The Lively Poll: A Tale of the North Sea by R. M. Ballantyne (best book clubs .TXT) đ
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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One of the curious results of this flood was that Bob was always more prompt to the summons to haul up the trawl than he had ever been before, more energetic in clawing the net inboard, and more eager to see and examine the contents of the cod-end. The explanation is simple. He had overheard his skipper say how fond Eve was of shellsâespecially of those which came from the bottom of the North Sea, and of all sorts of pretty and curious things, wherever they came from.
From that hour Bob Lumpy became a diligent collector of marine curiosities, and the very small particular corner of the vessel which he called his own became ere long quite a museum. They say that sympathy is apt to grow stronger between persons of opposite constitutions. If this be so, perhaps it was his natureâhis bold, hearty, gushing, skylarking spirit, his strong rugged frame, his robust health, his carroty hair, his appley cheeks, his eagle nose, his flashing eyesâthat drew him so powerfully to the helpless, tender little invalid, with her delicate frame and pale cheeks, straight little nose, bud of a mouth, and timid, though by no means cowardly, spirit.
On another occasion Bob overheard Lockley again talking about Eve. âIâm sorry for the poor thing,â he said to Peter Jay, as they paced the deck together; âsheâs got such a wretched home, anâ her motherâs such a drunken bruââ
Lockley checked himself, and did not finish the sentence.
âThe doctor says,â he resumed, âthat if Eve had only a bath-chair or suthinâ oâ that sort, to get wheeled about in the fresh air, sheâd very likely get better as she growed olderâspecially if she had good victuals. You see, small as she is, and young as she looks, sheâs over fifteen. But even if she had the chair, poor thing! who would wheel it for her? It would be no use unless it was done regular, anâ her mother canât do itâor wonât.â
From that hour Bob Lumpy became a miser. He had been a smoker like the rest of the crew, but he gave up âbaccy.â He used to take an occasional glass of beer or spirits when on shore or on board the copers, but he became a total abstainer, much to his own benefit in every way, and as a result he became richâin an extremely small way.
There was a very small, thin, and dirty, but lively and intelligent boy in Yarmouth, who loved Bob Lumsden better, if possible, than himself. His name was Pat Stiver. The affection was mutual. Bob took this boy into his confidence.
One day, a considerable time after Bobâs discovery of Eve, Pat, having nothing to do, sauntered to the end of Gorleston Pier, and there to his inexpressible joy, met his friend. Before he had recovered sufficiently from surprise to utter a word, Bob seized him by the arms, lifted him up, and shook him.
âTake care, Lumpy,â cried the boy, âIâm wery tender, like an over-young chicken. Youâd better set me down before I comes in pieces.â
âWhy, Stiver, youâre the very man I was thinkinâ of,â said Lumpy, setting the boy on the edge of the pier, and sitting down beside him.
Stiver looked proud, and felt six inches taller.
âListen,â said Bob, with an earnest look that was apt to captivate his friends; âI want help. Will you do somethinâ for me?â
âAnything,â replied the boy with emphasis, âfrom pitch and toss to manslaughter!â
âWell, look here. You know Eve Mooney?â
âDo I know the blessedest angel in all Gorleston? In course I does. Wot of her?â
âSheâs illâvery ill,â said Lumpy.
âYou might as well tell me, when itâs daytime, that the sunâs up,â returned Pat.
âDonât be so awful sharp, Stiver, else Iâll have to snub you.â
âWhich youâve onây got to frown, Bob Lumpy, anâ the deedâs done.â
Bob gave a short laugh, and then proceeded to explain matters to his friend: how he had been saving up his wages for some time past to buy a second-hand bath-chair for Eve, because the doctor had said it would do her so much good, especially if backed up with good victuals.
âItâs the wittles as bothers me, Stiver,â said Bob, regarding his friend with a puzzled expression.
âHâm! well,â returned the small boy seriously, âwittles has bothered me too, off anâ on, pretty well since I was born, though Iâm bound to confess I does get a full blow-out now anâââ
âHold on, Stiver; youâre away on the wrong tack,â cried Bob, interrupting. âI donât mean the difficulty oâ findinâ wittles, but how to get Eve to take âem.â
âTell her to shut her eyes anâ open her mouth, anâ then shove âem in,â suggested Pat.
âIâll shove you into the sea if you go on talking balderdash,â said Bob. âNow, look here, you hainât got nothinâ to do, have you!â
âIf you mean in the way oâ my purfession, Bob, youâre right. I purfess to do anything, but nobody as yet has axed me to do nothinâ. In the ways oâ huntinâ up wittles, howsever, Iâve plenty to do. Itâs hard lines, and yet I ainât extravagant in my expectations. Most coves require three good meals a day, wâereas Iâm content with one. I begins at breakfast, anâ I goes on a-eatinâ promiskoously all day till arter supperâwâen I can get it.â
âJust so, Stiver. Now, I want to engage you professionally. Your dooties will be to hang about Mrs Mooneyâs but in an offhand, careless sort oâ way, like them superintendent chaps as git five or six hundred a year for doinâ nuffin, anâ be ready at any time to offer to give Eve a shove in the chair. But first youâll have to take the chair to her, anâ say it was sent to her fromââ
âRobert Lumsden, Esquire,â said Pat, seeing that his friend hesitated.
âNot at all, you little idiot,â said Bob sharply. âYou mustnât mention my name on no account.â
âFrom a gentleman, then,â suggested Pat.
âThat might do; but I ainât a gentleman, Stiver, anâ I canât allow you to go anâ tell lies.â
âIâd like to know who is if you ainât,â returned the boy indignantly. âAinât a gentleman a man wotâs gentle? Anâ wâen you was the other day a-spreadinâ of them lovely shells, anâ crabs, anâ sea-goinâ kooriosities out on her pocket-hankercher, didnât I see that you was gentle?â
âIâll be pretty rough on you, Pat, in a minit, if you donât hold your jaw,â interrupted Bob, who, however, did not seem displeased with his friendâs definition of a gentleman. âWell, you may say what you like, only be sure you say whatâs true. Anâ then youâll have to take some nice things as Iâll get for her from time to time wâen I comes ashore. But thereâll be difficulties, I doubt, in the way of gettinâ her to take wittles wâen she donât know who they comes from.â
âOh, donât you bother your head about that,â said Pat. âIâll manage it. Iâm used to difficulties. Just you leave it to me, anâ itâll be all right.â
âWell, I will, Pat; so youâll come round with me to the old furniturâ shop in Yarmouth, anâ fetch the chair. I got it awful cheap from the old chap as keeps the shop wâen I told him what it was for. Then youâll bring it out to Eve, anâ try to git her to have a ride in it to-day, if you can. Iâll see about the wittles arter. Hainât quite worked that out in my mind yet. Now, as to wages. I fear I canât offer you noneââ
âI never axed for none,â retorted Pat proudly.
âThatâs true Pat; but Iâm not a-goinâ to make you slave for nuthinâ. Iâll just promise you that Iâll save all I can oâ my wages, anâ give you what I can spare. Youâll just have to trust me as to that.â
âTrust you, Bob!â exclaimed Pat, with enthusiasm, âlook here, now; this is how the wind blows. If the Prime Minister oâ Rooshia was to come to me in full regimentals anâ offer to make me capting oâ the Horse Marines to the Hemperor, Iâd say, âNo thankee, Iâm engaged,â as the young woman said to the young man she didnât want to marry.â
The matter being thus satisfactorily settled, Bob Lumsden and his little friend went off to Yarmouth, intent on carrying out the first part of their plan.
It chanced about the same time that another couple were having a quiet chat together in the neighbourhood of Gorleston Pier. Fred Martin and Isa Wentworth had met by appointment to talk over a subject of peculiar interest to themselves. Let us approach and become eavesdroppers.
âNow, Fred,â said Isa, with a good deal of decision in her tone, âIâm not at all satisfied with your explanation. These mysterious and long visits you make to London ought to be accounted for, and as I have agreed to become your wife within the next three or four months, just to please you, the least you can do, I think, is to have no secrets from me. Besides, you have no idea what the people here and your former shipmates are saying about you.â
âIndeed, dear lass, what do they say?â
âWell, they say now youâve got well they canât understand why you should go loafing about doinâ nothinâ or idling your time in London, instead of goinâ to sea.â
âIdlinâ my time!â exclaimed Fred with affected indignation. âHow do they know Iâm idlinâ my time? What if I was studyinâ to be a doctor or a parson?â
âPerhaps theyâd say that was idlinâ your time, seeinâ that youâre only a fisherman,â returned Isa, looking up in her loverâs face with a bright smile. âBut tell me, Fred, why should you have any secret from me?â
âBecause, dear lass, the thing that gives me so much pleasure and hope is not absolutely fixed, and I donât want you to be made anxious. This much I will tell you, however: you know I passed my examination for skipper when I was home last time, and now, through Godâs goodness, I have been offered the command of a smack. If all goes well, I hope to sail in her next week; then, on my return, I hope toâto take the happiest. Well, well, Iâll say no more about that, as weâre gettinâ near motherâs door. But tell me, Isa, has Uncle Martin been worrying mother again when I was away?â
âNo. When he found out that you had got the money that was left to her, and had bought an annuity for her with it, he went away, and Iâve not seen him since.â
âThatâs well. Iâm glad of that.â
âBut am I to hear nothing more about this smack, not even her name?â
âNothing more just now, Isa. As to her name, itâs not yet fixed. But, trust me, you shall know all in good time.â
As they had now reached the foot of Mrs Martinâs stair, the subject was dropped.
They found the good woman in the act of supplying Granny Martin with a cup of tea. There was obvious improvement in the attic. Sundry little articles of luxury were there which had not been there before.
âYou see, my boy,â said Mrs Martin to Fred, as they sat round the social board, ânow that the Lord has sent me enough to get along without slavinâ as I usedâto do, I takes more time to make granny comfortable, anâ Iâve got her a noo chair, and noo specs, which she was much in want of, for the old uns was scratched to that extent you could hardly see through âem, besides beinâ cracked across both eyes. Ainât they much better, dear?â
The old woman, seated in the attic window, turned her head towards the tea-table and nodded benignantly once or twice; but the kind look soon faded into the wonted air of patient contentment, and the old head turned to the sea as the needle turns to the pole, and the soft murmur was heard,
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