[Monday, 17th Aug.]
The tide
happening to fall late in the evening of Monday
the 17th, the party, counting twenty-four in number, embarked
on board of the SMEATON about ten o'clock p.m., and sailed
from Arbroath with a gentle
breeze at west. Our ship's
colours having been flying all day in
compliment to the
commencement of the work, the other
vessels in the harbour
also
saluted, which made a very gay appearance. A number of
the friends and acquaintances of those on board having been
thus collected, the piers, though at a late hour, were
perfectly
crowded, and just as the SMEATON cleared the
harbour, all on board united in giving three
hearty cheers,
which were returned by those on shore in such good earnest,
that, in the still of the evening, the sound must have been
heard in all parts of the town, re-echoing from the walls and
lofty turrets of the
venerable Abbey of Aberbrothwick. The
writer felt much
satisfaction at the manner of this parting
scene, though he must own that the present
rejoicing was, on
his part, mingled with
occasional reflections upon the
responsibility of his situation, which
extended to the safety
of all who should be engaged in this
perilous work. With such
sensations he
retired to his cabin; but as the artificers were
rather inclined to move about the deck than to remain in their
confined berths below, his
repose was
transient, and the
vessel being small every
motion was
necessarily heard. Some
who were musically inclined
occasionally sung; but he listened
with
peculiar pleasure to the sailor at the helm, who hummed
over Dibdin's
characteristic air:-
`They say there's a Providence sits up aloft,
To keep watch for the life of poor Jack.'
[Tuesday, 18th Aug.]
The weather had been very gentle all night, and, about
four in the morning of the 18th, the SMEATON anchored.
Agreeably to an arranged plan of operations, all hands were
called at five o'clock a.m., just as the highest part of the
Bell Rock began to show its sable head among the light
breakers, which
occasionally whitened with the foaming sea.
The two boats belonging to the floating light attended the
SMEATON, to carry the artificers to the rock, as her boat
could only
accommodate about six or eight sitters. Every one
was more eager than his neighbour to leap into the boats and
it required a good deal of
management on the part of the
coxswains to get men unaccustomed to a boat to take their
places for rowing and at the same time trimming her properly.
The
landing-master and
foreman went into one boat, while the
writer took
charge of another, and steered it to and from the
rock. This became the more necessary in the early stages of
the work, as places could not be spared for more than two, or
at most three seamen to each boat, who were always stationed,
one at the bow, to use the boat-hook in fending or pushing
off, and the other at the aftermost oar, to give the proper
time in rowing, while the middle oars were double-banked, and
rowed by the artificers.
As the weather was
extremely fine, with light airs of
wind from the east, we landed without difficulty upon the
central part of the rock at half-past five, but the water had
not yet
sufficiently left it for commencing the work. This
interval, however, did not pass
unoccupied. The first and
last of all the
principal operations at the Bell Rock were
accompanied by three
hearty cheers from all hands, and, on
occasions like the present, the
steward of the ship attended,
when each man was regaled with a glass of rum. As the water
left the rock about six, some began to bore the holes for the
great bats or holdfasts, for fixing the beams of the Beacon-
house, while the smith was fully attended in laying out the
site of his forge, upon a somewhat sheltered spot of the rock,
which also recommended itself from the
vicinity of a pool of
water for tempering his irons. These
preliminary steps
occupied about an hour, and as nothing further could be done
during this tide towards fixing the forge, the workmen
gratified their
curiosity by roaming about the rock, which
they investigated with great
eagerness till the tide
overflowed it. Those who had been sick picked dulse (FUCUS
PALMATUS), which they ate with much
seemingappetite; others
were more
intent upon collecting limpets for bait, to enjoy
the
amusement of
fishing when they returned on board of the
vessel. Indeed, none came away empty-handed, as everything
found upon the Bell Rock was considered
valuable, being
connected with some interesting association. Several coins,
and numerous bits of
shipwrecked iron, were picked up, of
almost every
description; and, in particular, a marking-iron
lettered JAMES - a circumstance of which it was thought proper
to give notice to the public, as it might lead to the
knowledge of some
unfortunateshipwreck, perhaps unheard of
till this simple
occurrence led to the discovery. When the
rock began to be overflowed, the
landing-master arranged the
crews of the
respective boats, appointing twelve persons to
each. According to a rule which the
writer had laid down to
himself, he was always the last person who left the rock.
In a short time the Bell Rock was laid completely under
water, and the weather being
extremely fine, the sea was so
smooth that its place could not be
pointed out from the
appearance of the surface - a circumstance which
sufficientlydemonstrates the dangerous nature of this rock, even during
the day, and in the smoothest and calmest state of the sea.
During the
interval between the morning and the evening tides,
the artificers were variously employed in
fishing and reading;
others were busy in drying and adjusting their wet clothes,
and one or two amused their companions with the
violin and
German flute.
About seven in the evening the signal bell for
landing on
the rock was again rung, when every man was at his quarters.
In this service it was thought more
appropriate to use the
bell than to PIPE to quarters, as the use of this instrument
is less known to the
mechanic than the sound of the bell. The
landing, as in the morning, was at the eastern harbour.
During this tide the
seaweed was pretty well cleared from the
site of the operations, and also from the tracks leading to
the different
landing-places; for walking upon the rugged
surface of the Bell Rock, when covered with
seaweed, was found
to be
extremely difficult and even dangerous. Every hand that
could possibly be occupied now employed in assisting the smith
to fit up the
apparatus for his forge. At 9 p.m. the boats
returned to the tender, after other two hours' work, in the
same order as
formerly - perhaps as much gratified with the
success that attended the work of this day as with any other
in the whole course of the operations. Although it could not
he said that the fatigues of this day had been great, yet all
on board
retired early to rest. The sea being calm, and no
movement on deck, it was pretty generally remarked in the
morning that the bell awakened the greater number on board
from their first sleep; and though this
observation was not
altogether
applicable to the
writer himself, yet he was not a
little pleased to find that thirty people could all at once
become so reconciled to a night's quarters within a few
hundred paces of the Bell Rock.
[Wednesday, 19th Aug.]
Being
extremelyanxious at this time to get forward with
fixing the smith's forge, on which the progress of the work at
present depended, the
writer requested that he might be called