Episode Transcript
1
0:00:00,000 --> 0:00:04,000
Greetings This is a reading of the book The Airship Golden Hind
2
0:00:04,000 --> 0:00:17,000
Some of the language in this book has not aged well and is indeed no longer politicly correct Take caution when listening to this visual audio-book
3
0:00:17,000 --> 0:00:22,000
Footage and photography are provided by Photations
4
0:00:22,000 --> 0:00:35,000
At Photations we believe that the world would be a better place if people spent their time being creative Join us in practicing art so we all can be The Master of Art
5
0:00:35,000 --> 0:00:48,000
Fine Art Prints available at our store W W W dot Photation Store Dot com Keep our Artwork alive by making a donation at Photations Donations Dot com
6
0:00:48,000 --> 0:00:51,000
The Airship Golden Hind By
7
0:00:51,000 --> 0:00:53,000
Percy F Westerman
8
0:00:53,000 --> 0:00:56,000
CHAPTER 14 THE. BOAT’S CREW
9
0:00:56,000 --> 0:01:00,000
The state of his cabin hardly troubled Fosterdyke
10
0:01:00,000 --> 0:01:11,000
He never even went to investigate the extent of the damage, for the moment the airship’s motors were re-started he hastened back to the navigation-room
11
0:01:11,000 --> 0:01:16,000
'Got a fix yet, Bramsdean ' were his first words
12
0:01:16,000 --> 0:01:20,000
Peter handed him a slip of paper
13
0:01:20,000 --> 0:01:23,000
'Well out of our course, sir,' he remarked
14
0:01:23,000 --> 0:01:26,000
The position was given as lat
15
0:01:26,000 --> 0:01:30,000
3° 15’ 20' S , long
16
0:01:30,000 --> 0:01:33,000
58° 20’ 5' E
17
0:01:33,000 --> 0:01:38,000
'We are,' agreed Fosterdyke gravely 'Well to the west’ard
18
0:01:38,000 --> 0:01:41,000
We ought to be within sight of the Seychelles '
19
0:01:41,000 --> 0:01:46,000
'Any chance of getting petrol there, I wonder ' asked Bramsdean
20
0:01:46,000 --> 0:01:52,000
'Judging by the name it seems a likely place to get ’Shell brand ’'
21
0:01:52,000 --> 0:01:56,000
'Don’t prattle, Peter,' exclaimed Kenneth, facetiously
22
0:01:56,000 --> 0:01:59,000
Fosterdyke laughed at the joke
23
0:01:59,000 --> 0:02:11,000
'Rotten puns, both of them,' he said 'All the same I wish we had another two hundred gallons of ’Pratt’s’ or ’Shell’ or any other old brand of petrol
24
0:02:11,000 --> 0:02:21,000
But it’s no use going still farther out of our course on the off-chance of getting juice, so we’ll just carry on '
25
0:02:21,000 --> 0:02:28,000
With the passing of the cyclone the wind fell light What little there was was dead aft
26
0:02:28,000 --> 0:02:40,000
The sea, viewed from an altitude of three thousand feet, appeared as smooth as glass, although in reality there was a long rolling ground swell
27
0:02:40,000 --> 0:02:56,000
In order to economise the petrol consumption the speed of the 'Golden Hind' was reduced to ninety miles an hour Should the favouring wind hold, the airship stood a good chance of making the Australian coast
28
0:02:56,000 --> 0:03:04,000
If it changed and blew from the south-east, then Fosterdyke’s chances of winning the race would be off
29
0:03:04,000 --> 0:03:19,000
Just before eleven o’clock in the morning of the day following the storm, Frampton, one of the crew on duty in the navigation-room, reported a boat about three miles away on the port bow
30
0:03:19,000 --> 0:03:35,000
By the aid of glasses it was seen that the boat was a ship’s cutter moving slowly under sail in an easterly direction Her crew were hidden from view by a spare sail rigged as an awning over the stern sheets
31
0:03:35,000 --> 0:03:38,000
'Something wrong there,' remarked Bramsdean
32
0:03:38,000 --> 0:03:47,000
'A small boat hundreds of miles from the nearest land requires some explanation Inform Sir. Reginald, Frampton
33
0:03:47,000 --> 0:03:52,000
tell him I propose coming down within hailing distance '
34
0:03:52,000 --> 0:04:12,000
Before Fosterdyke could reach the navigation-room the noise of the 'Golden Hind’s' aerial propellers had attracted the attention of the occupants of the cutter, and six or seven men, whipping off the awning, began waving strips of canvas and various garments
35
0:04:12,000 --> 0:04:21,000
Slowing down and descending to fifty feet, the airship approached the boat The latter was hardly seaworthy
36
0:04:21,000 --> 0:04:39,000
Her topstrake had been stove in on the starboard side, and had been roughly repaired by means of a piece of painted canvas Her sails were patched in several places, while in default of a rudder she was being steered by means of an oar
37
0:04:39,000 --> 0:04:41,000
'Poor chaps
38
0:04:41,000 --> 0:04:44,000
Look at them ' ejaculated Kenneth
39
0:04:44,000 --> 0:04:46,000
'They’re almost done in '
40
0:04:46,000 --> 0:04:52,000
The boat’s crew were indeed in desperate straits They were ragged, gaunt, and famished
41
0:04:52,000 --> 0:05:07,000
Their faces and hands were burnt to a brick-red colour with exposure to the wind and tropical sun Three of them, seeing that help was at hand, had collapsed and were lying inertly on the bottom-boards
42
0:05:07,000 --> 0:05:14,000
Viewed from a height of fifty feet the length of the ocean rollers became apparent
43
0:05:14,000 --> 0:05:41,000
The sea was not dangerous, since there were no formidable crests to the long undulations, but there was considerable risk of the lightly built fuselage sustaining damage should the boat surge alongside On the other hand, it was almost a matter of impossibility to get the men on board otherwise than by the airship descending and resting on the surface
44
0:05:41,000 --> 0:05:56,000
Obviously they were far too weak to attempt to climb the rope-ladder, while the use of bowlines was open to great objection both as regards the length of time and the risk of injury to the rescued men
45
0:05:56,000 --> 0:06:07,000
Being a ship’s boat the cutter was provided with slinging gear The question was whether in her damaged state the boat would break her back in being hoisted
46
0:06:07,000 --> 0:06:11,000
but Fosterdyke decided to take the risk
47
0:06:11,000 --> 0:06:36,000
Accordingly wire hawsers were lowered from the two bow-hawser pipes, and by dint of careful manoeuvring the shackles were engaged Then, under the lifting power of additional brodium introduced into the for’ard ballonets, the 'Golden Hind' rose vertically until the boat was clear of the water
48
0:06:36,000 --> 0:06:46,000
The motor winches were then started and the cutter hauled up until her gunwales were almost touching the underside of the airship’s nacelle
49
0:06:46,000 --> 0:07:04,000
One by one the exhausted men were taken on board the airship by means of the hatchway through which Kenyon had gone to the rescue of Enrico Jaures This done, two of the 'Golden Hind’s' men dropped into the boat and passed slings round her
50
0:07:04,000 --> 0:07:28,000
When these took the weight of the cutter the wire hawsers were unshackled and the two men clambered back to the airship, which had now risen to nearly a thousand feet One end of each sling was then slipped, and the boat, falling like a stone, splintered to matchwood as she struck the surface of the sea
51
0:07:28,000 --> 0:07:35,000
The seven rescued men were given food and drink in strictly moderate quantities
52
0:07:35,000 --> 0:07:53,000
Vainly they begged for more, but Fosterdyke knew the danger of starving men being allowed to eat and drink their fill Nor did he attempt to question them at that juncture, beyond ascertaining that there were no more boats belonging to their ship
53
0:07:53,000 --> 0:07:57,000
They were put into bunks and made to sleep
54
0:07:57,000 --> 0:08:12,000
It was not until ten o’clock on the following morning that four of the rescued men put in an appearance in Fosterdyke’s cabin The remaining three were too ill to leave their bunks
55
0:08:12,000 --> 0:08:17,000
They were, they said, the sole survivors of the American barque _Hilda P
56
0:08:17,000 --> 0:08:35,000
Murchison_, thirty days out from Albany, Western Australia, and bound for Karachi Three hundred miles east of the Chagos Archipelago an explosion took place, but whether external or internal the survivors did not know
57
0:08:35,000 --> 0:08:42,000
One of them thought it might have been a mine But it was severe enough to sink the _Hilda P
58
0:08:42,000 --> 0:08:55,000
Murchison_ in less than five minutes, and the sole survivors were the first mate and six hands of the duty watch, who managed to scramble into the only boat that had not been shattered
59
0:08:55,000 --> 0:09:19,000
Without food and with only a small barrico of water, they set off to make their way back to Australia, knowing that with the prevailing winds they stood a much better chance of making land there than if they attempted a three-hundred-mile beat to windward, with the risk of missing the Chagos Archipelago altogether
60
0:09:19,000 --> 0:09:33,000
That was eight days ago They contrived to exist upon raw fish, tallow candles--which they found in a locker--and half a pint of water per man per diem
61
0:09:33,000 --> 0:09:38,000
Once they sighted a vessel, but their signals for assistance were unnoticed
62
0:09:38,000 --> 0:09:50,000
Then they encountered a white squall, the tail end of a storm that ripped their sails before they could stow canvas, and carried away the rudder
63
0:09:50,000 --> 0:09:59,000
The blow was succeeded by a flat calm For hours the cutter drifted idly, her roughly repaired sails hanging listlessly in the sultry air
64
0:09:59,000 --> 0:10:12,000
Almost overcome by hunger, fatigue, and the tropical heat, they were on the point of despair when the timely arrival of the British airship snatched them from a lingering death
65
0:10:12,000 --> 0:10:26,000
'I hope we’ll be able to set you ashore at Fremantle within the next eight or ten hours,' said Fosterdyke 'Meanwhile we’ll get in touch with the wireless station there and report your rescue
66
0:10:26,000 --> 0:10:36,000
Oh, yes, you may smoke in the for’ard compartment, but you’ll find this ship as ’dry’ as the land of the Stars and Stripes '
67
0:10:36,000 --> 0:10:49,000
During the rest of the day progress was well maintained The westerly breeze increased to half a gale, which meant an addition of thirty to forty miles an hour to the airship’s speed
68
0:10:49,000 --> 0:10:57,000
Barring accidents the 'Golden Hind' would reach Fremantle with petrol still remaining in her tanks
69
0:10:57,000 --> 0:11:08,000
'It’s not often one gets a westerly wind in the Twenties,' observed the baronet 'South-east Trades are the usual order of things
70
0:11:08,000 --> 0:11:17,000
We’re lucky Normally we should have to go as far south as 40° to rely upon a westerly wind
71
0:11:17,000 --> 0:11:22,000
' 'It will help us from Fremantle to New Zealand,' said Peter
72
0:11:22,000 --> 0:11:55,000
'I remember reading in the paper not so many months ago of the skipper of a sailing vessel who tried for days to beat up from Melbourne to Fremantle Finally he gave up beating to wind’ard as a hopeless job, so he turned and ran before the westerly breeze, sailed round the Horn and the Cape of Good Hope, and actually arrived at Fremantle several days before another vessel that had left Melbourne at the same time as he did
73
0:11:55,000 --> 0:12:02,000
' 'Let’s hope we’ll find an equally favouring wind to help us across the Pacific,' remarked Fosterdyke
74
0:12:02,000 --> 0:12:04,000
'We’ll want it '