I have dwelt at length upon the experiences
of the North Sea, because trivial as they appear on
the surface, they concern the biggest problem of human
life the belief that man is not of the earth,
but only a temporary sojourner upon it. This
belief, that he is destined to go on living elsewhere,
makes a vast difference to one’s estimate of
values. Life becomes a school instead of a mere
stage, the object of which is that our capacities
for usefulness should develop through using them until
we reach graduation. What life gives to us can
only be of permanent importance as it develops our
souls, thus enabling us to give more back to it, and
leaves us better prepared for any opportunities than
may lie beyond this world. The most valuable asset
for this assumption is love for the people among whom
one lives.
The best teachers in life are far
from being those who know most, or who think themselves
wisest. Show me a schoolmaster who does not love
his boys and you show me one who is of no use.
Our faith in our sonship of God is immensely strengthened
by the puzzling fact that even God cannot force goodness
into us, His sons, because we share His nature.
These convictions, anyhow, were the
mental assets with which I had to begin work, and
no others. A scientific training had impressed
upon me that big and little are very relative terms;
that one piece of work becomes unexpectedly permanent
and big, while that which appears to be great, but
is merely diffuse, will be temporary and ineffective.
Experience has taught me that one human life has its
limits of direct impetus, but that its most lasting
value is its indirect influence. The greatest
Life ever lived was no smaller for being in a carpenter’s
shop, and largely spent among a few ignorant fishermen.
The Scarabée had a valid apologia pro vita
sua in spite of Dr. Holmes. Tolstoy on his
farm, Milton without his sight, Bunyan in his prison,
Pasteur in his laboratory, all did great things for
the world.
There is so much that is manly about
the lives of those who follow the sea, so much less
artificiality than in many other callings, and with
our fishermen so many fewer of what we call loosely
“chances in life,” that to sympathize
with them was easy and sympathy is a long
step toward love. Life at sea also gives time
and opportunity for really knowing a man. It
breaks down conventional barriers, and indeed almost
compels fellowship and thus an intelligent understanding
of the difficulties and tragedies of the soul of our
neighbour. That rare faculty of imagination which
is the inspiration of all great lovers of men is not
alone indispensable. Hand in hand with this inevitably
goes the vision of one’s own opportunity to
help and not to hinder others, even though it be through
the unattractive medium of the collection box for
that gives satisfaction only in proportion to the sacrifice
which we make.
In plain words the field of work offered
me was attractive. It seemed to promise me the
most remunerative returns for my abilities, or, to
put it in another way, it aroused my ambitions sufficiently
to make me believe that my special capacities and
training could be used to make new men as well as
new bodies. Any idea of sacrifice was balanced
by the fact that I never cared very much for the frills
of life so long as the necessities were forthcoming.
The attention that Harold Begbie’s
book “Twice-Born Men” received, was to
me later in life a source of surprise. One forgets
that the various religions and sects which aimed at
the healing of men’s souls have concerned themselves
more with intellectual creeds than material, Christ-like
ends. At first it was not so. Paul rejoiced
that he was a new man. There can be no question
but that the Gospels show us truly that the change
in Christ’s first followers was from men, the
slaves of every ordinary human passion, into men who
were self-mastered that Christ taught by
what he was and did rather than by insistence on creeds
and words. It has been seeing these changes in
men’s lives, not only in their surroundings,
though those improve immediately, that reconcile one
to our environment, and has induced me to live a life-time
in the wilds.
Another movement that was just starting
at this time also interested me considerably.
A number of keen young men from Oxford and Cambridge,
having experienced the dangers that beset boys from
big English public schools who enter the universities
without any definite help as to their attitude toward
the spiritual relationships of life, got together
to discuss the question. They recognized that
the formation of the Boys’ Brigade in our conservative
social life only touched the youth of the poorer classes.
Like our English Y.M.C.A., it was not then aristocratic
enough for gentlemen. They saw, however, that
athletic attainments carried great weight, and that
all outdoor accomplishments had a strong attraction
for boys from every class. Thus it happened that
an organization called the Public School Camps came
into being. Its ideal was the uplift of character,
and the movement has grown with immense strides on
both sides of the Atlantic.
An integral part of my summer holidays
during these years was spent as medical officer at
one of these camps. For many reasons it was wise
in England to run them on military lines, for besides
the added dignity, it insured the ability to maintain
order and discipline. Some well-known commandant
was chosen who was a soldier also in the good fight
of faith. Special sites were selected, generally
on the grounds of some big country seat which were
loaned by the interested lord of the manor, and every
kind of outdoor attraction was provided which could
be secured. Besides organized competitive games,
there was usually a yacht, good bathing, always a
gymkhana, and numerous expeditions and “hikes.”
Not a moment was left unoccupied. All of the
work of the camp was done by the boys, who served in
turn on orderly duty. The officers were always,
if possible, prominent athletes, to whom the boys
could look up as being capable in physical as well
as spiritual fields. There was a brief address
each night before “taps” in the big marquee
used for mess; and one night was always a straight
talk on the problems of sex by the medical officers,
whom the boys were advised to consult in their perplexities.
These camps were among the happiest memories of my
life, and many of the men to-day gratefully acknowledge
that the camps were the turning-point of their whole
lives. The secret was unconventionality and absolute
naturalness with no “shibboleths.”
The boys were allowed to be boys absolutely in an
atmosphere of sincere if not omniscient fervour.
On one occasion when breaking up camp, a curly-headed
young rascal in my tent, being late on the last morning unknown
to any one went to the train in his pajamas,
hidden only by his raincoat. At a small wayside
station over a hundred miles from London, whither
he was bound, leaving his coat in the carriage, he
ventured into the refreshment stall of the waiting-room.
Unfortunately, however, he came out only to find his
train departed and himself in his nightclothes on the
platform without a penny, a ticket, or a friend.
Eluding the authorities he reached the huge Liverpool
terminus by night to find a faithful friend waiting
on the platform for him with the sorely needed overgarment.
No one was ever ashamed to be a Christian,
or of what Christ was, or what he did and stood for.
However, to ignore the fact that the mere word “missionary”
aroused suspicion in the average English unconventional
mind such as those of these clean, natural-minded
boys would be a great mistake. Unquestionably,
as in the case of Dickens, a missionary was unpractical
if not hypocritical, and mildly incompetent if not
secretly vicious. I found myself always fighting
against the idea that I was termed a missionary.
The men I loved and admired, especially such men as
those on our athletic teams, felt really strongly
about it. Henry Martyn as a scholar was
a hero to those who read of him, though few did.
Moreover, who does not love Charles Kingsley?
Even as boys, we want to be “a man,” though
Kingsley was a “Parson Lot.” It always
seemed that a missionary was naturally discounted
until he had proved his right to be received as an
ordinary being. Once after being the guest of
a bank president, he told me that my stay was followed
by that of their bishop, who was a person of great
importance. When the bishop had gone, he asked
his two boys one day. “Well, which do you
like best, the bishop or the doctor?” “Ach,”
was the reply, “the bishop can’t stand
on his head.” On another occasion during
a visit while lecturing on behalf of the
fishermen and doing my usual evening physical
drill in my bedroom, by a great mischance I missed
a straight-arm-balance on a chair, fell over, and
nearly brought the chandelier of the drawing-room down
on the heads of some guests. That a so-called
“missionary” should be so worldly as to
wish to keep his body fit seemed so unusual that I
heard of that trifle a hundred times.
The Church of Christ that is coming
will be interested in the forces that make for peace
and righteousness in this world rather than in academic
theories as to how to get rewards in another.
That will be a real stimulus to fitness and capacity
all round instead of a dope for failures. It
is that element in missions to-day, such as the up-to-date
work of the Rockefeller Institute and other medical
missions in China and India, which alone holds the
respect of the mass of the people. The value
of going out merely to make men of different races
think as we think is being proportionately discounted
with the increase of education.
Our North Sea work grew apace.
Vessel after vessel was added to the fleet. Her
Majesty, Queen Victoria, became interested, and besides
subscribing personally toward the first hospital boat,
permitted it to be named in her honour. According
to custom the builders had a beautiful little model
made which Her Majesty agreed to accept. It was
decided that it should be presented to her in Buckingham
Palace by the two senior mission captains.
The journey to them was a far more
serious undertaking than a winter voyage on the Dogger
Bank. However, arrayed in smart blue suits and
new guernseys and polished to the last degree, they
set out on the eventful expedition. On their
return every one was as anxious to know “how
the voyage had turned out” as if they had been
exploring new fishing grounds around the North Cape
in the White Sea. “Nothing to complain
of, boys, till just as we had her in the wind’s
eye to shoot the gear,” said the senior skipper.
“A big swell in knee-breeches opened the door
and called out our names, when I was brought up all
standing, for I saw that the peak halliard was fast
on the port side. The blame thing was too small
for me to shift over, so I had to leave it. But,
believe me, she never said a word about it. That’s
what I call something of a lady.”
At this time we had begun two new
ventures, an institute at Yarmouth for fishermen ashore
and a dispensary vessel to be sent out each spring
among the thousands of Scotch, Manx, Irish, and French
fishermen, who carried on the herring and mackerel
fishery off the south and west coast of Ireland.
The south Irish spring fishery is
wonderfully interesting. Herring and mackerel
are in huge shoals anywhere from five to forty miles
off the land, and the vessels run in and out each
day bringing back the catch of the night. Each
vessel shoots out about two miles of net, while some
French ones will shoot out five miles. Thus the
aggregate of nets used would with ease stretch from
Ireland to New York and back. Yet the undaunted
herring return year after year to the disastrous rendezvous.
The vessels come from all parts. Many are the
large tan-sailed luggers from the Scottish coasts,
their sails and hulls marked “B.F.” for
Banff, “M.E.” for Montrose, “C.N.”
for Campbelltown, etc. With these come the
plucky little Ulster boats from Belfast and Larne,
Loch Swilly and Loch Foyle; and not a few of the hereditary
seafaring men from Cornwall, Devon, and Dorset.
Others also come from Falmouth, Penzance, and Exmouth.
Besides these are the Irish boats few enough,
alas, for Paddy is not a sailor. A good priest
had tried to induce his people to share this rich
harvest by starting a fishery school for boys at Baltimore,
where net-making and every other branch of the industry
was taught. It was to little purpose, for I have
met men hungry on the west coast, who were trying to
live on potato-raising on that bog land who were graduates
of Father D.’s school.
There was one year when we ourselves
were trying out the trawling in Clew Bay and Blacksod,
and getting marvellous catches; so much so that I
remember one small trawler from Grimsby on the east
coast of England making two thousand dollars in two
days’ work, while the Countess of Z. fund was
distributing charity to the poverty-stricken men who
lived around the bay itself. The Government of
Ireland also made serious efforts to make its people
take up the fishery business. About one million
dollars obtained out of the escheated funds of the
Church of England in Ireland, when that organization
was disestablished by Mr. Gladstone, was used as a
loan fund which was available for fishermen, resident
six months, at two per cent interest. They were
permitted to purchase their own boat and gear for
the fishery out of the money thus provided.
While we lay in Durham Harbour at
the entrance to Waterford Harbour, we met many Cornishmen
who were temporarily resident there, having come over
from Cornwall to qualify for borrowing the money to
get boats and outfit. During one week in which
we were working from that port, there were so many
saints’ days on which the Irish crews would
not go out fishing, but were having good times on the
land, that the skippers, who were Cornishmen, had
to form a crew out of their own numbers and take one
of their boats to sea.
One day we had landed on the Arran
Islands, and I was hunting ferns in the rock crevices,
for owing to the warmth of the Gulf current the growth
is luxuriant. On the top of the cliffs about three
hundred feet high, I fell in with two Irishmen smoking
their pipes and sprawling on the edge of the precipice.
The water below was very deep and they were fishing.
I had the fun of seeing dangling codfish hauled leisurely
up all that long distance, and if one fell off on
the passage, it was amusing to note the absolute insouciance
of the fishermen, who assured me that there were plenty
more in the sea.
It has always been a puzzle to me
why so few tourists and yachtsmen visit the south
and west coast of Ireland. Its marvellous wild,
rock scenery, its exquisite bays, no other
words describe them, its emerald verdure,
and its interesting and hospitable people have given
me, during the spring fishing seasons that I spent
on that coast, some of the happiest memories of my
life. On the contrary, most of the yachts hang
around the Solent, and the piers of Ryde, Cowes, and
Southampton, instead of the magnificent coast from
Queenstown to Donegal Cliffs, and from there all along
West Scotland to the Hebrides.
About this time our work established
a dispensary and social centre at Crookhaven, just
inside the Fastnet Lighthouse, and another in Tralee
on the Kerry coast, north of Cape Clear. Gatherings
for worship and singing were also held on Sundays
on the boats, for on that day neither Scotch, Manx,
nor English went fishing. The men loved the music,
the singing of hymns, and the conversational addresses.
Many would take some part in the service, and my memories
of those gatherings are still very pleasant ones.
On this wild coast calls for help
frequently came from the poor settlers as well as
from the seafarers. A summons coming in one day
from the Fastnet Light, we rowed out in a small boat
to that lovely rock in the Atlantic. A heavy
sea, however, making landing impossible, we caught
hold of a buoy, anchored off from the rock, and then
rowing in almost to the surf, caught a line from the
high overhanging crane. A few moments later one
was picked out of the tumbling, tossing boat like
a winkle out of a shell, by a noose at the end of a
line from a crane a hundred and fifty feet above,
swung perpendicularly up into the air, and then round
and into a trap-door in the side of the lighthouse.
On leaving one was swung out again in the same fashion,
and dangled over the tumbling boat until caught and
pulled in by the oarsmen.
Another day we rowed out nine miles
in an Irish craft to visit the Skerry Islands, famous
for the old Beehive Monastery, and the countless nests
of gannets and other large sea-birds. The cliffs
rise to a great height almost precipitously, and the
ceaseless thunder of the Atlantic swell jealously
guards any landing. There being no davit or crane,
we had just to fling ourselves into the sea, and climb
up as best we could, carrying a line to haul up our
clothing from the boat and other apparatus after landing,
while the oarsmen kept her outside the surf.
To hold on to the slippery rock we needed but little
clothing, anyhow, for it was a slow matter, and the
clinging power of one’s bare toes was essential.
The innumerable gannets sitting on their nests gave
the island the appearance of a snowdrift; and we soon
had all the eggs that we needed lowered by a line.
But some of the gulls, of whose eggs we wanted specimens
also, built so cleverly onto the actual faces of the
cliffs, that we had to adopt the old plan of hanging
over the edge and raising the eggs on the back of one’s
foot, which is an exploit not devoid of excitement.
The chief difficulty was, however, with one of our
number, who literally stuck on the top, being unable
to descend, at least in a way compatible with comfort
or safety. The upshot was that he had to be blindfolded
and helped.
One of our Council, being connected
at this time with the Irish Poor-Relief Board and
greatly interested in the Government efforts to relieve
distress in Ireland, arranged that we should make a
voyage around the entire island in one of our vessels,
trying the trawling grounds everywhere, and also the
local markets available for making our catch remunerative.
There has been considerable activity in these waters
of late years, but it was practically pioneer work
in those days, the fishery being almost entirely composed
of drift nets and long lines. It was supposed
that the water was too deep and the bottom too uneven
and rocky to make trawling possible. We had only
a sailing vessel of about sixty tons, and the old
heavy beam trawl, for the other trawl and steam fishing
boats were then quite in their infancy. The quantity
and variety of victims that came to our net were prodigious,
and the cruise has remained as a dream in my memory,
combined as it was with so many chances of helping
out one of the most interesting and amiable if
not educated peoples in the world.
It happened to be a year of potato scarcity; as one
friend pointed out, there was a surplus of Murphys
in the kitchen and a scarcity of Murphys in the cellar “Murphys”
being another name for that vegetable which is so
large a factor in Irish economic life. As mentioned
before, a fund, called the Countess of Z.’s fund,
had been established to relieve the consequent distress,
and while we were fishing in Black Sod Bay, the natives
around the shore were accepting all that they could
secure. Yet one steam trawler cleared four hundred
pounds within a week; and our own fine catches, taken
in so short a while, made it seem a veritable fishermen’s
paradise for us, who were accustomed to toil over
the long combers and stormy banks of the North Sea.
The variety of fish taken alone made the voyage of
absorbing interest, numbering cod, haddock, ling,
hake, turbot, soles, plaice, halibut, whiting, crayfish,
shark, dog-fish, and many quaint monsters unmarketable
then, but perfectly edible. Among those taken
in was the big angler fish, which lives at the bottom
with his enormous mouth open, dangling an attractive-looking
bait formed by a long rod growing out from his nose,
which lures small victims into the cavern, whence,
as he possesses row upon row of spiky teeth which providentially
point down his throat, there is seldom any returning.
Among the many memories of that coast
which gave me a vision of the land question as it
affected the people in those days, one in particular
has always remained with me. We had made a big
catch in a certain bay, a perfectly beautiful inlet.
To see if the local fishermen could find a market
within reach of these fishing grounds, with one of
the crew, and the fish packed in boxes, we sailed up
the inlet to the market town of Bell Mullet.
Being Saturday, we found a market day in progress,
and buyers, who, encouraged by one of the new Government
light railways, were able to purchase our fish.
That evening, however, when halfway home, a squall
suddenly struck our own lightened boat, which was
rigged with one large lugsail, and capsized her.
By swimming and manoeuvring the boat, we made land
on the low, muddy flats. No house was in sight,
and it was not until long after dark that we two shivering
masses of mud reached an isolated cabin in the middle
of a patch of the redeemed ground right in the centre
of a large bog. A miserably clad woman greeted
us with a warm Irish welcome. The house had only
one room and accommodated the live-stock as well as
the family. A fine cow stood in one corner; a
donkey tied to the foot of the bed was patiently looking
down into the face of the baby. Father was in
England harvesting. A couple of pigs lay under
the bed, and the floor space was still further encroached
upon by a goodly number of chickens, which were encouraged
by the warmth of the peat fire. They not only
thought it their duty to emphasize our welcome, but misled
by the firelight were saluting the still
far-off dawn. The resultant emotions which we
experienced during the night led us to suggest that
we might assist toward the erection of a cattle pen.
Before leaving, however, we were told, “Shure
t’ rint would be raised in the fall,”
if such signs of prosperity as farm buildings greeted
the land agent’s arrival.
The mouth of Loch Foyle, one of the
most beautiful bays in Ireland, gave us a fine return
in fish. Especially I remember the magnificent
turbot which we took off the wild shore between the
frowning basalt cliffs of the Giant’s Causeway,
and the rough headlands of Loch Swilly. We sold
our fish in the historic town of Londonderry, where
we saw the old gun Mons Meg, which once so successfully
roared for King William, still in its place on the
old battlements. By a packet steamer plying to
Glasgow, we despatched some of the catch to that greedy
market. At Loch Foyle there is a good expanse
of sandy and mud bottom which nurses quite a harvest
of the sea, though oddly enough close
by off Rathlin Island is the only water over one hundred
fathoms deep until the Atlantic Basin is reached.
The Irish Sea like the North Sea is all shallow water.
Crossing to the Isle of Man, we delayed there only
a short while, for those grounds are well known to
the Fleetwood trawlers, who supply so much fish to
the dense population of North Central England.
We found little opportunity of trawling off the west
of Scotland, the ocean’s bottom being in no way
suited to it. On reaching the Western Hebrides,
however, we were once more among many old friends.
From Stornaway on the Isle of Lewis alone some nine
hundred drifters were pursuing the retreating armies
of herring.
The German hordes have taught us to
think of life in large numbers, but were the herring
to elect a Kaiser, he would dominate in reality an
absolutely indestructible host. For hundreds of
years fishermen of all countries have without cessation
been pursuing these friends of mankind. For centuries
these inexhaustible hordes have followed their long
pathways of the sea, swimming by some strange instinct
always more or less over the same courses ever
with their tireless enemies, both in and out of the
water, hot foot on their tracks. Sharks, dog-fish,
wolf-fish, cod, and every fish large enough to swallow
them, gulls, divers, auks, and almost every bird of
the air, to say nothing of the nets set now from steam-propelled
ships, might well threaten their speedy extermination.
This is especially true when we remember that even
their eggs are preyed upon in almost incalculable bulk
as soon as they are deposited. But phoenix-like
they continue to reappear in such vast quantities
that they are still the cheapest food on the market.
Such huge numbers are caught at one time that they
have now and again to be used for fertilizer, or dumped
overboard into the sea. The great bay of Stornaway
Harbour was so deeply covered in oil from the fish
while we lay there, that the sailing boats raced to
and fro before fine breezes and yet the wind could
not even ripple the surface of the sea, as if at last
millennial conditions had materialized. Many
times we saw nets which had caught such quantities
of fish at once that they had sunk to the bottom.
They were only rescued with great difficulty, and
then the fish were so swollen by being drowned in
the net that it took hours of hard work and delay to
shake their now distended bodies out again.
The opportunities for both holding
simple religious services and rendering medical help
from our dispensary were numerous, and we thought
sufficiently needed to call for some sort of permanent
effort; so later the Society established a small mission
room in the harbour.
Alcohol has always been a menace to
Scotch life, though their fishermen were singularly
free from rioting and drunkenness. Indeed, their
home-born piety was continually a protest to the indulgence
of the mixed crowd which at that time followed King
Henry. Scores of times have I seen a humble crew
of poor fishermen, who themselves owned their small
craft, observing the Sunday as if they were in their
homes, while the skippers of large vessels belonging
to others fished all the week round at the beck of
their absent owners, thinking they made more money
in that way.
In 1891 the present Lord Southborough,
then Mr. Francis Hopwood, and a member of the Mission
Board, returned from a visit to Canada and Newfoundland.
He brought before the Council the opportunities for
service among the fishermen of the northwest Atlantic,
and the suggestion was handed on to me in the form
of a query. Would I consider crossing the Atlantic
in one of our small sailing vessels, and make an inquiry
into the problem?
Some of my older friends have thought
that my decision to go was made under strong religious
excitement, and in response to some deep-seated conviction
that material sacrifices or physical discomforts commended
one to God. I must, however, disclaim all such
lofty motives. I have always believed that the
Good Samaritan went across the road to the wounded
man just because he wanted to. I do not believe
that he felt any sacrifice or fear in the matter.
If he did, I know very well that I did not. On
the contrary, there is everything about such a venture
to attract my type of mind, and making preparations
for the long voyage was an unmitigated delight.
The boat which I selected was ketch-rigged much
like a yawl, but more comfortable for lying-to in
heavy weather, the sail area being more evenly distributed.
Her freeboard being only three feet, we replaced her
wooden hatches, which were too large for handling patients,
by iron ones; and also sheathed her forward along
the water-line with greenheart to protect her planking
in ice. For running in high seas we put a large
square sail forward, tripping the yard along the foremast,
much like a spinnaker boom. Having a screw steering
gear which took two men to handle quickly enough when
she yawed and threatened to jibe in a big swell, it
proved very useful.
It was not until the spring of 1892
that we were ready to start. We had secured a
master with a certificate, for though I was myself
a master mariner, and my mate had been in charge of
our vessel in the North Sea for many years, we had
neither of us been across the Atlantic before.
The skipper was a Cornishman, Trevize by name, and
a martinet on discipline an entirely new
experience to a crew of North Sea fishermen.
He was so particular about everything being just so
that quite a few days were lost in starting, though
well spent as far as preparedness went. Nothing
was wanting when at last, in the second week of June,
the tugboat let us go, and crowds of friends waved
us good-bye from the pier-head as we passed out with
our bunting standing. We had not intended to
touch land again until it should rise out of the western
horizon, but off the south coast of Ireland we met
with heavy seas and head winds, so we ran into Crookhaven
to visit our colleagues who worked at that station.
Our old patients in that lonely corner were almost
as interested as ourselves in the new venture, and
many were the good eggs and “meals of greens”
which they brought down to the ship as parting tokens.
Indeed, we shrewdly guessed that our “dry”
principles alone robbed us of more than “one
drop o’ potheen” whose birth the light
of the moon had witnessed.
As we were not fortunate in encountering
fair winds, it was not until the twelfth day that
we saw our first iceberg, almost running into it in
a heavy fog. The fall in the temperature of the
sea surface had warned us that we were in the cold
current, and three or four days of dense fog emphasized
the fact. As it was midsummer, we felt the change
keenly, when suddenly on the seventeenth day the fog
lifted, and a high evergreen-crowned coast-line greeted
our delighted eyes. A lofty lighthouse on a rocky
headland enabled us almost immediately to discover
our exact position. We were just a little north
of St. John’s Harbour, which, being my first
landfall across the Atlantic, impressed me as a really
marvellous feat; but what was our surprise as we approached
the high cliffs which guard the entrance to see dense
columns of smoke arising, and to feel the offshore
wind grow hotter and hotter as the pilot tug towed
us between the headlands. For the third time
in its history the city of St. John’s was in
flames.
The heat was fierce when we at last
anchored, and had the height of the blaze not passed,
we should certainly have been glad to seek again the
cool of our icy friends outside. Some ships had
even been burned at their anchors. We could count
thirteen fiercely raging fires in various parts of
the city, which looked like one vast funeral pyre.
Only the brick chimneys of the houses remained standing
blackened and charred. Smoke and occasional flame
would burst out here and there as the fickle eddies
of wind, influenced, no doubt, by the heat, whirled
around as if in sport over the scene of man’s
discomfitures. On the hillside stood a solitary
house almost untouched, which, had there been any
reason for its being held sacred, might well have served
as a demonstration of Heaven’s special intervention
in its behalf. As it was, it seemed to mock the
still smouldering wreck of the beautiful stone cathedral
just beside it. Among the ruins in this valley
of desolation little groups of men darted hither and
thither, resembling from the harbour nothing so much
as tiny black imps gloating over a congenial environment.
I hope never again to see the sight that might well
have suggested Gehenna to a less active imagination
than Dante’s.
Huts had been erected in open places
to shelter the homeless; long queues of hungry human
beings defiled before temporary booths which served
out soup and other rations. Every nook and corner
of house-room left was crowded to overflowing with
derelict persons and their belongings. The roads
to the country, like those now in the environs of
the towns in northern France, were dotted with exiles
and belated vehicles, hauling in every direction the
remnants of household goods. The feeling as of
a rudely disturbed antheap dominated one’s mind,
and yet, in spite of it all, the hospitality and welcome
which we as strangers received was as wonderful as
if we had been a relief ship laden with supplies to
replace the immense amount destroyed in the ships
and stores of the city. Moreover, the cheerfulness
of the town was amazing. Scarcely a “peep”
or “squeal” did we hear, and not a single
diatribe against the authorities. Every one had
suffered together. Nor was it due to any one’s
fault. True, the town water-supply had been temporarily
out of commission, some stranger was said to have
been smoking in the hay loft, Providence had not specially
intervened to save property, and hence this result.
Thus to our relief it was a city of hope, not of despair,
and to our amazement they were able to show most kindly
interest in problems such as ours which seemed so
remote at the moment. None of us will ever forget
their kindness, from the Governor Sir Terence O’Brien,
and the Prime Minister, Sir William Whiteway, to the
humblest stevedore on the wharves.
I had expected to spend the greater
part of our time cruising among the fishing schooners
out of sight of land on the big Banks as we did in
the North Sea; but I was advised that owing to fog
and isolation, each vessel working separately and
bringing its own catch to market, it would be a much
more profitable outlay of time, if we were to follow
the large fleet of over one hundred schooners,
with some thirty thousand fishermen, women, and children
which had just sailed North for summer work along
the coast of Labrador. To better aid us the Government
provided a pilot free of expense, and their splendid
Superintendent of Fisheries, Mr. Adolph Nielsen, also
accepted the invitation to accompany us, to make our
experiment more exhaustive and valuable by a special
scientific inquiry into the habits and manner of the
fish as well as of the fishermen. Naturally a
good deal of delay had occurred owing to the unusual
congestion of business which needed immediate attention
and the unfortunate temporary lack of facilities;
but we got under way at last, and sailing “down
North” some four hundred miles and well outside
the land, eventually ran in on a parallel and made
the Labrador coast on the 4th of August.
The exhilarating memory of that day
is one which will die only when we do. A glorious
sun shone over an oily ocean of cerulean blue, over
a hundred towering icebergs of every fantastic shape,
and flashing all of the colours of the rainbow from
their gleaming pinnacles as they rolled on the long
and lazy swell. Birds familiar and strange left
the dense shoals of rippling fish, over which great
flocks were hovering and quarrelling in noisy enjoyment,
to wave us welcome as they swept in joyous circles
overhead.