On the night after the battle, Bill
Bowls and Ben Bolter were sent on board a French transport
ship.
As they sat beside each other, in
irons, and securely lodged under hatches, these stout
men of war lamented their hard fate thus-
“I say, Bill, this is wot I calls a fix!”
“That’s so, Ben-a bad fix.”
There was silence for a few minutes, then Ben resumed-
“Now, d’ye see, this here
war may go on for ever so long-years it
may be-an’ here we are on our way
to a French prison, where we’ll have the pleasure,
mayhap, of spendin’ our youth in twirlin’
our thumbs or bangin’ our heads agin the bars
of our cage.”
“There ain’t a prison
in France as’ll hold me,” said Bill Bowls
resolutely.
“No? how d’ye ‘xpect
to git out-seein’ that the walls and
doors ain’t made o’ butter, nor yet o’
turnips?” inquired Ben.
“I’ll go up the chimbley,”
said Bill savagely, for his mind had reverted to Nelly
Blyth, and he could not bear to think of prolonged
imprisonment.
“But wot if they’ve got no chimbleys?”
“I’ll try the winders.”
“But if the winders is tight barred, wot then?”
“Why, then, I’ll bust ’em, or I’ll
bust myself, that’s all.”
“Humph!” ejaculated Ben.
Again there was a prolonged silence,
during which the friends moodily meditated on the
dark prospects before them.
“If we could only have bin killed
in action,” said Bill, “that would have
been some comfort.”
“Not so sure o’ that,
messmate,” said Ben. “There’s
no sayin’ wot may turn up. P’r’aps
the war will end soon, an’ that’s not onlikely,
for we’ve whipped the Mounseers on sea, an’
it won’t be difficult for our lobsters to lick
’em on land. P’r’aps there’ll
be an exchange of prisoners, an’ we may have
a chance of another brush with them one o’ these
days. If the wüst comes to the wüst,
we can try to break out o’ jail and run a muck
for our lives. Never say die is my motto.”
Bill Bowls did not assent to these
sentiments in words, but he clenched his fettered
hands, set his teeth together, and gave his comrade
a look which assured him that whatever might be attempted
he would act a vigorous part.
A few days later the transport entered
a harbour, and a guard came on board to take charge
of the prisoners, of whom there were about twenty.
As they were being led to the jail of the town, Bill
whispered to his comrade-
“Look out sharp as ye go along,
Ben, an’ keep as close to me as ye can.”
“All right, my lad,” muttered
Ben, as he followed the soldiers who specially guarded
himself.
Ben did not suppose that Bill intended
then and there to make a sudden struggle for freedom,
because he knew that, with fettered wrists, in a strange
port, the very name of which they did not know, and
surrounded by armed enemies, such an attempt would
be utterly hopeless; he therefore concluded, correctly,
that his companion wished him to take the bearings
(as he expressed it) of the port, and of the streets
through which they should pass. Accordingly he
kept his “weather-eye open.”
The French soldiers who conducted
the seamen to prison, although stout athletic fellows,
and, doubtless, capable of fighting like heroes, were
short of stature, so that the British tars looked down
on them with a patronising expression of countenance,
and one or two even ventured on a few facetious remarks.
Bill Bowls and Ben Bolter, who both measured above
six feet in their stockings, towered above the crowd
like two giants.
“It’s a purty place intirely,”
said an Irish sailor, with a smiling countenance,
looking round upon the houses, and nodding to a group
of pretty girls who were regarding the prisoners with
looks of pity. “What may be the name of
it, av I may make bowld to inquire?”
The question was addressed to the
soldier on his right, but the man paid no attention.
So the Irishman repeated it, but without drawing forth
a reply.
“Sure, yer a paltry thing that
can’t give a civil answer to a civil question.”
“He don’t understand Irish,
Pat, try him with English,” said Ben Bolter.
“Ah, then,” said Pat,
“ye’d better try that yersilf, only yer
so high up there he won’t be able to hear ye.”
Before Ben had an opportunity of trying
the experiment, however, they had arrived at the jail.
After they had passed in, the heavy door was shut
with a clang, and bolted and barred behind them.
It is probable that not one of the
poor fellows who heard the sound, escaped a sensation
of sinking at the heart, but certain it is that not
one condescended to show his feelings in his looks.
They were all put into a large empty
room, the window of which looked into a stone passage,
which was itself lighted from the roof; the door was
shut, locked, bolted, and barred, and they were left
to their meditations.
They had not remained long there,
however, when the bolts and bars were heard moving
again.
“What say ’e to a rush,
lads?” whispered one of the men eagerly.
“Agreed,” said Bill Bowls,
starting forward; “I’ll lead you, boys.”
“No man can fight with his hands
tied,” growled one of the others. “You’ll
only be spoilin’ a better chance, mayhap.”
At that moment the last bolt was withdrawn,
and the door swung open, revealing several files of
soldiers with muskets, and bayonets fixed, in the
passage. This sight decided the question of a
rush!
Four of the soldiers entered with
the turnkey. The latter, going up to Bill Bowls
and Ben Bolter, said to them in broken English:-
“You follows de soldat.”
Much surprised, but in silence, they obeyed the command.
As they were going out, one of their
comrades said, “Good-bye, mates: it’s
plain they’ve taken ye for admirals on account
o’ yer size!”
“Niver a taste,” said
the Irishman before mentioned, “‘tis bein’
led, they are, to exekooshion-”
The remainder of this consolatory
suggestion was cut off by the shutting of the door.
After traversing several passages,
the turnkey stopped before a small door studded with
iron nails, and, selecting one of his huge keys, opened
it, while the soldiers ranged up on either side.
The turnkey, who was a tall, powerful
man, stepped back, and, looking at Bill, pointed to
the cell with his finger, as much as to say, “Go
in.”
Bill looked at him and at the soldiers
for a moment, clenched his fists, and drew his breath
short, but as one of the guard quietly brought his
musket to the charge, he heaved a sigh, bent his head,
and, passing under the low doorway, entered the cell.
“Are we to stop long here, Mister
Turnkey?” asked Ben, as he was about to follow.
The man vouchsafed no reply, but again
pointed to the cell.
“I’ve always heered ye
wos a purlite nation,” said Ben, as he followed
his messmate; “but there’s room for improvement.”
The door was shut, and the two friends
stood for a few minutes in the centre of their cell,
gazing in silence around the blank walls.
The appearance of their prison was
undoubtedly depressing, for there was nothing whatever
in it to arrest the eye, except a wooden bench in one
corner, and the small grated window which was situated
near the top of one of the walls.
“What d’ye think o’
this?” asked Ben, after some time, sitting down
on the bench.
“I think I won’t be able
to stand it,” said Bill, flinging himself recklessly
down beside his friend, and thrusting his hands deep
into his trouser pockets.
“Don’t take on so bad,
messmate,” said Ben, in a reproving tone.
“Gittin’ sulky with fate ain’t no
manner o’ use. As our messmate Flinders
used to say, `Be aisy, an’ if ye can’t
be aisy, be as aisy as ye can.’
There’s wot I calls sound wisdom in that.”
“Very true, Ben; nevertheless
the sound wisdom in that won’t avail to
get us out o’ this.”
“No doubt, but it’ll help
us to bear this with equablenimity while we’re
here, an’ set our minds free to think about the
best way o’ makin’ our escape.”
At this Bill made an effort to throw
off the desperate humour which had taken possession
of him, and he so far succeeded that he was enabled
to converse earnestly with his friend.
“Wot are we to do?” asked Bill gloomily.
“To see, first of all, what
lies outside o’ that there port-hole,”
answered Ben. “Git on my shoulders, Bill,
an’ see if ye can reach it.”
Ben stood against the wall, and his
friend climbed on his shoulders, but so high was the
window, that he could not reach to within a foot of
it. They overcame this difficulty, however, by
dragging the bench to the wall, and standing upon
it.
“I see nothin’,”
said Bill, “but the sky an’ the sea, an’
the prison-yard, which appears to me to be fifty or
sixty feet below us.”
“That’s not comfortin’,”
observed Ben, as he replaced the bench in its corner.
“What’s your advice now?” asked
Bill.
“That we remain on our good
behaviour a bit,” replied Ben, “an’
see wot they means to do with us, an’ whether
a chance o’ some sort won’t turn up.”
“Well, that’s a good plan-anyhow,
it’s an easy one to begin with-so
we’ll try it for a day or two.”
In accordance with this resolve, the
two sailors called into play all the patience, prudence,
and philosophy of which they were possessed, and during
the three days that followed their incarceration, presented
such a meek, gentle, resigned aspect; that the stoniest
heart of the most iron-moulded turnkey ought to have
been melted; but the particular turnkey of that prison
was made of something more or less than mortal mould,
for he declined to answer questions,-declined
even to open his lips, or look as if he heard the
voices of his prisoners, and took no notice of them
farther than to fetch their food at regular intervals
and take away the empty plates. He, however,
removed their manacles; but whether of his own good-will
or by order they did not know.
“Now, Ben,” said Bill
on the evening of the third day, as they sat beside
each other twirling their thumbs, “this here
sort o’ thing will never do. I mean for
to make a dash when the turnkey comes in the mornin’;
will you help me?”
“I’m yer man,” said
Ben; “but how d’ye mean to set about it?”
“Well, somewhat in this fashion:-W’enever
he opens the door I’ll clap my hand on his mouth
to stop his pipe, and you’ll slip behind him,
throw yer arms about him, and hold on till I tie a
handkerchief over his mouth. Arter that we’ll
tie his hands and feet with whatever we can git hold
of-his own necktie, mayhap-take
the keys from him, and git out the best way we can.”
“H’m; but wot if we don’t
know the right turnin’s to take, an’ run
straight into the jaws of other turnkeys, p’r’aps,
or find other doors an’ gates that his bunch
o’ keys won’t open?”
“Why, then, we’ll just
fail, that’s all; an’ if they should scrag
us for it, no matter.”
“It’s a bad look-out, but I’ll try,”
said Ben.
Next morning this plan was put in
execution. When the turnkey entered the cell,
Bill seized him and clapped his hand on his mouth.
The man struggled powerfully, but Ben held him in
a grasp so tight that he was as helpless as an infant.
“Keep yer mind easy, Mounseer,
we won’t hurt ’e,” said Ben, while
his comrade was busy gagging him.
“Now, then, lift him into the corner,”
whispered Bill.
Ben and he carried the turnkey, whom
they had tied hand and foot with handkerchiefs and
neckties, into the interior of the cell, left him
there, locked the door on him, and immediately ran
along the passage, turned a corner, and came in sight
of an iron grating, on the other side of which sat
a man in a dress similar to that of the turnkey they
had left behind them. They at once drew back
and tried to conceal themselves, but the man had caught
sight of them, and gave the alarm.
Seeing that their case was desperate,
Bill rushed at the grating with all his force and
threw himself heavily against it. The whole building
appeared to quiver with the shock; but the caged tiger
has a better chance of smashing his iron bars than
poor Bill Bowls had. Twice he flung his whole
weight against the barrier, and the second time Ben
helped him; but their efforts were in vain. A
moment later and a party of soldiers marched up to
the grating on the outside. At the same time
a noise was heard at the other end of the passage.
Turning round, the sailors observed that another
gate had been opened, and a party of armed men admitted,
who advanced with levelled muskets.
Seeing this, Bill burst into a bitter
laugh, and flung down the keys with a force that caused
the long passage to echo again, as he exclaimed-
“It’s all up with us,
Ben. We may as well give in at once.”
“That’s so,” said
Ben sadly, as he suffered himself to be handcuffed,
after which he and his companion in misfortune were
conducted back to their cell.