IN WHICH JASPER BEGG MAKES KNOWN THE PURPOSE OF HIS VOYAGE TO THE PACIFIC OCEAN, AND HOW IT CAME ABOUT THAT HE COMMISSIONED THE STEAM-SHIP SOUTHERN CROSS THROUGH PHILIPS, WESTBURY, AND CO.
Many gentlemen have asked me to write
the story of Ken’s Island, and in so far as
my ability goes, that I will now do. A plain seaman
by profession, one who has had no more education than
a Kentish grammar school can give him, I, Jasper Begg,
find it very hard to bring to other people’s
eyes the wonderful things I have seen or to make all
this great matter clear as it should be clear for a
right understanding. But what I know of it, I
will here set down; and I do not doubt that the newspapers
and the writers will do the rest.
Now, it was upon the third day of
May in the year 1899, at four bells in the first dog
watch, that Harry Doe, our boatswain, first sighted
land upon our port-bow, and so made known to me that
our voyage was done. We were fifty-three days
out from Southampton then; and for fifty-three days
not a man among the crew of the Southern Cross had
known our proper destination, or why his skipper, Jasper
Begg, had shipped him to sail for the Pacific Ocean.A pleasure voyage, the papers said; and some remembered
that I had been in and out of private yachts ever
since I ran away from school and booked with Skipper
Higg, who sailed Lord Kanton’s schooner from
the Solent; but others asked themselves what pleasure
took a yacht’s skipper beyond the Suez, and
how it came about that a poor man like Jasper Begg
found the money to commission a 500-ton tramp through
Philips, Westbury, and Co., and to deal liberally
with any shipmate who had a fancy for the trip.These questions I meant to answer in my own time.A hint here and there of a lady in whose interest
the voyage was undertaken kept the crew quiet, if
it did not please its curiosity. Mister Jacob,
my first officer, and Peter Bligh (who came to me
because he said I was the only man who kept him away
from the drink) guessed something if they knew little.They had both served under me in Ruth Bellenden’s
yacht; neither had forgotten that Ruth Bellenden’s
husband sailed eastward for the wedding trip.If they put their heads together and said that Ruth
Bellenden’s affairs and the steam-ship Southern
Cross were not to be far apart at the end of it, I
don’t blame them. It was my business to
hold my tongue until the land was sighted, and so
much I did for Ruth Bellenden’s sake.
Well, it was the third day of May,
at four bells in the first dog watch, when Harry Doe,
the boatswain, sighted land on the port-bow, and came
abaft with the other hands to hear what I had got to
say to him. Mr. Jacob was in his bunk then, he
being about to take the first watch, and Peter Bligh,
who walked the bridge, had rung down for half-speed
by the time I came out with my glass for the first
view of the distant island. We were then, I must
tell you at a rough reckoning, in longitude 150 east
of Greenwich, by about 30 north; and my first thought
was that we might have sighted the Ganges group, as
many a ship sailing from ’Frisco to Japan; but
when I had looked at the land a little while, and
especially at a low spur of rocks to the northward,
I knew that this was truly the Ken Archipelago, and
that our voyage was done.
“Lads,” I said, “yonder
is your port. Good weather and good luck, and
we’ll put about for home before three days have
passed.”
Now, they set up a great cheer at
this; and Peter Bligh, whose years go to fat, wiped
his brow like a man who has got rid of a great load
and is very pleased to have done with it.
“Thank you for that,”
said he. “I hope I do my duty in all weathers,
Mr. Begg, but this sunshine do wear a man sadly.Will you stop her, sir, or shall we go dead slow?”
“Dead slow, if you please, Mister
Pugh,” said I; “the chart gives two thousand
fathoms about the reef. We should have water enough,
and water is a good thing, as I believe you know.”
“When there’s nothing
else, I can manage to make shift with it and
feel a better man, sir,” he added, as an after-thought.But I was already busy with my glass and that was
not the hour for light talk. Yonder upon the
port-bow a group of islands shaped on our horizon as
shadows upon a glassy sea. I could espy a considerable
cliff-land rising to the southward, and north of that
the rocky spur of which I have made mention.The sun was setting behind us in a sky of orange and
crimson, and it was wonderful to see the playful lights
now giving veins of gold to the dark mass of the higher
rocks, or washing over the shadows as a running water
of flame. I have seen many beautiful sights upon
the sea, in storm or tempest, God’s weather or
the devil’s; but I shall never forget that sunset
which brought me to Ken’s Island on as strange
an errand as ever commissioned a ship. The deep
blue of the sky, the vastness of the horizon, the
setting sun, the island’s shaping out of the
deep: these, and the curiosity which kept the
glass ever at my eye, made an hour which a man might
fear to tell of. True, I have sighted many a
strange land in my time and have put up my glass for
many an unknown shore; but yonder lay the home of Ruth
Bellenden, and to-morrow’s sun would tell me
how it fared with her. I had sailed from England
to learn as much.
Now, Mr. Jacob, the first officer,
had come up to the bridge while I was searching the
shore for an anchorage, and he, who always was a prudent
man, spoke up at once for laying to and leaving our
business, whatever it was, until the morning.
“You’ll lose the light
in ten minutes, and yon’s a port I do not like
the look of,” said he. “Better go
about, sir. Reefs don’t get out of the
way, even for a lady.”
“Mister Jacob,” said I,
for, little man that he was, he had a big wit in his
own way, “the lady would be very glad to get
out of the way of the reef, I’m thinking.However, that’s for the morning. Here’s
Peter Bligh as pleased as any school-boy at the sight
of land. Tell him that he isn’t going ashore
to-night, and he’ll thank you nicely. Eh,
Peter, are you, too, of Jacob’s mind? Is
it sea or shore, a glass in my cabin or what the natives
will sell you in the log-cabins over yonder?”
Peter Bligh shut up his glass with a snap.
“I know the liquor, Mr. Begg,”
said he; “as the night is good to me, I’m
of Mister Jacob’s way of thinking. A sound
bed and a clear head, and a fair wind for the morning you’ll
see little of any woman, black or white, on yonder
rock to-night.”
Jacob his little eyes twinkling,
as they always did at his own jokes muttered
the old proverb about choosing a wife by candle-light;
but before any one could hear him a beacon shone out
across the sea from some reef behind the main island
I had noticed, and all eyes were turned anxiously
to that. It was a queer place, truly, to set up
a light, and I don’t wonder that the men remarked
it.
“An odd kind of a lantern to
help poor mariners,” said Mister Jacob, sagely.“Being kind to it, sir, I should say that it’s
not more than a mile too much to the northward.”
“Lay your course by that, and
a miracle won’t carry you by the reef,”
added Peter Bligh, sagaciously; “in my country,
which is partly Ireland, sir, we put up notice-boards
for the boys that ride bicycles: ‘This
Hill is Dangerous.’ Faith, in ould Oireland,
they put ’em up at the bottom of the hills,
which is useful entirely.”
Some of the crew, grouped about the
ladder’s foot, laughed at this; others began
to mutter among themselves as though the beacon troubled
them, and they did not like it. A seaman’s
the most superstitious creature that walks the earth
or sails on the sea, as all the world knows.I could see the curiosity, which had followed my men
from Southampton, was coming to a head here about
twelve thousand miles from home.
“Lads,” cried I, quick
to take the point up, “Mister Bligh says that
an Irishman built yon light, and he knows, being a
bit of a one himself. We’re not going in
by it, anyway, so you can ask questions to-morrow.There’s a hundred pounds to be divided among
you for your good behaviour outward, and there’ll
be another hundred when we make Calshot Light.To-night we’ll find good sea-room, and leave
their beacon to the lumber-heads that put it up.I thank you, lads, for honest work in an honest ship.Ask the purser for an extra tot of grog, and say the
skipper told you to.”
They gave a hearty “Aye, aye,
sir,” to this, and without more ado we put the
ship about and went dead slow against a stiff tide
setting east by north-east. For my part, I reckoned
this the time to tell my officers what my intentions
were, and when I had called them into the cabin, leaving
our “fourth” a mere lad, but
a good one upon the bridge, I ordered Joe,
the steward, to set the decanters upon the table.Mister Jacob, as usual, put on his glasses (which he
always did in room or cabin, just as though he would
read a book), but Peter Bligh sat with his cap between
his knees and as foolish an expression upon his face
as I have ever seen.
“Now, gentlemen,” I said,
“no good talking in this world was ever done
upon a dusty table, so we’ll have a glass round
and then to business. Mr. Bligh, I’m sure,
will make no objection to that.”
“Faith, and I know when to obey
my superior officer, captain. A glass round,
and after that ”
“Peter, Peter,” said I,
“’tis the ‘after that’ which
sends many a good hulk to the bottom.”
“Not meaning to apply the term
to Peter Bligh, but by way of what the landsmen call
‘silime,’” said Mister Jacob.
“‘Simile’ you mean,
Mister Jacob. Well, it’s all the same, and
neither here nor there in the matter of a letter.The fact is, gentlemen, I wish you to know why I have
sailed this ship to Ken’s Archipelago, and under
what circumstances I shall sail her home again.”
They pricked up their ears at this,
Peter turning his cap nervously in his hands and Mister
Jacob being busy with his glasses as he loves to be.
“Yes,” I went on, “you
have behaved like true shipmates and spoken never
a word which a man might not fairly speak. And
now it’s my duty to be open with you. Well,
to cut it short, my lads, I’ve sailed to the
Pacific because my mistress, Ruth Bellenden, asked
me.”
They had known as much, I imagine,
from the start; but while Mister Jacob pretended to
be very much surprised, honest Peter raised his glass
and drank to Mistress Ruth’s good health.
“God bless her,” he said,
“and may the day come when I ship along o’
such a one again. Aye, you would have come out
for her sake, captain no other, I’m
sure!”
“She being Ruth Bellenden no
longer, but the wife of a gentleman with a name none
but a foreigner can spell,” added Mister Jacob;
and then he went on: “Well, you surprise
me very much, captain very much indeed.Matrimony is a choppy sea and queer things swim in
it. But this this I had not looked
to hear.”
I knew that this was only Mister Jacob’s
way, and continued my story.
“It was a promise to her upon
her wedding day. Ten thousand pounds she left
with her lawyers for this very purpose. ’My
husband has strange ideas; I may not share them,’
were her words to me. ’If his yacht should
not be at the islands when I wish to visit Europe again,
I should like you to find me a vessel in its place.I trust you, Jasper Begg,’ she said; ’you
will sail for Ken’s Archipelago twelve months
from today, and you will come to my house there, as
you used to do in the old time, for orders. Perhaps
I shall send you home again, perhaps I may like to
have a yacht of my own once more. Who knows?I am quite alone in the world,’ she said, laughing,
’though my brother is alive. And the Pacific
Ocean is a long way from London oh, such
a long way,’ she said, or something of that
sort.”
“Aye, and right, too. A
derned long way she meant, I don’t doubt, if
what was in her mind came out,” puts in Peter
at this.
“Mr. Bligh,” said I, “be
pleased to hold your tongue until your opinion is
asked. What I am telling you is a confidence which
you two, and no others, share with me. To-morrow,
as soon as daylight, I shall row ashore and ask to
see Mme. Czerny, as I suppose I must call little
Ruth now. If she says, ‘Go home again,’
very well, home we go with good wages in our pockets.If she says ‘Stay,’ there’s not a
man on board this ship that will not stay willingly she
being married to a foreigner, which all the world
knows is not the same as being married to an Englishman ”
“To say nothing of an Irishman,”
said Peter Bligh, whose mother was from Dublin and
whose father was named sometimes for a man of Rotherhithe
and at other times put down to any country which it
suited Peter to boast about.
“Edmond Czerny was a Hungarian,”
said I, “and he played the fiddle wonderful.What mad idea took him for a honeymoon to Ken’s
Island, the Lord only knows. They say he was
many years in America. I know nothing about him,
save that he had a civil tongue and manners to catch
a young girl’s fancy. She was only twenty-two
when she married him, Mister Jacob.”
“Old enough to know better quite
old enough to know better. Not that I would say
anything against Ruth Bellenden, not a word. It’s
the woman’s part to play the capers, sir, and
we poor mortal men to be took by them. Howsomever,
since there was a fiddle in it, I’ve nothing
more to say.”
We laughed at Mister Jacob’s
notion, and Peter Bligh said what it was in my heart
to say:
“Saving that if Ruth Bellenden
needs a friend, she’ll find twenty-six aboard
this ship, to say nothing of the cook’s boy and
the dog. You’ve a nice mind, Mister Jacob,
but you’ve a deal to larn when it comes to women.My poor old father, who hailed from Shoreham ”
“It was Newport yesterday, Peter.”
“Aye, so it were so
it were. But, Newport or Shoreham, he’d
a precious good notion of the sex, and what he said
I’ll stand by. ’Get ’em on
their feet to the music,’ says he, ’and
you can lead ’em anywheres.’ ’Tis
Gospel truth that, Mister Jacob.”
“But a man had better mind his
steps,” said I. “For my part, I shouldn’t
be surprised if Ruth Bellenden’s husband gave
us the cold shoulder to-morrow and sent us about our
business. However, the sea’s free to all
men, lads, and the morn will show. By your leave
we’ll have a bit of supper and after that turn
in. We shall want all our wits about us when
daylight comes.” They agreed to this, and
without further parley we went on deck and heard what
the lad “Dolly” Venn had to tell us.It was full dark now and the islands were hidden from
our view. The beacon shone with a steady white
glare which, under the circumstances, was almost uncanny.I asked the lad if he had sighted any ships in towards
the land or if signals had been made. He answered
me that no ship had passed in or out nor any rocket
been fired. “And I do believe, sir,”
he said, “that we shall find the harbour on the
far sight of yonder height.”
“The morning will show us, lad,”
said I; “go down to your supper, for I mean
to take this watch myself.” They left me
on the bridge. The wind had fallen until it was
scarce above a moan in the shrouds. I stood watching
the beacon as a man who watches the window light of
one who has been dear to him.