We were steaming to the westward,
towards the spot where the sun, glowing like a disc
of molten copper, was slowly nearing the horizon.
It had been one of those hot, breathless sort of days
with no breeze; and now, near sunset, nothing but
an occasional cat’s-paw stole gently across
the sea to ruffle its glassy surface in irregular-shaped
patches. Elsewhere, the water, shining like a
mirror, reflected the blazing glory of the sky.
Some distance off lay the coast, its
familiar outline dim, purple, and mysterious in the
evening mist. But it was neither the sunset,
glorious as it was, nor the scenery which held our
imagination. It was the shipping.
All manner of craft there were.
First came the Spurt, of Tromso, a Norwegian
tramp of dissolute and chastened appearance, whose
deliberate, plodding gait and general air of senility
belied her name, or at any rate the English meaning
of it. Her rusty black hull was decorated with
three large squares painted in her national colours,
red, with a vertical white-edged stripe of blue in
the centre. Next a bulbous, prosperous-looking
Dutchman, who seemed to waddle in her, or his, stride.
She was slightly faster than the ancient Spurt,
but was no flyer, and boasted a canary-yellow hull
bearing her name in fifteen-foot letters, and enormous
painted tricolours striped horizontally in red, white,
and blue.
Then two Swedes with unpronounceable
names who, by their embellishments, informed the world
that they hailed respectively from Göteborg and
Helsingborg. They also sported large rectangles,
painted in vertical stripes of yellow and blue, while
close behind them, a Dane, with an absurdly attenuated
funnel and long ventilators sticking at all angles
out of her hull like pins from a pincushion, ambled
stolidly along like a weary cart-horse. She,
scorning other decoration, merely showed the scarlet
white-crossed emblem of her country. Some of
the neutrals carried signs bearing their names which
could be illuminated at night, and all seemed equally
determined not to afford any prowling Hun submarine
a legitimate excuse for torpedoing them on sight.
But the craft which outnumbered the
others by more than four to one were the British.
They bore no distinctive marks or colouring on their
sides, and their travel-stained and weather-beaten
appearance, their rusty hulls, discoloured funnels,
and the generally dingy and unpretentious look about
them showed that they were kept far too busy to trouble
about external appearances. The only token of
their nationality was the wisp of tattered red bunting
fluttering at the stern of each; the gallant old Red
Ensign which, war or no war, still dances triumphantly
on practically every sea, except the Baltic.
Many of the passing vessels looked
out of date and old-fashioned. Some veterans
of the ’eighties or ’nineties, fit only
to sail under a foreign flag according to pre-war
standards, may have been dug out of their obscurity
to play their part in the war. And a very important
part it is. Ships must run, and, at a time when
the Admiralty have levied a heavy toll for war purposes
upon all classes of ships belonging to the Mercantile
Marine, every vessel which will float and can steam
can be utilised many times over for the equally important
work of carrying cargo. It is not peaceful work,
either, in these days of promiscuous mine-laying and
enemy submarines armed with guns and torpedoes ready
to sink without warning.
The important work of the yachts,
pleasure steamers, trawlers, and drifters used for
mine-sweeping, patrol work, and other naval purposes
need not be entered into here; but the Mercantile Marine
proper, what, for want of a better term, we may call
“the deep sea service,” has supplied the
Royal Navy with many thousands of splendid officers
and men who are now serving their country in fighting
ships as members of the Royal Naval Reserve.
Moreover, numbers of its ships of all classes are
employed for war purposes as armed merchant cruisers,
transports, oil fuel vessels, colliers, ammunition
ships, storeships, and the like. But the function
of those ships which are left for their legitimate
purpose of cargo carrying is of equal importance to
the country, of inestimable value, in fact, since
we could not exist without them. Their duty is
fraught with constant peril. Submarines may be
lurking and mines may have been laid upon the routes
they have to traverse, but never have there been the
least signs of unreadiness or unwillingness to proceed
to sea when ordered to do so.
Most of the officers and men of the
Mercantile Marine are not trained to war like their
comrades of the Royal Navy. They are not paid,
and their ships are not built, to fight; but yet,
time and time again, their natural pluck and intrepidity
has shown itself in the face of an entirely new danger.
Instances are so numerous that it
is impossible to mention them all. Remember the
gallant fight of the Clan MacTavish, with her single
gun, against the heavily-armed German raider Moewe.
Take the case of the “Blue Funneller”
Laertes, Captain Probert, which was ordered
to stop by an enemy submarine, but, disregarding the
summons, proceeded at full speed, steering a zigzag
course, and so escaped, Remember the little Thordis,
Captain Bell, which, after having a torpedo fired at
her, actually rammed and sank the submarine which
fired it.
Again, there was the transport Mercian,
Captain Walker, which was attacked by gunfire from
a hostile submarine in the Mediterranean. Some
of the troops on board were killed, others were wounded,
and nobody could have blamed the captain if he had
surrendered. But what did he do? He endured
a bombardment lasting for an hour and a half, and,
thanks to the bravery and skill of all on board, the
ship escaped.
There was also Captain Palmer, of
the Blue Jacket, who, though his ship had actually
been torpedoed, stood by her in his boats, reboarded
her, and, in spite of her damage, steamed her to a
place of safety. Recollect Captain Clopert, whose
vessel, the Southport, was captured by a German
man-of-war, was taken to the island of Kusaie, and
was there disabled by the removal of certain important
parts of her machinery. She was evidently to
be utilised as a collier, but no sooner had the enemy
left than the master, officers, and men set to work
to effect repairs. How they did it with the meagre
appliances at their disposal only they themselves
can say, but the fact remains that the ship escaped.
These cases are only typical.
Whole volumes might be written round the warlike
deeds of our “peaceful” merchantmen, and
from the many instances of gallantry we read of and
the still greater number which do not achieve publicity
it is evident that on every occasion of encountering
the enemy the master of the ship, backed up most nobly
by his officers and crew, has not only done everything
possible to save his ship from capture in the first
instance, but has never hesitated to defend his vessel
in accordance with the generally accepted tenets of
International Law, which state that a merchant ship
can defend herself when attacked.
Courage in the face of the enemy when
one can return shot for shot is one thing, but heroism
of the same kind in an unarmed ship is on rather a
different plane.
The work of the Royal Navy and the
Mercantile Marine is largely interdependent.
The two great sea services of the country must ever
work hand in hand and side by side, and let us never
forget what we owe to the latter.