University of Virginia Library


KENTUCKY'S GHOST.

Page KENTUCKY'S GHOST.

10. KENTUCKY'S GHOST.

True? Every syllable.

That was a very fair yarn of yours, Tom Brown,
very fair for a landsman, but I 'll bet you a doughnut
I can beat it; and all on the square, too, as I say, —
which is more, if I don't mistake, than you could take
oath to. Not to say that I never stretched my yarn
a little on the fo'castle in my younger days, like the
rest of 'em; but what with living under roofs so long
past, and a call from the parson regular in strawberry
time, and having to do the flogging consequent on the
inakkeracies of statement follering on the growing up
of six boys, a man learns to trim his words a little,
Tom, and no mistake. It 's very much as it is with
the talk of the sea growing strange to you from hearing
nothing but lubbers who don't know a mizzen-mast
from a church-steeple.

It was somewhere about twenty years ago last October,
if I recollect fair, that we were laying in for that
particular trip to Madagascar. I 've done that little
voyage to Madagascar when the sea was like so much
burning oil, and the sky like so much burning brass,
and the fo'castle as nigh a hell as ever fo'castle was in


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a calm; I 've done it when we came sneaking into port
with nigh about every spar gone and pumps going
night and day; and I 've done it with a drunken captain
on starvation rations, — duff that a dog on land
would n't have touched and two teaspoonfuls of water
to the day, — but someways or other, of all the times
we headed for the East Shore I don't seem to remember
any quite as distinct as this.

We cleared from Long Wharf in the ship Madonna,
— which they tell me means, My Lady, and a pretty
name it was; it was apt to give me that gentle kind
of feeling when I spoke it, which is surprising when
you consider what a dull old hull she was, never logging
over ten knots, and oncertain at that. It may
have been because of Moll's coming down once in a
while in the days that we lay at dock, bringing the
boy with her, and sitting up on deck in a little white
apron, knitting. She was a very good-looking woman,
was my wife, in those days, and I felt proud of her,
— natural, with the lads looking on.

“Molly,” I used to say, sometimes, — “Molly Madonna!”

“Nonsense!” says she, giving a clack to her needles,
— pleased enough though, I warrant you, and turning
a very pretty pink about the cheeks for a four-years'
wife. Seeing as how she was always a lady to me,
and a true one, and a gentle, though she was n't much
at manners or book-learning, and though I never gave
her a silk gown in her life, she was quite content, you
see, and so was I.


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I used to speak my thought about the name sometimes,
when the lads were n't particularly noisy, but
they laughed at me mostly. I was rough enough and
bad enough in those days; as rough as the rest, and
as bad as the rest, I suppose, but yet I seemed to have
my notions a little different from the others. “Jake's
poetry,” they called 'em.

We were loading for the East Shore trade, as I
said, did n't I? There is n't much of the genuine,
old-fashioned trade left in these days, except the
whiskey branch, which will be brisk, I take it, till
the Malagasy carry the prohibitory law by a large majority
in both houses. We had a little whiskey in
the hold, I remember, that trip, with a good stock of
knives, red flannel, handsaws, nails, and cotton. We
were hoping to be at home again within the year.
We were well provisioned, and Dodd, — he was the
cook, — Dodd made about as fair coffee as you 're
likely to find in the gallery of a trader. As for our
officers, when I say the less said of them the better,
it ain't so much that I mean to be disrespectful as that
I mean to put it tenderly. Officers in the merchant
service, especially if it happens to be the African service,
are brutal men quite as often as they ain't (at
least, that 's my experience; and when some of your
great ship-owners argue the case with me, — as I 'm
free to say they have done before now, — I say,
“That 's my experience, sir,” which is all I 've got to
say); — brutal men, and about as fit for their positions


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as if they 'd been imported for the purpose a little indirect
from Davy Jones's Locker. Though they do
say that the flogging is pretty much done away with
in these days, which makes a difference.

Sometimes on a sunshiny afternoon, when the muddy
water showed a little muddier than usual, on account
of the clouds being the color of silver, and all the air
the color of gold, when the oily barrels were knocking
about on the wharves, and the smells were strong from
the fish-houses, and the men shouted and the mates
swore, and our baby ran about deck a-play with everybody
(he was a cunning little chap with red stockings
and bare knees, and the lads took quite a shine to
him), “Jake,” his mother would say, with a little
sigh, — low, so that the captain never heard, — “think
if it was him gone away for a year in company the
like of that!”

Then she would drop her shining needles, and call
the little fellow back sharp, and catch him up into her
arms.

Go into the keeping-room there, Tom, and ask her
all about it. Bless you! she remembers those days
at dock better than I do. She could tell you to this
hour the color of my shirt, and how long my hair was,
and what I ate, and how I looked, and what I said.
I did n't generally swear so thick when she was about.

Well; we weighed, along the last of the month, in
pretty good spirits. The Madonna was as stanch and
seaworthy as any eight-hundred-tonner in the harbor,


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if she was clumsy; we turned in, some sixteen of us
or thereabouts, into the fo'castle, — a jolly set, mostly
old messmates, and well content with one another;
and the breeze was stiff from the west, with a fair sky.

The night before we were off, Molly and I took a
walk upon the wharves after supper. I carried the
baby. A boy, sitting on some boxes, pulled my sleeve
as we went by, and asked me, pointing to the Madonna,
if I would tell him the name of the ship.

“Find out for yourself,” said I, not over-pleased to
be interrupted.

“Don't be cross to him,” says Molly. The baby
threw a kiss at the boy, and Molly smiled at him
through the dark. I don't suppose I should ever
have remembered the lubber from that day to this,
except that I liked the looks of Molly smiling at him
through the dark.

My wife and I said good-by the next morning in a
little sheltered place among the lumber on the wharf;
she was one of your women who never like to do their
crying before folks.

She climbed on the pile of lumber and sat down, a
little flushed and quivery, to watch us off. I remember
seeing her there with the baby till we were well
down the channel. I remember noticing the bay as
it grew cleaner, and thinking that I would break off
swearing; and I remember cursing Bob Smart like
a pirate within an hour.

The breeze held steadier than we 'd looked for, and


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we 'd made a good offing and discharged the pilot by
nightfall. Mr. Whitmarsh — he was the mate — was
aft with the captain. The boys were singing a little;
the smell of the coffee was coming up, hot and home-like,
from the galley. I was up in the maintop, I forget
what for, when all at once there came a cry and
a shout; and, when I touched deck, I saw a crowd
around the fore-hatch.

“What 's all this noise for?” says Mr. Whitmarsh,
coming up and scowling.

“A stow-away, sir! A boy stowed away!” said
Bob, catching the officer's tone quick enough. Bob
always tested the wind well, when a storm was brewing.
He jerked the poor fellow out of the hold, and
pushed him along to the mate's feet.

I say “poor fellow,” and you 'd never wonder why
if you 'd seen as much of stowing away as I have.

I 'd as lief see a son of mine in a Carolina slavegang
as to see him lead the life of a stow-away. What
with the officers from feeling that they 've been taken
in, and the men, who catch their cue from their superiors,
and the spite of the lawful boy who hired in the
proper way, he don't have what you may call a tender
time.

This chap was a little fellow, slight for his years,
which might have been fifteen, I take it. He was
palish, with a jerk of thin hair on his forehead. He
was hungry, and homesick, and frightened. He looked
about on all our faces, and then he cowered a little,
and lay still just as Bob had thrown him.


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“We—ell,” says Whitmarsh, very slow, “if you
don't repent your bargain before you go ashore, my
fine fellow, — me, if I 'm mate of the Madonna!
and take that for your pains!”

Upon that he kicks the poor little lubber from quarter-deck
to bowsprit, or nearly, and goes down to his
supper. The men laugh a little, then they whistle a
little, then they finish their song quite gay and well
acquainted, with the coffee steaming away in the galley.
Nobody has a word for the boy, — bless you,
no!

I 'll venture he would n't have had a mouthful that
night if it had not been for me; and I can't say as I
should have bothered myself about him, if it had not
come across me sudden, while he sat there rubbing
his eyes quite violent, with his face to the west'ard
(the sun was setting reddish), that I had seen the lad
before; then I remembered walking on the wharves,
and him on the box, and Molly saying softly that I
was cross to him.

Seeing that my wife had smiled at him, and my
baby thrown a kiss at him, it went against me, you
see, not to look after the little rascal a bit that night.

“But you 've got no business here, you know,” said
I; “nobody wants you.”

“I wish I was ashore!” said he, — “I wish I was
ashore!”

With that he begins to rub his eyes so very violent
that I stopped. There was good stuff in him too; for


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he choked and winked at me, and did it all up, about
the sun on the water and a cold in the head, as well as
I could myself just about.

I don't know whether it was on account of being
taken a little notice of that night, but the lad always
kind of hung about me afterwards; chased me round
with his eyes in a way he had, and did odd jobs for
me without the asking.

One night before the first week was out, he hauled
alongside of me on the windlass. I was trying a new
pipe (and a very good one, too), so I did n't give him
much notice for a while.

“You did this job up shrewd, Kent,” said I, by and
by; “how did you steer in?” — for it did not often
happen that the Madonna got fairly out of port with
a boy unbeknown in her hold.

“Watch was drunk; I crawled down ahind the
whiskey. It was hot, you bet, and dark. I lay and
thought how hungry I was,” says he.

“Friends at home?” says I.

Upon that he gives me a nod, very short, and gets
up and walks off whistling.

The first Sunday out that chap did n't know any
more what to do with himself than a lobster just put
on to boil. Sunday 's cleaning day at sea, you know.
The lads washed up, and sat round, little knots of
them, mending their trousers. Bob got out his cards.
Me and a few mates took it comfortable under the
to'gallant fo'castle (I being on watch below), reeling


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off the stiffest yarns we had in tow. Kent looked on
at euchre awhile, then listened to us awhile, then
walked about oneasy.

By and by says Bob, “Look over there, — spry!”
and there was Kent, sitting curled away in a heap
under the stern of the long-boat. He had a book.
Bob crawls behind and snatches it up, unbeknown,
out of his hands; then he falls to laughing as if he
would strangle, and gives the book a toss to me. It
was a bit of Testament, black and old. There was
writing on the yellow leaf, this way: —

“Kentucky Hodge.
“from his Affecshunate mother
“who prays, For you evry day, Amen.”

The boy turned fust red, then white, and straightened
up quite sudden, but he never said a word, only
sat down again and let us laugh it out. I 've lost my
reckoning if he ever heard the last of it. He told
me one day how he came by the name, but I forget
exactly. Something about an old fellow — uncle, I
believe — as died in Kentucky, and the name was
moniment-like, you see. He used to seem cut up a
bit about it at first, for the lads took to it famously;
but he got used to it in a week or two, and, seeing as
they meant him no unkindness, took it quite cheery.

One other thing I noticed was that he never had
the book about after that. He fell into our ways next
Sunday more easy.

They don't take the Bible just the way you would,


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Tom, — as a general thing, sailors don't; though I will
say that I never saw the man at sea who did n't give
it the credit of being an uncommon good yarn.

But I tell you, Tom Brown, I felt sorry for that
boy. It 's punishment bad enough for a little scamp
like him leaving the honest shore, and folks to home
that were a bit tender of him maybe, to rough it on
a trader, learning how to slush down a back-stay, or
tie reef-points with frozen fingers in a snow-squall.

But that 's not the worst of it, by no means. If
ever there was a cold-blooded, cruel man, with a
wicked eye and a fist like a mallet, it was Job Whitmarsh,
taken at his best. And I believe, of all the
trips I 've taken, him being mate of the Madonna,
Kentucky found him at his worst. Bradley — that 's
the second mate — was none too gentle in his ways,
you may be sure; but he never held a candle to Mr.
Whitmarsh. He took a spite to the boy from the first,
and he kept it on a steady strain to the last, right
along, just about so.

I 've seen him beat that boy till the blood ran down
in little pools on deck; then send him up, all wet and
red, to clear the to'sail halliards; and when, what with
the pain and faintness, he dizzied a little, and clung to
the ratlines, half blind, he would have him down and
flog him till the cap'n interfered, — which would happen
occasionally on a fair day when he had taken just
enough to be good-natured. He used to rack his
brains for the words he slung at the boy working quiet


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enough beside him. It was odd, now, the talk he
would get off. Bob Smart could n't any more come
up to it than I could: we used to try sometimes, but
we had to give in always. If curses had been a marketable
article, Whitmarsh would have taken out his
patent and made his fortune by inventing of them,
new and ingenious. Then he used to kick the lad
down the fo'castle ladder; he used to work him, sick
or well, as he would n't have worked a dray-horse; he
used to chase him all about deck at the rope's end;
he used to mast-head him for hours on the stretch; he
used to starve him out in the hold. It did n't come in
my line to be over-tender, but I turned sick at heart,
Tom, more times than one, looking on helpless, and
me a great stout fellow.

I remember now — don't know as I 've thought of it
for twenty years — a thing McCallum said one night;
McCallum was Scotch, — an old fellow with gray hair;
told the best yarns on the fo'castle always.

“Mark my words, shipmates,” says he, “when Job
Whitmarsh's time comes to go as straight to hell as
Judas, that boy will bring his summons. Dead or
alive, that boy will bring his summons.”

One day I recollect especial that the lad was sick
with fever on him, and took to his hammock. Whitmarsh
drove him on deck, and ordered him aloft. I
was standing near by, trimming the spanker. Kentucky
staggered for'ard a little and sat down. There
was a rope's-end there, knotted three times. The
mate struck him.


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“I 'm very weak, sir,” says he.

He struck him again. He struck him twice more.
The boy fell over a little, and lay where he fell.

I don't know what ailed me, but all of a sudden I
seemed to be lying off Long Wharf, with the clouds
the color of silver, and the air the color of gold, and
Molly in a white apron with her shining needles, and
the baby a-play in his red stockings about the deck.

“Think if it was him!” says she, or she seems to
say, — “think if it was him!

And the next I knew I 'd let slip my tongue in a
jiffy, and given it to the mate that furious and onrespectful
as I 'll wager Whitmarsh never got before.
And the next I knew after that they had the irons
on me.

“Sorry about that, eh?” said he, the day before
they took 'em off.

No, sir,” says I. And I never was. Kentucky
never forgot that. I had helped him occasional in
the beginning, — learned him how to veer and haul
a brace, let go or belay a sheet, — but let him alone
generally speaking, and went about my own business.
That week in irons I really believe the lad never forgot.

One time — it was on a Saturday night, and the
mate had been oncommon furious that week — Kentucky
turned on him, very pale and slow (I was up
in the mizzen-top, and heard him quite distinct).

“Mr. Whitmarsh,” says he, — “Mr. Whitmarsh,”


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— he draws his breath in, — “Mr. Whitmarsh,” —
three times, — “you 've got the power and you know
it, and so do the gentlemen who put you here; and
I 'm only a stow-away boy, and things are all in a
tangle, but you 'll be sorry yet for every time you 've
laid your hands on me!

He had n't a pleasant look about the eyes either,
when he said it.

Fact was, that first month on the Madonna had
done the lad no good. He had a surely, sullen way
with him, some'at like what I 've seen about a
chained dog. At the first, his talk had been clean
as my baby's, and he would blush like any girl at
Bob Smart's stories; but he got used to Bob, and
pretty good, in time, at small swearing.

I don't think I should have noticed it so much if it
had not been for seeming to see Molly, and the sun,
and the knitting-needles, and the child upon the
deck, and hearing of it over, “Think if it was him!
Sometimes on a Sunday night I used to think it was a
pity. Not that I was any better than the rest, except
so far as the married men are always steadier. Go
through any crew the sea over, and it is the lads who
have homes of their own and little children in 'em as
keep the straightest.

Sometimes, too, I used to take a fancy that I could
have listened to a word from a parson, or a good brisk
psalm-tune, and taken it in very good part. A year is
a long pull for twenty-five men to be becalmed with


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each other and the devil. I don't set up to be pious
myself, but I 'm not a fool, and I know that if we 'd had
so much as one officer aboard who feared God and kept
his commandments, we should have been the better
men for it. It 's very much with religion as it is with
cayenne pepper, — if it 's there, you know it.

If you had your ships on the sea by the dozen,
you 'd bethink you of that? Bless you, Tom! if
you were in Rome you 'd do as the Romans do.
You 'd have your ledgers, and your children, and
your churches and Sunday schools, and freed niggers,
and 'lections, and what not, and never stop to think
whether the lads that sailed your ships across the
world had souls, or not, — and be a good sort of man
too. That 's the way of the world. Take it easy,
Tom, — take it easy.

Well, things went along just about so with us till
we neared the Cape. It 's not a pretty place, the
Cape, on a winter's voyage. I can't say as I ever
was what you may call scar't after the first time
rounding it, but it 's not a pretty place.

I don't seem to remember much about Kent along
there till there come a Friday at the first of December.
It was a still day, with a little haze, like white
sand sifted across a sunbeam on a kitchen table. The
lad was quiet-like all day, chasing me about with his
eyes.

“Sick?” says I.

“No,” says he.


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“Whitmarsh drunk?” says I.

“No,” says he.

A little after dark I was lying on a coil of ropes,
napping it. The boys were having the Bay of
Biscay quite lively, and I waked up on the jump in
the choruses. Kent came up while they were telling

“How she lay
On that day
In the Bay of Biscay O!”

He was not singing. He sat down beside me, and
first I thought I would n't trouble myself about him,
and then I thought I would.

So I opens one eye at him encouraging. He crawls
up a little closer to me. It was rather dark where we
sat, with a great greenish shadow dropping from the
mainsail. The wind was up a little, and the light at
helm looked flickery and red.

“Jake,” says he all at once, “where 's your mother?”

“In — heaven!” says I, all taken aback; and if
ever I came nigh what you might call a little disrespect
to your mother, it was on that occasion, from
being taken so aback.

“Oh!” said he. “Got any women-folks to home
that miss you?” asks he, by and by.

Said I, “Should n't wonder.”

After that he sits still a little with his elbows on his
knees; then he speers at me sidewise awhile; then
said he, “I s'pose I 've got a mother to home. I ran
away from her.”


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This, mind you, is the first time he has ever spoke
about his folks since he came aboard.

“She was asleep down in the south chamber,” says
he. “I got out the window. There was one white
shirt she 'd made for meetin' and such. I 've never
worn it out here. I had n't the heart. It has a collar
and some cuffs, you know. She had a headache
making of it. She 's been follering me round all
day, a sewing on that shirt. When I come in she
would look up bright-like and smiling. Father 's dead.
There ain't anybody but me. All day long she 's been
follering of me round.”

So then he gets up, and joins the lads, and tries to
sing a little; but he comes back very still and sits
down. We could see the flickery light upon the boys'
faces, and on the rigging, and on the cap'n, who was
damning the bo'sen a little aft.

“Jake,” says he, quite low, “look here. I 've
been thinking. Do you reckon there 's a chap here —
just one, perhaps — who 's said his prayers since he
came aboard?”

No!” said I, quite short: for I 'd have bet my
head on it.

I can remember, as if it was this morning, just how
the question sounded, and the answer. I can't seem
to put it into words how it came all over me. The
wind was turning brisk, and we 'd just eased her with
a few reefs; Bob Smart, out furling the flying jib, got
soaked; me and the boy sitting silent, were spattered.


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I remember watching the curve of the great swells,
mahogany color, with the tip of white, and thinking
how like it was to a big creature hissing and foaming
at the mouth, and thinking all at once something about
Him holding of the sea in a balance, and not a word
bespoke to beg his favor respectful since we weighed
our anchor, and the cap'n yonder calling on Him just
that minute to send the Madonna to the bottom, if the
bo'sen had n't disobeyed his orders about the squaring
of the after-yards.

“From his Affecshunate mother who prays, For
you evry day, Amen,” whispers Kentucky, presently,
very soft. “The book 's tore up. Mr. Whitmarsh
wadded his old gun with it. But I remember.”

Then said he: “It 's 'most bedtime to home. She
's setting in a little rocking-chair, — a green one.
There 's a fire, and the dog. She sets all by herself.”

Then he begins again: “She has to bring in her
own wood now. There 's a gray ribbon on her cap.
When she goes to meetin' she wears a gray bunnet.
She 's drawed the curtains and the door is locked.
But she thinks I 'll be coming home sorry some day,
— I 'm sure she thinks I 'll be coming home sorry.”

Just then there comes the order, “Port watch
ahoy! Tumble up there lively!” so I turns out,
and the lad turns in, and the night settles down a
little black, and my hands and head are full. Next
day it blows a clean, all but a bank of gray, very


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thin and still, — about the size of that cloud you see
through the side window, Tom, — which lay just
abeam of us.

The sea, I thought, looked like a great purple pin-cushion,
with a mast or two stuck in on the horizon for
the pins. “Jake's poetry,” the boys said that was.

By noon that little gray bank had grown up thick,
like a wall. By sundown the cap'n let his liquor
alone, and kept the deck. By night we were in
chop-seas, with a very ugly wind.

“Steer small, there!” cries Whitmarsh, growing
hot about the face, — for we made a terribly crooked
wake, with a broad sheer, and the old hull strained
heavily, — “steer small there, I tell you! Mind your
eye now, McCallum, with your foresail! Furl the
royals! Send down the royals! Cheerily, men!
Where 's that lubber Kent? Up with you, lively
now!”

Kentucky sprang for'ard at the order, then stopped
short. Anybody as knows a royal from an anchor
would n't have blamed the lad. I 'll take oath to 't
it 's no play for an old tar, stout and full in size,
sending down the royals in a gale like that; let alone
a boy of fifteen year on his first voyage.

But the mate takes to swearing (it would have
turned a parson faint to hear him), and Kent shoots
away up, — the great mast swinging like a pendulum
to and fro, and the reef-points snapping, and the blocks
creaking, and the sails flapping to that extent as you


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would n't consider possible unless you 'd been before
the mast yourself. It reminded me of evil birds I 've
read of, that stun a man with their wings; strike you
to the bottom, Tom, before you could say Jack Robinson.

Kent stuck bravely as far as the cross-trees. There
he slipped and struggled and clung in the dark and
noise awhile, then comes sliding down the back-stay.

“I 'm not afraid, sir,” says he; “but I cannot do
it.”

For answer Whitmarsh takes to the rope's-end. So
Kentucky is up again, and slips and struggles and
clings again, and then lays down again.

At this the men begin to grumble a little low.

“Will you kill the lad?” said I. I get a blow for
my pains, that sends me off my feet none too easy;
and when I rub the stars out of my eyes the boy is up
again, and the mate behind him with the rope. Whitmarsh
stopped when he 'd gone far enough. The
lad climbed on. Once he looked back. He never
opened his lips; he just looked back. If I 've seen
him once since, in my thinking, I 've seen him twenty
times, — up in the shadow of the great gray wings, a
looking back.

After that there was only a cry, and a splash, and
the Madonna racing along with the gale twelve knots.
If it had been the whole crew overboard, she could
never have stopped for them that night.

“Well,” said the cap'n, “you 've done it now.”


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Whitmarsh turns his back.

By and by, when the wind fell, and the hurry was
over, and I had the time to think a steady thought,
being in the morning watch, I seemed to see the old
lady in the gray bunnet setting by the fire. And the
dog. And the green rocking-chair. And the front
door, with the boy walking in on a sunny afternoon to
take her by surprise.

Then I remember leaning over to look down, and
wondering if the lad were thinking of it too, and what
had happened to him now, these two hours back, and
just about where he was, and how he liked his new
quarters, and many other strange and curious things.

And while I sat there thinking, the Sunday-morning
stars cut through the clouds, and the solemn
Sunday-morning light began to break upon the sea.

We had a quiet run of it, after that, into port,
where we lay about a couple of months or so, trading
off for a fair stock of palm-oil, ivory, and hides. The
days were hot and purple and still. We had n't what
you might call a blow, if I recollect accurate, till we
rounded the Cape again, heading for home.

We were rounding that Cape again, heading for
home, when that happened which you may believe me
or not, as you take the notion, Tom; though why a
man who can swallow Daniel and the lion's den, or
take down t' other chap who lived three days comfortable
into the inside of a whale, should make faces at
what I 've got to tell I can't see.


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It was just about the spot that we lost the boy that
we fell upon the worst gale of the trip. It struck us
quite sudden. Whitmarsh was a little high. He was
n't apt to be drunk in a gale, if it gave him warning
sufficient.

Well, you see, there must be somebody to furl the
main-royal again, and he pitched onto McCallum.
McCallum had n't his beat for fighting out the royal
in a blow.

So he piled away lively, up to the to'-sail yard.
There, all of a sudden, he stopped. Next we knew
he was down like heat-lightning.

His face had gone very white.

“What 's to pay with you?” roared Whitmarsh.

Said McCallum, “There 's somebody up there, sir.

Screamed Whitmarsh, “You 're gone an idiot!”

Said McCallum, very quiet and distinct: “There 's
somebody up there, sir. I saw him quite plain. He
saw me. I called up. He called down. Says he,
`Don't you come up!' and hang me if I 'll stir a step
for you or any other man to-night!”

I never saw the face of any man alive go the turn
that mate's face went. If he would n't have relished
knocking the Scotchman dead before his eyes, I 've
lost my guess. Can't say what he would have done
to the old fellow, if there 'd been any time to lose.

He 'd the sense left to see there was n't overmuch,
so he orders out Bob Smart direct.

Bob goes up steady, with a quid in his cheek and a


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cool eye. Half-way amid to'-sail and to'-gallant he
stops, and down he comes, spinning.

“Be drowned if there ain't!” said he. “He 's
sitting square upon the yard. I never see the boy
Kentucky, if he is n't sitting on that yard. `Don't
you come up!
' he cries out, — `don't you come up!”'

“Bob 's drunk, and McCallum 's a fool!” said Jim
Welch, standing by. So Welch wolunteers up, and
takes Jaloffe with him. They were a couple of the
coolest hands aboard, — Welch and Jaloffe. So up
they goes, and down they comes like the rest, by the
back-stays, by the run.

“He beckoned of me back!” says Welch. “He
hollered not to come up! not to come up!”

After that there was n't a man of us would stir
aloft, not for love nor money.

Well, Whitmarsh he stamped, and he swore, and he
knocked us about furious; but we sat and looked at
one another's eyes, and never stirred. Something cold,
like a frost-bite, seemed to crawl along from man to
man, looking into one another's eyes.

“I 'll shame ye all, then, for a set of cowardly lubbers!”
cries the mate; and what with the anger and
the drink he was as good as his word, and up the ratlines
in a twinkle.

In a flash we were after him, — he was our officer,
you see, and we felt ashamed, — me at the head, and
the lads following after.

I got to the futtock shrouds, and there I stopped,


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for I saw him myself, — a palish boy, with a jerk of
thin hair on his forehead; I 'd have known him anywhere
in this world or t' other. I saw him just as distinct
as I see you, Tom Brown, sitting on that yard
quite steady with the royal flapping like to flap him
off.

I reckon I 've had as much experience fore and aft,
in the course of fifteen years aboard, as any man that
ever tied a reef-point in a nor'easter; but I never saw
a sight like that, not before nor since.

I won't say that I did n't wish myself well on deck;
but I will say that I stuck to the shrouds, and looked
on steady.

Whitmarsh, swearing that that royal should be
furled, went on and went up.

It was after that I heard the voice. It came straight
from the figure of the boy upon the upper yard.

But this time it says, “Come up! Come up!” And
then, a little louder, “Come up! Come up! Come up!
So he goes up, and next I knew there was a cry, —
and next a splash, — and then I saw the royal flapping
from the empty yard, and the mate was gone, and the
boy.

Job Whitmarsh was never seen again, alow or aloft,
that night or ever after.

I was telling the tale to our parson this summer, —
he 's a fair-minded chap, the parson, in spite of a little
natural leaning to strawberries, which I always take
in very good part, — and he turned it about in his
mind some time.


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“If it was the boy,” says he, — “and I can't say
as I see any reason especial why it should n't have
been, — I 've been wondering what his spiritooal condition
was. A soul in hell,” — the parson believes in
hell, I take it, because he can't help himself; but he
has that solemn, tender way of preaching it as makes
you feel he would n't have so much as a chicken get
there if he could help it, — “a lost soul,” says the
parson (I don't know as I get the words exact), —
“a soul that has gone and been and got there of its
own free will and choosing would be as like as not to
haul another soul alongside if he could. Then again,
if the mate's time had come, you see, and his chances
were over, why, that 's the will of the Lord, and it 's
hell for him whichever side of death he is, and nobody's
fault but hisn; and the boy might be in the
good place, and do the errand all the same. That 's
just about it, Brown,” says he. “A man goes his
own gait, and, if he won't go to heaven, he won't, and
the good God himself can't help it. He throws the
shining gates all open wide, and he never shut them
on any poor fellow as would have entered in, and he
never, never will.”

Which I thought was sensible of the parson, and
very prettily put.

There 's Molly frying flapjacks now, and flapjacks
won't wait for no man, you know, no more than time
and tide, else I should have talked till midnight, very
like, to tell the time we made on that trip home, and


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how green the harbor looked a sailing up, and of
Molly and the baby coming down to meet me in a
little boat that danced about (for we cast a little
down the channel), and how she climbed up a
laughing and a crying all to once, about my neck,
and how the boy had grown, and how when he ran
about the deck (the little shaver had his first pair of
boots on that very afternoon) I bethought me of the
other time, and of Molly's words, and of the lad we 'd
left behind us in the purple days.

Just as we were hauling up, I says to my wife:
“Who 's that old lady setting there upon the lumber,
with a gray bunnet, and a gray ribbon on her cap?”

For there was an old lady there, and I saw the sun
all about her, and all on the blazing yellow boards,
and I grew a little dazed and dazzled.

“I don't know,” said Molly, catching onto me a
little close. “She comes there every day. They say
she sits and watches for her lad as ran away.”

So then I seemed to know, as well as ever I knew
afterwards, who it was. And I thought of the dog.
And the green rocking-chair. And the book that
Whitmarsh wadded his old gun with. And the front-door,
with the boy a walking in.

So we three went up the wharf, — Molly and the
baby and me, — and sat down beside her on the
yellow boards. I can't remember rightly what I
said, but I remember her sitting silent in the sunshine
till I had told her all there was to tell.


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Don't cry!” says Molly, when I got through, —
which it was the more surprising of Molly, considering
as she was doing the crying all to herself. The old
lady never cried, you see. She sat with her eyes
wide open under her gray bunnet, and her lips a
moving. After a while I made it out what it was
she said: “The only son — of his mother — and
she —”

By and by she gets up, and goes her ways, and
Molly and I walk home together, with our little boy
between us.

THE END.

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