“For them the rod of chastisement
flowered.”
A stranger suddenly dropped in these
Shetland islands, especially in winter, would not
unnaturally say, “how monotonously dreary life
must be here! In such isolation the heart must
lose its keen sense of sympathy, and be irresponsive
and dumb.” That is the great mistake about
the affections. It is not the rise and fall of
empires, the birth and death of kings, or the marching
of armies that move them most. When they answer
from their depths, it is to the domestic joys and
tragedies of life. Ever since Eve wept over her
slain son, and Rebecca took the love-gifts of Isaac,
this has been the case; and until that mighty angel,
who stands on the sea and land, cries, “Time
shall be no more,” the home loves, and the home
trials, will be the center of humanity’s deepest
and sweetest emotions. So, then, the little Shetland
town had in it all the elements necessary for a life
full of interest-birth and death, love and
sorrow, the cruel hand and the generous hand, the
house of mourning and the house of joy.
Just before Christmas-tide, Tulloch
was sitting alone at midnight. His malady was
too distressing to allow him to sleep, but a Norseman
scorns to complain of physical suffering, and prefers,
so long as it is possible, to carry on the regular
routine of his life. He was unable to go much
out, and his wasted body showed that it was under a
constant torture, but he said nothing, only he welcomed
Margaret and the doctor warmly, and seemed to be glad
of their unspoken sympathy. It had been stormy
all day, but the wind had gone down, and a pale moon
glimmered above the dim, tumbling sea. All was
quiet, not a footfall, not a sound except the dull
roar of the waves breaking upon the beach.
Suddenly a woman’s sharp cry
cut the silence like a knife. It was followed
by sobs and shrieks and passing footsteps and the clamor
of many voices. Every one must have noticed how
much more terrible noises are at night than in the
daytime; the silly laughter of drunkards and fools,
the maniac’s shout, the piercing shriek of a
woman in distress, seem to desecrate its peaceful gloom,
and mock the slow, mystic panorama of the heavens.
Tulloch felt unusually impressed by this night-tumult,
and early in the morning sent his servant out to discover
its meaning.
“It was Maggie Barefoot, sir;
her man was drowned last night; she has six bairns
and not a bread-winner among them. But what then?
Magnus Tulloch went too, and he had four little lads-their
mother died at Lammas-tide. They’ll be
God’s bairns now, for they have neither kith
nor kin. It is a sad business, I say that.”
“Go and bring them here.”
The order was given without consideration,
and without any conscious intention. He was amazed
himself when he had uttered it. The man was an
old servant, and said hesitatingly, “Yes, but
they are no kin of thine.”
“All the apples on the same
tree have come from the same root, Bêle; and
it is like enough that all the Tullochs will have had
one forbear. I would be a poor Tulloch to see
one of the name wanting a bite and sup. Yes,
indeed.”
He was very thoughtful after seeing
the children, and when Dr. Balloch came, he said to
him at once: “Now, then, I will do what
thou hast told me to do-settle up my affairs
with this world forever. Wilt thou help me?”
“If I think thou does the right
thing, I will help thee, but I do not think it is
right to give thy money to Margaret Vedder. She
has enough and to spare. ‘Cursed be he
that giveth unto the rich.’ It was Mahomet
and Anti-Christ that said the words, but for all that
they are good words.”
“I have no kin but a fifth cousin
in Leith; he is full of gold and honor. All that
I have would be a bawbee to him. But this is what
I think, my money is Shetland money, made of Shetland
fishers, and it ought to stay in Shetland.”
“I think that too.”
“Well, then, we are of one mind
so far. Now my wish is to be bread-giver even
when I am dead, to be bread-giver to the children
whose fathers God has taken. Here are Magnus Tulloch’s
four, and Hugh Petrie’s little lad, and James
Traill’s five children, and many more of whom
I know not. My houses, big and little, shall be
homes for them. My money shall buy them meal
and meat and wadmall to clothe them. There are
poor lonely women who will be glad to care for them,
eight or ten to each, and Suneva Fae and Margaret Vedder
will see that the women do their duty. What thinkest
thou?”
“Now, then, I think this, that
God has made thy will for thee. Moreover, thou
hast put a good thought into my heart also. Thou
knows I brought in my hand a little money when I came
to Shetland, and it has grown, I know not how.
I will put mine with thine, and though we are two
childless old men, many children shall grow up and
bless us.”
Into this scheme Tulloch threw all
his strength and foresight and prudence. The
matter was urgent, and there were no delays, and no
waste of money. Three comfortable fishermen’s
cottages that happened to be vacant, were fitted with
little bunks, and plenty of fleeces for bedding.
Peat was stacked for firing, and meal and salted fish
sent in; so that in three days twenty-three fatherless,
motherless children were in warm, comfortable homes.
Suneva entered into the work with
perfect delight. She selected the mothers for
each cottage, and she took good care that they kept
them clean and warm, that the little ones’ food
was properly cooked, and their clothes washed and
mended. If there were a sorrow or a complaint
it was brought to her, and Suneva was not one to blame
readily a child.
Never man went down to the grave with
his hands so full of beneficent work as Tulloch.
Through it he took the sacrament of pain almost joyfully,
and often in the long, lonely hours of nightly suffering,
he remembered with a smile of pleasure, the little
children sweetly sleeping in the homes he had provided
for them. The work grew and prospered wonderfully;
never had there been a busier, happier winter in Lerwick.
As was customary, there were tea-parties at Suneva’s
and elsewhere nearly every night, and at them the
women sewed for the children, while the men played
the violin, or recited from the Sagas, or sung
the plaintive songs of the Islands.
Margaret brought the dying man constant
intelligence of his bounty: the children, one
or two at a time, were allowed to come and see him;
twice, leaning on Dr. Balloch, and his servant Bêle,
he visited the homes, and saw the orphans at their
noonday meals. He felt the clasp of grateful
hands, and the kiss of baby lips that could not speak
their thanks. His last was the flower of his life-work
and he saw the budding of it, and was satisfied with
its beauty.
One morning in the following April,
Margaret received the letter which Suneva had prophesied
would arrive by the twentieth, if the weather were
favorable. Nowhere in the world has the term,
“weather permitting,” such significance
as in these stormy seas. It is only necessary
to look at the mail steamers, so strongly built, so
bluff at the bows, and nearly as broad as they are
long, to understand that they expect to have to take
plenty of hard blows and buffetings. It was the
first steamer that had arrived for months, and though
it made the harbor in a blinding snow-storm, little
Jan would not be prevented from going into the town
to see if it brought a letter. For the boy’s
dream of every thing grand and noble centered in his
father. He talked of him incessantly; he longed
to see him with all his heart.
Margaret also was restless and faint
with anxiety; she could not even knit. Never
were two hours of such interminable length. At
last she saw him coming, his head bent to the storm,
his fleet feet skimming the white ground, his hands
deep in his pockets. Far off, he discovered his
mother watching for him; then he stopped a moment,
waved the letter above his head, and hurried onward.
It was a good letter, a tender, generous, noble letter,
full of love and longing, and yet alive with the stirring
story of right trampling wrong under foot. The
child listened to it with a glowing face:
“I would I were with my father
and Snorro,” he said, regretfully.
“Would thou then leave me, Jan?”
“Ay, I would leave thee, mother.
I would leave thee, and love thee, as my father does.
I could stand by my father’s side, I could fire
a gun, or reef a sail, as well as Snorro. I would
not be afraid of any thing; no, I would not.
It is such a long, long time till a boy grows up to
be a man! When I am a man, thou shall see that
I will have a ship of my own.”
It is only in sorrow bad weather masters
us; in joy we face the storm and defy it. Margaret
never thought of the snow as any impediment.
She went first to Suneva, and then to Dr. Balloch with
her letter; and she was so full of happiness that
she did not notice the minister was very silent and
preoccupied. After a little, he said, “Margaret,
I must go now to Tulloch; it has come to the last.”
“Well, then, I think he will
be glad. He has suffered long and sorely.”
“Yet a little while ago he was
full of life, eager for money, impatient of all who
opposed him. Thou knowest how hard it often was
to keep peace between him and thy father. Now
he has forgotten the things that once so pleased him;
his gold, his houses, his boats, his business, have
dropped from his heart, as the toys drop from the hand
of a sleepy child.”
“Father went to see him a week ago.”
“There is perfect peace between
them now. Thy father kissed him when they said
‘good-by.’ When they meet again, they
will have forgotten all the bitterness, they will
remember only that they lived in the same town, and
worshiped in the same church, and were companions in
the same life. This morning we are going to eat
together the holy bread; come thou with me.”
As they walked through the town the
minister spoke to a group of fishers, and four from
among them silently followed him. Tulloch was
still in his chair, and his three servants stood beside
him. The table was spread, the bread was broken,
and, with prayers and tears, the little company ate
it together. Then they bade each other farewell,
a farewell tranquil and a little sad-said
simply, and without much speaking. Soon afterward
Tulloch closed his eyes and the minister and Margaret
watched silently beside him. Only once again the
dying man spoke. He appeared to be sleeping heavily,
but his lips suddenly moved and he said: “We
shall see Nanna to-morrow!”
“We!” whispered Margaret. “Whom
does he mean?”
“One whom we can not see; one
who knows the constellations, and has come to take
him to his God.”
Just at sunset a flash of strange
light transfigured for a moment the pallor of his
face; he opened wide his blue eyes, and standing erect,
bowed his head in an untranslatable wonder and joy.
It was the moment of release, and the weary body fell
backward, deserted and dead, into the minister’s
arms.
During the few months previous to
his death, Tulloch had been much in every one’s
heart and on every one’s tongue. There had
not been a gathering of any kind in which his name
had not been the prominent one; in some way or other,
he had come into many lives. His death made a
general mourning, especially among the fishers, to
whom he had ever been a wise and trustworthy friend.
He had chosen his grave in a small islet half a mile
distant from Lerwick-a lonely spot where
the living never went, save to bury the dead.
The day of burial was a clear one,
with a salt, fresh wind from the south-west.
Six fishermen made a bier of their oars, and laid the
coffin upon it. Then the multitude followed, singing
as they went, until the pier was reached. Boat
after boat was filled, and the strange procession
kept a little behind the one bearing the coffin and
the minister. The snow lay white and unbroken
on the island, and, as it was only a few acres in
extent, the sea murmured unceasingly around all its
shores.
The spot was under a great rock carved
by storms into cloud-like castles and bastions.
Eagles watched them with icy gray eyes from its summit,
and the slow cormorant, and the sad sea-gulls.
Overhead a great flock of wild swans were taking their
majestic flight to the solitary lakes of Iceland,
uttering all the time an inspiring cry, the very essence
of eager expectation and of joyful encouragement.
Dr. Balloch stood, with bared head and uplifted eyes,
watching them, while they laid the mortal part of
his old friend in “that narrow house, whose
mark is one gray stone.” Then looking around
on the white earth, and the black sea, and the roughly-clad,
sad-faced fishers, he said, almost triumphantly-
“The message came forth from
him in whom we live, and move, and have our being:
“Who is nearer to us than breathing,
and closer than hands or feet.
“Come up hither and dwell in
the house of the Lord forever.
“The days of thy sorrow have
been sufficient; henceforward there is laid up for
thee the reward of exceeding joy.
“Thou shalt no more fear the
evil to come; the bands of suffering are loosed.
Thy Redeemer hath brought thee a release from sorrow.
“So he went forth unto his Maker;
he attained unto the beginning of peace.
“He departed to the habitations
of just men made perfect, to the communion of saints,
to the life everlasting.”
Then he threw a few spadefuls of earth
into the grave, and every man in turn did the same,
till the sepulture was fully over. Silently then
the boats filled, and all went to their homes.
They were solemn, but not sorrowful. The simple,
pathetic service left behind it a feeling as of triumph.
It had shown them they were mortal, but assured them
also of immortality.
During the following summer Margaret
received many letters from Jan; and she wrote many
to him. Nothing is so conducive to a strong affection
as a long sweet course of love-letters, and both of
them impressed their souls on the white paper which
bore to each other their messages of affection.
It was really their wooing time, and never lover was
half so impatient to claim his bride, as Jan was to
see again his fair, sweet Margaret. But it was
not likely that he could return for another year,
and Margaret set herself to pass the time as wisely
and happily as possible.
Nor did she feel life to be a dreary
or monotonous affair. She was far too busy for
morbid regrets or longings, for ennui, or impatience.
Between Dr. Balloch, little Jan, the “Tulloch
Homes,” and her own house, the days were far
too short. They slipped quickly into weeks, and
the weeks into months, and the months grew to a year,
and then every morning she awoke with the same thought-“Even
to-day Jan might come.” Little Jan shared
her joyous expectations. He was always watching
the horizon for any strange-looking craft. The
last thing at night, the first in the morning, sometimes
during the night, he scanned the bay, which was now
filling fast with fishing boats from all quarters.
One Sunday morning very, very early,
he came to his mother’s bedside. “Wake,
my mother! There is a strange ship in the bay.
She is coming straight to harbor. Oh! I
feel surely in my heart, that it is my father’s
ship! Let me go. Let me go now, I ask thee.”
Margaret was at the window ere the
child ceased speaking. “Thou may go,”
she said, “for I certainly think it is ‘The
Lapwing.’”
He had fled at the first words, and
Margaret awoke Elga, and the fires were kindled, and
the breakfast prepared, and the happy wife dressed
herself in the pale blue color that Jan loved; and
she smiled gladly to see how beautifully it contrasted
with the golden-brown of her hair, and the delicate
pink in her cheeks.
As for the child, his clear, sharp
eyes soon saw very plainly that the vessel had come
to anchor in the bay. “Well,” he said,
“that will be because the tide does not serve
yet.” John Semple, an old Scot from Ayrshire,
was on the pier, the only soul in sight. “John,
thou loose the boat, and row me out to ‘The
Lapwing.’ It is ‘The Lapwing.’
I know it is. Come, thou must be in a hurry.”
“‘Hurry’ is the
deil’s ain word, and I’ll hurry for naebody;
forbye, I wadna lift an oar for man nor bairn on the
Sawbath day.”
“Dost thou think it is ‘The Lapwing?’”
“It may be: I’ll no say it isn’t.”
The child had unfastened the boat
while he was talking; he leaped into it, and lifted
an oar. “Then I must scull, John. Thou
might go with me!”
“I’m no gaun to break
the Sawbath, an’ a water way is waur than a land
way, for then you’ll be atween the deil an’
the deep sea. Bide at hame, Jan, an’ ye’ll
be a wise lad.”
Jan shook his head, and went away
by himself. The bay was smooth as glass, and
he paddled with marvelous ease and speed. Very
soon he came alongside the yacht: the sailors
were holystoning the deck, but there was not a face
looked over the side that little Jan knew.
“Well, then, is this ‘The Lapwing?’”
he asked.
“That’s her name; what’s your name,
you little monkey?”
“Jan Vedder. Throw me a rope.”
The men laughed as if at some excellent
joke, and taunted and teased the child until he was
in a passion. In the middle of the quarrel Jan
himself came on deck.
“A lad as wants to come on board, Captain.”
Jan looked down at the lad who wanted
to come on board, and the bright, eager face gave
him a sudden suspicion. “What is thy name?”
he asked.
“Jan Vedder. Wilt thou throw me a rope?”
Then the captain turned and gave some
orders, and in a few minutes little Jan stood on the
deck of “The Lapwing.” His first glance,
his first movement was toward the handsomely dressed
officer who was watching him with such a smiling,
loving face.
“Thou art my father! I
know thou art!” and with the words he lifted
up his face and arms as if to be kissed and embraced.
Then they went into the cabin and
Snorro was called, and perhaps Jan had a little pang
of jealousy when he witnessed the joy of the child,
and saw him folded to Snorro’s big heart.
Jan and Snorro were already dressed in their finest
uniforms. They had only been waiting for the
daybreak to row into harbor. But now there was
no need of delay. “My mother is waiting
for thee,” said little Jan, anxiously. “Come,
let us go to her.”
It was still very early. John
Semple had disappeared, and not a soul else was stirring.
But this time when Jan approached his old home, the
welcome was evident from afar. The chimneys were
smoking, the blinds raised, the door wide open, and
Margaret, beautiful and loving, stood in it, with
beaming face and open arms to welcome him.
Then there was a wonderful breakfast,
and they sat over it until the bells were ringing
for church. “There will be time to talk
afterward,” said Snorro, “but now, what
better thing can be done than to go to church?
It will be the best place of all, and it is well said,
’for a happy hour a holy roof.’ What
dost thou think, Jan?”
“I think as thou dost, and I
see the same answer in my Margaret’s face.
Well, then, we will take that road.”
So Jan, with his wife upon his arm,
went first, and Snorro, holding little Jan by the
hand, followed. The congregation were singing
a psalm, a joyful one, it seemed to Jan, and they
quietly walked to the minister’s pew, which
was always reserved for strangers.
Ere they reached it there was a profound
sensation, and Dr. Balloch slightly raised himself
and looked at the party. Jan was in his full
uniform, and so was Snorro, but there was no mistaking
either of the men. And no mistaking the tone
of the service which followed! It seemed as if
the minister had flung off fifty years, and was again
talking to his flock with the fire and enthusiasm of
his youth. His prayer was like a song of triumph;
his sermon, the old joyful invitation of the heart
that had found its lost treasure, and called upon
its neighbors to come and rejoice with it. The
service ended in a song that was a benediction, and
a benediction that was a song.
Then Dr. Balloch hastened to come
down, and Jan, seeing how he trembled with joy, went
to meet and support him; and so there, even on the
pulpit stairs, the good minister kissed and blessed
him, and called him, “my dear son.”
Peter put out both hands to Jan, and Margaret embraced
Suneva, and in the church-yard the whole congregation
waited, and there was scarcely a dry eye among either
men or women.
“Thou come home to my house
to-night, Jan,” said Peter, “thou, and
thy wife and child; come, and be gladly welcome, for
this is a great day to me.”
“Come, all of you,” said
Suneva, “and Snorro, he must come too.”
So they spent the night at Peter’s
house, and the next morning Peter walked to his store
between his son-in-law and his grandson, the proudest
and happiest man in Shetland. All, and far more
than all of his old love for Jan had come back to
his heart. Jan could have asked him now for the
half of his fortune, and it would have been given
cheerfully.