but he could lose no time, and
scrambling, leaping, swinging himself by the branches, he reached the
foot of the cliff in safety, and in five minutes more was on the little
quay at the end of the steep street of the Cove.
The quay was crowded with the fisher-people, and there was a strange
confusion of voices; some saying all was lost; some that the crew had
got to the rock; others, that some one ought to put off and help them;
others, that a boat would never live in such a sea; and an old telescope
was in great requisition.
Ben Robinson, a tall, hardy young man, of five-and-twenty, wild,
reckless, high-spirited and full of mischief and adventure, was standing
on a pile at the extreme verge above the foaming water, daring the
others to go with him to the rescue; and, though Jonas Ledbury, a feeble
old man, was declaring, in a piteous tone, it was a sin and a shame to
let so many poor creatures be lost in sight, without one man stirring to
help them; yet all stood irresolute, watching the white breakers dashing
on the Shag, and the high waves that swelled and rolled between.
'Do you know where the crew are?' exclaimed Guy, shouting as loud as he
could, for the noise of the winds and waves was tremendous.
'There, sir, on the flat black stone,' said the fortunate possessor
of the telescope. 'Some ten or eleven of them, I fancy, all huddled
together.'
'Ay, ay!' said old Ledbury. 'Poor creatures! there they be; and what
is to be done, I can't say! I never saw a boat in such a sea, since the
night poor Jack, my brother, was lost, and Will Ray with him.'
'I see them,' said Guy, who had in the meantime looked through his
glass. 'How soon is high water?'
It was an important question, for the rocks round the Shag were covered
before full tide, even when the water was still. There was a looking up
at the moon, and then Guy and the fishermen simultaneously exclaimed,
that it would be in three hours; which gave scarcely an hour to spare.
Without another word, Guy sprang from the quay to the boat-house,
unlocked it, and, by example, showed that the largest boat was to be
brought out. The men helped him vigorously, and it stood on the narrow
pebbly beach, the only safe landing-place in the whole bay; he
threw into it a coil of rope, and called out in his clear commanding
voice--'Five to go with me!'
Hanging back was at an end. They were brave men, who had wanted nothing
but a leader, and with Sir Guy at their head,
|