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The Brassbounder Part 23

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XXVI

LIKE A MAN!

Spring in the air of it, a bright, keen day, and the mist only strong enough to soften the bold, rugged outline of Knocknarea, our sailing mark, towering high and solitary above Sligo Harbour. The strong west wind that we had fought and bested at the Stags turned friendly, had blown us fair to our voyage's end, and now, under easy canvas, we tacked on sh.o.r.e and off, waiting for tide to bear up and float our twenty feet in safety across the Bar.

At Raghly, our signal for a local pilot was loyally responded to. A s.h.i.+p of tonnage was clearly a rare sight in these parts, for the entire male population came off to see us safely in--to make a day of it! Old pilots and young, fishermen and gossoons, they swept out from creek and headland in their swift Mayo skiffs, and though only one was Trinity licensed for our draft of water, the rest remained, to bear willing hands at the braces on the chance of a job at the cargo being given.

'Ould Andy' was the official pilot--a hardy old farmer-fisherman, weazened by years and the weather. He had donned his best in honour of the occasion--a coa.r.s.e suit of fearnought serges, quaintly cut, and an ancient top hat, set at a rakish angle. Hasty rising showed in razor cuts on his hard blue jowl, and his untied shoes made clatter as he mounted the p.o.o.p, waving a yellow time-stained license. An odd figure for a master-pilot; but he made a good impression on Old Jock when he said, simply, "... but bedad, now, Cyaptin! Sure, Oim no hand at thim big yards ov yours, but Oi kin show ye where th' daape watther is!"



The s.h.i.+p steered to his liking, and all in trim, he walked the p.o.o.p, showing a great pride of his importance as a navigator of twenty feet.

Suddenly--at no apparent call--he stepped to the side where his boat was towing.

"What-t," he yelled. "Ach, hoult yer whisht! What-t are yez shoutin'

about? What-t? Ast the Cyaptin f'r a bit av 'baccy f'r th' byes in th' boat! Indade, an' Oi will natt ast th' dacent gintilman f'r a bit av 'baccy f'r th' byes in th' boat! What-t? Ach, hoult yer whisht, now!"

Joining the Captain he resumed the thread of his description of Sligo Port, apparently unheeding the Old Man's side order to the steward that sent a package of hard tobacco over the rail.

"... an' ye'll lie at Rosses Point, Cyaptin, till ye loighten up t'

fourteen faate. Thin, thr'll be watther f'r yes at th' Quay, but..."

(Another tangent to the lee rail.) ... "Ach! What-t's th' matther wit'

ye now. Be m' sowl, it's heart-breakin' ye are, wit' yer shoutin' an'

that-t! What-t? Salt baafe an' a few bisskits! No! Oi will natt!!

Ast 'im yersilf f'r a bit av salt baafe an' a few bisskits, bad scran t' ye, yes ongrateful thaaves!"

We are homeward bound; the beef and biscuits go down. After them, "a tarn sail--jest a rag, d'ye moind, t' make a jib f'r th' ould boat"; then, "a pat av paint an' a brush"--it becomes quite exciting with Ould Andy abusing his boat's crew at every prompted request. We are beginning to wager on the nature of the next, when sent to the stations for anchoring. Ould Andy, with an indignant gesture and shake of his fists, turns away to attend to his more legitimate business, and, at his direction, we anchor to seaward of the Bar.

The wind that has served us so well has died away in faint airs, leaving a long gla.s.sy swell to score the placid surface of the Bay and set a pearly fringe on the distant sh.o.r.e. The tide moves steadily in flood, broadening in ruffling eddies at the shoals of the Bar. On a near beacon a tide gauge shows the water, and when sail is furled and the yards in harbour trim we have naught to do but reckon our wages, and watch the rising water lapping, inch by inch, on the figured board.

From seaward there is little to be seen of the countryside. The land about is low to the coast, but far inland blue, mist-capped ranges stand bold and rugged against the clear northern sky. Beyond the Bar the harbour lies bare of s.h.i.+pping--only a few fis.h.i.+ng skiffs putting out under long sweeps, and the channel buoys bobbing and heaving on the long swell. A deserted port we are come to after our long voyage from the West!

"That'll be th' _Maid o' th' Moy_, Cyaptin," said Ould Andy, squinting through the gla.s.ses at smoke-wrack on the far horizon. "Hot-fut from Ballina, t' tow ye in. An' Rory Kilgallen may save his cowl, bedad, f'r we'll naade two fut av watther yet before we get acrost.

Bedad"--in high glee--"he'll nat-t be after knowin' that it's twinty faate, no liss, that Ould Andy is bringin' in this day!"

With a haste that marks her skipper's anxiety to get a share of the good things going, the _Maid_, a trim little paddle tug, draws nigh, and soon a high bargaining begins between Old Jock and the tugman, with an eager audience to chorus, "D'ye hear that-t, now!" at each fiery period. Rory has the whip hand--and knows it. No compet.i.tion, and the tide making inch by inch on the beacon gauge!

For a time Old Jock holds out manfully. "Goad, no! I'll kedge th'

hooker up t' Sligo Quay before I give ye that!" But high water at hand and no sign of wind, he takes the tug on at a stiff figure, and we man the windla.s.s, tramping the well-worn round together for the last time.

_Leave her_ is the set chantey for finish of a voyage, and we roar a l.u.s.ty chorus to Granger, the chanteyman.

"O! Leave 'r John-ny, leave 'r like a man, (_An' leave 'r, John-ny, leave 'r!_) Oh! Leave 'r, John-ny, leave 'r when ye can, (_An' it's time--for us--t' leave 'r!_")

A hard heave, and the tug lying short. A Merseyman would have the weight off the cable by this.

"O! Soon we'll 'ear 'th Ol' Man say, (_Leave 'r, John-ny, leave 'r!_) Ye kin go ash.o.r.e an' take yer pay, (_An' it's time--for us--t' leave 'r!_")

"Heave, byes," the gossoons bearing stoutly on the bars with us.

"Heave, now! He's got no frin's!"

"O! Th' times wos 'ard, an' th' wages low, (_Leave 'r, John-ny, leave 'r!_) Th' w'yage wos long, an' th' gales did blow, (_An' it's time--for us--t' leave 'r!"_)

Check--and rally; check--a mad rush round--the anchor dripping at the bows, and we move on across the eddies of the Bar in wake of the panting tug.

A short tow, for all the bargaining, and at Rosses Point we bring up to moorings--the voyage at an end.

"That'll do, you men," said the Mate, when the last warp was turned.

"Pay off at th' Custom House at twelve to-morrow!"

"That'll do!" Few words and simple; but the meaning! Free at last!

No man's servant! With a hurricane whoop the crew rush to quarters to sling their bags for the road.

Then the trafficking with the sh.o.r.e, the boatmen reaping a harvest. "A bob th' trip, yer 'anner, on a day like this." The doors of the village inn swinging constantly, and the white-ap.r.o.ned landlord (mopping a heated brow at royal orders), sending messengers to ransack the village cupboards for a reserve of gla.s.ses. And when at last the boats are ready for the long pull up to Sligo town, and the impatient boatmen shouting, "Coom on now, byes! Before th' toide tarns; byes, now!" The free men embark, and we, the afterguard (who draw no pay), are left to watch them set off, and wish that our day were quickly come.

For a time we hear their happy voices, and answer cheer for cheer, then the dark comes, and the last is a steady _clack_ of rowlocks, and the men singing "_Leave 'r, John-ny ... like a man!_"

Two days later, on deck of the Glasgow boat, I gazed on my old s.h.i.+p for the last time. At the narrow bend we steamed slow, to steer cautiously past her. The harbour watch were there to give me a parting cheer, and Old Jock, from the p.o.o.p, waved a cheery response to my salute. Past her, we turned water again, and sped on to sea.

It was a day of mist and low clouds, and a weakly sun breaking through in long slanting shafts of light. Over the Point a beam was fleeting, playing on the house-tops, s.h.i.+mmering in window gla.s.ses, lighting on the water, on the tracery of spar and rigging, and showing golden on the red-rusty hull of the old barque--my home for so long in fair weather and foul.

A turn of the steering shut her from my sight, and I turned to go below.

"Fine s.h.i.+ps! Fine s.h.i.+ps--t' look aat!"

The Mate of the steamer, relieved from duty, had stopped at my side, sociable. He would be a Skye-man by the talk of him. It was good to hear the old speech again.

"Aye! she's a fine s.h.i.+p."

"Haf you been th' voyage in her? Been long away?"

"Oh yes! Sixteen months this trip!"

"Saxteen munss! Ma gra.s.s.h.i.+us! Y'll haf a fine pey oot o' her?"

"Not a cent! Owing, indeed; but my time'll be out in a week, an I'll get my indentures."

"Oh, yiss! Oh, yiss! A bressbounder, eh!" Then he gave a half-laugh, and muttered the old formula about "the man who would go to sea for pleasure, going to h.e.l.l for a pastime!"

"Whatna voyage did ye haf, now?" he asked, after filling a pipe with good 'golden bar,' that made me empty the bowl of mine, noisily.

"Oh, pretty bad. Gales an' gales. h.e.l.lish weather off the Horn, an'

short-handed, an' the house full o' las.h.i.+n' water--not a dry spot, fore an' aft. 'Gad! we had it sweet down there. Freezin', too, an' th'

sails hard as old Harry. Ah! a fine voyage, wi' rotten grub an' short commons at that!"

"Man, man! D'ye tell me that, now! Ma gra.s.s.h.i.+us! Ah wouldna go in them if ye wa.s.s t' gif me twenty pounds a munss!"

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The Brassbounder Part 23 summary

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