The Romance of the Coast eBook

James Runciman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 198 pages of information about The Romance of the Coast.

The Romance of the Coast eBook

James Runciman
This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 198 pages of information about The Romance of the Coast.
houses or skimmed away into the fields beyond.  When the wind reached its height the sounds it made in the hollows were like distant firing of small-arms, and the waves in the hollow rocks seemed to shake the ground over the cliffs.  A little schooner came round the point, running before the sea.  She might have got clear away, because it was easy enough for her, had she clawed a short way out, risking the beam sea, to have made the harbour where the fishers were.  But the skipper kept her close in, and presently she struck on a long tongue of rocks that trended far out eastward.  The tops of her masts seemed nearly to meet, so it appeared as if she had broken her back.  The seas flew sheer over her, and the men had to climb into the rigging.  All the women were watching and waiting to see her go to pieces.  There was no chance of getting a boat out, so the helpless villagers waited to see the men drown; and the women cried in their shrill, piteous manner.  Dorothy said, “Will she break up in an hour?  If I thowt she could hing there, I would be away for the lifeboat.”  But the old men said, “You can never cross the burn.”  Four miles south, behind the point, there was a village where a lifeboat was kept; but just half-way a stream ran into the sea, and across this stream there was only a plank bridge.  Half a mile below the bridge the water spread far over the broad sand and became very shallow and wide.  Dorothy spoke no more, except to say “I’ll away.”  She ran across the moor for a mile, and then scrambled down to the sand so that the tearing wind might not impede her.  It was dangerous work for the next mile.  Every yard of the way she had to splash through the foam, because the great waves were rolling up very nearly to the foot of the cliffs.  An extra strong sea might have caught her off her feet, but she did not think of that; she only thought of saving her breath by escaping the direct onslaught of the wind.  When she came to the mouth of the burn her heart failed her for a little.  There was three-quarters of a mile of water covered with creamy foam, and she did not know but what she might be taken out of her depth.  Yet she determined to risk it, and plunged in at a run.  The sand was hard under foot, but, as she said, when the piled foam came softly up to her waist she “felt gey funny.”  Half-way across she stumbled into a hole caused by a swirling eddy, and she thought all was over; but her nerve never failed her, and she struggled till she got a footing again.  When she reached the hard ground she was wet to the neck, and her hair was sodden with her one plunge “overhead.”  Her clothes troubled her with their weight in crossing the moor; so she put off all she did not need and pressed forward again.  Presently she reached the house where the coxswain of the lifeboat lived.  She gasped out, “The schooner!  On the Letch!  Norrad.”

The coxswain, who had seen the schooner go past, knew what was the matter.  He said, “Here, wife, look after the lass,” and ran out.  The “lass” needed looking after, for she had fainted.  But her work was well done; the lifeboat went round the point, ran north, and took six men ashore from the schooner.  The captain had been washed overboard, but the others were saved by Dorothy’s daring and endurance.

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The Romance of the Coast from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.