Deep Down, a Tale of the Cornish Mines by R. M. Ballantyne (readnow txt) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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But, be that as it may, our trio went to work âwith a will.â Maggot was keen to get up as much of the rich mineral as possible during the monthâknowing that he would not get the place next month on such good terms. Trevarrow, besides having no objections to make money when he could for its own sake, was anxious to have a little to spare to James Penrose, whose large family found it pinching work to subsist on the poor fellowâs allowance from the club. As to Zackey, he was ready for anything where Uncle Davy was leader. So these three resolved to work night and day. Maggot took his turn in the daytime and slept at night; Trevarrow slept in the daytime and worked at night; while the boy worked as long as he could at whatever time suited him best.
As they advanced on the lode it became larger and richer, and in a day or two it assumed such proportions as to throw the fortunate workers into a state of great excitement, and they tore out and blasted away the precious mineral like Titans.
One day, about kroust-time, having fired two holes, they came out of the âendâ in which they wrought and sat down to lunch while the smoke was clearing away.
ââTes a brave lode,â said Maggot.
âIt is,â responded Trevarrow, taking a long draught of water from the canteen.
âWhat shall us do?â said Maggot; âgo to grass to slaip, or slaip in the bal?â
âIn the bal, if you do like it,â said Trevarrow.
So it was agreed that the men should sleep in the mine on boards, or on any dry part of the level, in order to save the time and energy lost in ascending and descending the long ladders, and thus make the most of their opportunity. It was further resolved that Zackey should be sent up for dry clothes, and bring them their meals regularly. Trevarrow did not forget to have his Bible brought to him, for he was too serious a man to shut his eyes to the danger of a sudden run of good fortune, and thought that the best way to guard against evil would be to devote nearly all his short periods of leisure time to the reading of âthe Word.â
You may be sure that Maggot afterwards laughed at him for this, but he did not concern himself much about it at the time, because he was usually too hungry to talk at meal-times, and too sleepy to do so after work was over.
They were still busily discussing the matter of remaining in the mine all night, when they heard the kibble descending the shaft, near the bottom of which they sat, and next moment a man came to the ground with considerable violence.
âWhy, Frankey, is that thee, booy?â said Maggot, starting up to assist him.
âAw dear, iss; Iâm gone dead aâmost! aw dear! aw dear!â
âWhy, whatever brought âee here?â said Trevarrow.
âThe kibble, sure,â replied the man, exhibiting his knuckles, which were cut and bleeding a good deal. âI did come by the chain, anyhow.â
This was indeed true. Frankey, as his mates called him, was at that time the âlanderâ in charge of the kibbles at the surface. It was his duty to receive each kibble as it was drawn up to the mouth of the shaft full of ore, empty it, and send it down again. Several coils of chain passing round the large drum of a great horse-windlass, called by the miners a âwhim,â was the means by which the kibbles were hoisted and lowered. The chain was so arranged that one kibble was lowered by it while the other was being drawn up. Frankey had emptied one of the kibbles, and had given the signal to the boy attending the horse to âlower away,â when he inadvertently stepped into the shaft. With ready presence of mind the man caught the chain and clung to it, but the boy, being prevented by a pile of rubbish from seeing what had occurred, eased him down, supposing him to be the kibble!
This âeasing downâ a great number of fathoms was by no means an easy process, as those know well who have seen a pair of kibbles go banging up and down a shaft. It was all that poor Frankey could do to keep his head from being smashed against rocks and beams; but, by energetic use of arms and legs, he did so, and reached the bottom of the shaft without further damage than a little skin rubbed off his knees and elbows, and a few cuts on his hands. The man thought so little of it, indeed, that he at once returned to grass by the ladder-way, to the unutterable surprise and no little consternation of the boy who had âeased him down.â
The air at the âendâ of the level in which Maggot and Trevarrow worked was very bad, and, for some time past, men had been engaged in sinking a winze from the level above to connect the two, and send in a supply of fresh air by creating a new channel of circulation. This winze was almost completed, but one of the men employed at it had suddenly become unwell that day, and no other had been appointed to the work. As it was a matter of great importance to have fresh air, now that they had resolved to remain day and night in the mine for some time, Maggot and Trevarrow determined to complete the work, believing that one or two shots would do it. Accordingly, they mounted to the level above, and were lowered one at a time to the bottom of the unfinished winze by a windlass, which was turned by the man whose comrade had become unwell.
For nearly two hours they laboured diligently, scarce taking time to wipe the perspiration from their heated brows. At the end of that time the hole was sufficiently deep to blast, so Maggot called out,ââZackey, my son, fetch the fuse and powder.â The boy was quickly lowered with these materials, and then drawn up.
Meanwhile Maggot proceeded to charge the hole, and his comrade sat down to rest. He put in the powder and tamping, and asked the other to hand him the tamping-bar.
âZackey has forgot it,â said Trevarrow, looking round.
âIt donât matter; hand me the borer.â
âNo, I wonât,â said Trevarrow decidedly, as he grasped the iron tool in question. âHo! Zackey booy, throw down the tampinâ-bar.â
This was done, and the operation of filling the hole continued, while Trevarrow commented somewhat severely on his companionâs recklessness.
âThatâs just how the most oâ the reckless men in the bal do get blawâd up,â he said; âtheyâre always picking away at the holes, and tamping with iron tools; why, thee might as well put a lighted match down the muzzle of a loaded gun as tamp with an iron borer.â
âCome, now,â said Maggot, looking up from his work with a leer, âit warnât that as made old Kimber nearly blow hisself up last week.â
âNo, but it was carelessness, anyhow,â retorted Trevarrow; âand lucky for him that he was a smart man, else heâd bin gone dead by this time.â
Maggot soon completed the filling of the hole, and then perpetrated as reckless a deed as any of his mining comrades had ever been guilty of. Trevarrow was preparing to ascend by the windlass, intending to leave his comrade to light the fuse and come up after him. Meanwhile Maggot found that the fuse was too long. He discovered this after it was fixed in the hole, and, unobserved by his companion, proceeded to cut it by means of an iron tool and a flat stone. Fire was struck at the last blow by the meeting of the iron and the stone, and the fuse ignited. To extinguish it was impossible; to cut it in the same way, without striking fire, was equally so. Of course there was plenty of time to ascend by the windlass, but only one at a time could do so. The men knew this, and looked at each other with terrible meaning in their eyes as they rushed at the bucket, and shouted to the man above to haul them up. He attempted to do so, but in vain. He had not strength to haul up two at once. One could escape, both could not, and to delay would be death to both. In this extremity David Trevarrow looked at his comrade, and said calmly,ââEscape, my brother; a minute more and I shall be in heaven.â
He stepped back while he spokeâthe bucket went rapidly upwards, and Trevarrow, sitting down in the bottom of the shaft, covered his eyes with a piece of rock and awaited the issue.
The rumbling explosion immediately followed, and the shaft was filled with smoke and flame and hurling stones. One of these latter, shooting upwards, struck and cut the ascending miner on his forehead as he looked down to observe the fate of his self-sacrificing comrade!
Maggot was saved, but he was of too bold and kindly a nature to remain for a moment inactive after the explosion was over. At once he descended, and, groping about among the dĂ©bris, soon found his friendâalive, and almost unhurt! A mass of rock had arched him overâor, rather, the hand of God, as if by miracle, had delivered the Christian miner.
After he was got up in safety to the level above they asked him why he had been so ready to give up his life to save his friend.
âWhy,â said David quietly, âI did think upon his wife and the childân, and little Grace seemed to say to me, âTake care oâ faitherââbesides, there are none to weep if I was taken away, so the Lord gave me grace to do it.â
That night there were glad and grateful hearts in Maggotâs cottageâand never in this world was a more flat and emphatic contradiction given to any statement, than that which was given to David Trevarrowâs assertionââThere are none to weep if I was taken away.â
(A short but beautiful account of the above incident will be found in a little volume of poems, entitled Lays from the Mine, the Moor, and the Mountain, written by John Harris, a Cornish miner.)
Sorrow and trouble now began to descend upon Mr Thomas Donnithorne like a thick cloud.
Reduced from a state of affluence to one bordering on absolute poverty, the old manâs naturally buoyant spirit almost gave way, and it needed all the attentions and the cheering influence of his good wife and sweet Rose Ellis to keep him from going (as he often half-jestingly threatened) to the end of Cape Cornwall and jumping into the sea.
âItâs all over with me, Oliver,â said he one morning, after the return of his nephew from London. âA young fellow like you may face up against such difficulties, but what is an old man to do? I canât begin the world over again; and as for the shares I have in the various mines, theyâre not worth the paper theyâre writ upon.â
âBut things may take a turn,â suggested Oliver; âthis is not the first time the mines have been in a poor condition, and the price of tin low. When things get very bad they are likely to get better, you know. Even now there seems to be some talk among the miners of an improved state of things. I met Maggot yesterday, and he was boasting of having found a monstrous bunch, which, according to him, is to be the making of all our fortunes.â
Mr Donnithorne shook his head.
âMaggotâs geese are always swans,â he said; âno, no, Oliver, I have lost all hope of improvement. There are so many of these deceptive mines around us just nowâsome already gone down, and some goingâthat the public are losing confidence in us, and, somewhat unfairly, judging
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