sucked under. On coming up he was caught under an upturned boat to
which five hands were clinging. "One lifeboat," says the chief
engineer, "which was floating empty in the distance was cleverly
manoeuvred to our
assistance by the
steward, who swam off to her
pluckily. Our next
endeavour was to
release the captain, who was
entangled under the boat. As it was impossible to right her, we
set-to to split her side open with the boat hook, because by awful
bad luck the head of the axe we had flew off at the first blow and
was lost. The
rescue took thirty minutes, and the extricated
captain was in a pitiable condition, being badly bruised and having
swallowed a lot of salt water. He was
conscious" target="_blank" title="a.无意识的;不觉察的">
unconscious. While at that
work the
submarine came to the surface quite close and made a
complete
circle round us, the seven men that we counted on the
conning tower laughing at our efforts.
"There were eighteen of us saved. I deeply regret the loss of the
chief officer, a fine fellow and a kind shipmate showing splendid
promise. The other men lost--one A.B., one greaser, and two
firemen--were quiet,
conscientious, good fellows."
With no restoratives in the boat, they
endeavoured to bring the
captain round by means of massage. Meantime the oars were got out
in order to reach the Faroes, which were about thirty miles dead to
windward, but after about nine hours' hard work they had to desist,
and, putting out a sea-anchor, they took shelter under the
canvasboat-cover from the cold wind and torrential rain. Says the
narrator: "We were all very wet and
miserable, and
decided to have
two biscuits all round. The effects of this and being under the
shelter of the
canvas warmed us up and made us feel pretty well
contented. At about
sunrise the captain showed signs of recovery,
and by the time the sun was up he was looking a lot better, much to
our
relief."
After being informed of what had been done the revived captain
"dropped a bombshell in our midst," by proposing to make for the
Shetlands, which were ONLY one hundred and fifty miles off. "The
wind is in our favour," he said. "I promise to take you there.
Are you all willing?" This--comments the chief engineer--"from a
man who but a few hours
previously had been hauled back from the
grave!" The captain's
confident manner inspired the men, and they
all agreed. Under the best possible conditions a boat-run of one
hundred and fifty miles in the North Atlantic and in winter weather
would have been a feat of no mean merit, but in the circumstances
it required
uncommon nerve and skill to carry out such a promise.
With an oar for a mast and the boat-cover cut down for a sail they
started on their dangerous journey, with the boat
compass and the
stars for their guide. The captain's undaunted serenity buoyed
them all up against despondency. He told them what point he was
making for. It was Ronas Hill, "and we struck it as straight as a
die."
The chief engineer commends also the ship
steward for the manner in
which he made the little food they had last, the
cheery spirit he
manifested, and the great help he was to the captain by keeping the
men in good
humour. That
trusty man had "his hands
cruelly chafed
with the rowing, but it never damped his spirits."
They made Ronas Hill (as straight as a die), and the chief engineer
cannot express their feelings of
gratitude and
relief when they set
their feet on the shore. He praises the unbounded kindness of the
people in Hillswick. "It seemed to us all like Paradise regained,"
he says, concluding his letter with the words:
"And there was our captain, just his usual self, as if nothing had
happened, as if bringing the boat that
hazardous journey and being
the means of saving eighteen souls was to him an
everydayoccurrence."
Such is the chief engineer's
testimony to the continuity of the old
tradition of the sea, which made by the work of men has in its turn
created for them their simple ideal of conduct.
CONFIDENCE--1919
I.
The seamen hold up the Edifice. They have been
holding it up in
the past and they will hold it up in the future,
whatever this
future may
contain of
logical development, of unforeseen new
shapes, of great promises and of dangers still unknown.
It is not an unpardonable stretching of the truth to say that the
British Empire rests on
transportation. I am
speaking now
naturally of the sea, as a man who has lived on it for many years,
at a time, too, when on sighting a
vessel on the
horizon of any of
the great oceans it was
perfectly safe to bet any
reasonable odds
on her being a British ship--with the certitude of making a pretty
good thing of it at the end of the voyage.
I have tried to
convey here in popular terms the strong impression
remembered from my young days. The Red Ensign prevailed on the
high seas to such an
extent that one always
experienced a slight
shock on
seeing some other
combination of colours blow out at the
peak or flag-pole of any chance
encounter in deep water. In the
long run the persistence of the visual fact forced upon the mind a
half-
conscious" target="_blank" title="a.无意识的;不觉察的">
unconscious sense of its inner
significance. We have all
heard of the
well-known view that trade follows the flag. And that
is not always true. There is also this truth that the flag, in
normal conditions, represents
commerce to the eye and understanding
of the average man. This is a truth, but it is not the whole
truth. In its numbers and in its unfailing ubiquity, the British
Red Ensign, under which naval actions too have been fought,
ad
ventures entered upon and sacrifices offered, represented in fact
something more than the
prestige of a great trade.
The
flutter of that piece of red
bunting showered
sentiment on the
nations of the earth. I will not
venture to say that in every case
that
sentiment was of a friendly nature. Of
hatred, half concealed
or concealed not at all, this is not the place to speak; and indeed
the little I have seen of it about the world was tainted with
stupidity and seemed to
confess in its very
violence the extreme
poorness of its case. But generally it was more in the nature of
envious wonder qualified by a half-concealed admiration.
That flag, which but for the Union Jack in the corner might have
been adopted by the most
radical of revolutions, affirmed in its
numbers the
stability of purpose, the continuity of effort and the
greatness of Britain's opportunity pursued
steadily in the order
and peace of the world: that world which for twenty-five years or
so after 1870 may be said to have been living in holy calm and
hushed silence with only now and then a slight clink of metal, as
if in some distant part of mankind's
habitation some
restless body
had stumbled over a heap of old armour.
II.
We who have
learned by now what a world-war is like may be excused
for
considering the disturbances of that period as in
significantbrawls, mere hole-and-corner scuffles. In the world, which memory
depicts as so
wonderfullytranquil all over, it was the sea yet
that was the safest place. And the Red Ensign, commercial,
industrial,
historic, pervaded the sea! Assertive only by its
numbers, highly
significant, and, under its
character of a trade--
emblem, nationally
expressive, it was
symbolic of old and new
ideas, of conservatism and progress, of
routine and
enterprise, of
drudgery and ad
venture--and of a certain easy-going optimism that
would have appeared the Father of Sloth itself if it had not been
so
stubbornly, so everlastingly active.
The unimaginative, hard-working men, great and small, who served
this flag
afloat and
ashore, nursed dumbly a
mysterious sense of
its
greatness. It sheltered magnificently their
vagabond labours
under the
sleepless eye of the sun. It held up the Edifice. But
it crowned it too. This is not the
extravagance of a mixed
metaphor. It is the sober expression of a not very
complex truth.
Within that double
function the national life that flag represented
so well went on in safety,
assured of its daily crust of bread for
which we all pray and without which we would have to give up faith,
hope and
charity, the
intellectual conquests of our minds and the
sanctified strength of our labouring arms. I may permit myself to
speak of it in these terms because as a matter of fact it was on
that very
symbol that I had founded my life and (as I have said
elsewhere in a moment of outspoken
gratitude) had known for many
years no other roof above my head.
In those days that
symbol was not particularly regarded.
Superficially and
definitely it represented but one of the forms of
national activity rather
remote from the close-knit organisations
of other industries, a kind of toil not immediately under the
public eye. It was of its Navy that the nation, looking out of the
windows of its world-wide Edifice, was
proudly aware. And that was
but fair. The Navy is the armed man at the gate. An existence
depending upon the sea must be guarded with a
jealous,
sleeplessvigilance, for the sea is but a
fickle friend.