, and prepare to act on the defensive.
The English seamen, indignant at such violation of
the laws of hospitality, and at the loss of their clothes,
immediately complied with his instructions, and, with
their blood boiling, were with difficulty restrained
from commencing the attack.
A shaggy-headed monster, apparently
the leader of the hostile party, again addressed Conolly
in his own language.
“It’s to know whether
ye’ll give up the cask quietly, or have a fight
for it. The devil a pair of trousers will they
give back, not even my own, though I’m an Irishman,
and a Galway man to boot. By Jesus, Mr Seymour,
it’s to be hoped ye’ll not give up the
cratur without a bit of a row.”
“No,” replied Seymour.
“Tell them that they shall not have it, and
that they shall be punished for the theft they have
already committed.”
“You’re to come and take
it,” roared Conolly, in Irish, to the opposing
party.
“Now, my lads,” cried
Seymour, “you must fight hard for it they
will show little mercy, if they gain the day.”
The boatswain returned his Bible to
his breast, and seizing the mast of the frigate’s
jolly-boat, which had been thrown up with the other
spars, poised it with both hands on a level with his
head, so as to use the foot of it as a battering-ram,
and stalked before his men.
The Irish closed with loud yells,
and the affray commenced with a desperation seldom
to be witnessed. Many were the wounds given and
received, and several of either party were levelled
in the dust. The numbers were about even; but
the weapons of the Irish were of a better description,
each man being provided with his own shillelah of hard
wood, which he had been accustomed to wield.
But the boatswain did great execution, as he launched
forward his mast, and prostrated an Irishman every
time, with his cool and well-directed aim. After
a few minutes’ contention, the Englishmen were
beaten back to the shealing, where they rallied, and
continued to stand at bay. Seymour, anxious at
all events that the Irish should not obtain the liquor,
directed Robinson, the captain of the forecastle,
to go into the hut, take the bung out of the cask,
and start the contents. This order was obeyed,
while the contest was continued outside, till McDermot,
the leader of the Irish, called off his men, that
they might recover their breath for a renewal of the
attack.
“If it’s the liquor you
want,” cried Conolly to them, by the direction
of Seymour, “you must be quick about it.
There it’s all running away through the doors
of the shealing.”
This announcement had, however, the
contrary effect to that which Seymour intended it
should produce. Enraged at the loss of the spirits,
and hoping to gain possession of the cask before it
was all out, the Irish returned with renewed violence
to the assault, and drove the English to the other
side of the shealing, obtaining possession of the
door, which they burst into, to secure their prey.
About eight or ten had entered, and had seized upon
the cask, which was not more than half emptied, when
the liquor, which had run out under the door of the
hut, communicated, in its course, with the fire that
had been kindled outside. With the rapidity
of lightning the flame ran up the stream that continued
to flow, igniting the whole of the spirits in the cask,
which blew up with a tremendous explosion, darting
the fiery liquid over the whole interior, and communicating
the flame to the thatch, and every part of the building,
which was instantaneously in ardent combustion.
The shrieks of the poor disabled wretches, stretched
on the sails, to which the fire had communicated,
and who were now lying in a molten sea of flame like
that described in Pandemonium by Milton the
yells of the Irish inside of the hut, vainly attempting
to regain the door, as they writhed in their flaming
apparel, which, like the shirt of Nessus, ate into
their flesh the burning thatch which had
been precipitated in the air, and now descended in
fiery flakes upon the parties outside, who stood aghast
at the dreadful and unexpected catastrophe, the
volumes of black and suffocating smoke which poured
out from every quarter, formed a scene of horror to
which no pen can do adequate justice. But all
was soon over. The shrieks and yells had yielded
to suffocation, and the flames, in their fury, had
devoured everything with such rapidity, that they
subsided for the want of further aliment. In
a few minutes, nothing remained but the smoking walls,
and the blackened corpses which they encircled.
Ill-fated wretches! ye had escaped
the lightning’s blast ye had been
rescued from the swallowing wave and little
thought that you would encounter an enemy more cruel
still your fellow-creature man.
The first emotions of Seymour and
his party, as soon as they had recovered from the
horror which had been excited by the catastrophe,
were those of pity and commiseration; but their reign
was short
“Revenge impatient rose, And threw
his blood-stain’d sword in thunder
down.”
The smoking ruins formed the altar
at which he received their vows, and stimulated them
to the sacrifice of further victims. Nor did
he fail to inspire the breasts of the other party,
indignant at the loss of their companions, and disappointed
at the destruction of what they so ardently coveted.
Debriseau, who had played no idle
game in the previous skirmish, was the first who rushed
to the attack. Crying out, with all the theatrical
air of a Frenchman, which never deserts him, even
in the agony of grief, “Mes braves compagnons,
vous serez venges!” he flew at McDermot,
the leader of the Irish savages.
A brand of half-consumed wood, with
which he aimed at McDermot’s head, broke across
the bludgeon which was raised to ward the blow.
Debriseau closed; and, clasping his arms round his
neck, tore him with his strong teeth with the power
and ferocity of a tiger, and they rolled together
in the dust, covered with the blood which poured in
streams, and struggling for mastery and life.
An American, one of the Aspasia’s crew,
now closed in the same way with another of the Irish
desperadoes, and as they fell together, twirling the
side-locks on the temples of his antagonist round
his fingers to obtain a fulcrum to his lever, he inserted
his thumbs into the sockets of his eyes, forced out
the balls of vision, and left him in agony and in
darkness.
“The sword of the Lord!”
roared the boatswain, as he fractured the skull of
a third with the mast of the boat, which, with herculean
force, he now whirled round his head.
“Fight, Aspasias, you
fight for your lives,” cried Seymour, who was
everywhere in advance, darting the still burning end
of the large spar into the faces of his antagonists,
who recoiled with suffocation and pain. It was,
indeed, a struggle for life; the rage of each had mounted
to delirium. The English sailors, stimulated
by the passions of the moment, felt neither pain nor
fatigue from their previous sufferings. The want
of weapons had been supplied by their clasp knives,
to which the Irish had also resorted, and deadly wounds
were given and received.
McDermot, the Irish leader, had just
gained the mastery of Debriseau, bestriding his body
and strangling him, with his fingers so fixed in his
throat that they seemed deeply to have entered into
the flesh. The Guernsey man was black in the
face, and his eyes starting from their sockets:
in a few minutes he would have been no more, when the
mast in the hands of the boatswain descended upon
the Irishman’s head, and dashed out his brains.
At the same moment, one of the Irishmen darted his
knife into the side of Seymour, who fell, streaming
with his own blood. The fate of their officer,
which excited the attention of the seamen, and the
fall of McDermot, on the opposite side, to whose assistance
the Irish immediately hastened, added to the suspension
of their powers from want of breath, produced a temporary
cessation of hostilities. Dragging away their
killed and wounded, the panting antagonists retreated
to the distance of a few yards from each other, tired,
but not satisfied with their revenge, and fully intending
to resume the strife as soon as they had recovered
the power. But a very few seconds had elapsed,
when they were interrupted by a third party; and the
clattering of horses’ hoofs was immediately followed
by the appearance of a female on horseback, who, galloping
past the Irishmen, reined up her steed, throwing him
on his haunches, in his full career, in the space
between the late contending parties.
“’Tis the daughter of
the House!” exclaimed the Irishmen, in consternation.
There wanted no such contrast as the
scene described to add lustre to her beauty, or to
enhance her charms. Fair as the snow-drift, her
cheeks mantling with the roseate blush of exercise
and animation her glossy hair, partly uncurled,
and still played with by the amorous breeze, hanging
in long ringlets down her neck her eye,
which alternately beamed with pity or flashed with
indignation, as it was directed to one side or the
other her symmetry of form, which the close
riding-dress displayed her graceful movements,
as she occasionally restrained her grey palfrey, who
fretted to resume his speed, all combined with her
sudden and unexpected appearance to induce the boatswain
and his men to consider her as superhuman.
“She’s an angel of light!”
muttered the boatswain to himself.
She turned to the Irish, and, in an
energetic tone, addressed them in their own dialect.
What she had said was unknown to the English party,
but the effect which her language produced was immediate.
Their weapons were thrown aside, and they hung down
their heads in confusion. They made an attempt
to walk away, but a few words from her induced them
to remain.
The fair equestrian was now joined
by two more, whose pace had not been so rapid; and
the boatswain, who had been contemplating her with
astonishment, as she was addressing the Irish, now
that she was about to turn towards him, recollected
that some of his men were not exactly in a costume
to meet a lady’s eye. He raised his call
to his mouth, and, with a sonorous whistle, cried
out, “All you without trousers behind shealing,
hoy!” an order immediately obeyed by the men
who had been deprived of their habiliments.
Conolly, who had understood the conversation
which had taken place, called out in Irish, at the
same time as he walked round behind the walls, “I
think ye’ll be after giving us our duds now,
ye dirty spalpeens, so bring ’um wid you
quick;” a request which was immediately complied
with, the clothes being collected by two of the Irish,
and taken to the men who had retired behind the walls
of the shealing.
Mr Hardsett was not long in replying
to her interrogations, and in giving her an outline
of the tragical events which had occurred, while the
ladies, trembling with pity and emotion, listened to
the painful narrative.
“Are you the only officer then
of the frigate that is left?”
“No, madam,” replied the
boatswain, “the third-lieutenant is here; but
there he lies, poor fellow, desperately wounded by
these men, from whom we expected to have had relief.”
“What was the name of your frigate?”
“The Aspasia, Captain M –.”
“O heaven!” cried the
girl, catching at the collar of the boatswain’s
coat in her trepidation.
“And the wounded officer’s name?”
“Seymour.”
A cry of anguish and horror escaped
from all the party as the beautiful interrogatress
tottered in her seat, and then fell off into the arms
of the boatswain.
In a few seconds, recovering herself,
she regained her feet. “Quick, quick lead
me to him.”
Supported by Hardsett, she tottered
to the spot where Seymour lay, with his eyes closed,
faint and exhausted with loss of blood, attended by
Robinson and Debriseau.
She knelt down by his side, and taking
his hand, which she pressed between her own, called
him by his name.
Seymour started at the sound of the
voice, opened his eyes, and in the beauteous form
which was reclining over him, beheld his dear, dear
Emily.