THE DARK CLOUDS BEGIN TO THICKEN A
RESCUE ATTEMPTED-MASTER JIM PLAYS A CONSPICUOUS
PART.
In the course of a few days the rumour
reached Algiers that England was in right earnest
about sending a fleet to bombard the city, and at the
same time Colonel Langley learned, through information
privately conveyed to him, that the report of Padre
Giovanni was to some extent incorrect. The old
man had misunderstood the message given to him, and
represented the fleet as being in the offing, whereas
it had not at that time left England.
The caution, however, was useful,
inasmuch as it put the British consul on his guard.
It was at the end of one of the Mohammedan
festivals when the news reached the Dey’s ears.
He was engaged at the time in celebrating the festival,
surrounded by his courtiers and those of the consuls
who chanced to be in favour. The tribute due
by Denmark and Spain not having been paid, their respective
representatives were not present, and the Dey was
debating in his mind the propriety of sending them
to work in irons with the slaves.
Among other entertainments there was
a wrestling match about to take place in the skiffa
of the palace. Before proceeding to the skiffa,
Omar had shown his guests his menagerie, which contained
some remarkably fine specimens of the black-maned
lion, with a variety of panthers, jackals, monkeys,
and other animals. This was rather a trying ordeal
for the nerves of the timid, because the animals were
not in cages, being merely fastened by ropes to rings
in the walls-all save one, called the “Spaniard,”
who was exhibited as the roarer of the tribe, and
had to be stirred up to partial madness occasionally
to show his powers of lung; he was therefore prudently
kept in a wooden cage.
Entering the skiffa, the Dey took
his seat on a throne, and ordered the wrestlers to
begin.
In the centre of the court was a pile
of sawdust, surmounted by a flag. At a given
signal two naked and well-oiled Moors of magnificent
proportions rushed into the court and scattered the
sawdust on the floor, after which they seized each
other round their waists, and began an exciting struggle,
which ended after a few minutes in one-of
them being thrown. Another champion then came
forward, and the scene was repeated several times,
until one came off the conqueror, and obtained from
the Dey a purse of gold as his reward. The unsuccessful
athletes were consoled by having a handful of silver
thrown into the arena to be scrambled for. It
seemed as if more enjoyment was got by the spectators
from the scramble than from the previous combats.
After this a quantity of food was thrown to the athletes,
for which another scramble ensued.
In the midst of this scene an officer
of the palace was observed to whisper in the ear of
the Dey, who rose immediately and left the skiffa,
bringing the amusements to an abrupt close.
Thus was sounded the first clap of
the thunder storm which was about to descend on the
city.
The effect of it was great, and, to
some of the actors in our tale, most important.
All the executions of slaves which
had been ordered to take place were countermanded,
except in the cases of one or two who had rendered
themselves particularly obnoxious, and a few others
who were unfit for labour. This was done because
Omar determined to put forth all his available power
to render the fortifications of the place as strong
as possible. All the slaves were therefore set
to work on them, but those who had been under sentence
of death were kept from too great a rebound of spirits
at the reprieve, by being told that the moment the
work was finished their respective punishments should
be inflicted. Our poor friend Mariano was thus
assailed by the horrible thought, while working at
the blocks of concrete, which he mixed from morning
till night, that in one such block he should ere long
find a living tomb.
We need scarcely add that the thought
drove him to desperation; but, poor fellow, he had
by that time learned that the violence of despair
could achieve nothing in the case of one on whose limbs
heavy irons were riveted, and whose frame was beginning
to break down under the protracted and repeated tortures
to which it had been exposed.
Ah! how many wretched men had learned
the same bitter lesson in the same accursed city in
days gone by-whose groans and cries, though
unrecorded by the pen of man, have certainly been
inscribed in the book of God’s remembrance,
and shall yet be brought into a brighter light than
that of terrestrial day!
Omar Dey was a man of energy and decision.
The instant it became known to him that England was
at last stirred up to resent the insults which had
been heaped upon her and other nations by the Algerines,
he set about making preparations for defence on the
vastest possible scale.
It was a sight worth seeing-though
we cannot afford space to describe it in detail-the
hundreds of camels, horses, mules, and donkeys that
trooped daily into the city with provisions and materiel
of every kind; the thousands of Arabs who by command
flocked in from the surrounding country to defend
the city, and the hundreds of Christian captives who,
collected from the quarries, as well as from the fields,
gardens, and stables of their respective owners, were
made to swarm like bees upon the already formidable
walls.
Some of the slaves were fettered;
most of them, having been tamed, were free.
Some were strong, others were weak, not a few were
dying, but all were made to work and toil day and
night, with just sufficient rest to enable them to
resume labour each morning. It was a woeful sight!
A sight which for centuries had been before the eyes
of European statesmen, but European statesmen had
preferred that European peoples should go on cutting
each other’s throats, and increasing their national
debts, rather than use their power and wealth to set
their captive brethren free; and it was not until
the nineteenth century that England, the great redresser
of wrongs, put forth her strong hand to crush the
Pirate City.
While these busy preparations were
going on, a terrible gale arose, which did a good
deal of damage to the harbour and shipping of Algiers,
and, among other peculiar side-influences, inscribed
the name of the French consul in the Dey’s black
book. Indeed, nearly all the consuls had their
place in that book now, for Omar had been chafed by
the cloud of little worries that surrounded him, not
having been long enough on the throne to regard such
with statesman-like equanimity.
The gale referred to had the effect
of driving several Moorish vessels close under the
walls of the town, just in front of the mosque Djama
Djedid. During its progress a French privateer,
(in other words, a licensed pirate!) which chanced
to be in port at the time, unintentionally fouled
a Moorish vessel, and sank it.
Next day a divan was held, at which
Omar demanded payment of the French consul.
Not feeling himself bound to pay for the misdeeds of
a privateer, the consul refused, whereupon the privateer
was seized, and all her crew sent in chains to work
at the fortifications.
It chanced, about the same time, that
news came of an English frigate having seized an Algerine
vessel, and carried her off to Gibraltar. This
sent Colonel Langley still deeper into Omar’s
black book, so that he felt himself and family to
be in great danger of being also put in chains and
sent to the Marina, if not worse. He therefore
hastened the secret packing of his valuables, intending
to avail himself of the first opportunity that should
offer of leaving the city.
Such an opportunity soon occurred,
at least so thought the consul, in the arrival of
the “Prometheus,” a British war-vessel
of 18 guns, but Colonel Langley found, as many have
discovered before him, that “there is many a
slip ’twixt the cup and the lip,” for the
Dey suddenly took a high position, and absolutely
refused to allow the British consul to depart.
Captain Dashwood, the commander of
the “Prometheus,” on his first interview
with the Dey, saw that there was no chance whatever
of getting off the consul by fair means, for Omar
treated him with studied hauteur and insolence.
“I know perfectly well,”
said he, at the conclusion of the conference, “that
your fleet, which report tells me has already left
England, is destined for Algiers. Is it not
so?”
“I have no official information,
your highness,” replied Captain Dashwood.
“If you have received such news, you know as
much as I do, and probably from the same source-the
public prints.”
“From whence I have it is a
matter of no moment,” returned the Dey, as he
abruptly closed the conference.
Immediately after, Captain Dashwood
informed the consul of his intention of sending a
boat ashore next morning, with the ostensible motive
of making final proposals to the Dey, but really for
the purpose of carrying out his plans, which he related
in detail.
Accordingly, next morning, the captain
proceeded to the palace, and kept the Dey in complimentary
converse as long as was possible with a man of such
brusque and impatient temperament.
While thus engaged, several of the
men and midshipmen of the “Prometheus”
proceeded to the consul’s house. They did
so in separate detachments, and some of them returned
once or twice to the boat, as if for some small things
that had been forgotten, thus confusing the guards
as to the numbers of those who had landed.
When Captain Dashwood again returned
to his boat there were two more midshipmen in it than
the number that had left his ship-one being
the consul’s wife, the other his daughter Agnes!
Master Jim, however, had been left behind, owing
to the arrangements not having been sufficient to
meet his requirements. Poor Mrs Langley had left
him with agonised self-reproach, on being assured
that he should be fetched off on the morrow.
Colonel Langley was of course obliged to remain with
him.
When the morrow came another boat
was sent ashore with baskets for provisions.
One of these baskets was taken to the consul’s
house. It was in charge of the surgeon of the
ship, as Master Jim required the services of a professional
gentleman on the occasion.
All went well at first. The
boat was manned by several men and midshipmen, who
went innocently to market to purchase provisions.
The surgeon, a remarkably cool and self-possessed
individual, went to the consul’s house, with
a Jack-tar-equally cool and self-possessed-
carrying the basket.
“Now then, let’s see how
smartly we can do it,” said the surgeon, on
entering Colonel Langley’s nursery. “Is
your child tractable?”
“Very much the reverse,”
replied the Colonel, with a smile.
“Umph! can’t be helped.-Set
down the basket, my man, and come and hold him.”
Now the Zaharian Zubby, not having
been let into the secret of the mysterious proceedings
that followed, became a source of unexpected danger
and annoyance to the surgeon and his friends.
She watched the former with some interest, while
he mixed a small powder in the family medicine-glass,
and when he advanced with it to Master Jim, her large
eyes dilated so that the amount of white formed an
absolutely appalling contrast with her ebony visage.
But when she saw Master Jim decline the draught with
his wonted decision of character, thereby rendering
it necessary for the nautical man to put powerful
restraint on his struggling limbs, and to hold his
nose while the surgeon forced open his mouth and poured
the contents of the family glass down his throat, and
when, in addition to all this, she beheld Colonel Langley
standing calmly by with an air of comparative indifference
while this hideous cruelty was being practised on
his son and heir, her warm heart could stand no more.
Uttering a series of wild shrieks, she ran at the
nautical man, scored his face down with her ten fingers,
seized the choking Jim in her arms, and thrust her
fore-finger down his little throat with the humane
view of enabling him to part with the nauseous draught
which he had been compelled to swallow.
Master Jim had convulsed himself twice,
and had actually got rid of a little of the draught,
before the surgeon could recover him from the irate
negress.
“I hope he hasn’t lost
much of it,” remarked the surgeon, looking anxiously
at the howling boy as he held him fast. “I
brought only one dose of the drug, but we shall see
in a few minutes.-Do stop the noise of
that screeching imp of blackness,” he added,
turning a look of anger on Zubby, whose grief was,
like her mirth, obstreperous.
“I wish as some ’un had
pared her nails afore I comed here,” growled
the nautical man.
“Hush, Zubby,” said Colonel
Langley, taking the girl kindly by the arm; “we
are doing Jim no harm; you’ll bring the janissaries
in to see who is being murdered if you go on so-hush!”
But Zubby would not hush; the Colonel
therefore called his black cook and handed her over
to him-who, being a fellow-countryman, and
knowing what a Zaharian frame could endure, carried
her into an adjoining room and quietly choked her.
“He’s going-all
right,” said the surgeon, with a look and nod
of satisfaction, as the child, lying in the nautical
man’s arms, dropt suddenly into a profound slumber.
“Now, we will pack him.-Stay,
has he a cloak or shawl of any kind?” said the
surgeon, looking round.
“Zubby alone knows where his
mysterious wardrobe is to be found,” replied
the Colonel.
“Then let the creature find
it,” cried the surgeon impatiently; “we
have no time to lose.”
Zubby was brought back and told to
wrap her treasure in something warm, which she willingly
did, under the impression that she was about to be
ordered to take him out for a walk, but the tears which
still bedimmed her eyes, coupled with agitation, caused
her to perform her wonted duty clumsily, and to stick
a variety of pins in various unnecessary places.
She was then sent to the kitchen with some trivial
message to the cook.
While she was away, Master Jim was
packed in the bottom of the vegetable basket, and
a quantity of cabbages, cauliflowers, etcetera, were
placed above him. The basket was given to the
nautical man to carry. Then the surgeon and
the consul went out arm-in-arm, followed by two midshipmen,
who were in attendance in the hall. Robinson-so
the nautical man was named-brought up the
rear.
They proceeded along the street Bab-el-Oued
for some distance, and then, passing the mosque near
the slave-market, descended the street that led to
the Marina, and the place where the boat of the “Prometheus”
lay in waiting.
The consul and surgeon affected to
talk and laugh lightly as they approached the gate,
and were permitted to pass, the guard supposing, no
doubt, that the British consul was exercising his wonted
civility in conducting his friends down to their boat.
But fate, in the form of Zubby, was unfavourable
to them. Either that loving damsel’s finger
had been more effective than was at first supposed,
or the pins were operating with unwonted pungency,
but certain it is, that just as Mr Robinson was passing
under the gateway, Master Jim awoke from his profound
slumber. Feeling, although not naturally dyspeptic,
that the cabbages weighed heavy on his stomach, he
set up such a howl, and struck out so violently, that
the lid of the basket was forced up, and sundry vegetables
rolled before the eyes of the astonished Turks.
Of course Master Jim and his bearer
were taken prisoners, but the evil did not stop here,
for the officer of the guard at once ordered the arrest
of the consul himself, as well as the surgeon, the
midshipmen, and the boat’s crew of the “Prometheus,”
and the whole were thrust into the dungeons of the
common prison-the consul, by special order
of the Dey, being loaded with iron fetters.
The dismay of poor Mrs Langley and
Agnes when they heard of the fate of the consul and
his child may be imagined. It was however mitigated
in some degree when, next morning, a boat came off
to the “Prometheus” containing Master
Jim himself, in charge of the faithful Zubby!
Whether it was that Omar deemed the
child a useless encumbrance or a valueless article,
or was visited by one of those touches of compunction
which are well-known to assail at times the breasts
of even the worst of pirates, we cannot tell; but
no such clemency was extended to Jim’s father.
The Dey positively refused either to give him up or
to promise his personal safety, nor would he listen
to a word respecting the officers and men whom he
had seized.
This was the news with which Captain
Dashwood left Algiers, and which, some days later,
he delivered to Lord Exmouth, when he met the British
fleet on its way to the city, with the view of bringing
the pirates to their senses.