A voyage across the Atlantic Ocean
in the year 1799 was not the every-day affair that
it has come to be at the present time. There
were no “ocean greyhounds” then.
The passage was a long and trying one in the clumsy
craft of those days, and people looked upon it as a
more serious affair than they now do on a tour round
the world.
In the year 1799 few people thought
of travelling for mere pleasure. North, south,
east, and west, the men went on missions of discovery,
of conquest, or of commerce; but the women and children
abode at home, save, of course, when they ventured
out to seek new homes in that new world which was
drawing so many to its shores.
It was therefore not to be wondered
at that the notion of Eric Copeland going out to his
father in far-away Nova Scotia should form the subject
of more than one family council at Oakdene Manor, the
beautiful country seat of the Copeland family, situated
in one of the prettiest parts of Warwickshire.
Eric was the only son of Doctor Copeland,
surgeon-in-chief of the Seventh Fusiliers, the
favourite regiment of the Duke of Kent, the father
of Queen Victoria. This regiment formed part
of the garrison at Halifax, then under the command
of the royal duke himself; and the doctor had written
to say that if the squire, Eric’s grandfather,
approved, he would like Eric to come out to him, as
his term of service had been extended three years
beyond what he expected, and he wanted to have his
boy with him. At the same time, he left the matter
entirely in the squire’s hands for him to decide.
So far as the old gentleman was concerned,
he decided at once.
“Send the boy out there to that
wild place, and have him scalped by an Indian or gobbled
by a bear before he’s there a month? Not
a bit of it. I won’t hear of it.
He’s a hundred times better off here.”
The squire, be it observed, held very
vague notions about Nova Scotia, and indeed the American
continent generally, in spite of his son’s endeavours
to enlighten him. He still firmly believed that
there were as many wigwams as houses in New York,
and that Indians in full war-paint and plumes were
every day seen on the streets of Philadelphia; while
as for poor little Nova Scotia, it was more than his
mind could take in how the Duke of Kent could ever
bring himself to spend a week in such an outlandish
place, not to speak of a number of years.
So soon as Eric learned of his father’s
request, he was not less quick in coming to a conclusion,
but it was of a precisely opposite kind to the squire’s.
He was what the Irish would call “a broth of
a boy.” Fifteen last birthday, five feet
six inches in height, broad of shoulder and stout
of limb, yet perfectly proportioned, as nimble on
his feet as a squirrel, and as quick of eye as a king-bird,
entirely free from any trace of nervousness or timidity,
good-looking in that sense of the word which means
more than merely handsome, courteous in his manners,
and quite up to the mark in his books, Eric represented
the best type of the British boy as he looked about
him with his brave brown eyes, and longed to be something
more than simply a school-boy, and to see a little
of that great world up and down which his father had
been travelling ever since he could remember.
“Of course I want to go to father,”
said he, promptly and decidedly. “I don’t
believe there are any bears or Indians at Halifax;
and even if there should be, I don’t care.
I’m not afraid of them.”
He had not the look of a boy that
could be easily frightened, or turned aside from anything
upon which he had set his heart, and the old squire
felt as though he were seeing a youthful reflection
of himself in the sturdy spirit of resolution shown
by his grandson.
“But, Eric, lad,” he began
to argue, “whether the Indians and bears are
plentiful or not, I don’t see why you want to
leave Oakdene, and go away out to a wild place that
is only fit for soldiers. You’re quite
happy with us here, aren’t you?” And the
old gentleman’s face took on rather a reproachful
expression as he put the question.
Eric’s face flushed crimson,
and crossing over to where the squire sat, he bent
down and kissed his wrinkled forehead tenderly.
“I am quite happy, grandpa.
You and grandma do so much for me that it would be
strange if I wasn’t. But you know I have
been more with you than I have with my own father;
and now when he wants me to go out to him, I want
to go too. You can’t blame me, can you?”
What Eric said was true enough.
The doctor’s regiment had somehow come in for
more than its share of foreign service. It had
carried its colours with credit over the burning plains
of India, upon the battle-fields of the Continent,
and then, crossing to America, had taken its part,
however ineffectually, in the struggle which ended
so happily in the birth of a new nation. During
all of his years Eric had remained at Oakdene, seeing
nothing of his father save when he came to them on
leave for a few months at a time.
These home-comings of the doctor were
the great events in Eric’s life. Nothing
was allowed to interfere with his enjoyment of his
father’s society. All studies were laid
aside, and one day of happiness followed another,
as together they rode to hounds, whipped the trout-streams,
shot over the coverts where pheasants were in plenty,
or went on delightful excursions to lovely places
round about the neighbourhood.
Dr. Copeland enjoyed his release from
the routine of military duty quite as much as Eric
did his freedom from school, and it would not have
been easy to say which of the two went in more heartily
for a good time.
It was just a year since the doctor
had last been home on leave, and a year seems a very
long time to a boy of fifteen, so that when the letter
came proposing that Eric should go out to his father
(it should have been told before that his mother was
dead, having been taken away from him when he was
a very little fellow), and spend three long years
with him without a break, if the doctor had been in
Kamtchatka or Tierra del Fuego instead
of simply in Nova Scotia, Eric would not have hesitated
a moment, but have jumped at the offer.
The old squire was very loath to part
with his grandson, and it was because he knew it would
be so that the doctor had not positively asked for
Eric to be sent out, but had left the question to be
decided by the squire.
Perhaps Eric might have failed to
carry his point but for the help given him by Major
Maunsell, a brother-officer of Doctor Copeland’s,
who had been home on leave, and in whose charge Eric
was to be placed if it was decided to let him go.
The major had come to spend a day
or two at Oakdene a little while before taking his
leave of England, and of course the question of Eric’s
returning to Nova Scotia with him came up for discussion.
Eric pleaded his case very earnestly.
“Now please listen to me a moment,”
said he, taking advantage of a pause in the conversation.
“I love you, grandpa and grandma, very dearly,
and am very happy with you here; but I love my father
too, and I never see him, except just for a little
while, when he comes home on leave, and it would be
lovely to be with him all the time for three whole
years. Besides that, I do want to see America,
and this is such a good chance. I am nearly
sixteen now, and by the time father gets back I’ll
have to be going to college, and then, you know, he
says he’s going to leave the army and settle
down here, so that dear knows when I can ever get
the chance to go again. Oh! please let me go,
grandpa, won’t you?”
Major Maunsell’s eyes glistened
as he looked at Eric and listened to him. He
was an old bachelor himself, and he could not help
envying Doctor Copeland for his handsome, manly son.
At once he entered into full sympathy with him in
his great desire, and determined to use all his influence
in supporting him.
“There’s a great deal
of sense in what the boy says,” he remarked.
“It is such a chance as he may not get again
in a hurry. There’s nothing to harm him
out in Halifax; and his father is longing to have him,
for he’s always talking to me about him, and
reading me bits out of his letters.”
So the end of it was that the major
and Eric between them won the day, and after taking
the night to think over it, the good old squire announced
the next morning at breakfast that he would make no
further objections, and that Eric might go.
The troop-ship in which Major Maunsell
was going would sail in a week, so there was no time
to be lost in getting Eric ready for the voyage, and
for the long sojourn in the distant colony. Many
were the trunks of clothing, books, and other things
that had to be packed with greatest care, and their
number would have been doubled if the major had not
protested against taking the jams, jellies, pickles,
medicines, and other domestic comforts that the loving
old couple wanted Eric to take with him, because they
felt sure he could get nothing so good out in Halifax.
All too quickly for them the day came
when they were to say good-bye to their grandson,
and the parting was a very tearful and trying one.
Full of joy as Eric felt, he could not keep back the
tears when his white-haired grandmother hugged him
again and again to her heart, exclaiming fervently,
“God bless and keep my boy!
May his almighty arms be underneath and round about
you, my darling. Put your trust in him, Eric,
no matter what may happen.”
And the bluff old squire himself was
suspiciously moist about the eyes as the carriage
drove away and Eric was really off to Chatham in charge
of Major Maunsell, with whom he had by this time got
to be on the best of terms.
At Chatham they found their ship in
the final stage of preparation for the voyage.
They were to sail in the Francis, a fine, fast
gun-brig of about three hundred tons, which had in
her hold a very valuable cargo, consisting of the
Duke of Kent’s library, together with a quantity
of very costly furniture, precious wines, and other
luxuries intended to make as comfortable as possible
the lot of his royal highness in the garrison at Halifax.
The major and Eric were assigned a roomy cabin to
themselves, in which they at once proceeded to make
themselves at home.
During the few days that intervened
before the sailing of the Francis, Eric’s
enjoyment of the novel scenes around him could hardly
be put into words. All he knew about the sea
was what he had learned from a summer now and then
at a watering-place; and the great gathering of big
ships at Chatham; the unceasing bustle as some came
in from long voyages and others went forth to take
their places upon distant stations; the countless
sailors and dock-hands swarming like ants hither and
thither; the important-looking officers strutting about
in gold-laced coats, and calling out their commands
in such hoarse tones that Eric felt tempted to ask
if they all had very bad colds; the shrill sound of
the boatswains’ whistles that seemed to have
no particular meaning; the martial music of bands
playing apparently for no other reason than just because
they wanted to, all this made up a wonder-world
for Eric in which he found a great deal of delight.
There was just one cloud upon his
happiness. Among his many pets at Oakdene his
special favourite was a splendid mastiff that the squire
had given him as a birthday present two years before.
Prince was a superb animal, and devoted to his young
master. No sooner had it been settled that Eric
should go out to his father than the boy at once asked
if his dog might not go with him. Major Maunsell
had no objection himself, but feared that the captain
of the Francis would not hear of it.
However, he thought that Eric might bring the dog up
to Chatham, and then if the captain would not let him
on board he could be sent back to Oakdene.
Prince accordingly accompanied him,
and a place having been found for him with a friend
of the major’s, his master had no peace of mind
until the question was settled. Some days passed
before he got a chance to see Captain Reefwell, who
was, of course, extremely busy; but at last he managed
to catch him one day just after lunch, when he seemed
in a pretty good humour, and without wasting time
preferred his request, trembling with eager hope as
he did so. The gruff old sailor at first bluntly
refused him; but Eric bravely returning to the charge,
his kind heart was moved to the extent of making him
say,
“Well, let me have a look at your dog, anyway.”
Hoping for the best, Eric ran off
and returned with Prince. Captain Reefwell scanned
the noble animal critically, and stretched out his
hand to pat him, whereupon the mastiff gravely lifted
his right paw and placed it in the captain’s
horny palm.
“Shiver my timbers! but the
dog’s got good manners,” said the captain
in surprise. “Did you teach him that?”
turning to Eric.
“Yes, sir,” replied Eric
proudly; “and he can do other things too.”
And he proceeded to put the big dog through a number
of tricks which pleased the old sailor so much that
finally he said, with a smile,
“All right, my lad. You
may bring your dog on board. But, mind you,
he comes before the mast. He’s not a cabin
passenger.”
“Oh, thank you, sir! thank you,
sir!” cried Eric joyfully. “I
won’t let you in the cabin, will I, Prince?
Isn’t it splendid? You’re to come
with me after all.” And he hugged the mastiff
as though he had been his own brother.