It was a quiet night in early April,
full of the hush which seems to gather all the creative
forces together, before the wild outburst of prodigal
creation begins in wild flower and weed and moorland
grasses, and Robert Sinclair, who had walked and tramped
over the moors for hours, until he was nearly exhausted,
his heart torn and his mind in an agony of suffering,
sat down upon a little hillock, his elbows on his
knees and his hands against his cheeks.
The moor-birds screamed and circled
in restless flight around him. They were plainly
protesting against his intrusion into their domain.
They shrilled and dived in their flight, almost touching
the bent head, with swooping wing, to rise again,
cleaving the air and sheering round again; but still
the lonely figure sat looking into darkness, becoming
numbed with cold, and all unconscious of the passage
of time.
Gradually the cold began to tell upon
him, and he started to his feet, plodding up the hill,
through the soft mossy yielding soil. Back again
he came after a time, his limbs aching with the long
night’s tramping; but yet he never thought of
going home or turning towards the village.
“Oh, Mysie!” he groaned
again and again, and all night long only these two
words escaped his lips. They came in a low sad
tone, like the wind coming through far-off trees;
but they were vibrant with suffering, and only the
moor-birds cried in answer.
“Oh, Mysie!” and the winds
sighed it again and again, as they came wandering
down out of the stillness between the hills, to pass
on into the silence of the night again, like lost
souls wandering through an uncreative world, proclaiming
to other spheres the doom that had settled upon earth.
“Oh, Mysie!” groaned a
moorland brook close by, which grumbled at some obstruction
in its pathway, and then sighed over its mossy bed,
like a tired child emerging exhausted from a long
fever, to fall asleep as deeply as if the seal of
death had been planted upon the little lips.
Occasionally he shifted his position, as his limbs
grew cramped, or rose to pace the moor again to bring
himself more exhaustion; but always he came back to
the little knoll, and sat down again, groaning out
the sad plaintive words, that were at once an appeal
and a cry, a defiance and a submission. By and
by the first gray streaks of dawn came filtering through
the curtains of the cloudy east, touching the low hills
with gray nimble fingers, or weaving a tapestry of
magic, as they brightened and grew clearer, over the
gray face of the morn.
Soon the birds leapt again from every
corner, climbing upon the ladders of light and tumbling
ecstasies of mad joy to welcome the day, as if they
feared to be left in the darkness with this strange
figure, which merely sat and groaned softly, and looked
before it with silent agony in its eyes; and now that
the light had again come, they shouted their protest
in a louder, shriller note; they mounted upon the waves
of light and swooped down into the trough of the semi-darkness,
expostulating and crying, not so much in alarm now,
as in anger. For with the light comes courage
to birds as well as men, and fear, the offspring of
ignorance, which is bred in darkness, loses its power
when its mystery is revealed.
But even with the coming of the day
the still silent figure did not move. It continued
to sit until the birds grew tired of protesting, and
even the mountain hare wandered close by, sniffing
the breeze in his direction, and cocking its ears
and listening, as it sat upon its hind legs, only
to resume its leisurely wandering again, feeling assured
that there was nothing to fear in the direction of
this quiet, bent figure of sorrow, that sat merely
staring at the hills, and saw naught of anything before
him. The things he saw were not the things around
him. He was moving in a multitude again.
He was walking among them with pity in his heart a
great pity for their ignorance, their lack of vision;
and he was giving them knowledge and restoring light
to their eyes, to widen their range of vision, so
that they could take things in their true perspective.
He was full of a great sympathy for their shortcomings,
recognizing to the full that only by sowing love could
love be reaped, only in service could happiness be
found that he who gave his life would save
it.
The great dumb mass of humanity needed
serving needed love. It passed on
blindly, wounding itself as it staggered against its
barriers, bruising its heart and soul in the darkness,
and never learning its lessons. Saviors in all
ages had lifted the darkness a bit, and given knowledge,
and sometimes it had profited for a while till false
prophets arose to mislead.
It was a seething feverish mass, stamping
and surging towards every blatant voice which cried
the false message to it, rousing it to anger, and
again misleading, until it often rose to rend its saviors
instead of those who had duped it so shamelessly.
All the tragic procession filed past,
and he gave them peace and knowledge. By and
by they grew to a long thin stream, feverish and agitated,
seemingly all converging towards a point pain
and anxiety in every quick movement, and suffering
in every gesture. He looked with still more and
more compassion upon them, with a greater love in his
breast, but it did not calm them as before, and at
last in desperation he stretched out his hands in
appealing pity for them, his whole being aglow with
the desire to help and pity and love, and he found
that the scene changed. He was on the moor, and
there was the discomfort of cold in his limbs; but yes,
he was looking at the pit, and there was a long stream
of men, women and children, principally women and children,
running frantically across the moor towards the pit,
and he could hear the faint sound of their voices,
which clearly betokened suffering, anxiety and alarm.
Something had happened. He must have been looking
at that procession for a long time, he realized, and
pulling himself together, he bounded to his feet and
was off in a long striding race through the moor towards
the pit, his heart telling him that something had
happened which was out of the ordinary kind of accident
that regularly happened at a coal mine. He bounded
along, knowing as he went that there was something
more of sorrow for his mother in this, whatever it
was. He felt so, but could not account for the
feeling, and as this thought grew in intensity in
his mind, he changed his course a bit, and made for
home, to ascertain what had really happened. It
was something big, he felt, but whatever it was, his
mother must again be called upon to suffer, and his
alarm grew with his pace, until he arrived breathless
at the house. One look at her face, and he knew
his instincts had told him the truth.
She was white and strained, though
tearless, but her eyes were full of an awful suffering.
“What has happened, mother?”
he demanded, as if he could hardly wait for her to
answer.
“The moss has broken in, an’
twenty-three men are lost. Jamie an’ Andra
are among them. They gaed oot themselves this
morning, telling me they could work fine, even though
you werena there. Oh, Rob! What will I do!
Oh, dear! Oh, dear! My bonnie laddies!”
and with a sob in her voice she turned away, and Robert
was again out of the house, and running through the
moor to the pit, as hard as desperation could drive
him. His two brothers were down there, and they
must be got out. Even as he ran he wondered what
strange freak of fate it was, that had kept him out
there on the moor all night and so saved him from
this terrible fate.
He could understand how his brothers
would feel at the chance of working one day by themselves.
He had always been their guide and protector.
They had gone into the pit with him when they left
school, and had just continued working with him since,
learning their trade from his greater experience,
and trusting always to his better judgment when there
was danger to avoid. They would go out that day
with the intention of working like slaves to produce
an extra turn of coal. Even though it were but
one extra hutch, they would fill it, and slave all
day with never a rest, so that they could have the
satisfaction of seeing approval in his eyes, when
they told him at night how many they had turned out,
and how well things had gone generally with them in
his absence.
He reached the pit, to find that the
moss was already rising in the shaft, and that there
was no possibility of getting down to try and save
these twenty-three men and boys who were imprisoned
in the darkness beneath.
He came across Tam Donaldson, who was the last to
get up.
“Tell me aboot it, Tam,”
he said. “Is there no chance of getting
down? Do you think any of them will be safe so
far?” and a whole lot of other anxious questions
were rattled off, while Tam, dripping wet from having
to wade and fight the last fifty fathoms toward the
pit bottom, through the silent, sinister, creeping
moss that filled the roadways and tunnels, stood to
give him an account of what had taken place.
“They were a’ sitting
at their piece, Rob a’ but James and
Andra. They were keen to get as muckle work done
as possible, an’ they had some coal to get to
fill oot a hutch, when a’ at yince we heard Andra
crying on us to rin. Had they a’ ran doon
the brae we’d a’ hae been safe, for we
could hae gotten to the bottom afore the moss; but
some ran into the inside heading, an’ hadna
time to realize that their outlet was cut off, an’
there they are; for the moss was comin’ doon
the full height of the road when I ran back to try
an’ cry on them to come back. So I had to
rin for’t too, an’ jist got oot by the
skin o’ my teeth.
“I kent fine it wad happen,”
he went on, as Robert stood, the tears in his eyes,
as he realized how hopeless the position was of ever
being able to restore these men and boys again to
their homes. There was anger in Tam’s voice
as he spoke. “It’s a’ to get
cheap coal, an’ they ought to hae known, for
they were telt, that to open oot that seam into long
well workings so near the surface, an’ wi’
sic a rotten roof, was invitin’ disaster, wi’
as muckle rain as we hae had lately. They are
a lot o’ murderers that’s what
they are! But what the hell do they care, sae
lang as they get cheap coal!”
Robert turned away sick at heart.
It was certainly a foolish thing, he had thought at
the time, for the management to change their method
of working the coal; for even though the seam had
grown thinner, he felt that it could have still been
worked at a profit under the old system. He knew
also that the men were all upset at the time by this
change, but the management had assured them that there
was no danger, and that it would mean more money for
the men, as they would be enabled to produce more
coal.
This certainly had happened for a
week or two, but the rates were soon broken, because
they were making too high wages; and the men found,
as usual, that their increased output had merely meant
increased work for them, and increased profits for
the owners.
Was there nothing to be done?
Robert wondered, as he paced restlessly back and forth,
his mind busy, as the mind of every man present, and
anxious to make any sacrifice, to take any risk, if
by so doing they might save those imprisoned in the
mine. Even while his mind was working, he could
not help listening to the talk of those around him.
There were strange opinions expressed, and wild plans
of rescue were suggested and discussed and disputed.
Everyone condemned the coal company for what had happened,
but over all there were the white-faced women and
the silent children; the muffled sobs, the tears, and
the agony of silent wet eyes that spoke more pain
than all the tragedies that had ever been written.
Robert could not help listening to
one man a big, raw, loosely-built fellow,
who stood in the midst of a group of women laying off
his idea of a rescue.
“I’m rale glad to be out
of it,” he said, “for Jean’s sake,
an’ the bairns; but for a’ that I’d
gang doon again an’ try an’ get them oot
if there was ony chance o’ doin’ it.”
“Hoo is Jean?” one woman
interposed to enquire about his wife, who had been
ill a long time.
“Oh, she’s gettin’
on fine noo, an’ the doctor has a hopeful word
o’ her,” he answered. “In fact,
I was just feeding the birds the last time he was
in, an’ asked him hoo she was doin’.”
This man, Dugald McIntosh, had one
god his canaries. He read all he could
get to read about them, and studied the best conditions
under which to rear them, sacrificed everything he
could to breed better birds, and this was always a
topic for him to discourse upon.
“I was just busy feedin’
them when he cam’ in, and after he had examined
her, I asked him hoo she was gettin’ on.”
“Fine,” he said, “gi’e
her plenty o’ sweet milk noo, and fresh eggs,
an’ she’ll sune be on her feet again.
Fresh eggs! mind you, an’ me canna get yin for
my canaries! I thocht it was a guid yin!”
Robert turned away; but there was
working in his mind an idea, and he ran round to the
colliery office to the manager, who was nearly mad
with grief and anxiety at what had happened.
“Come in, Sinclair,” he
said simply. “Can you suggest anything to
help us? Whatever is done, it can only be done
quickly; for the moss is rising rapidly in the shaft,
and even though some of the men are safe in the upper
workings, it is only a question of a very short time
till the moss will rise and suffocate them, or until
the black damp does so. If you have any idea
that can help, out with it and let us make a trial,
for the inactivity is killing me.”
“I have been thinking, Mr. Anderson,”
replied Robert, “that we might go down the old
air-shaft over in the moss there, and run along the
top level, which is not far from the surface, and
try and blast it through on the heading into which
the moss broke.”
It might be full of moss too, for
no one knew the extent of the breakage in the metals,
and even though it were clear, the damp would be lying
in it; but surely they might make an attempt on it.
Robert remembered working this level to within about
nine feet from going through on the heading.
If he had plenty of hands, just to go down and drill
a hole in anywhere, and blast out the coal with a
shot or two wherever he could best place them, he
might succeed in getting through to the men. It
might be that after the first rush filling the roadways,
the flood of moss had drained off, and was not now
running so thickly down the heading.
“Let me go and try, sir,”
he pleaded eagerly. “I think I can manage,
if the level is still unbroken. We can work in
short turns, so as not to be overcome with the damp.
Will you let me have a try? I believe it’s
the only chance we have, and if we do succeed, look
what it will mean to the women in the village.
Will you let me try?”
“Yes,” replied Anderson,
reaching for his lamp, “and I shall be one of
the triers too. Go out and pick seven or eight
men. I’ll get the necessary tools and get
off over the moor to the old air shaft. It may
still be open. It is a pity we let it go out of
repair, but we can have a trial.”
Robert ran out, a hope filling his
heart, telling his news to those round about, and
the first man to step forth, before he had finished,
was Dugald McIntosh, the man who had put more value
on his canaries than on his wife’s health, who
quietly lifted up the drills the manager had brought,
and slinging them lightly over his shoulder, was off
across the moor at a run, with a dozen men at his
heels, all eager to get to grips with the danger,
and try to rescue their imprisoned comrades.