When Rollo was about twelve years
of age, he made a voyage to Europe under rather extraordinary
circumstances. He went alone; that is to say,
he had no one to take care of him. In fact, in
addition to being obliged to take care of himself,
he had also his little sister Jane to take care of;
for she went with him. The way it happened that
two such children were sent to sea on such a long
voyage, without any one to have them in charge, was
this.
Rollo’s father and mother had
gone to Europe to make a tour, a year before this
time, and had taken Rollo’s brother Nathan, or
Thanny, as Rollo used most frequently to call
him, with them. They had gone partly for pleasure,
but more especially on account of Mr. Holiday’s
health, which was not good. It was thought that
the voyage, and the recreation and pleasure of travelling
in Europe, would be a benefit to him. In certain
cases where a person’s health is impaired, especially
when one is slowly recovering from past sickness,
nothing is found to have a more beneficial effect
upon the patient than for him to go away somewhere
and have a good time. It was determined to try
the effect of this remedy upon Mr. Holiday, and so
he went to Europe. Mrs. Holiday went with him.
They took Thanny too, to be company for them on the
way. Thanny was at this time about seven years
old.
A child of that age, for a travelling
companion, is sometimes a source of great pleasure,
and sometimes, on the other hand, he is the means of
great annoyance and vexation. This depends upon
whether he is obedient, patient, quiet, and gentle
in his manners and demeanor, or noisy, inconsiderate,
wilful, and intractable. A great many children
act in such a manner, whenever they take a journey
or go out to ride with their parents, that their parents,
in self-defence, are obliged to adopt the plan of
almost always contriving to leave them behind.
It was not so, however, with Nathan.
He was an excellent boy in travelling, and always
made the ride or the journey more pleasant for those
who took him with them. This was the reason why,
when it was determined that Mr. and Mrs. Holiday should
go to England, that Mrs. Holiday was very desirous
that Nathan should go too. And so far as Nathan
was concerned, the voyage and the tour proved to be
all that Mr. and Mrs. Holiday expected or desired.
In regard to other points, however, it was less successful.
Mr. Holiday did not improve in health, and he did
not have a good time. Mrs. Holiday was anxious
about her husband’s health, and she was uneasy
too at being separated so long from her other two
children, Rollo and little Jane, especially
little Jane, whom she had learned to love
as if she were really her daughter. So, before
the year was ended, they both heartily wished themselves
back in America again.
But now Mr. Holiday’s health
grew worse, and he seemed too ill to return.
This was in the month of May. It was decided by
the physician, that it would not be best for him to
attempt to return until September, and perhaps not
until the following spring. Mrs. Holiday was herself
very much disappointed at this result. She, however,
submitted to it very cheerfully. “I must
be as good as Thanny,” said she. “He
submits patiently to his disappointments, and why
should not I submit to mine. His are as great,
I suppose, for him to bear as mine are for me.”
When Mrs. Holiday found that she could
not go to her children, she began to be very desirous
that her children should come to her. She was
at first almost afraid to propose such a thing to
her husband, as she did not see how any possible plan
could be formed for bringing Rollo and Jane across
the wide and boisterous Atlantic alone. She, however,
at length one day asked Mr. Holiday whether it would
not be possible in some way to accomplish it.
Mr. Holiday seemed half surprised
and half pleased when he heard this proposal.
At first he did not appear to know exactly what to
say, or even to think. He sat looking into the
fire, which was blazing in the grate before him, lost
apparently in a sort of pleasing abstraction.
There was a faint smile upon his countenance, but he
did not speak a word.
“That is an idea!” he
said, at length, in a tone of satisfaction. “That
is really an idea!”
Mrs. Holiday did not speak. She
awaited in silence, and with no little anxiety, the
result of her husband’s meditations.
“That is really quite an idea!”
he said at length. “Let us get Rollo and
Jane here, and then we shall feel entirely easy, and
can return to America whenever we get ready, be it
sooner or later. We shall be at home at once
where we are.”
“I suppose it will cost something
to have them come over,” said Mrs. Holiday.
She was not so anxious to have the children come as
to desire that the question should be decided without
having all the objections fully considered. Besides,
she was afraid that if the question were to be decided
hastily, without proper regard to the difficulties
that were in the way, there would be danger that it
would be reconsidered after more mature reflection,
and the decision reversed. So she wished that
every thing that could be brought against the project
should be fully taken into the account at the outset.
“I suppose,” said she,
“that their expenses in coming out, and in returning,
and in remaining here with us, in the interim, would
amount to a considerable sum.”
“Yes,” said Mr. Holiday; “but that
is of no consequence.”
“I don’t know what we
should do about having them taken care of on the passage,”
added Mrs. Holiday.
“O, there would be no difficulty
about that,” said Mr. Holiday. “George
could easily find some passenger coming out in the
ship, who would look after them while at sea, I have
no doubt. And if he should not find any one,
it would be of no consequence. Rollo could take
care of himself.”
“And of Jane, too?” asked Mrs. Holiday.
“Yes,” replied Mr. Holiday,
“and of Jane, too; that is, with the help of
the chambermaids. They have excellent chambermaids
on board the Atlantic steamers.”
So it was concluded to send for Rollo
and Jane to embark on board the steamer at New York,
and sail for Europe. Mr. Holiday wrote to Rollo’s
uncle George, requesting him to make the necessary
arrangements for the voyage, and then to take the
children to New York, and put them on board.
He was to commit them, if possible, to the charge of
some one of the passengers on board the ship.
If, for any reason, he should not succeed in finding
any passenger to take care of them, he was to state
the case to the captain of the ship, that he might
see to them a little from time to time; and, in addition
to this, he was to put them under the special charge
of one of the chambermaids, promising her that she
should be well rewarded for her services, on the arrival
of the ship in Liverpool.
The important tidings of the determination
which had been made, that Rollo and Jane should actually
cross the Atlantic, were first announced to the children
one evening near the end of May. They were eating
their supper at the time, seated on a stone seat at
the bottom of the garden, where there was a brook.
Their supper, as it consisted of a bowl of bread and
milk for each, was very portable; and they had accordingly
gone down to their stone seat to eat it, as they often
did on pleasant summer evenings. The stone seat
was in such a position that the setting sun shone
very cheerily upon it. On this occasion, Rollo
had finished his milk, and was just going down to
the brook by a little path which led that way, in
order to see if there were any fishes in the water;
while Jane was giving the last spoonful of her milk
to their kitten. On the stone near where Jane
was sitting was a small birdcage. This cage was
one which Jane used to put her kitten in. The
kitten was of a mottled color, which gave to its fur
somewhat the appearance of spots; and so Jane called
the little puss her tiger. As it was obviously
proper that a tiger should be kept in a cage, Jane
had taken a canary birdcage, which she found one day
in the garret, and had used it to put the kitten in.
As she took the precaution never to keep the prisoner
shut up long at a time, and as she almost always fed
it in the cage, the kitten generally made no objections
to going in whenever Jane desired it.
“Here comes uncle George,” said Rollo.
Jane was so busy pouring the spoonful
of milk through the bars of the cage into a little
shallow basin, which she kept for the purpose within,
that she could not look up.
“He is coming down through the
garden,” added Rollo; “and he has got a
letter in his hand. It’s from mother, I
know.”
So saying, Rollo began to caper about
with delight, and then ran off to meet his uncle.
Jane finished the work of pouring out the milk as soon
as possible, and then followed him. They soon
came back again, however, accompanying their uncle,
and conducting him to the stone seat, where the children
sat down to hear the letter.
“Rollo,” said Mr. George,
“how should you like to go to England?”
“To go to England?” said
Rollo, in a tone of exultation; “very much
indeed.”
“Should you dare to go alone?”
said Mr. George; “that is, with nobody to take
care of you?”
“Yes, indeed!” said Rollo,
emphatically. “I should not need any body
to take care of me.”
“I don’t know but you
will have to go,” said Mr. George; “and
not only take care of yourself, but of Jane besides.”
“Why, am I to go too?”
asked Jane. As she said this, she began to look
quite alarmed.
“How should you like the plan?” said Mr.
George.
“O, I should not dare
to go,” said Jane, shaking her head with a very
serious air. “I should not dare to go at
all, unless I had somebody to take care of me bigger
than Rollo.”
“Ha!” exclaimed Rollo,
“I could take care of you perfectly well.
I could buy the tickets and show you down to supper,
and help you over the plank at the landings, and every
thing else.”
Rollo’s experience of steamer
life had been confined to trips on Long Island Sound,
or up and down the Hudson River.
“I suppose you would be dreadfully
sick on the way,” said Mr. George.
“O, no,” said Rollo, “I
should not be sick. What’s the use of being
sick? Besides, I never am sick in a steamboat.”
“No,” said Jane, shaking
her head and looking quite anxious; “I should
not dare to go with you at all. I should not dare
to go unless my mother were here to go with me; or
my father, at least.”
“I am afraid you will have to
go,” said Mr. George, “whether you are
afraid to or not.”
“That I shall have to go?” repeated Jane.
“Yes,” replied Mr. George.
“Your father has written me that he is not well
enough to come home, and I am to send you and Rollo
out in the next steamer. So that you see you
have nothing to say or to do about it. All you
have to do is to submit to destiny.”
Jane did not know very precisely what
was meant by the phrase, submitting to destiny;
but she understood very well that, in this case, it
meant that she must go to England to join her father
and mother, whether she liked the plan or not.
She was silent a moment, and looked very thoughtful.
She then put forth her hand to her kitten, which was
just at that moment coming out of the cage, having
finished drinking the milk which she had put there
for it, and took it into her lap, saying at the same
time,
“Well, then I will go; only
you must let me take my Tiger with me.”
“That you can do,” said
Mr. George. “I am very willing to compromise
the matter with you in that way. You can take
Tiger with you, if you choose.”
“And the cage too?” said
Jane, putting her hand upon the ring at the top of
it.
“Yes,” said Mr. George, “and the
cage too.”
“Well!” said Jane, speaking
in a tone of great satisfaction and joyousness, “then
I will go. Get into the cage, Tiger, and we’ll
go and get ready.”
The steamer was to sail in about a
week from this time. So Mr. George proceeded
immediately to New York to engage passage. When
Rollo’s aunt, who had had the care of him and
Jane during the absence of Mr. and Mrs. Holiday, heard
how soon the steamer would sail, she said that she
did not think that that would afford time enough to
get the children ready.
“O, it takes no time,”
said Mr. George, “to get people ready to go to
Europe. Put into a trunk plenty of plain common
clothing for the voyage, and the work is done.
As for the rest, people can generally find pretty
much every thing they want on the other side.”
Mr. George went to New York to engage
the passage for the children. And inasmuch as
many of the readers of this book who reside in the
country may never have had the opportunity of witnessing
the arrangements connected with Atlantic steamers,
they may perhaps like to know how this was done.
In the first place, it was necessary to get a permit
to go on board the ship. The crowds of people
in New York, who are always going to and fro, are
so great, and the interest felt in these great steamships
is so strong, that if every body were allowed free
access and egress to them, the decks and cabins of
the vessels would be always in confusion. So
they build a barricade across the great pier at which
the ships lie, with ponderous gates, one large one
for carts and carriages, and another smaller one for
people on foot, opening through it, and no one is
admitted without a ticket. Mr. George went to
the office in Wall Street and procured such a ticket,
which one of the clerks in attendance there gave him,
on his saying that he wished to go on board to select
a state room for some passengers.
Provided with this ticket, Mr. George
took an omnibus at Wall Street and rode up to Canal
Street. At Canal Street he took another omnibus,
which carried him nearly to the East River. There
he left the omnibus, and proceeded the rest of the
way on foot. The crowd of people on the sidewalks
going and coming, and of carts, drays, wagons, and
coaches in the street, was immense. There was
one crossing where, for some time, Mr. George could
not get over, so innumerable and closely wedged together
were the vehicles of all descriptions that occupied
the way. There were many people that were stopped
with him on the sidewalk. Among them was a servant
girl, with a little boy under her charge, whom she
was leading by the hand. The girl looked very
anxious, not knowing how to get across the street.
“Let me carry the child across for you,”
said Mr. George.
So saying he took the child up gently,
but quickly, in his arms, and watching a momentary
opening in the stream of carriages, he pressed through,
the servant girl following him. He set the boy
down upon the sidewalk. The girl said that she
was very much obliged to him, indeed; and then
Mr. George went on.
Just then a small and ragged boy held
out his hand, and with a most woe-begone expression
of countenance and a piteous tone of voice, begged
Mr. George to give him a few pennies, to keep him from
starving. Mr. George took no notice of him, but
passed on. A moment afterward he turned round
to look at the boy again. He saw him take a top
out of his pocket, and go to spinning it upon the
sidewalk, and then, suddenly seeing some other boys,
the young rogue caught up his top and ran after them
with shouts of great hilarity and glee. He was
an impostor; Mr. George knew this when he refused
to give him any money.
Mr. George then went on again.
He came, at length, to the great gates which led to
the pier. There was a man just within the gate,
walking to and fro, near the door of a sort of office,
or lodge, which he kept there. Mr. George attempted
to open the gate.
“Please show your ticket, sir,” said he.
Mr. George took out his ticket and
gave it to the porter, whereupon the porter opened
the gate and let him in.
Mr. George found himself under an
enormous roof, which spread itself like a vast canopy
over his head, and extended from side to side across
the pier. Under this vast shed laborers were wheeling
boxes and bales of merchandise to and fro, while small
steam engines of curious forms and incessant activity
were at work hoisting coal on board the ships from
lighters alongside, and in other similar operations.
There were two monstrous steamships lying at this
pier, one on each side. Mr. George turned toward
the one on the left. There was a long flight of
steps leading up from the pier to the decks of this
ship. It was formed by a staging, which extended
from the pier to the bulwarks of the ship, like a
stair-case, with a railing on each side. Mr. George
ascended these steps to the bulwarks, and thence descended
by a short flight of steps to the deck itself, and
then went along the deck till he came to the door
leading to the cabins.
He found within quite a number of
cabins, arranged on different floors, like the different
stories of a house. These cabins were very resplendent
with gilding and carving, and were adorned with curtains
and mirrors on every side. They presented to Mr.
George, as he walked through them, a very imposing
spectacle. Along the sides of them were a great
many little bed rooms, called state rooms. These
state rooms were all very beautifully finished, and
were furnished with every convenience which passengers
could require. Mr. George selected two of these
state rooms. They were two that were adjoining
to each other, and they were connected by a door.
There were two beds, or rather bed places, in
each state room, one above the other. Mr. George
chose the lower berth in one state room for Rollo,
and the lower one in the next state room for Jane.
When he had chosen the berths in this manner, he wrote
the name of each of the children on a card, and then
pinned the cards up upon the curtains of the respective
berths.
“There!” said he.
“That is all right. Now perhaps some lady
will take the other berth in Jane’s room, and
some gentleman that in Rollo’s. Then they
will both have company in their rooms. Otherwise
I must find somebody to take care of them both.”
Mr. George then left the ship and
went back to the office in Wall Street, to engage
the berths and pay the passage money. The office
was spacious and handsomely furnished, and there were
several clerks in it writing at desks. There
were two rooms, and in the back room was a table,
with large plans of the ship upon it, on which all
the cabins and state rooms of the several decks were
represented in their proper positions. The names
of the various passengers that had engaged passage
in the ship were written in the several state rooms
which they had chosen. The clerk wrote the names,
Master Holiday and Miss Holiday, in
the state rooms which Mr. George pointed out to him,
and, when he had done so, Mr. George looked over all
the other names that had been written in before, to
see if there were any persons whom he knew among them.
To his great gratification he found that there were
several such.
“Yes,” said he, as he
rose up from the examination of the plan, “there
are several gentlemen there who will be very ready,
under the circumstances of the case, to do Mr. Holiday
the favor of looking after his children during the
voyage.”
Being thus, in a measure, relieved
of all solicitude, Mr. George walked about the room
a few minutes, examining the pictures of the several
steamers of the line which were hanging on the walls,
and then went away.