A DREAM OF THE NORTH SEA
by
JAMES RUNCIMAN
Author of _Past and Present_, _Among the North Sea Trawlers_, _Skippers and Shellbacks_, etc.
London: James Nisbet and Co., 21, Berners Street, W.
1889
DEDICATION
To the Queen.
MADAM,
This book is dedicated to Your Majesty with the respectful admiration of one who is proud to have been associated with an effort to make the world more hopeful and beautiful for men who not long ago knew little hope and felt no beauty.
In the wild weather, when the struggle for life never slackens from hour to hour on the trawling grounds, the great work of the Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen, like some mighty Pharos, sheds light on the troubled darkness, and brave men, in hundreds, are thankful for its wise care and steady helpfulness.
Perhaps, of all the tribe of writers, I know most minutely the scope and significance of that Mission--"as well for the body as the soul"--of which Your Majesty is the Patron; and it is my earnest conviction that no event in your brilliant and beneficent reign could well be appraised at a higher value than the despatch of Hospital Cruisers to the smacksmen, which your gracious and practical sympathy has done so much to bring about.
Permit me to subscribe myself, MADAM, Your Majesty's most humble, obedient Servant,
JAMES RUNCIMAN.
KINGSTON-ON-THAMES, May 1, 1889.
PREFACE.
One of the greatest of English classics--great by reason of his creative power, simplicity, and pathos--has built the superstructure of his famous allegory upon the slender foundations of a dream. But just as the immortal work of John Bunyan had a very real support in truths and influences of the highest power and the deepest meaning, so the pages which record Mr. Runciman's "Dream of the North Sea," have an actual, a realistic, and a tragic import in the daily toil, sufferings, and hardships of the Deep Sea Trawlers. Moreover, the blessed work of healing the bodies, cheering the minds, and enlightening the souls of these storm-beaten labourers is not altogether a dream, for the extended operations which are now undertaken by the Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen furnish material for one of the brightest and most interesting records of present-day beneficence. But so much remains to be done, so great are the trials and the sorrows that still brood on the lone North Sea, that Mr. Runciman's dream in vivid story and deft literary art, goes forth with a strong appeal to every thoughtful reader. The greatness of the work yet to be undertaken may to some extent be conceived from the marvellous results which have already been accomplished. I have elsewhere said that to this issue many persons have contributed, from the Queen on the throne down to the humble and pious smacksman in the North Sea, but that, so far as human skill and genius can achieve a conspicuous success in any human and benevolent enterprise, it has fallen to the lot of the Founder of the Mission to Deep Sea Fishermen to accomplish such a success. No one can now write or think or "dream" of the trawlers on the German Ocean, without referring, and referring again, to Mr. E.J. Mather, either _in propria persona_, or--as the author of "Waverley" might have said--in the guise of some _Eidolon_ suited to a Vision of the North Sea. This leads me to explain that though it had been originally announced that the introductory notice to this book would be from the pen of Mr. Mather, that gentleman, in view of the apparent references to himself throughout the tale, shrank from the task, with the result that the honour and the privilege have fallen upon me. I close by expressing a hope that Mr. Runciman's dream of the future may, when it reaches its accomplishment, add fresh lustre to a work which was begun by Mr. Mather in courage and in hope, and by him carried to a unique success.
Table of contents (by pages)
- 1: A Dream of the North Sea by James Runciman
- 2: A hard gale rushed over a torn sea
- 3: But the what's his name is fahscinating ah
- 4: Walton and Miss Dearsley to take a turn
- 5: Said Fullerton how could they know
- 6: Flung his arms round Tom Lennard
- 7: Marion Dearsley looked at Ferrier with parted lips
- 8: And the smacksmen go through this all the winter long
- 9: A skipper may manage simple things
- 10: And the wessel was makin' such heavy weather of it
- 11: Miss Dearsley was leaning beside the cot
- 12: Fullerton's wessels for one half of our men
- 13: You're over kind to moither yourself about me
- 14: And even on deck the ugly squelch
- 15: Ferrier was a good and plucky man
- 16: But Larmor and Lewis had lived long
- 17: Larmor clapped his poor hands and bowed graciously
- 18: Larmor pointed to the questioner
- 19: And Ferrier was in the power of Blair and Lennard
- 20: At six Blair and Tom were astir
- 21: All the ledger and daybook men say we are crackbrained
- 22: Charitable men can see the slater
- 23: Ferrier worked as long as he could
- 24: Marion Dearsley was deeply stirred
- 25: Instantly Ferrier saw what had happened
- 26: If Larmor of the Haughty Belle will come
- 27: And he was decidedly the Sydney Smith of the fleet
- 28: Ferrier was stirred by the hoarse thunder of voices
- 29: The more venomous does the virus of cant become
- 30: Tom Lennard was exalting his popularity
- 31: Fullerton was watching Ferrier
- 32: So you and I will take Blair in hand
- 33: Ferrier never had an uncivil word
- 34: Blair told Skipper Freeman what the Admiral wanted
- 35: But if you administer turpentine for pleurisy
- 36: Man with concussion of the brain
- 37: Eightpence for each of those sixty haddocks
- 38: The Seadog bids the men give way
- 39: Ferrier had to use the knife first
- 40: Ferrier was not a conscious poet
- 41: He laughed when Lewis dressed him
- 42: Ferrier had stuck to his terrible routine work
- 43: And the jar flung poor Ebenezer Mutton clash on to the deck
- 44: Men durst not look to windward
- 45: The skipper would like a word with you
- 46: I can't slack away these halliards
- 47: And Tom Lennard slumbered after the breath came back to him
- 48: And on the third day Tom Lennard
- 49: Only Tom Lennard remained impenetrably silent
- 50: Ferrier was pale when Frank asked Where am I
- 51: Ferrier summarized his work and his failures
- 52: The deck was all the time in a smother of half frozen slush
- 53: For the smack was showing her keel
- 54: There was a yell from both smacks
- 55: And found Tom Lennard blubbering hard over him
- 56: Eighty sweet English girls condemned to death
- 57: For no manlier being walks broad England than Robert Cassall
- 58: And you don't need to give anything to your fishmonger
- 59: Brutal Fantees who run away from enemies
- 60: Don't bring in preachee preachee any more
- 61: 'I was cured on the Robert Cassall
- 62: So ended the enslavement of Robert Cassall
- 63: Sir James particularly watched Fullerton
- 64: Cassall isn't putting obstacles in your way
- 65: The steamer only needs extra for coal
- 66: Cassall and I will arrange as to how many beds Roche beds
- 67: After Robert Cassall had been some days at home
- 68: Cassall and his lawyers had very much of their own way
- 69: Miss Ranken was in a flutter of exultation
- 70: How on earth he got hold of eminent pressmen
- 71: Fullerton to address this meeting
- 72: Then Ferrier showed how the light of new faith
- 73: I'd test every join and every rivet myself
- 74: Out of mere fondness for Cassall
- 75: The Robert Cassall was ready for sea
- 76: The skipper of the ordinary Mission smack came on board
- 77: So the Robert Cassall scoured the North Sea like a phantom
- 78: The foreigners could bring out cheap tobacco
- 79: The copers did a great amount of mischief indirectly
- 80: The crowd of smacksmen who came were a very wild lot
- 81: The captain of the carrier said
- 82: Spend thousands on the poor Fantee by all means
- 83: For every fleet that scours the trawling grounds
- 84: Is being constructed at a cost of L3
