The Young Trawler by R. M. Ballantyne (i read books txt) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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âNo, sir,â said the little maid, pushing open the door, âa small room off this one, sir.â
âGlorious!â shouted the captain, entering and striking the top of the door-way with his head in doing so. âNothing could be better. This is the theological library! Just the thingâgood-sized window, same view, small table, andâwell, I declare! if there ainât empty bookshelves!â
âVery sorry, sir,â said the little maid, hastening to apologise; âwe have no books, but theyâll be handy for any books you may bring to the sea-side with you, sir, or for any little knick-knacks and odds and ends.â
âYes, yes, my good girl. Iâll fetch a few theological odds and ends to-night thatâll pârâaps fill âem up. By the way, youâve a bedroom, I hope?â
He looked anxious, and the maid, who seemed inclined to laugh, said that of course they had, a nice airy bedroom on the same floor on the other side of the passageâalso commanding the sea.
The captainâs face beamed again.
âAnd now, my girlâbut, by the way, I shall want another bedroom. Have youââ
âIâm sorry to say that we have not. The rest of the house is quite full.â
Captain Breamâs face again became anxious. âThatâs bad,â he said; âof course I can get one out oâ the house, but it would be inconvenient.â
âThere is a hattic, sir,â said the maid, âbut it is âigh up, and so very small, that I fearââ
âLet me see the attic,â said the captain, promptly.
The maid conducted him up another flight of steps to a room, or rather closet, which did not appear to be more than five feet broad and barely six feet long; including the storm-window, it might have been perhaps seven feet long. It was situated in a sort of angle, so that from the window you could have a view of a piece of slate roof, and two crooked chimney pots with a slice of the sea between them. As there was much traffic on the sea off that coast, the slice referred to frequently exhibited a ship or a boat for a few seconds.
âMy study!â murmured the captain, looking round on the bare walls, and the wooden chair, and a low bedstead which constituted the furniture. âNot much room for the intellect to expand here. However, Iâve seen worse.â
âWe consider it a very good hattic, sir,â said the little maid, somewhat hurt by the last remark.
âI meant no offence, my dear,â said the captain, with one of his blandest smiles, âonly the berth is rather small, dâee see, for a man of my size. It is first-rate as far as it goes, but if it went a little furtherâin the direction of the sea, you knowâit might give me a little more room to kick about my legs. But itâll do. Itâll do. Iâll take all the rooms, so youâll consider them engaged.â
âBut you havenât asked the price of âem yet sir,â said the little maid.
âI donât care tuppence about the price, my dear. Are you the landlady?â
âLa! no, sir,â replied the girl, laughing outright as they returned to the parlour.
âWell then, you send the landlady to me, and Iâll soon settle matters.â
When the landlady appeared, the captain was as good as his word. He at once agreed to her terms, as well as her stipulations, and paid the first weekâs rent in advance on the spot.
âNow,â said he, on leaving, âIâll come back this evening with a lot of books. To-morrow forenoon, the ladies for whom the rooms are taken will arrive, please God, and you will have everything ready and in apple-pie order for âem. Iâll see about grub afterwards, but in the meantime you may give orders to have sent in to-morrow a lot oâ fresh eggs and milk and creamâlots of creamâand fresh butter and tea and coffee anâ suchlike. But I neednât do more than give a wink to a lady of your experience.â
With this last gallant remark Captain Bream left the lodging and strolled down to the sea-beach.
âMother,â said Ruth one day to her dignified parent, âshall you be soon free of engagements?â
âYes, probably by the end of next week. Why do you ask?â
âBecause I am longing to get away to Yarmouth. I had a letter from dear Kate Seaward to-day. They have been a week in their lodging now, and are enjoying it immensely. Here is the letter. Let me read a bit of it to you. She says: âYou have no idea how much we are charmed with this place. It is a perfect paradise! Perhaps part of our feeling of delight is due to the great change from our smoky little residence in London, but you would not wonder at my enthusiasm if you saw the sweet little window beside which I am writing, and the splendid seaâlike a great field of clear glass, which spreads away on all sides to the horizon. Oh! I do love the seaâto look at, I mean. You must not suppose, dear, that I have any love left when I am on it. Oh no! The memory of my last crossing of the Channelâthat dreadful British Channelâis as fresh as if it had happened yesterdayâthe heaving of the steamer and the howling of the wind, the staggering of the passengers, and the expression of their faces, to say nothing of their colour. And then the sensations! Appalling is a mild word. It is not appropriate. If I might coin a word, horrific seems more suitable. But words utterly fail when deep and powerful sensations are concerned. I do assure you, Ruth, that I was absolutely indifferent as to what should become of me that dreadful day as I lay extended flat on my back on one of the saloon sofas. And when that nurse with the baby was forced by a lurch of the ship to sit down on me, I do believe that I could have thanked her if she had crushed me out of existence. Yes, I hate the sea as a place of residence, but I love it as an object to be looked at, especially when it is calm and glittering, as it now is, in the early morning sun.
âTalking of the early morning reminds me of good Captain Bream, who is one of the most singular and incomprehensible creatures I ever met with. He is an early riserânot that that makes him singularâbut instead of going out to walk he remains up in his pigeon-hole of a room studying theology! And such a miscellaneous collection of books he has got on all sorts of religious controversy! He say he wants to be able to meet the objections of unbelievers whom he sometimes encounters when preaching to sailors. Jessie and I have heard him preach to a number of sailors and fishermen assembled in an old boat-shed, and you have no idea, Ruth, how delightful it is to hear him. So different from what one expected, and so very unlike the preaching of many men. I have often wondered why it is that some menâsensible men, too, in other mattersâshould think it necessary to talk in a sing-song, or whiny voice, with a pathetic drawl, or through their noses, when they have to speak on religious subjects! I once heard an indignant clergyman say that he thought it was a device of the devil to turn sacred things into ridicule, but I cannot agree with that. It seems to me that men are often too ready to saddle Satan with evil devices which they ought to fix on their own stupid shoulders. Captain Bream simply talks when he preaches; just as if he were talking on any business matter of great importance, and he does it so nicely, too, and so earnestly, like a father talking to his children. Many of the rough-looking fishermen were quite melted, and after the meeting a good many of them remained behind to talk with him privately. Jessie and I are convinced that he is doing a great and good work here. But he is a most eccentric man, and seems a good deal perplexed by his theological studies. The other day Jessie ventured to question him about these, and he became quite energetic as he said:â
ââI tell âee what it is, ladies, when I go cruisinâ out and in among these theological volumes until I lose my reckoning altogether anâ git among shoals anâ quicksands that I never so much as heard of before, I just lay hold oâ the cable thatâs made fast to my sheet-anchor, and I haul in on that. Here is the sheet-anchor, he said, pulling his little Bible from his pocket, the Word of God. Thatâs it. When I feel how ignorant anâ stoopid anâ unlearned I am, I just keep haulinâ on the cable till I come to some such word as this, âNot by might, nor by power, but by my Spirit, saith the Lord,â anâ so Iâm comforted, anâ my mindâs made easy, for, after all we may think and say and read, it must come to thisââLet every man be fully persuaded in his own mind.â Every man must work out his own theology for himself, accordinâ to that Word, and Iâve worked it out so far by Godâs blessinâ, that Jesus Christâthe Godâmanâis my foundation, the Holy Spirit is my guide, and salvation from sin is my aim and endânot only for myself but for my fellow-sinners.
ââBut I must not go on quoting the Captainâs sayings and eccentric doings, else I shall never stop.
ââWhen are you and your mother coming down? I cannot tell how much we long to have you with us to share in our enjoyment of this charming place. And the fisher-people are so interesting too. I donât wonder you took such a fancy to them. Of course we have not had time to make acquaintance with many of them yet. And Jessie has become so engrossed with the Captainâs theological books that I canât tear her away from them. At first she began to inspect their contents with a view to tabulate them and help the captain, but she gets so deep in them that she forgets time altogether, and I have often found her, after having been several hours in the library, sitting there poring over a huge volume without having made a single note or jotting! The captain is quite facetious about it, and said yesterday that if she didnât work a little harder heâd have to dismiss her from the service anâ ship a new hand. Then he dragged us both out for a long walk on the beach. We cannot resist him. Nobody can. And such cream as we have!âmore like thin butter than cream. And such quantities of it too, for he declares he is very fond of it, and must always have plenty on hand. But I cannot help thinking it is for our sakes he has it, for although he talks much about it and makes great demonstration and noise when he drinks it, he does not really consume muchâand you know it must be drunk by somebody, else it would spoil. Oh! we are having, as the captain himself says, a remarkably jolly time of it here, and only want you to make our happiness complete. But with all his fun and energy and cheerfulness, I cannot avoid noticing that dear Captain Bream is frequently very pensive and absent. I cannot help thinking sometimes that he is the victim of some secret sorrow.ââ
At this point Ruth looked up in her motherâs face and burst into a fit of hilarious
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