Poor Jack eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 539 pages of information about Poor Jack.

Poor Jack eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 539 pages of information about Poor Jack.

[Illustration:  WRECK OF THE GALLEY.—­Marryat, Vol.  X., p. 407.]

After a careful watching for perhaps two minutes on the part of Bramble, he gave the word, and on dashed the galley toward the strand, keeping pace with the wild surges, and although buried in the foam, not shipping one drop of water.

“Now, my men, give way—­for your lives, give way,” cried Bramble, as a cresting wave came towering on, as if in angry pursuit of us.  The men obeyed, but, in their exertions, the stroke oar snapped in two, the man fell back, and prevented the one behind him from pulling.  Our fate was sealed; the surge poured over, and throwing us broadside to the beach, we were rolled over and over in the boiling surf.  A cry was heard—­a cry of terror and despair—­on the part of the women.  I heard it as I was swept away by the undertow, and the next wave poured over me; but all was activity and energy on the part of the men who were on the beach:  the next wave that run in, they recovered me and two more by linking their arms and allowing the surf to break over them.  We were so much bruised that we could not stand; they dragged us up, and left us to the women.  Bramble and four others were still struggling for life; again two were saved—­but the men on the beach were exhausted by their strenuous exertions.

[Illustration:  WE FOUND BOTH BRAMBLE AND BESSY CLINGING TO THE ROPE.—­Marryat, Vol.  X., p. 409.]

I had just recovered myself so as to sit up, when I perceived that they were not acting in concert as before; indeed, in the last attempt, several of them had narrowly escaped with their own lives.  Bessy was now down among them wildly gesticulating; Bramble still floated on the boiling surf, but no chain was again formed; the wave poured in bearing him on its crest; it broke, and he was swept away again by the undertow, which dragged him back with a confused heap of singles clattering one over the other as they descended.  I saw him again, just as another wave several feet in height was breaking over him—­I felt that he was lost; when Bessy, with a hook rope in her hand, darted toward him right under the wave as it turned over, and as she clasped his body, they both disappeared under the mountain surge.  Another shriek was raised by the women, while the men stood as if paralyzed.  In my excitement I had gained my legs, and I hastened to seize the part of the rope which remained on the beach.  Others then came and helped; we hauled upon it, and found that there was weight at the end.  Another sea poured in; we hastily gathered in the slack of the rope, and when the water retreated, we found both Bramble and Bessy clinging to the rope.  In a moment the men rushed down and hauled up the bodies.  Bramble had hold of the rope by both hands—­it was the clutch of death; Bessy had her arms round her father’s neck; both were senseless.  The boatmen carried them up to the cottage, and the usual methods of recovery were resorted to with success.  Still we had to lament the death of two of our best pilots, whose loss their wives and children were loudly wailing, and whose bodies were not found for many days afterward.  Alas! they were not the only ones who were lamented.  Upward of three hundred vessels were lost during that dreadful gale, and hardly a seaport or fishing town but bewailed its many dead.

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Poor Jack from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.