THE DAWN OF A BETTER DAY.
The eighteenth century passed away,
and as the nineteenth began its course, a great and
marvellous change came over the dwellers on the lonely
island in that almost unknown region of the Southern
Seas. It was a change both spiritual and physical,
the latter resulting from the former, and both having
their roots, as all things good must have, in the
blessed laws of God.
The change did not come instantaneously.
It rose upon Pitcairn with the sure but gradual influence
of the morning dawn, and its progress, like its advent,
was unique in the history of the Church of God.
No preacher went forth to the ignorant
people, armed with the powers of a more or less correct
theology. No prejudices had to be overcome, or
pre-existing forms of idolatry uprooted, and the people
who had to be changed were what might have been deemed
most unlikely soil mutineers, murderers,
and their descendants. The one hopeful characteristic
among them was the natural amiability of the women,
for Young and Adams did not display more than the
average good-humour of men, yet these amiable women,
as we have seen, twice plotted and attempted the destruction
of the men, and two of them murdered in cold blood
two of their own kinsmen.
It may, perhaps, have already been
seen that Young and Adams were of a grave and earnest
turn of mind. The terrible scenes which they
had passed through naturally deepened this characteristic,
especially when they thought of the dreadful necessity
which had been forced on them the deliberate
slaying of Matthew Quintal, an act which caused them
to feel like murderers, however justifiable
it may have seemed to them.
Like most men who are under deep and
serious impressions, they kept their thoughts to themselves.
Indeed, John Adams, with his grave matter-of-fact
tendencies and undemonstrative disposition, would
probably never have opened his lips on spiritual things
to his companion if Young had not broken the ice;
and even when the latter did venture to do so, Adams
resisted at first with the dogged resolution of an
unbelieving man.
“We’ve been awful sinners,
John Adams,” said Young one afternoon as they
were sauntering home from their plantations to dinner.
“Well, sir, no doubt there’s
some truth in what you say,” replied Adams,
slowly, “but then, d’ye see, we’ve
bin placed in what you may call awful circumstances.”
“That’s true, that’s
true,” returned Young, with a perplexed look,
“and I’ve said the same thing, or something
like it, to myself many a time; but, man, the Bible
doesn’t seem to harmonise with that idea somehow.
It seems to make no difference between big and little
sinners, so to speak, at least as far as the matter
of salvation is concerned; and yet I can’t help
feeling somehow that men who have sinned much ought
to repent much.”
“Just so, sir,” said John
Adams, with a self-satisfied air, “you’re
right, sir. We have been awful sinners, as you
say, an’ now we’ve got to repent as hard
as we can and lead better lives, though, of course,
we can’t make much difference in our style o’
livin’, seein’ that our circumstances
don’t allow o’ much change, an’ neither
of us has bin much given to drink or swearin’.”
“Strange!” rejoined Young.
“You almost echo what I’ve been saying
to myself over and over again, yet I can’t feel
quite easy, for if we have only got to repent and
try to lead better lives, what’s the use of our
talking about `Our Saviour?’ and what does the
Bible mean in such words as these: `Believe on
the Lord Jesus Christ and thou shalt be saved.’
`Only believe.’ `By grace are ye saved, through
faith, and that not of yourselves, it is the gift
of God.’ `By the works of the law shall no
flesh living be justified.’”
“Do you mean to say, sir, that
them words are all out of the Bible?” asked
Adams.
“Yes, I know they are, for I
read them all this morning. I had a long hunt
after the Bible before I found it, for poor Christian
never told me where he kept it. I turned it
up at last under a bit of tarpaulin in the cave, and
I’ve been reading it a good deal since, and I
confess that I’ve been much puzzled. Hold
on a bit here,” he added, stopping and seating
himself on a flowering bank beside the path; “that
old complaint of mine has been troubling me a good
deal of late. Let’s rest a bit.”
Young referred here to an asthmatic
affection to which he was subject, and which had begun
to give him more annoyance since the catching of a
severe cold while out shooting among the hills a year
before.
“From what you say, sir,”
said Adams, thoughtfully, after they had sat down,
“it seems to me that if we can do nothing
in the matter o’ workin’ out our salvation,
and have nothin’ to do but sit still an’
receive it, we can’t be to blame if we don’t
get it.”
“But we may be to blame for
refusing it when it’s offered,” returned
Young. “Besides, the Bible says, `Ask and
ye shall receive,’ so that knocks away the ground
from under your notion of sitting still.”
“P’r’aps you’re
right, sir,” continued Adams, after a few minutes’
thought, during which he shook his head slowly as if
not convinced; “but I can’t help thinkin’
that if a man only does his best to do his dooty,
it’ll be all right with him. That’s
all that’s required in His Majesty’s service,
you know, of any man.”
“True, but if a man doesn’t
do his best, what then? Or if he is so careless
about learning his duty that he scarce knows what it
is, and in consequence falls into sundry gross mistakes,
what then? Moreover, suppose that you and I,
having both done our duty perfectly up to the time
of the mutiny, were now to go back to England and say,
like the bad boys, `We will never do it again,’
what would come of it, think you?”
“We’d both be hanged for
certain,” answered Adams, with emphasis.
“Well, then, the matter isn’t
as simple an you thought it, at least according to
your view.”
“It is more puzzlin’ than
I thought it,” returned Adams; “but then
that’s no great wonder, for if it puzzles you
it’s no wonder that it should puzzle me, who
has had no edication whatever ’xcep what I’ve
picked up in the streets. But it surprises me you’ll
excuse me, Mr Young that you who’s
bin at school shouldn’t have your mind more clear
about religion. Don’t they teach it at
school?”
“They used to read a few verses
of the Bible where I was at school,” said Young,
“and the master, who didn’t seem to have
any religion in himself, read over a formal prayer;
but I fear that that didn’t do us much good,
for we never listened to it. Anyhow, it could
not be called religious teaching. But were you
never at school, Adams?”
“No, sir, not I,” answered
the seaman, with a quiet laugh; “leastwise not
at a reg’lar true-blue school. I was brought
up chiefly in the streets of London, though that’s
a pretty good school too of its kind. It teaches
lads to be uncommon smart, I tell you, and up to a
thing or two, but it don’t do much for us in
the book-larnin’ way. I can scarcely read
even now, an’ what I have of it was got through
spellin’ out the playbills in the public-house
windows. But what d’ye say, sir, now that
we both seem inclined to turn over a new leaf, if you
was to turn schoolmaster an’ teach me to read
and write a bit better than I can do at present?
I’d promise to be a willin’ scholar an’
a good boy.”
“Not a bad idea,” said
Young, with a laugh, as he rose and continued the
descent of the track leading to the settlement.
The village had by this time improved
very much in appearance, good substantial cottages,
made of the tafano or flower wood, and the aruni,
having taken the place of the original huts run up
at the period of landing. Some of the cottages
were from forty to fifty feet long, by fifteen wide
and thirteen high. It was evident that ships
were, partly at least, the model on which they had
been constructed; for the sleeping-places were a row
of berths opposite the door, each with its separate
little window or porthole. There were no fireplaces,
the range of the thermometer on the island being from
55 degrees to 85 degrees, and all cooking operations
were performed in detached outhouses and ovens.
In the chief of these cottages might
have been found, among the many miscellaneous objects
of use and ornament, two articles which lay apart
on a shelf, and were guarded by Young and Adams with
almost reverential care. These were the chronometer
and the azimuth compass of the Bounty.
The cottages, some of which had two
stories, were arranged so as to enclose a large grassy
square, which was guarded by a strong palisade from
the encroachments of errant hogs, goats, and fowls.
This spot, among other uses, served as a convenient
day-nursery for the babies, and also a place of occasional
frolic and recreation to the elder children.
To the first of these was added, not
long after the death of their respective fathers,
Edward Quintal and Catherine McCoy. To John Adams,
also, a daughter was born, whom he named Hannah, after
a poor girl who had been in the habit of chucking
him under the chin, and giving him sugar-plums when
he was an arab in the streets of London at
least so he jestingly remarked to his spouse on the
day she presented the new baby to his notice.
On the day of which we write, Young
and Adams found the square above-mentioned in possession
of the infantry, under command of their self-elected
captain, Otaheitan Sally, who was now, according to
John Adams, “no longer a chicken.”
Being in her eleventh year, and, like her country-women
generally at that age, far advanced towards big girlhood,
she presented a tall, slight, graceful, and beautifully
moulded figure, with a sweet sprightly face, and a
smile that was ever disclosing her fine white teeth.
Her profusion of black hair was gathered into a knot
which hung low on the back of her pretty round head.
She was crowned with a wreath of wild-flowers, made
and presented by her troops. It is needless
to say that every one of these, big and little, was
passionately attached to Sally.
Chief among her admirers now, as of
old, was Charlie Christian, who, being about eight
years of age, well grown and stalwart like his father,
was now almost as tall as his former nurse.
Charlie had not with years lost one
jot of that intensely innocent and guileless look
of childhood, which inclined one to laugh while he
merely cast earnest gaze into one’s face; but
years had given to him a certain gravity and air of
self-possession which commanded respect, even from
that volatile imp, his contemporary, Dan McCoy.
Thursday October Christian, who was
less than a year younger than Sally, had also shot
up into a long-legged boy, and bade fair to become
a tall and sturdy man. He, like his brother,
was naturally grave and earnest, but was easily roused
to action, and if he did not himself originate fun,
was ever ready to appreciate the antics and mild wickedness
of Dan McCoy, or to burst into sudden and uproarious
laughter at the tumbles or ludicrous doings of the
sprawlers, who rolled their plump-made forms on the
soft grass.
Not one of the band, however, had
yet attained to the age which renders young people
ashamed of childish play. When Young and Adams
appeared on the scene, Sally, her hair broken loose
and the wreath confusedly mingled with it, was flying
round the square with Dolly Young on her shoulder,
and chased by Charlie Christian, who pretended, in
the most obvious manner, that he could not catch her.
Toc was sitting on the fence watching them, and perceiving
his brother’s transparent hypocrisy, was chuckling
to himself with great delight.
Matt Quintal and Dan McCoy, at the
head of two opposing groups, were engaged in playing
French and English, each group endeavouring to pull
the other over a rope laid on the grass between them.
Several of the others, being too little,
were not allowed to join in the game, and contented
themselves with general scrimmaging and skylarking,
while Edward Quintal, Catherine McCoy, and Hannah Adams,
the most recent additions to the community, rolled
about in meaningless felicity.
“Hold on hard,” shouted
Dan McCoy, whose flushed face and blue eyes beamed
and flashed under a mass of curling yellow hair, and
who was the foremost boy of the French band.
“I’m holdin’ on,”
cried Matt Quintal, who was intellectually rather
obtuse.
“Tight,” cried Dan.
“Tight,” repeated Matt.
“There, don’t let go oh! hup!”
The grasp of Dan suddenly relaxed
when Matt and his Englishmen were straining their
utmost. Of course they went back on the top of
each other in a wild jumble, while Dan, having put
a foot well back, was prepared, and stood comparatively
firm.
“You did that a-purpose,” cried Matt,
springing up and glaring.
“I know you did it a-purpose,” retorted
Dan.
“But but I said that that
you did it a-purpose,” stammered Matt.
“Well, an’ didn’t
I say that you said that I said you did it
a-purpose?”
A yell of delight followed this reply,
in which, however, Matt did not join.
Like his father, Matt Quintal was
short in the temper at least, short for
a Pitcairn boy. He suddenly gave Dan McCoy a
dab on the nose with his fist. Now, as every
one must know, a dab on the nose is painful; moreover,
it sometimes produces blood. Dan McCoy, who also
inherited a shortish temper from his father, feeling
the pain, and seeing the blood, suddenly flushed to
the temples, and administered to Matt a sounding slap
on the side of the head, which sent him tumbling on
the grass. But Matt was not conquered, though
overturned. Jumping up, he made a rush at Dan,
who stood on the defensive. The other children,
being more gentle in their natures, stood by, and
anticipated with feelings of awe the threatened encounter;
but Thursday October Christian, who had listened with
eager ears, ever since his intelligence dawned, to
the conversations of the mutineers, here stepped between
the combatants.
“Come, come,” said he,
authoritatively, in virtue of his greater age and
superior size, “let’s have fair play.
If you must fight, do it ship-shape, an’, accordin’
to the articles of war. We must form a ring
first, you know, an’ get a bottle an’ a
sponge and ”
An appalling yell at this point nearly
froze the marrow in everybody’s bones.
It was caused by a huge pig, which, observing that
the gate had been left open, had entered the square,
and gone up to snuff at one of the nude babies, who,
seated like a whitey-brown petrifaction, gazed with
a look of horror in the pig’s placid face.
If ever a pig in this sublunary sphere
regretted a foolish act, that Pitcairn pig must have
been steeped in repentance to the latest day of its
life. With one howl in unison, the entire field,
minus the infants, ran at that pig like a human
tornado. It was of no avail that the pig made
straight for the gate by which it had entered.
That gate had either removed or shut itself.
In frantic haste, the unhappy creature coursed round
the square, followed by its pursuers, who soon caught
it by the tail, then by an ear, then by the nose and
the other ear, and a fore leg and two hind ones, and
finally hurled it over the fence, amid a torrent of
shrieks which only a Pitcairn pig could utter or a
Pitcairn mind conceive. It fell with a bursting
squeak, and retired in grumpy silence to ruminate
over the dire consequences of a too earnest gaze in
the face of a child.
“Well done, child’n!”
cried John Adams. “Sarves him right.
Come, now, to grub, all of you.”
Even though the Pitcairn children
had been disobedient by nature, they would have obeyed
that order with alacrity. In a few brief minutes
a profound silence proclaimed, more clearly than could
a trumpet-tongue, that the inhabitants of the lonely
island were at dinner.