became
audible,
persistent, unnoticed. The cowled
grandfatherwas very much entertained somewhere within his hood.
He had not joined in the shouting of jokes, neither had he moved
the least bit. He had remained quietly in his place against the
foot of the mast. I had been given to understand long before
that he had the rating of a second-class able
seaman (matelot
leger) in the fleet which sailed from Toulon for the
conquest of
Algeria in the year of grace 1830. And, indeed, I had seen and
examined one of the
buttons of his old brown patched coat, the
only brass
button of the
miscellaneous lot, flat and thin, with
the words Equipages de ligne engraved on it. That sort of
button, I believe, went out with the last of the French Bourbons.
"I preserved it from the time of my Navy Service," he explained,
nodding rapidly his frail, vulture-like head. It was not very
likely that he had picked up that relic in the street. He looked
certainly old enough to have fought at Trafalgar--or at any rate
to have played his little part there as a powder-monkey. Shortly
after we had been introduced he had informed me in a Franco-
Provencal jargon, mumbling tremulously with his toothless jaws,
that when he was a "shaver no higher than that" he had seen the
Emperor Napoleon returning from Elba. It was at night, he
narrated
vaguely, without animation, at a spot between Frejus and
Antibes in the open country. A big fire had been lit at the side
of the cross-roads. The population from several villages had
collected there, old and young--down to the very children in
arms, because the women had refused to stay at home. Tall
soldiers wearing high, hairy caps, stood in a
circle facing the
people
silently, and their stern eyes and big moustaches were
enough to make everybody keep at a distance. He, "being an
impudent little shaver," wriggled out of the crowd, creeping on
his hands and knees as near as he dared to the grenadiers' legs,
and peeping through discovered
standingperfectly still in the
light of the fire "a little fat fellow in a three-cornered hat,
buttoned up in a long straight coat, with a big pale face,
inclined on one shoulder, looking something like a
priest. His
hands were clasped behind his back. . .It appears that this was
the Emperor," the Ancient commented with a faint sigh. He was
staring from the ground with all his might, when "my poor
father," who had been searching for his boy frantically
everywhere, pounced upon him and hauled him away by the ear.
The tale seems an
authenticrecollection. He
related it to me
many times, using the very same words. The
grandfather honoured
me by a special and somewhat embarrassing predilection. Extremes
touch. He was the oldest member by a long way in that Company,
and I was, if I may say so, its
temporarily adopted baby. He had
been a pilot longer than any man in the boat could remember;
thirty--forty years. He did not seem certain himself, but it
could be found out, he suggested, in the archives of the Pilot-
office. He had been pensioned off years before, but he went out
from force of habit; and, as my friend the
patron of the Company
once confided to me in a
whisper, "the old chap did no harm. He
was not in the way." They treated him with rough deference. One
and another would address some
insignificant remark to him now
and again, but nobody really took any notice of what he had to
say. He had survived his strength, his
usefulness, his very
wisdom. He wore long, green, worsted stockings, pulled up above
the knee over his
trousers, a sort of woollen nightcap on his
hairless cranium, and
wooden clogs on his feet. Without his
hooded cloak he looked like a
peasant. Half a dozen hands would
be
extended to help him on board, but afterwards he was left
pretty much to his own thoughts. Of course he never did any
work, except, perhaps, to cast off some rope when hailed: "He,
l'Ancien! let go the halyards there, at your hand"--or some such
request of an easy kind.
No one took notice in any way of the chuckling within the shadow
of the hood. He kept it up for a long time with
intenseenjoyment. Obviously he had preserved
intact the
innocence of
mind which is easily amused. But when his hilarity had exhausted
itself, he made a
professional remark in a self-assertive but
quavering voice:
"Can't expect much work on a night like this."
No one took it up. It was a mere truism. Nothing under canvas
could be expected to make a port on such an idle night of dreamy
splendour and
spiritualstillness. We would have to glide idly
to and fro, keeping our station within the appointed bearings,
and, unless a fresh
breezesprang up with the dawn, we would land
before
sunrise on a small islet that, within two miles of us,
shone like a lump of
frozenmoonlight, to "break a crust and take
a pull at the wine bottle." I was familiar with the procedure.
The stout boat emptied of her crowd would
nestle her buoyant,
capable side against the very rock--such is the
perfectly smooth
amenity of the
classic sea when in a gentle mood. The crust
broken, and the
mouthful of wine swallowed--it was
literally no
more than that with this abstemious race--the pilots would pass
the time stamping their feet on the slabs of sea-salted stone and
blowing into their nipped fingers. One or two misanthropists
would sit apart perched on boulders like man-like sea-fowl of
solitary habits; the sociably disposed would
gossip scandalously
in little gesticulating knots; and there would be perpetually one
or another of my hosts
taking aim at the empty
horizon with the
long, brass tube of the
telescope, a heavy, murderous-looking
piece of
collective property, everlastingly changing hands with
brandishing and levelling movements. Then about noon (it was a
short turn of duty--the long turn lasted twenty-four hours)
another boatful of pilots would
relieve us--and we should steer
for the old Phoenician port, dominated, watched over from the
ridge of a dust-grey arid hill by the red-and-white-striped pile
of the Notre Dame de la Garde.
All this came to pass as I had
foreseen in the
fullness of my
very recent experience. But also something not
foreseen by me
did happen, something which causes me to remember my last outing
with the pilots. It was on this occasion that my hand touched,
for the first time, the side of an English ship.
No fresh
breeze had come with the dawn, only the steady little
draught got a more keen edge on it as the eastern sky became
bright and
glassy with a clean,
colourless light. It was while
we were all
ashore on the islet that a
steamer was picked up by
the
telescope, a black speck like an
insect posed on the hard
edge of the offing. She emerged rapidly to her water-line and
came on
steadily, a slim hull with a long
streak of smoke
slanting away from the rising sun. We embarked in a hurry, and
headed the boat out for our prey, but we hardly moved three miles
an hour.
She was a big, high-class cargo-
steamer of a type that is to be
met on the sea no more, black hull, with low, white super-
structures, powerfully rigged with three masts and a lot of yards
on the fore; two hands at her
enormous wheel--steam steering-gear
was not a matter of course in these days--and with them on the
bridge three others, bulky in thick blue jackets, ruddy-faced,
muffled up, with peaked caps--I suppose all her officers. There
are ships I have met more than once and known well by sight whose
names I have forgotten; but the name of that ship seen once so
many years ago in the clear flush of a cold pale
sunrise I have
not forgotten. How could I--the first English ship on whose side
I ever laid my hand! The name--I read it letter by letter on the
bow--was "James Westoll." Not very
romantic you will say. The
name of a very
considerable,
well-known and
universally respected
North-country shipowner, I believe. James Westoll! What better
name could an
honourable hard-working ship have? To me the very
grouping of the letters is alive with the
romantic feeling of her
reality as I saw her floating
motionless, and borrowing an ideal
grace from the
austerepurity of the light.
We were then very near her and, on a sudden
impulse, I
volunteered to pull bow in the dinghy which shoved off at once to