Volume I Part 5 (1/2)
So it proved. We arrived on Sunday morning; the custom house officers, very gentlemanly men, came on board; our luggage was all set out, and pa.s.sed through a rapid examination, which in many cases amounted only to opening the trunk and shutting it, and all was over. The whole ceremony did not occupy two hours.
So ends this letter. You shall hear further how we landed at some future time.
LETTER II.
DEAR FATHER:--
It was on Sunday morning that we first came in sight of land. The day was one of a thousand--clear, calm, and bright. It is one of those strange, throbbing feelings, that come only once in a while in life; this waking up to find an ocean crossed and long-lost land restored again in another hemisphere; something like what we should suppose might be the thrill of awakening from life to immortality, and all the wonders of the world unknown. That low, green line of land in the horizon is Ireland; and we, with water smooth as a lake and sails furled, are running within a mile of the sh.o.r.e. Every body on deck, full of spirits and expectation, busy as can be looking through spygla.s.ses, and exclaiming at every object on sh.o.r.e,--
”Look! there's Skibareen, where the worst of the famine was,” says one.
”Look! that's a ruined Martello tower,” says another.
We new voyagers, who had never seen any ruin more imposing than that of a cow house, and, of course, were ravenous for old towers, were now quite wide awake, but were disappointed to learn that these were only custom house rendezvous. Here is the county of Cork. Some one calls out,--
”There is O'Connell's house;” and a warm dispute ensues whether a large mansion, with a stone chapel by it, answers to that name. At all events the region looks desolate enough, and they say the natives of it are almost savages. A pa.s.senger remarks, that ”O'Connell never really did any thing for the Irish, but lived on his capacity for exciting their enthusiasm.” Thereupon another expresses great contempt for the Irish who could be so taken in. Nevertheless, the capability of a disinterested enthusiasm is, on the whole, a n.o.bler property of a human being than a shrewd self-interest. I like the Irish all the better for it.
Now we pa.s.s Kinsale lighthouse; there is the spot where the Albion was wrecked. It is a bare, frowning cliff, with walls of rock rising perpendicularly out of the sea. Now, to be sure, the sea smiles and sparkles around the base of it, as gently as if it never could storm; yet under other skies, and with a fierce south-east wind, how the waves would pour in here! Woe then to the distressed and rudderless vessel that drifts towards those fatal rocks! This gives the outmost and boldest view of the point.
[Ill.u.s.tration: View East of Kinsale.]
The Albion struck just round the left of the point, where the rock rises perpendicularly out of the sea. I well remember, when a child, of the newspapers being filled with the dreadful story of the wreck of the s.h.i.+p Albion--how for hours, rudderless and helpless, they saw themselves driving with inevitable certainty against these pitiless rocks; and how, in the last struggle, one human being after another was dashed against them in helpless agony.
What an infinite deal of misery results from man's helplessness and ignorance and nature's inflexibility in this one matter of crossing the ocean! What agonies of prayer there were during all the long hours that this s.h.i.+p was driving straight on to these fatal rocks, all to no purpose! It struck and crushed just the same. Surely, without the revelation of G.o.d in Jesus, who could believe in the divine goodness? I do not wonder the old Greeks so often spoke of their G.o.ds as cruel, and believed the universe was governed by a remorseless and inexorable fate.
Who would come to any other conclusion, except from the pages of the Bible?
But we have sailed far past Kinsale point. Now blue and shadowy loom up the distant form of the Youghal Mountains, (p.r.o.nounced _Yoole_.) The surface of the water is alive with fis.h.i.+ng boats, spreading their white wings and skimming about like so many moth millers.
About nine o'clock we were crossing the sand bar, which lies at the mouth of the Mersey River, running up towards Liverpool. Our signal pennants are fluttering at the mast head, pilot full of energy on one wheel house, and a man casting the lead on the other.
”By the mark, five,” says the man. The pilot, with all his energy, is telegraphing to the steersman. This is a very close and complicated piece of navigation, I should think, this running up the Mersey, for every moment we are pa.s.sing some kind of a signal token, which warns off from some shoal. Here is a bell buoy, where the waves keep the bell always tolling; here, a buoyant lighthouse; and ”See there, those shoals, how pokerish they look!” says one of the pa.s.sengers, pointing to the foam on our starboard bow. All is bustle, animation, exultation. Now float out the American stars and stripes on our bow.
Before us lies the great city of Liverpool. No old Cathedral, no castles, a real New Yorkish place.
”There, that's the fort,” cries one. Bang, bang, go the two guns from our forward gangway.
”I wonder if they will fire from the fort,” says another.
”How green that gra.s.s looks!” says a third; ”and what pretty cottages!”
”All modern, though,” says somebody, in tones of disappointment. Now we are pa.s.sing the Victoria Dock. Bang, bang, again. We are in a forest of s.h.i.+ps of all nations; their masts bristling like the tall pines in Maine; their many colored flags streaming like the forest leaves in autumn.
”Hark,” says one; ”there's, a chime of bells from the city; how sweet! I had quite forgotten it was Sunday.”
Here we cast anchor, and the small steam tender conies puffing alongside. Now for the custom house officers. State rooms, holds, and cabins must all give up their trunks; a general muster among the baggage, and pa.s.senger after pa.s.senger comes forward as their names are called, much as follows: ”Snooks.” ”Here, sir.” ”Any thing contraband here, Mr. Snooks? Any cigars, tobacco, &c.?” ”Nothing, sir.”
A little unlocking, a little fumbling. ”Shut up; all right; ticket here.” And a little man pastes on each article a slip of paper, with the royal arms of England and the magical letters V.R., to remind all men that they have come into a country where a lady reigns, and of course must behave themselves as prettily as they can.
We were inquiring of some friends for the most convenient hotel, when we found the son of Mr. Cropper, of Dingle Bank, waiting in the cabin, to take us with him to their hospitable abode. In a few moments after the baggage had been examined, we all bade adieu to the old s.h.i.+p, and went on board the little steam tender, which carries pa.s.sengers up to the city.