Nothing was said about the marriage.
The privacy of the affair lay as a
sort of obligation of silence upon the kindly-natured
passengers, and though, as I have said, they could
not keep their eyes off us, their conversation was
studiedly remote from the one topic about which we
were all thinking. Lunch was almost ended when
I spied the second mate peering down at us through
the glass of the sky-light, and in a few minutes he
descended the cabin ladder, and said something in
a low voice to the captain.
“By George, Grace!” said
I, grasping her hand as it lay on her lap, and whipping
out with the notion put into me by a look I caught
from the captain. “I believe the second
mate has come down to report a ship in sight.”
She started, and turned eagerly in
the direction of the captain, who had quickly given
the mate his orders, for already the man had returned
on deck.
Mrs. Barstow, seated close to the
captain, nodded at us, and Parsons himself sung out
quietly down the table:
“I believe, Mr. and Mrs. Barclay,
this will be your last meal aboard the Carthusian.”
I sprang with excitement to my feet.
“Anything in sight, captain?”
“Ay, a steamer apparently
a yacht. Plenty of time,” added he, rising,
nevertheless, leisurely as he spoke, on which all the
passengers broke from the table so speedily
dull grows the sea-life, so quickly do people learn
how to make much of the most trivial incidents upon
the ocean and in a few moments we were
all on deck.
“Yes, by Jove, Grace, there
she is, sure enough!” cried I, standing at the
side with my darling and pointing forward, where, still
some miles distant, a point or two on the starboard
bow, was a steamer, showing very small indeed at the
extremity of the long, far-reaching line of smoke
that was pouring from her. A passenger handed
me a telescope; I levelled it, and then clearly distinguished
a yacht-like structure, with a yellow funnel, apparently
schooner-rigged, with a sort of sparkling about her
hull, whether from gilt, or brass, or glass, that
instantly suggested the pleasure vessel.
It was still the same bright, joyous
day that had shone over us all the morning.
The sea was of a dark, rich blue, and the run of it
cradle-like, with a summer-day lightness and grace
in the arching and breaking of the surge. The
ship, aslant in the wind, was sailing finely, with
a slow, regular, stately swing of her towering fabric
of canvas to windward, as she softly rolled on the
floating slant of the seas. Turning my face
aft, I saw the second mate and an apprentice, or midshipman
in buttons, in the act of hoisting a string of colours
to the gaff-end. The flags soared in a graceful
semi-circle, and the whole ship looked brave in a
breath with the pulling of the many-dyed bunting,
each flag delicate as gossamer against the blue of
the sky, and the whole show of the deepest interest
as the language of the sea as the ship’s
own voice!
Had we been cast away, and in the
direst peril, I could scarcely have awaited the approach
of that steamer with more breathless expectation.
Where was she bound to? Would she receive us?
Should we accept her offer to take us aboard, though
she might be heading to some port wide of the place
we desired to reach, such as Ireland or the North of
Scotland? I could think of nothing else.
The captain stood aft watching her, now and again
lifting the ship’s glass to his eye; the forecastle
was loaded with steerage passengers all staring forward;
the poop too looked full; the very stewards had left
the saloon to peer; the cook had quitted his galley,
and the Jacks had “knocked-off,” as they
call it, from the sundry jobs on which they were engaged,
as though awaiting the order to bring the main topsail
to the mast.
I approached the captain with Grace’s hand under
my arm.
“She has her answering pennant
flying,” he exclaimed, letting fall his glass
to accost me, and he called to the second mate to haul
down our signal. “I believe she will receive
you, Mr. Barclay. She’s a gentleman’s
yacht, and a fine boat at that. So much the better.
After the Carthusian,” he added, with
a proud look at his noble ship, “I dare say
you mightn’t have found the first thing we fell
in with perfectly agreeable.”
“Where do you think she’s bound, captain?”
“I should say undoubtedly heading for the English
Channel,” he answered.
“There should be no difficulty
in transferring us, I think,” said I, with a
glance at the sea.
“Bless me, no,” he answered,
“get her close to leeward, and the ship’ll
make a breakwater for Mrs. Barclay.”
“Captain Parsons, what can I
say that will in any measure express my gratitude
to you? May I take it that a letter addressed
to you to the care of the owners of the Carthusian
will be sure to reach you on your return?”
“Oh, yes. But never you
mind about that. What I’ve done has given
me pleasure, and I hope that you’ll both live
long, and that neither of you by a single look or
word will ever cause the other to regret that you
fell into the hands of Captain Parsons of the good
ship Carthusian.”
Grace gave him a sweet smile.
Now that it seemed we were about to leave his ship
she could gaze at him without alarm. He broke
from its to deliver an order to the second mate, who
re-echoed his command in a loud shout. In a
moment a number of sailors came racing aft and fell
to rounding-in, as it is called, upon the main and
main-top sailbraces with loud and hearty songs, which
were re-echoed out of the white hollows aloft and
combined with the splashing noise of waters and the
small music of the wind in the rigging into a true
ocean concert for the ear. The machinery of
the braces brought the sails on the main to the wind;
the ship’s way was almost immediately arrested,
and she lay quietly sinking and rising with a sort
of hush of expectation along her decks, which nothing
disturbed save the odd farmyard-like sounds of the
live stock somewhere forward.
The steamer was now rapidly approaching
us, and by this time without the aid of a glass I
made her out to be a fine screw yacht of some three
hundred and fifty tons, painted black, with a yellow
funnel forward of amidships, which gave her the look
of a gunboat. She had a charthouse, or some
such structure near her bridge, that was very liberally
glazed, and blinding flashes leapt from the panes of
glass as she rolled to and from the sun as though
she were quickly firing cannon charged with soundless
and smokeless gunpowder. A figure paced the
filament of bridge that was stretched before her funnel.
He wore a gold band round his hat and brass buttons
on his coat. Two or three men leaned over the
head rail viewing us as they approached, but her quarter-deck
was deserted. I could find no hint of female
apparel or of the blue serge of the yachtsman.
Old Parsons, taking his stand at the
rail clear of the crowd, waited until the yacht floated
abreast, where with a few reverse revolutions of her
propeller she came to a stand within easy talking distance as
handsome and finished a model as ever I had seen afloat.
“Ho, the yacht, ahoy!” shouted Captain
Parsons.
“Hallo!” responded the
glittering figure from the bridge, manifestly the
yacht’s skipper.
“What yacht is that?”
“The Mermaid.”
“Where are you from and where are you bound
to?”
“From Madeira for Southampton,” came back
the response.
“That will do, Grace,” cried I, joyfully.
“We took a lady and a gentleman
off their yacht, the Spitfire, that we found
in a leaky condition yesterday,” shouted Parsons,
“having been dismasted in a gale and blown out
of the Channel. We have them aboard. Will
you receive them and set them ashore?”
“How many more besides them, sir?” bawled
the master of the yacht.
“No more them two
only,” and Parsons pointed to Grace and me, who
stood conspicuous, near the main rigging.
“Ay, ay, sir; we’ll receive ’em.
Will you send your boat?”
Captain Parsons flourished his hand
in token of acquiescence; but he stood near enough
to enable me to catch a few growling sentences, referring
to the laziness of yachtsmen, which he hove at the
twinkling figure through his teeth in language which
certainly did not accord with his priestly tendencies.
There was no luggage to pack, no parcels
to hunt for, nothing for me to do but leave Grace
a minute, whilst I rushed below to fee the stewards.
So much confusion attended our transference that my
recollection of what took place is vague. I
remember that the second mate was incessantly shouting
out orders, until one of the ship’s quarter boats,
with several men in her, had been fairly lowered to
the water’s edge, and brought to the gangway,
over which some steps had been thrown. I also
remember once again shaking Captain Parsons most cordially
by the hand, thanking him effusively for his kindness
and wishing him and his ship all possible good-luck
under the heavens. The passengers crowded round
us and wished us good-bye, and I saw Mrs. Barstow slip
a little parcel into Grace’s hand, and whisper
a few words; whereupon they kissed each other with
the warmth of old friends.
Mr. M’Cosh stood at the gangway,
and I asked him to distribute the twenty-pound bank
note I handed to him amongst the crew of the boat
that had taken us from the Spitfire; I further
requested that the second mate, taking his proportion
which I left entirely to the discretion of Mr. M’Cosh,
would purchase some trifle of pin or ring by which
to remember us.
Grace was then handed into the boat a
ticklish business to the eyes of a landsman, but performed
with amazing despatch and ease by the rough seaman
who passed her over and received her. I followed,
watching my chance, and in a few moments the oars
were out and the boat making for the yacht, that lay
within musket shot. She was rolling, however,
faster and so much more heavily than the big iron ship,
that the job of getting on board her was heightened
into a kind of peril. I should never have imagined
merely by looking down on the water from the height
of the Carthusian’s rail how strong was
the Atlantic surge blue, summer-like and
beautiful with its lacery of froth, as it showed from
the altitude of the ship’s deck. It came
to Grace being lifted bodily over the side by a couple
of the yachtsman, who each grasped her hand.
I was similarly helped up, and was not a little thankful
to find ourselves safe on the solid deck of the steamer
after the egg-shell-like tossing of the ship’s
quarter-boat alongside.
We were received by the captain of
the yacht, a fellow with a face that reminded me somewhat
of Caudel, of a countenance and bearing much too sailorly
to be rendered ridiculous by his livery of gold band
and buttons. But before I could address him
old Parsons hailed to give him the name of the Carthusian
and to request him to report the ship, and he ran
on to the bridge to answer. I could look at nothing
just then but the ship. Of all sea pieces I
never remember the like of that for beauty.
We were to leeward of her, and she showed us the milk-white
bosoms of her sails, that flashed out in silver brilliance
to the sunlight through sheer force of the contrast
of the vivid red of her water-line as it was lifted
out of the yeast and then plunged again by the rolling
of the craft. Large soft clouds resembling puffs
of steam sailed over her waving mast-heads, where
a gilt vane glowed like a streak of fire against the
blue of the sky between the clouds.
A full-rigged ship never looks more
majestic I think than when she is hove to under all
plain sail, that is, when all canvas but stun’sails
is piled upon her and her main topsail is to the mast,
with the great main course hauled up to the yard and
windily swaying in festoons. She is then like
a noble mare reined in; her very hawse pipes seem to
grow large like the nostrils of some nervous creature
impatiently sniffing the air; she bows the sea as
though informed with a spirit of fire that maddens
her to leap the surge, and to rush forward once more
in music and in thunder, in giddy shearing and in
long floating plunges on the wings of the wind.
Never does a ship show so much as a thing of life
as when she is thus restrained.
But the boat had now gained the tall
fabric’s side; the tackles had been hooked into
her, and even whilst she was soaring to the davits
the great main topsail yard of the Carthusian
came slowly round, and the sails to the royal filled.
At the same moment I was sensible of a pulsation
in the deck on which we were standing; the engines
had been started, and in a few beats of the heart
the Carthusian was on our quarter, breaking
the sea under her bow as the long, slender, metal
hull leaned to the weight of the high and swelling
canvas.
I pulled off my hat and flourished
it, Grace waved her handkerchief, a hearty cheer swept
down to us, not only from the passengers assembled
on the poop but also from the crowds who watched us
from the forecastle and from the line of the bulwark
rails, and for some minutes every figure was in motion,
as the people gesticulated their farewells to us.
“Act the fourth!” said
I, bringing my eyes to Grace’s face. “One
more act and then over goes the show, as the Cockneys
say.”
“Aren’t you glad to be here, Herbert?”
“I could kneel, my duck.
But how good those people are! How well they
have behaved! Such utter strangers as we are
to them! What did Mrs. Barstow give you?”
She put her hand in her pocket, opened
the little parcel, and produced an Indian bracelet,
a wonderfully cunning piece of work in gold.
“Upon my word!” cried I.
“How kind of her!” exclaimed
Grace, with her eyes sparkling, though I seemed to
catch a faint note of tears in her voice. “I
shall always remember dear Mrs. Barstow.”
“And what yacht is this?”
said I, casting my eyes around. “A beautiful
little ship indeed. How exquisitely white are
these planks! What money, by George! in everything
the eye rests upon!”
The master, who had remained on the
bridge to start the yacht, now approached. He
saluted us with the respectful air of a man used to
fine company, but I instantly observed, on his glancing
at Grace, that his eye rested upon the wedding ring.
“I presume you are the captain?” said
I.
“I am, sir.”
“Pray, what name?”
“John Verrion, sir.”
“Well, Captain Verrion, I must
first of all thank you heartily for receiving us.
I had to abandon my yacht, the Spitfire, yesterday.
We were nearly sunk by a hurricane of wind, but the
men believed they could keep her afloat and carry
her home. They would have their way,
and I heartily pray they are safe, though they cannot
yet have made a port. Is the owner of this vessel
aboard?”
“No, sir. She belongs
to the Earl of . His lordship’s
been left at Madeira. He changed his mind and
stopped at Madeira him and the countess,
and a party of three that was along with them and
sent the yacht home.”
“Then there is nobody aboard except the crew?”
“Nobody, sir.”
“I have not the honour of his
lordship’s acquaintance,” said I, “but
I think, Grace,” I exclaimed, turning towards
her, not choosing to speak of her as “this lady,”
whilst she wore the wedding ring, not to call her
“my wife” either, “that he is a distant
connection of your aunt, Lady Amelia Roscoe.”
“I don’t know, Herbert,” she answered.
“Anyway,” said I, “it
is a great privilege to be received by such a vessel
as this.”
“His lordship ’ud wish
me to do everything that’s right, sir,”
said Captain Verrion. “I’ll have
a cabin got ready for you, but as to meals ”
he paused, and added awkwardly, “I’m afraid
there’s nothen aboard but plain yachting fare,
sir.”
“Oh, we have been shipwrecked we
are now accustomed to the privations of the sea anything
that our teeth can meet in will do for us, captain!”
I exclaimed, laughing. “When do you hope
to reach Southampton?”
“Monday afternoon, sir.”
“A little more than two days,”
I exclaimed. “You must be a pretty fast
boat.”
He smiled and said, “What might
be the port you want to get at, sir? Southampton
may be too high up for you.”
“Our destination was Penzance,”
said I; “but any port that is in England will
do.”
“Oh,” said he, “there
ought to be no difficulty in putting you ashore at
Penzance.” He then asked us if we would
like to step below, and forthwith conducted us into
a large, roomy, elegantly, indeed sumptuously, furnished
cabin, as breezy as a drawing-room, and aromatic with
the smell of plantains or bananas hung up somewhere
near, though out of sight. The panels were hand-painted
pictures, the upper deck or ceiling was finely embellished,
and there was a gilt centrepiece from which depended
a small but costly chandelier or candelabra that projected
some ten or twelve oil lamps. The carpet was
a thick velvet pile, and there were curtains and mirrors
as in a drawing-room; indeed, I never could have imagined
such an interior on board a sea-going structure, and
though it was all very grand and princely to look at,
I could not but regard the whole as an example of
wanton, senseless extravagance.
“This should suit you, Grace!” said I.
“Is it not heavenly?” she cried.
The captain stood by with a pleased countenance, observing
us.
“I don’t know if I’m
right in calling you sir?” he exclaimed;
“I didn’t rightly catch your name.”
“My name is Mr. Herbert Barclay.”
“Thank ye, sir. I was going to say if
you and her ladyship ”
“No, not her ladyship,”
I interrupted, guessing that the fellow, having caught
the name of Lady Amelia Roscoe, was confounding Grace
with that title; but here I broke off, with a conscious
look, I fear, for I could not speak of my sweetheart
as Miss Bellassys with that ring on her finger, nor
would it have been safe to talk of her as my wife either:
in her presence, at all events, for she had the most
sweet ingenuous face imaginable, through which every
mood and thought peeped, and Captain Verrion’s
eyes seemed somewhat shrewd.
“I was going to say, sir,”
he proceeded, “that you’re welcome to any
of the sleeping berths you may have a mind to.
If you will take your choice I’ll have the
beds got ready.”
The berths were aft mere
boxes, each with a little bunk, but all fitted so
as to correspond in point of costliness with the furniture
of the living or state room. We chose the two
foremost berths as being the farthest of the sleeping
places from the crew; and this matter being ended,
and after declining Captain Verrion’s very civil
offer of refreshments, we returned to the deck.
The steamer was thrashing through
it at an exhilarating speed. The long blue Atlantic
surge came briming and frothing to her quarter, giving
her a lift at times that set the propeller racing,
but the clean-edged, frost-like band of wake streamed
far astern, where in the liquid blue of the afternoon
that way hung the star-coloured cloths of the Carthusian,
a leaning shaft, resembling a spire of ice.
“Bless me!” I cried, “how
we have widened our distance! When a man falls
overboard with what hideous rapidity must his ship
appear to glide away from him!”
“Is it not delightful to be
independent of the wind, Herbert?” exclaimed
Grace, as she took my arm.
“Yes, but consider the beauty
of a tower of canvas compared to that yellow chimney
pot,” said I. “The Carthusian!”
I added, sending my glance at the distant airy gleam;
“we shall never forget her. Yet she seems
but a phantom ship too; some sea vision of one’s
sleep, so quickly has it all happened, and so astonishing
what has happened. But has old Parsons
made us man and wife?”
She shook her head.
“That cabin wedding this morning,”
I continued, “ought to be a fact if all the
rest is a dream. But you must go on wearing that
ring, Grace, and since it is on I shall have to call
you Mrs. Barclay. Don’t go and pull it
off now. I saw this captain fasten his eye upon
it, and we must be one thing or the other, my sweet.”
“Oh, anything to please you,
Herbert,” she replied, pouting as was her custom
when she was not of my mind; “but try to call
me Mrs. Barclay as seldom as possible.”
Thus we chatted as we walked the deck.
We had the afterpart of the little ship entirely
to ourselves; the captain came and went, but never
offered to approach. There was a mate as I supposed,
a man without a gold band to his cap, but with buttons
to his coat, who replaced the skipper on the bridge
when he quitted it. Owing to deck structures,
funnel-casing and the like, I could see but little
of the forward part of the yacht; but such men as
showed seldom glanced aft, and then with such an air
of respect as was excessively refreshing after the
narrow, inquiring and continuous inspection we had
been honoured with aboard the Carthusian.
The quietude of a man-of-war was in the life of the
yacht; the seamen spoke low; if ever one of them smoked
a pipe he kept himself out of sight with it.
In fact, it was like being aboard one’s own
vessel, and now that we were fairly going home, being
driven towards the English Channel at a steady pace
of some twelve or thirteen knots in the hour by the
steady resistless thrust of the propeller, we could
find heart to abandon ourselves to every delightful
sensation born of the sweeping passage of the beautiful
steamer, to every emotion inspired by each other’s
society, and by the free, boundless, noble prospect
of dark blue waters that was spread around us.
We were uninterrupted till five o’clock.
The captain then advanced, and saluting us with as
much respect as if we had been the earl and his lady,
he inquired if we would have tea served in the cabin.
I answered that we should be very glad of a cup of
tea; but that he was to give himself no trouble; the
simplest fare he could put before us we should feel
as grateful for as if he sat us down to a mansion house
dinner.
He said that the steward had been
left ashore at Madeira, but that a sailor, who knew
what to do as a waiter, would attend upon us.
“Who would suppose, Grace,”
said I, when we were alone, “that the ocean
was so hospitable? Figure us finding ourselves
ashore in such a condition as was our lot when we
thought the Spitfire sinking under us in
other words, in want! At how many houses
might we have knocked without getting shelter or the
offer of a meal? This is like being made welcome
in Grosvenor Square, and you may compare the Carthusian
to a fine mansion in Bayswater.”
“I have had quite enough of
the sea, Herbert,” she answered. “Its
hospitality is not to my taste; and yet, if you owned
such a steamer as this, I believe I should be willing
to make a voyage in her with you when we are married.”
I let this pass, holding that I had
already said enough as to the legitimacy of our shipboard
union.
And now what follows I need not be
very minute in relating. The captain contrived
for “tea,” as he called it, as excellent
a meal as we could have wished for; white biscuit,
good butter, bananas, a piece of virgin corned-beef,
and preserved milk to put into our tea. What
better fare could one ask for? I had a pipe and
tobacco with me, and as I walked the deck in the evening
with my darling, I had never felt happier.
It was a rich autumn evening; the
wind had slackened and was now a light air, and we
lingered on deck long after the light had faded in
the western sky, leaving the still young moon shining
brightly over the sea, across whose dark, wrinkled,
softly-heaving surface ran the wake of the speeding
yacht, in a line like a pathway traversing a boundless
moor.
We passed one or two shadowy ships,
picking them up and then dropping them with a velocity,
that to our homeward-yearning hearts was exceedingly
soothing and comforting. Then, when the strong,
continuous sweep of the breeze raised by the passage
of the steamer grew too strong for Grace, we descended
into the cabin, where our sailor attendant, lighted
the fine chandelier or candelabra, and Grace and I
sat in splendour, our forms reflected in the mirrors,
everything visible as by sunlight, though there must
have been some magic above the art of the sun in those
soft pencils of light flowing from the centre-piece
of oil-flames; for never before had I observed in my
darling so delicate and tender a bloom of complexion;
her hair, too, seemed to gather a deeper richness
of dye, and her eyes
But, enough of such parish talk; though
I know not why a lover should not be as fully privileged
to celebrate his sweetheart’s perfection in
prose, as a poet is in verse. It is a matter
of custom rather than of taste. Dante might
have praised his Beatrice, Waller his Sacharissa,
Horace and Prior their Chloes, and a very great many
other gentlemen a very great many other ladies in
prose sentences, quite as fine and true to the understanding
as their verse. But would they have found readers?
It is this consideration that makes me take a hurried
leave of Grace’s eyes.