Arbroath, which were soon to be brought to a close; the
landing-master's crew having, in the
meantime, shifted on
board of the PATRIOT. In leaving the rock, the
writer kept
his eyes fixed upon the
lighthouse, which had recently got
into the form of a house, having several tiers or stories of
windows. Nor was he unmindful of his
habitation in the
beacon- now far overtopped by the
masonry, - where he had spent
several weeks in a kind of active
retirement, making practical
experiment of the fewness of the
positive wants of man. His
cabin measured not more than four feet three inches in breadth
on the floor; and though, from the
oblique direction of the
beams of the
beacon, it widened towards the top, yet it did
not admit of the full
extension of his arms when he stood on
the floor; while its length was little more than sufficient
for suspending a cot-bed during the night, calculated for
being triced up to the roof through the day, which left free
room for the
admission of
occasional visitants. His folding
table was attached with hinges, immediately under the small
window of the
apartment, and his books, barometer,
thermometer, portmanteau, and two or three camp-stools, formed
the bulk of his movables. His diet being plain, the
paraphernalia of the table were proportionally simple; though
everything had the appearance of comfort, and even of
neatness, the walls being covered with green cloth formed into
panels with red tape, and his bed festooned with curtains of
yellow cotton-stuff. If, in speculating upon the abstract
wants of man in such a state of
exclusion, one were reduced to
a single book, the Sacred Volume - whether considered for the
striking
diversity of its story, the
morality of its doctrine,
or the important truths of its
gospel - would have proved by
far the greatest treasure.
[Monday, 2nd July]
In walking over the workyard at Arbroath this morning,
the
writer found that the stones of the course immediately
under the cornice were all in hand, and that a week's work
would now finish the whole, while the
intermediate courses lay
ready numbered and marked for
shipping to the rock. Among
other subjects which had occupied his attention to-day was a
visit from some of the relations of George Dall, a young man
who had been impressed near Dundee in the month of February
last; a
dispute had
arisen between the magistrates of that
burgh and the Regulating Officer as to his right of impressing
Dall, who was BONA FIDE one of the protected seamen in the
Bell Rock service. In the
meantime, the poor lad was
detained, and
ultimately committed to the prison of Dundee, to
remain until the question should be tried before the Court of
Session. His friends were naturally very
desirous to have him
relieved upon bail. But, as this was only to be done by the
judgment of the Court, all that could be said was that his pay
and allowances should be continued in the same manner as if he
had been upon the sick-list. The circumstances of Dall's case
were
briefly these:- He had gone to see some of his friends in
the neighbourhood of Dundee, in winter, while the works were
suspended, having got leave of
absence from Mr. Taylor, who
commanded the Bell Rock tender, and had in his possession one
of the Protection Medals. Un
fortunately, however, for Dall,
the Regulating Officer thought proper to
disregard these
documents, as, according to the
strict and literal
interpretation of the Admiralty regulations, a
seaman does not
stand protected unless he is
actually on board of his ship, or
in a boat belonging to her, or has the Admiralty
protection in
his possession. This order of the Board, however, cannot be
rigidly followed in practice; and
therefore, when the matter
is
satisfactorily stated to the Regulating Officer, the
impressed man is generally liberated. But in Dall's case this
was peremptorily refused, and he was retained at the instance
of the magistrates. The
writer having brought the matter
under the
consideration of the Commissioners of the Northern
Lighthouses, they authorised it to be tried on the part of the
Lighthouse Board, as one of
extremehardship. The Court, upon
the first
hearing, ordered Dall to be liberated from prison;
and the proceedings never went further.
[Wednesday, 4th July]
Being now within twelve courses of being ready for
building the cornice, measures were taken for getting the
stones of it and the parapet-wall of the light-room brought
from Edinburgh, where, as before noticed, they had been
prepared and were in
readiness for
shipping. The honour of
conveying the upper part of the
lighthouse, and of
landing the
last stone of the building on the rock, was considered to
belong to Captain Pool of the SMEATON, who had been longer in
the service than the master of the PATRIOT. The SMEATON was,
therefore, now
partly loaded with old iron, consisting of
broken railways and other
lumber which had been lying about
the rock. After
landing these at Arbroath, she took on board
James Craw, with his horse and cart, which could now be spared
at the workyard, to be employed in carting the stones from
Edinburgh to Leith. Alexander Davidson and William Kennedy,
two careful masons, were also sent to take
charge of the
loading of the stones at Greenside, and stowing them on board
of the
vessel at Leith. The
writer also went on board, with a
view to call at the Bell Rock and to take his passage up the
Firth of Forth. The wind, however, coming to blow very fresh
from the
eastward, with thick and foggy weather, it became
necessary to reef the mainsail and set the second jib. When
in the act of making a tack towards the tender, the sailors
who worked the head-sheets were, all of a sudden, alarmed with
the sound of the smith's
hammer and anvil on the
beacon, and
had just time to put the ship about to save her from running
ashore on the
western" target="_blank" title="a.西北的;自西北的">
northwestern point of the rock, marked `James
Craw's Horse.' On looking towards the direction from whence
the sound came, the building and
beacon-house were seen, with
consternation, while the ship was hailed by those on the rock,
who were no less confounded at
seeing the near approach of the
SMEATON; and, just as the
vessel cleared the danger, the smith
and those in the
mortargallery made signs in token of their
happiness at our
fortunate escape. From this
occurrence the
writer had an
experimental proof of the
utility of the large
bells which were in
preparation to be rung by the machinery of
the revolving light; for, had it not been the sound of the
smith's anvil, the SMEATON, in all
probability, would have
been wrecked upon the rock. In case the
vessel had struck,
those on board might have been safe, having now the
beacon-
house, as a place of
refuge; but the
vessel, which was going
at a great
velocity, must have suffered
severely, and it was
more than
probable that the horse would have been drowned,
there being no means of getting him out of the
vessel. Of
this
valuable animal and his master we shall take an
opportunity of
saying more in another place.
[Thursday, 5th July]
The weather cleared up in the course of the night, but
the wind shifted to the N.E. and blew very fresh. From the
force of the wind, being now the period of spring-tides, a
very heavy swell was
experienced at the rock. At two o'clock
on the following morning the people on the
beacon were in a
state of great alarm about their safety, as the sea had broke
up part of the floor of the
mortargallery!, which was thus
cleared of the lime-casks and other
buoyant articles; and, the
alarm-bell being rung, all hands were called to render what
assistance was in their power for the safety of themselves and
the materials. At this time some would
willingly have left
the
beacon and gone into the building: the sea, however, ran
so high that there was no passage along the
bridge of