Bill Bowls was the most amiable, gentle,
kindly, and modest fellow that ever trod the deck
of a man-of-war. He was also one of the most
lion-hearted men in the Navy.
When Bill was a baby-a
round-faced, large-eyed, fat-legged baby, as unlike
to the bronzed, whiskered, strapping seaman who went
by the name of “Fighting Bill” as a jackdaw
is to a marlinespike-when Bill was a baby,
his father used to say he was just cut out for a sailor;
and he was right, for the urchin was overflowing with
vigour and muscular energy. He was utterly reckless,
and very earnest-we might almost say desperately
earnest. Whatever he undertook to do he did “with
a will.” He spoke with a will, listened
with a will, laughed, yelled, ate, slept, wrought,
and fought with a will. In short, he was a splendid
little fellow, and therefore, as his father wisely
said, was just cut out for a sailor.
Bill seemed to hold the same opinion,
for he took to the water quite naturally from the
very commencement of life. He laughed with glee
when his mother used to put him into the washtub,
and howled with rage when she took him out.
Dancing bareheaded under heavy rain was his delight,
wading in ponds and rivers was his common practice,
and tumbling into deep pools was his most ordinary
mishap. No wonder, then, that Bill learned at
an early age to swim, and also to fear nothing whatever,
except a blowing-up from his father. He feared
that, but he did not often get it, because, although
full of mischief as an egg is full of meat, he was
good-humoured and bidable, and, like all lion-hearted
fellows, he had little or no malice in him.
He began his professional career very
early in life. When in after years he talked
to his comrades on this subject, he used to say-
“Yes, mates, I did begin to
study navigation w’en I was about two foot high-more
or less-an’ I tell ‘e what it
is, there’s nothin’ like takin’
old Father Time by the forelock. I was about
four year old when I took my first start in the nautical
way; and p’r’aps ye won’t believe
it, but it’s a fact, I launched my first ship
myself; owned her; commanded and navigated her, and
was wrecked on my first voyage. It happened
this way; my father was a mill-wright, he was, and
lived near a small lake, where I used to splutter
about a good deal. One day I got hold of a big
plank, launched it after half an hour o’ the
hardest work I ever had, got on it with a bit of broken
palm for an oar, an’ shoved off into deep water.
It was a splendid burst! Away I went with my
heart in my mouth and my feet in the water tryin’
to steady myself, but as ill luck would have it, just
as I had got my ship on an even keel an’ was
beginnin’ to dip my oar with great caution, a
squall came down the lake, caught me on the starboard
quarter, and threw me on my beam-ends. Of coorse
I went sowse into the water, and had only time to give
out one awful yell when the water shut me up.
Fortnitly my father heard me; jumped in and pulled
me out, but instead of kicking me or blowin’
me up, he told me that I should have kept my weather-eye
open an’ met the squall head to wind.
Then he got hold of the plank and made me try it again,
and didn’t leave me till I was able to paddle
about on that plank almost as well as any Eskimo in
his skin canoe. My good old dad finished the
lesson by tellin’ me to keep always in shoal
water till I could swim, and to look out for squalls
in future! It was lucky for me that I had learned
to obey him, for many a time I was capsized after
that, when nobody was near me, but bein’ always
in shoal water, I managed to scramble ashore.”
As Bill Bowls began life so he continued
it. He went to sea in good earnest when quite
a boy and spent his first years in the coasting trade,
in which rough service he became a thorough seaman,
and was wrecked several times on various parts of
our stormy shores. On reaching man’s estate
he turned a longing eye to foreign lands, and in course
of time visited some of the most distant parts of the
globe, so that he may be said to have been a great
traveller before his whiskers were darker than a lady’s
eyebrows.
During these voyages, as a matter
of course, he experienced great variety of fortune.
He had faced the wildest of storms, and bathed in
the beams of the brightest sunshine. He was as
familiar with wreck as with rations; every species
of nautical disaster had befallen him; typhoons, cyclones,
and simooms had done their worst to him, but they
could not kill him, for Bill bore a sort of charmed
life, and invariably turned up again, no matter how
many of his shipmates went down. Despite the
rough experiences of his career he was as fresh and
good-looking a young fellow as one would wish to see.
Before proceeding with the narrative
of his life, we shall give just one specimen of his
experiences while he was in the merchant service.
Having joined a ship bound for China,
he set sail with the proverbial light heart and light
pair of breeches, to which we may add light pockets.
His heart soon became somewhat heavier when he discovered
that his captain was a tyrant, whose chief joy appeared
to consist in making other people miserable.
Bill Bowls’s nature, however was adaptable,
so that although his spirits were a little subdued,
they were not crushed. He was wont to console
himself, and his comrades, with the remark that this
state of things couldn’t last for ever, that
the voyage would come to an end some time or other,
and that men should never say die as long as there
remained a shot in the locker!
That voyage did come to an end much
sooner than he or the tyrannical captain expected!
One evening our hero stood near the
binnacle talking to the steersman, a sturdy middle-aged
sailor, whose breadth appeared to be nearly equal to
his length.
“Tom Riggles,” said Bill,
somewhat abruptly, “we’re goin’ to
have dirty weather.”
“That’s so, lad, I’m
not goin’ to deny it,” replied Tom, as
he turned the wheel a little to windward:
Most landsmen would have supposed
that Bill’s remark should have been, “We
have got dirty weather,” for at the time
he spoke the good ship was bending down before a stiff
breeze, which caused the dark sea to dash over her
bulwarks and sweep the decks continually, while thick
clouds, the colour of pea-soup, were scudding across
the sky; but seafaring men spoke of it as a “capful
of wind,” and Bill’s remark was founded
on the fact that, for an hour past, the gale had been
increasing, and the appearance of sea and sky was becoming
more threatening.
That night the captain stood for hours
holding on to the weather-shrouds of the mizzen-mast
without uttering a word to any one, except that now
and then, at long intervals, he asked the steersman
how the ship’s head lay. Dark although
the sky was, it did not seem so threatening as did
the countenance of the man who commanded the vessel.
Already the ship was scudding before
the wind, with only the smallest rag of canvas hoisted,
yet she rose on the great waves and plunged madly
into the hollows between with a violence that almost
tore the masts out of her. The chief-mate stood
by the wheel assisting the steersman; the crew clustered
on the starboard side of the forecastle, casting uneasy
glances now at the chaos of foaming water ahead, and
then at the face of their captain, which was occasionally
seen in the pale light of a stray moonbeam.
In ordinary circumstances these men would have smiled
at the storm, but they had unusual cause for anxiety
at that time, for they knew that the captain was a
drunkard, and, from the short experience they had
already had of him, they feared that he was not capable
of managing the ship.
“Had we not better keep her
a point more to the south’ard, sir?” said
the mate to the captain, respectfully touching his
cap; “reefs are said to be numerous here about.”
“No, Mister Wilson,” answered
the captain, with the gruff air of a man who assumes
and asserts that he knows what he is about, and does
not want advice.
“Keep her a point to the west,”
he added, turning to the steersman.
There was a cry at that moment-a
cry such as might have chilled the blood in the stoutest
heart-
“Rocks ahead!”
“Port! port! hard-a-port!”
shouted the men. Their hoarse voices rose above
the gale, but not above the terrible roar of the surf,
which now mingled with the din of the storm.
The order was repeated by the mate,
who sprang to the wheel and assisted in obeying it.
Round came the gallant ship with a magnificent sweep,
and in another moment she would have been head to wind,
when a sudden squall burst upon her broadside and
threw her on her beam-ends.
When this happened the mate sprang
to the companion-hatch to get an axe, intending to
cut the weather-shrouds so that the masts might go
overboard and allow the ship to right herself, for,
as she then lay, the water was pouring into her.
Tom Riggles was, when she heeled over, thrown violently
against the mate, and both men rolled to leeward.
This accident was the means of saving them for the
time, for just then the mizzen rigging gave way, the
mast snapped across, and the captain and some of the
men who had been hastening aft were swept with the
wreck into the sea.
A few minutes elapsed ere Tom and
the mate gained a place of partial security on the
poop. The scene that met their gaze there was
terrible beyond description. Not far ahead the
sea roared in irresistible fury on a reef of rocks,
towards which the ship was slowly drifting. The
light of the moon was just sufficient to show that
a few of the men were still clinging to the rail of
the forecastle, and that the rigging of the main and
foremasts still held fast.
“Have you got the hatchet yet?”
asked Tom of the mate, who clung to a belaying-pin
close behind him.
“Ay, but what matters it whether
we strike the rocks on our beam-ends or an even keel?”
The mate spoke in the tones of a man
who desperately dares the fate which he cannot avoid.
“Here! let me have it!” cried Tom.
He seized the hatchet as he spoke
and clambered to the gangway. A few strokes
sufficed to cut the overstrained ropes, and the mainmast
snapped off with a loud report, and the ship slowly
righted.
“Hold on!” shouted Tom
to a man who appeared to be slipping off the bulwarks
into the sea.
As no reply was given, the sailor
boldly leapt forward, caught the man by the collar,
and dragged him into a position of safety.
“Why, Bill, my boy, is’t
you?” exclaimed the worthy man in a tone of
surprise, as he looked at the face of our hero, who
lay on the deck at his feet; but poor Bill made no
reply, and it was not until a glass of rum had been
poured down his throat by his deliverer that he began
to recover.
Several of the crew who had clung
to different parts of the wreck now came aft one by
one, until most of the survivors were grouped together
near the wheel, awaiting in silence the shock which
they knew must inevitably take place in the course
of a few minutes, for the ship, having righted, now
drifted with greater rapidity to her doom.
It was an awful moment for these miserable
men! If they could have only vented their feelings
in vigorous action it would have been some relief,
but this was impossible, for wave after wave washed
over the stern and swept the decks, obliging them
to hold on for their lives.
At last the shock came. With
a terrible crash the good ship struck and recoiled,
quivering in every plank. On the back of another
wave she was lifted up, and again cast on the cruel
rocks. There was a sound of rending wood and
snapping cordage, and next moment the foremast was
in the sea, tossing violently, and beating against
the ship’s side, to which it was still attached
by part of the rigging. Three of the men who
had clung to the shrouds of the foremast were swept
overboard and drowned. Once more the wreck recoiled,
rose again on a towering billow, and was launched
on the rocks with such violence that she was forced
forward and upwards several yards, and remained fixed.
Slight although this change was for
the better, it sufficed to infuse hope into the hearts
of the hitherto despairing sailors. The dread
of being instantly dashed to pieces was removed, and
with one consent they scrambled to the bow to see
if there was any chance of reaching the shore.
Clinging to the fore-part of the ship
they found the cook, a negro, whose right arm supported
the insensible form of a woman-the only
woman on board that ship. She was the wife of
the carpenter. Her husband had been among the
first of those who were swept overboard and drowned.
“Hold on to her, massa,”
exclaimed the cook; “my arm a’most brok.”
The mate, to whom he appealed, at
once grasped the woman, and was about to attempt to
drag her under the lee of the caboose, when the vessel
slipped off the rocks into the sea, parted amidships,
and was instantly overwhelmed.
For some minutes Bill Bowls struggled
powerfully to gain the shore, but the force of the
boiling water was such that he was as helpless as if
he had been a mere infant; his strength, great though
it was, began to fail; several severe blows that he
received from portions of the wreck nearly stunned
him, and he felt the stupor that preceded death overpowering
him, when he was providentially cast upon a ledge of
rock. Against the same ledge most of his shipmates
were dashed by the waves and killed, but he was thrown
upon it softly. Retaining sufficient reason
to realise his position, he clambered further up the
rocks, and uttered an earnest “Thank God!”
as he fell down exhausted beyond the reach of the
angry waves.
Soon, however, his energies began
to revive, and his first impulse, when thought and
strength returned, was to rise and stagger down to
the rocks, to assist if possible, any of his shipmates
who might have been cast ashore. He found only
one, who was lying in a state of insensibility on
a little strip of sand. The waves had just cast
him there, and another towering billow approached,
which would infallibly have washed him away, had not
Bill rushed forward and dragged him out of danger.
It proved to be his friend Tom Riggles.
Finding that he was not quite dead, Bill set to work
with all his energy to revive him, and was so successful
that in half-an-hour the sturdy seaman was enabled
to sit up and gaze round him with the stupid expression
of a tipsy man.
“Come, cheer up,” said
Bill, clapping him on the back; “you’ll
be all right in a short while.”
“Wot’s to do?” said Tom, staring
at his rescuer.
“You’re all right,”
repeated Bill. “One good turn deserves
another, Tom. You saved my life a few minutes
ago, and now I’ve hauled you out o’ the
water, old boy.”
The sailor’s faculties seemed
to return quickly on hearing this. He endeavoured
to rise, exclaiming-
“Any more saved?”
“I fear not,” answered Bill sadly, shaking
his head.
“Let’s go see,”
cried Tom, staggering along the beach in search of
his shipmates; but none were found; all had perished,
and their bodies were swept away far from the spot
where the ship had met her doom.
At daybreak it was discovered that
the ship had struck on a low rocky islet on which
there was little or no vegetation. Here for three
weeks the two shipwrecked sailors lived in great privation,
exposed to the inclemency of the weather, and subsisting
chiefly on shell-fish. They had almost given
way to despair, when a passing vessel observed them,
took them off, and conveyed them in safety to their
native land.
Such was one of the incidents in our hero’s
career.