The Lighthouse by R. M. Ballantyne (the beach read .TXT) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
Book online «The Lighthouse by R. M. Ballantyne (the beach read .TXT) đ». Author R. M. Ballantyne
âDid she do that?â exclaimed Ruby, with emotion.
Forsyth looked for a moment earnestly at his friend.
âI mean,â continued Ruby, in some confusion, âdid she look bright when she spoke of my beinâ away?â
âNo lad, it was when she spoke of you cominâ back; but I could see that her good spirits was partly put on to keep up the old woman.â
For a moment or two the friends remained silent.
Suddenly Forsyth laid his hand on the otherâs shoulder, and said impressively: âRuby Brand, itâs my belief that that girl is rather fond of you.â
Ruby looked up with a bright smile, and said, âDâyou think so? Well, dâye know, I believe she is.â
âUpon my word, youngster,â exclaimed the other, with a look of evident disgust, âyour conceit is considerable. I had thought to be somewhat confidential with you in regard to this idea of mine, but you seem to swallow it so easy, and to look upon it as so natural a thing, thatâthatâ Do you suppose youâve nothinâ to do but ask the girl to marry you and sheâll say âYesâ at once?â
âI do,â said Ruby quietly; ânay, I am sure of it.â
Forsythâs eyes opened very wide indeed at this. âYoung man,â said he, âthe sea must have washed all the modesty you once had out of youââ
âI hope not,â interrupted the other, âbut the fact is that I put the question you have supposed to Minnie long ago, and she did say âYesâ to it then, so itâs not likely sheâs goinâ to draw back now.â
âWhew! that alters the case,â cried Forsyth, seizing his friendâs hand, and wringing it heartily.
âHallo! you two seem to be on good terms, anyhow,â observed Jamie Dove, whose head appeared at that moment through the hole in the floor by which the lantern communicated with the room below. âI came to see if anything had gone wrong, for your time of watch is up.â
âSo it is,â exclaimed Forsyth, rising and crossing to the other side of the apartment, where he applied his lips to a small tube in the wall.
âWhat are you doing?â enquired Ruby.
âWhistling up Joe,â said Forsyth. âThis pipe runs down to the sleepinâ berths, where thereâs a whistle close to Joeâs ear. He must be asleep. Iâll try again.â
He blew down the tube a second time and listened for a reply, which came up a moment or two after in a sharp whistle through a similar tube reversed; that is, with the mouthpiece below and the whistle above.
Soon after, Joe Dumsby made his appearance at the trap-door, looking very sleepy.
âI feels as âeavy as a lump oâ lead,â said he. âWot an âorrible thing it is to be woke out oâ a comfârâable sleep.â
Just as he spoke the lighthouse received a blow so tremendous that all the men started and looked at each other for a moment in surprise.
âI say, is it warranted to stand anything?â enquired Ruby seriously.
âI hope it is,â replied the smith, âelse itâll be a blue lookout for us. But we donât often get such a rap as that. Dâye mind the first we ever felt oâ that sort, Forsyth? It happened last month. I was on watch at the time, Forsyth was smokinâ his pipe in the kitchen, and Dumsby was in bed, when a sea struck us with such force that I thought we was done for. In a moment Forsyth and Joe came tumblinâ up the ladderâJoe in his shirt. âIt must have been a ship sailed right against us,â says Forsyth, and with that we all jumped on the rail that runs round the lantern there and looked out, but no ship could be seen, though it was a moonlight night. You see thereâs plenty oâ water at high tide to let a ship of two hundred tons, drawinâ twelve feet, run slap into us, and weâve sometimes feared this in foggy weather; but it was just a blow of the sea. Weâve had two or three like it since, and are gettinâ used to it now.â
âWell, we canât get used to do without sleep,â said Forsyth, stepping down through the trap-door, âso Iâll bid ye all good night.â
ââOld on! Tell Ruby about Junk before ye go,â cried Dumsby. âAh! well, Iâll tell âim myself. You must know, Ruby, that weâve got what they calls an hoccasional light-keeper ashore, who larns the work out âere in case any of us regâlar keepers are took ill, so as âe can supply our place on short notice. Well, âe was out âere larninâ the dooties one tremendous stormy night, anâ the poor fellow was in a mortial fright for fear the lantern would be blowed right hoff the top oâ the stone column, and âimself along with it. You see, the door that covers the manhole there is usually shut when weâre on watch, but Junk (we called âim Junk âcause âe wos so like a lump oâ fat pork), âe kep the door open all the time anâ sat close beside it, so as to be ready for a dive. Well, it was my turn to watch, so I went up, anâ just as I puts my fut on the first step oâ the lantern-ladder there comes a sea like wot we had a minit ago; the wind at the same time roared in the wentilators like a thousand fiends, and the spray dashed agin the glass. Junk gave a yell, and dived. He thought it wos all over with âim, and wos in sich a funk that he came down âead foremost, and would sartinly âave broke âis neck if âe âadnât come slap into my buzzum! I tell âe it was no joke, for âe wos fourteen stone if âe wos an ounce, anâââ
âCome along, Ruby,â said Dove, interrupting; âthe sooner we dive too the better, for thereâs no end to that story when Dumsby get off in full swing. Good night!â
âGood night, lads, anâ better manners tâye!â said Joe, as he sat down beside the little desk where the lightkeepers were wont during the lonely watch-hours of the night to read, or write, or meditate.
The sun shone brightly over the sea next morning; so brightly and powerfully that it seemed to break up and disperse by force the great storm-clouds which hung about the sky, like the fragments of an army of black bullies who had done their worst and been baffled.
The storm was over; at least, the wind had moderated down to a fresh, invigorating breeze. The white crests of the billows were few and far between, and the wild turmoil of waters had given place to a grand procession of giant waves, that thundered on the Bell Rock Lighthouse, at once with more dignity and more force than the raging seas of the previous night.
It was the sun that awoke Ruby, by shining in at one of the small windows of the library, in which he slept. Of course it did not shine in his face, because of the relative positions of the library and the sun, the first being just below the lantern, and the second just above the horizon, so that the rays struck upwards, and shone with dazzling brilliancy on the dome-shaped ceiling. This was the second time of wakening for Ruby that night, since he lay down to rest. The first wakening was occasioned by the winding up of the machinery which kept the lights in motion, and the chain of which, with a ponderous weight attached to it, passed through a wooden pilaster close to his ear, causing such a sudden and hideous din that the sleeper, not having been warned of it, sprang like a Jack-in-the-box out of bed into the middle of the room, where he first stared vacantly around him like an unusually surprised owl, and then, guessing the cause of the noise, smiled pitifully, as though to say, âPoor fellow, youâre easily frightened,â and tumbled back into bed, where he fell asleep again instantly.
On the second time of wakening Ruby rose to a sitting posture, yawned, looked about him, yawned again, wondered what oâclock it was, and then listened.
No sound could be heard save the intermittent roar of the magnificent breakers that beat on the Bell Rock. His couch was too low to permit of his seeing anything but sky out of his windows, three of which, about two feet square, lighted the room. He therefore jumped up, and, while pulling on his garments, looked towards the east, where the sun greeted and almost blinded him. Turning to the north window, a bright smile lit up his countenance, and âA blessing rest on youâ escaped audibly from his lips, as he kissed his hand towards the cliffs of Forfarshire, which were seen like a faint blue line on the far-off horizon, with the town of Arbroath just rising above the morning mists.
He gazed out at this north window, and thought over all the scenes that had passed between him and Minnie from the time they first met, down to the day when they last parted. One of the sweetest of the mental pictures that he painted that morning with unwonted facility, was that of Minnie sitting at his motherâs feet, comforting her with the words of the Bible.
At length he turned with a sigh to resume his toilette. Looking out at the southern window, he observed that the rocks were beginning to be uncovered, and that the ârailsâ, or iron pathway that led to the foot of the entrance-door ladder, were high enough out of the water to be walked upon. He therefore hastened to descend.
We know not what appearance the library presented at the time when Ruby Brand slept in it; but we can tell, from personal experience, that, at the present day, it is a most comfortable and elegant apartment. The other rooms of the lighthouse, although thoroughly substantial in their furniture and fittings, are quite plain and devoid of ornament, but the library, or âstrangerâs roomâ, as it is sometimes called, being the guest-chamber, is fitted up in a style worthy of a ladyâs boudoir, with a Turkey carpet, handsome chairs, and an elaborately carved oak table, supported appropriately by a centre stem of three twining dolphins. The dome of the ceiling is painted to represent stucco panelling, and the partition which cuts off the small segment of this circular room that is devoted to passage and staircase, is of panelled oak. The thickness of this partition is just sufficient to contain the bookcase; also a cleverly contrived bedstead, which can be folded up during the day out of sight. There is also a small cupboard of oak, which serves the double purpose of affording shelf accommodation and concealing the iron smoke-pipe which rises from the kitchen, and, passing through the several storeys, projects a few feet above the lantern. The centre window is ornamented with marble sides and top, and above it stands a marble bust of Robert Stevenson, the engineer of the building, with a marble slab below bearing testimony to the skill and energy with which he had planned and executed the work.
If not precisely what we have described it to be at the present time, the library must have been somewhat similar on that morning when our hero issued from it and descended to the rock.
The first stair landed him at the entrance to the sleeping-berths. He looked into one, and observed Forsythâs head and arms lying in the bed, in that peculiarly negligent style that betokens deep and sweet repose. Dumsbyâs rest was equally sound in the next berth. This fact did not require proof
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