“Look for yourself, yer honour. There’s not a boat on the coast that could get through them breakers.”
“There she goes.”
Even above the noise of the storm, a loud cry was heard, and the crash of breaking timber as, with the shock, the main and mizzen masts, weakened by the loss of the foremast, went over the sides. The next great wave drove the vessel forward two or three fathoms.
“That’s her last move,” Considine said. “The rocks will be through her bottom, now.”
“They are off,” a boy shouted, running up.
“Who are off?” Considine asked.
“The young squire and Larry Doolan.”
“Off where?” Mr. Davenant exclaimed.
“Off in the curragh, yer honour. Me and Tim Connolly helped them carry it round the Nose, and they launched her there. There they are. Sure you can see them for yourself.”
The party rushed out from the shelter, and there, a quarter of a mile along on the right, a small boat was seen, making its way over the waves.
“Be jabers, yer honour, and they have done it,” the boatmen said, as Mr. Davenant gave a cry of alarm.
“I didn’t think of the curragh, and if I had, she could not have been launched here. Mr. Walter has hit on the only place where there was a chance. Under the shelter of the Nose it might be done, but nowhere else.”
The Nose was a formidable reef of rocks, running off from a point and trending to the south. Many a ship had gone ashore on its jagged edge, but, with the wind from the northeast, it formed somewhat of a shelter, and it was under its lee that Walter and Larry had launched the curragh.
The curragh is still found on the Irish coast. It is a boat whose greatest width is at the stern, so much so that it looks like a boat cut in two. The floor is almost flat, and rises so much to the bow that three or four feet are entirely out of water. They are roughly built, and by no means fast, but they are wonderfully good sea boats, for their size, and can live in seas which would swamp a boat of ordinary build.
Walter had, with the assistance of Larry Doolan, built this boat for going out fishing. It was extremely light, being a mere framework covered with tarred canvas. As soon as Walter had reached the village, and found that the fishermen considered that no boat could possibly be put out, he had found and held a consultation with Larry.
“Do you think the curragh could go out, Larry?”
“Not she, yer honour. She would just be broke up like an eggshell with them breakers.”
“But she might float, if we got beyond them, Larry.”
“She might that,” Larry agreed, “seeing how light she is.”
“Well, will you go with me, Larry?”
“Sure and I would go anywhere with yer honour, but she could never get out.”
“I am thinking, Larry, that if we carry her along beyond the Nose, we might find it calmer there.”


