Grace
Grace
On 7 September, 1838, Grace
Darling and her father, William, a lighthouse keeper on the coast of
Northumberland, saved the lives of nine survivors from the wrecked steamship,
the Forfarshire. You can still see their
boat in the museum in Bamburgh.
This is a tribute not only to Grace
and her father but also to the men and women of the RNLI (Royal National Lifeboat Institution)
who form the lifeboat crews in ports around the coast of Britain and Ireland. They
are volunteers who have normal jobs but answer distress calls from boats in
trouble day or night the whole year round.
Come in, my friend,
Come in,
And quickly close the door.
It’s a rough and stormy night
out there
So draw up close to the fire.
The wind and the rain shake
the window pane
And an icy draught howls by
the door.
So while the chimney moans
with the wailing gale,
Put on another log or two
And let the flames climb
higher.
Now listen.
Off the coast of
Northumberland
There shone the Longstone
Light,
But in spite of the light
that brightly shone
A ship struck the rocks by
the islands there
And split in two one night.
The rain and the gales blew
in from the north
As the sun went down in the sea.
It was just such a night as
this, my friend,
When home is the place to be.
The keeper of the Longstone
Light
He turned to his daughter
then.
‘My eyes are old and I cannot
see
So far into the foam
But can you see a ship out
there,
So far away from home?’
‘Father, there’s a ship out
there
But she’ll sail away no more.
The wind and the waves are breaking her
So far out from the shore.’
‘My eyes are old and I cannot
see
So far into the foam
But can you see some men out
there,
So far away from home?’
‘On the ship there’s not a
soul
Not a soul from stern to bow,
Nor on the bridge or on the deck.
Not a soul can I see now.’
‘Then look at the sea and the
raging foam.
Search every inch of the sea.
For maybe one has launched a
boat
And is waiting for you and
for me.’
‘Out in the sea beside the
ship
There’s none that I can see
There is no boat upon the
waves
No boat is on the sea.’
‘Then look now hard at the
rocks beyond
At the rocks far out in the
sea.
For maybe one has reached the
rocks
And is waiting for you and
for me.’
‘Out on the rocks beside the
ship
There are nine that I can see.
They are on the rocks at the
end of the bay
That are pounded by the sea.’
They put on coats and fastened
them tight,
But scarcely did they talk,
And then they closed the lighthouse
door,
As if out for a Sunday walk.
They made for their boat that
was lying safe
In the lee of a rock on the shore,
Just the two of them and their
little boat,
For them it was one trip
more.
And not a word did the father
say
For there was work to be done,
But he thought to himself
along the way,
‘Now Grace here is the only
one
Can manage the boat in a sea
like this,
Now Grace here is the only
one
That can help me bring them
home.’
They said not a word but
quietly did
The job that had to be done.
They pulled the boat across
the sand
And pushed her into the sea,
And they took their places on
the boards
With an oar in either hand.
The gale blew from the north
that night
And the rain lashed at their
backs,
Wave after wave broke by
their boat,
As they rowed far out in the
bay,
But he thought to himself in
the freezing spray
As he saw her bend to the
stroke,
‘Among the rocks in a wooden
boat
Among the rocks and the foam,
This is no place for you, my
girl.
Though you pull on the oar
like the bravest man,
I’ll be glad to see you home.’
And so they rowed out into
the sea
Away from the firm, sure
land.
They calmly rowed towards the
rocks
With their mind on the job in
hand.
‘Steady now, Grace, for the
rocks we face
Will rip us apart for fun.
Steady the bow and ride the
wave
Then down in the trough in
that moment of calm
Row for the rock and make her
firm.’
They made for the rock and William
jumped
To care for the shivering men,
And Grace kept the boat away
from the rocks,
She rode the waves away from
the rocks
Among the running foam.
She knew that one false pull
on the oar
Just one false touch on
either side,
And they would never see home.
‘Just five can we take, just
five of you,
But we’ll be back again.’
So they took them in and the
boat settled down
Much lower in the sea,
But they rowed her home, they
calmly rowed
Till they reached the sandy shore.
Then they turned around and pointed
her bow
To the open sea once more.
They gathered then the other
four
That shivered on the rock.
And glad they were to turn
their back
On the wind and the sinking
wreck,
And to make for home on the
shore.
When all of the nine were
safe,
Were safe on the shivering
sand,
They pulled the boat out from
the waves.
They pulled her up the
windswept beach
To a place that the sea could
never reach,
However rough and however
wild
Its white waves hammered the
shore.
And they made all fast,
And they let her rest,
For her job had been well
done,
In the lee of a rock on the
soft sandy beach,
For they needed her no more.
And then they went up hand in
hand
To the house where the light
was bright
And the last to go in the
little room
With their sodden salt
clothes
On their skin that froze,
With blisters on their calloused
hands,
Were Grace and her father,
the keeper
Of the Longstone Light.
And the London papers sent
their men
To tell the world of the news.
From London in comfort up
they came
To look for heroism and fame,
And the man and the girl
Could not understand
Why they were known
throughout the land.
And the men in gloves and silk
neckties
So polite and elegant in the
wind,
Smiled and shook their
blistered hands.
And then they stared at the
rocks so far
As they walked down to the
shore,
And they turned and said to
the London men,
‘We did our job, no more.’
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