The Story of Isaac Brock eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 163 pages of information about The Story of Isaac Brock.

The Story of Isaac Brock eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 163 pages of information about The Story of Isaac Brock.

CHAPTER I.

Our hero’s home—­Guernsey.

Off the coast of Brittany, where the Bay of Biscay fights the white horses of the North Sea, the Island of Guernsey rides at anchor.  Its black and yellow, red and purple coast-line, summer and winter, is awash with surf, burying the protecting reefs in a smother of foam.  Between these drowned ridges of despair, which warn the toilers of the sea of an intention to engulf them, tongues of ocean pierce the grim chasms of the cliffs.

Between this and the sister island of Alderney the teeth of the Casquets cradle the skeleton of many a stout ship, while above the level of the sea the amethyst peaks of Sark rise like phantom bergs.  In the sunlight the rainbow-coloured slopes of Le Gouffre jut upwards a jumble of glory.  Exposed to the full fury of an Atlantic gale, these islands are well-nigh obliterated in drench.  From where the red gables cluster on the heights of Fort George, which overhang the harbour, to the thickets of Jerbourg, valley and plain, at the time we write of, were a gorgeous carpet of anemones, daffodils, primroses and poppies.

These are tumultuous latitudes.  Sudden hurricanes, with the concentrated force of the German Ocean behind them, soon scourge the sea into a whirlpool and extinguish every landmark in a pall of gray.  For centuries tumult and action have been other names for the Channel Islands.  It is no wonder that the inhabitants partake of the nature of their surroundings.  Contact with the elements produces a love for combat.  As this little book is largely a record of strife, and of one of Guernsey’s greatest fighting sons, it may be well to recall the efforts that preceded the birth of our hero and influenced his career, and through which Guernsey retained its liberties.

For centuries Guernsey had been whipped into strife.  From the raid upon her independence by David Bruce, the exiled King of Scotland, early in 1300, on through the centuries up to the seventeenth, piping times of peace were few and far between.  The resources of the island led to frequent invasions from France, but while fighting and resistance did not impair the loyalty of the islanders, it nourished a love of freedom, and of hostility to any enemy who had the effrontery to assail it.  As a rule the sojourn of these invaders was brief.  When sore pressed in a pitched battle on the plateau above St. Peter’s Port, the inhabitants would retreat behind the buttresses of Castle Cornet, when, as in the invasion by Charles V. of France, the fortress proving impregnable, the besiegers would collect their belongings and sail away.

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The Story of Isaac Brock from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.