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<h2> CHAPTER XVIII. THE CYCLONE. </h2>
<p>Blunt, recognising the meteoric heralds of danger, had begun to regret his
obstinacy. He saw that a hurricane was approaching.</p>
<p>Along the south coast of the Australian continent, though the usual
westerly winds and gales of the highest latitudes prevail during the
greater portion of the year, hurricanes are not infrequent. Gales commence
at NW with a low barometer, increasing at W and SW, and gradually veering
to the south. True cyclones occur at New Zealand. The log of the Adelaide
for 29th February, 1870, describes one which travelled at the rate of ten
miles an hour, and had all the veerings, calm centre, etc., of a true
tropical hurricane. Now a cyclone occurring off the west coast of New
Zealand would travel from the New Hebrides, where such storms are
hideously frequent, and envelop Norfolk Island, passing directly across
the track of vessels coming from South America to Sydney. It was one of
these rotatory storms, an escaped tempest of the tropics, which threatened
the Lady Franklin.</p>
<p>The ominous calm which had brooded over the island during the day had
given place to a smart breeze from the north-east, and though the schooner
had been sheltered at her anchorage under the lee of the island (the
"harbour" looked nearly due south), when once fairly out to sea, Blunt saw
it would be impossible to put back in the teeth of the gale. Haply,
however, the full fury of the storm would not overtake them till they had
gained sea-room.</p>
<p>Rufus Dawes, exhausted with the excitement through which he had passed,
had slept for two or three hours, when he was awakened by the motion of
the vessel going on the other tack. He rose to his feet, and found himself
in complete darkness. Overhead was the noise of trampling feet, and he
could distinguish the hoarse tones of Blunt bellowing orders. Astonished
at the absence of the moonlight which had so lately silvered the sea, he
flung open the cabin window and looked out. As we have said, the cabin
allotted to North was one of the two stern cabins, and from it the convict
had a full view of the approaching storm.</p>
<p>The sight was one of wild grandeur. The huge, black cloud which hung in
the horizon had changed its shape. Instead of a curtain it was an arch.
Beneath this vast and magnificent portal shone a dull phosphoric light.
Across this livid space pale flashes of sheet-lightning passed
noiselessly. Behind it was a dull and threatening murmur, made up of the
grumbling of thunder, the falling of rain, and the roar of contending wind
and water. The lights of the prison-island had disappeared, so rapid had
been the progress of the schooner under the steady breeze, and the ocean
stretched around, black and desolate. Gazing upon this gloomy expanse,
Rufus Dawes observed a strange phenomenon—lightning appeared to
burst upwards from the sullen bosom of the sea. At intervals, the
darkly-rolling waves flashed fire, and streaks of flame shot upwards. The
wind increased in violence, and the arch of light was fringed with rain. A
dull, red glow hung around, like the reflection of a conflagration.
Suddenly, a tremendous peal of thunder, accompanied by a terrific downfall
of rain, rattled along the sky. The arch of light disappeared, as though
some invisible hand had shut the slide of a giant lantern. A great wall of
water rushed roaring over the level plain of the sea, and with an
indescribable medley of sounds, in which tones of horror, triumph, and
torture were blended, the cyclone swooped upon them.</p>
<p>Rufus Dawes comprehended that the elements had come to save or destroy
him. In that awful instant the natural powers of the man rose equal to the
occasion. In a few hours his fate would be decided, and it was necessary
that he should take all precaution. One of two events seemed inevitable;
he would either be drowned where he lay, or, should the vessel weather the
storm, he would be forced upon the deck, and the desperate imposture he
had attempted be discovered. For the moment despair overwhelmed him, and
he contemplated the raging sea as though he would cast himself into it,
and thus end his troubles. The tones of a woman's voice recalled him to
himself. Cautiously unlocking the cabin door, he peered out. The cuddy was
lighted by a swinging lamp which revealed Sylvia questioning one of the
women concerning the storm. As Rufus Dawes looked, he saw her glance, with
an air half of hope, half of fear, towards the door behind which he
lurked, and he understood that she expected to see the chaplain. Locking
the door, he proceeded hastily to dress himself in North's clothes. He
would wait until his aid was absolutely required, and then rush out. In
the darkness, Sylvia would mistake him for the priest. He could convey her
to the boat—if recourse to the boats should be rendered necessary—and
then take the hazard of his fortune. While she was in danger, his place
was near by.</p>
<p>From the deck of the vessel the scene was appalling. The clouds had closed
in. The arch of light had disappeared, and all was a dull, windy
blackness. Gigantic seas seemed to mount in the horizon and sweep towards
and upon them. It was as though the ship lay in the vortex of a whirlpool,
so high on either side of her were piled the rough pyramidical masses of
sea. Mighty gusts arose—claps of wind which seemed like strokes of
thunder. A sail loosened from its tackling was torn away and blown out to
sea, disappearing like a shred of white paper to leeward. The mercury in
the barometer marked 29:50. Blunt, who had been at the rum bottle, swore
great oaths that no soul on board would see another sun; and when
Partridge rebuked him for blasphemy at such a moment, wept spirituous
tears.</p>
<p>The howling of the wind was benumbing; the very fury of sound enfeebled
while it terrified. The sailors, horror-stricken, crawled about the deck,
clinging to anything they thought most secure. It was impossible to raise
the head to look to windward. The eyelids were driven together, and the
face stung by the swift and biting spray. Men breathed this atmosphere of
salt and wind, and became sickened. Partridge felt that orders were
useless—the man at his elbow could not have heard them. The vessel
lay almost on her beam ends, with her helm up, stripped even of the sails
which had been furled upon the yards. Mortal hands could do nothing for
her.</p>
<p>By five o'clock in the morning the gale had reached its height. The
heavens showered out rain and lightnings—rain which the wind blew
away before it reached the ocean, lightnings which the ravenous and
mountainous waves swallowed before they could pierce the gloom. The ship
lay over on her side, held there by the madly rushing wind, which seemed
to flatten down the sea, cutting off the top of the waves, and breaking
them into fine white spray which covered the ocean like a thick cloud, as
high as the topmast heads. Each gust seemed unsurpassable in intensity,
but was succeeded, after a pause, that was not a lull but a gasp, by one
of more frantic violence. The barometer stood at 27:82. The ship was a
mere labouring, crazy wreck, that might sink at any moment. At half-past
three o'clock the barometer had fallen to 27:62. Save when lighted by
occasional flashes of sheet-lightning, which showed to the cowed wretches
their awe-stricken faces, this tragedy of the elements was performed in a
darkness which was almost palpable.</p>
<p>Suddenly the mercury rose to 29:90, and, with one awful shriek, the wind
dropped to a calm. The Lady Franklin had reached the centre of the
cyclone. Partridge, glancing to where the great body of drunken Blunt
rolled helplessly lashed to the wheel, felt a strange selfish joy thrill
him. If the ship survived the drunken captain would be dismissed, and he,
Partridge, the gallant, would reign in his stead. The schooner, no longer
steadied by the wind, was at the mercy of every sea. Volumes of water
poured over her. Presently she heeled over, for, with a triumphant scream,
the wind leapt on to her from a fresh quarter. Following its usual course,
the storm returned upon its track. The hurricane was about to repeat
itself from the north-west.</p>
<p>The sea, pouring down through the burst hatchway, tore the door of the
cuddy from its hinges. Sylvia found herself surrounded by a wildly-surging
torrent which threatened to overwhelm her. She shrieked aloud for aid, but
her voice was inaudible even to herself. Clinging to the mast which
penetrated the little cuddy, she fixed her eyes upon the door behind which
she imagined North was, and whispered a last prayer for succour. The door
opened, and from out the cabin came a figure clad in black. She looked up,
and the light of the expiring lamp showed her a face that was not that of
the man she hoped to see. Then a pair of dark eyes beaming ineffable love
and pity were bent upon her, and a pair of dripping arms held her above
the brine as she had once been held in the misty mysterious days that were
gone.</p>
<p>In the terror of that moment the cloud which had so long oppressed her
brain passed from it. The action of the strange man before her completed
and explained the action of the convict chained to the Port Arthur
coal-wagons, of the convict kneeling in the Norfolk Island
torture-chamber. She remembered the terrible experience of Macquarie
Harbour. She recalled the evening of the boat-building, when, swung into
the air by stalwart arms, she had promised the rescuing prisoner to plead
for him with her kindred. Regaining her memory thus, all the agony and
shame of the man's long life of misery became at once apparent to her. She
understood how her husband had deceived her, and with what base injustice
and falsehood he had bought her young love. No question as to how this
doubly-condemned prisoner had escaped from the hideous isle of punishment
she had quitted occurred to her. She asked not—even in her thoughts—how
it had been given to him to supplant the chaplain in his place on board
the vessel. She only considered, in her sudden awakening, the story of his
wrongs, remembered only his marvellous fortitude and love, knew only, in
this last instant of her pure, ill-fated life, that as he had saved her
once from starvation and death, so had he come again to save her from sin
and from despair. Whoever has known a deadly peril will remember how
swiftly thought then travelled back through scenes clean forgotten, and
will understand how Sylvia's retrospective vision merged the past into the
actual before her, how the shock of recovered memory subsided in the
grateful utterance of other days—"Good Mr. Dawes!"</p>
<p>The eyes of the man and woman met in one long, wild gaze. Sylvia stretched
out her white hands and smiled, and Richard Devine understood in his turn
the story of the young girl's joyless life, and knew how she had been
sacrificed.</p>
<p>In the great crisis of our life, when, brought face to face with
annihilation, we are suspended gasping over the great emptiness of death,
we become conscious that the Self which we think we knew so well has
strange and unthought-of capacities. To describe a tempest of the elements
is not easy, but to describe a tempest of the soul is impossible. Amid the
fury of such a tempest, a thousand memories, each bearing in its breast
the corpse of some dead deed whose influence haunts us yet, are driven
like feathers before the blast, as unsubstantial and as unregarded. The
mists which shroud our self—knowledge become transparent, and we are
smitten with sudden lightning-like comprehension of our own misused power
over our fate.</p>
<p>This much we feel and know, but who can coldly describe the hurricane
which thus o'erwhelms him? As well ask the drowned mariner to tell of the
marvels of mid-sea when the great deeps swallowed him and the darkness of
death encompassed him round about. These two human beings felt that they
had done with life. Together thus, alone in the very midst and presence of
death, the distinctions of the world they were about to leave disappeared.
Then vision grew clear. They felt as beings whose bodies had already
perished, and as they clasped hands their freed souls, recognizing each
the loveliness of the other, rushed tremblingly together.</p>
<p>Borne before the returning whirlwind, an immense wave, which glimmered in
the darkness, spouted up and towered above the wreck. The wretches who yet
clung to the deck looked shuddering up into the bellying greenness, and
knew that the end was come.</p>
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