There was a letter for the artist.
It contained a check from the Frenchman. He had
bought three of the pictures the one of
Uncle William’s house and the two of the old
Bodet place.
“Did you know it?” demanded
the artist. He was facing Uncle William in the
boat as they rowed home.
“I didn’t know it,”
said Uncle William, with a long, easy pull, “but
I reckoned suthin’ ’d be along putty soon.
If it hadn’t come to-day, I was goin’
to make Andy give us enough to begin on.”
“He wouldn’t have done it.”
“Oh, yes, he’d ‘a’
done it. He’d ‘a’ squirmed and
twisted some, but he’d ‘a’ done
it. He’d ‘a’ had to!”
The artist laughed out happily.
“Well, now you can do as you like. We’ll
have the best boat there is going.”
Uncle William nodded. “I
knew you’d want to. I’ve been kind
o’ plannin’ for it. We’ll go
down to-morrow or next day and see about it.”
The artist looked at him curiously.
“I don’t believe you care half as much
as I do!”
Uncle William returned the look, smiling
broadly. “It’ll seem putty good to
feel my own boards under me again,” he said cheerfully.
“But you didn’t care when
you didn’t have them,” said the artist.
“You just toted those infernal kittens ”
Uncle William’s chuckle was
genial. “Kittens ain’t everything,”
he said mildly. “But I’ve seen the
time when kittens wa’n’t to be despised.
You jest set that way a little mite, Mr. Woodworth,
and I’ll beach her even.”
“One thing I’m glad of,”
said the artist, as the boat grated along the pebbles.
“You can pay Andy.”
“Andy’ll be glad,”
responded Uncle William, “but it’ll be
quite a spell before he has a chance to.”
He waved his arm toward the bay. “He’s
off for the day.”
The artist scanned the horizon with
disappointed face. “He’ll be back
by noon, perhaps?”
Uncle William shook his head.
“Not afore night. I can tell by the way
he’s movin’. We’ll come up and
hev dinner and then we can plan her out.”
They sat on the rocks all the afternoon,
looking at the dancing waves and planning for the
new Jennie. Uncle William drew models on
the back of an old envelope and explained figures.
The artist followed him with eager eyes. Now
and then his chest expanded and he drew a deep breath
of satisfaction.
“Feel’s good, don’t
it?” said Uncle William. “I ust to
feel that way when I’d been in debt a good while
and made a big ketch. Seemed ’s if the
whole world slid off my shoulders.” He shook
his head. “But it was kind o’ foolishness.”
“Wouldn’t you feel that way now?”
demanded the artist.
“I don’t believe I would,”
said Uncle William, slowly. “It’s
a kind o’ wicked feelin’ when
the sun’s a-shinin’ jest the same, and
the water’s movin’ up and down, ”
he motioned toward the harbor, “and
the boats are comin’ in at night, settlin’
down like birds, and the lights.” He looked
affectionately at the water. “It’s
all there jest the same whether I owe anybody or not.
And the rocks don’t budge much ”
He laid his big brown hand on the warm surface beside
him, smoothing it in slow content.
The artist looked at him, smiling
a little wistfully. “It sounds all very
well to talk about,” he said, “but the
world would go to rack and ruin if everybody felt
that way.”
“I ust to think so,” said
Uncle William, placidly. “I ust to lie awake
nights worryin’ about it. But late years
I’ve give it up. Seems to jog along jest
about the same as when I was worryin’ and
I take a heap sight more comfort. Seems
kind o’ ridiculous, don’t it, when the
Lord’s made a world as good as this one, not
to enjoy it some?”
“Don’t you feel any responsibility
toward society?” asked the artist, curiously.
Uncle William shook his head with
a slow smile. “I don’t believe I do.
I ust to. Lord, yes! I ust to think about
folks that was hungry till my stummick clean caved
in. I ust to eat my dinner like it was sawdust,
for fear I’d get a little comfort out of it,
while somebody somewheres was starvin’ little
childern, like enough. That was al’ays the
hardest part of it little childern.
I ust to think some of foundin’ a’sylum
up here on the rocks sailin’ round
the world and pickin’ up a boat-load and then
bringin’ ’em up here and turnin’
’em loose on the rocks, givin’ ’em
all they could stuff to eat. And then one night,
when I was cal’atin’ and figgerin’
on it, I saw that I couldn’t get half of ’em
into my boat, nor a quarter, nor a tenth jest
a little corner of ’em. And then it come
over me, all of a sudden, what a big job I’d
tackled, and I jest turned it over to the Lord, then
an there. And all the next day I kep’ kind
o’ thinkin’ about it out here on the rocks how
he’d took a thousand year mebbe ’t
was more; a good long spell, they say to
get the rocks ready for folks to live on jest
the rocks! And like enough he knew what he was
plannin’ to do, and didn’t expect me to
finish it all up for him in fo’-five years.
Since then I’ve been leavin’ it to him
more takin’ a hand when I could, but
payin’ more attention to livin’. I
sort o’ reckon that’s what he made us for to
live. The’ ’s a good deal o’
fin in it if you go at it right.”
“That’s a great idea, Uncle William,”
said the artist.
“It’s comf’tabul,”
assented Uncle William. “You get your livin’
as you go along, and a little suthin’ over.
Seems ’s if some folks didn’t even get
a livin’ they’re so busy doing things.”
He was silent for a while, his blue
eyes following the light on the water. “The’
was a man I sailed with once, a cur’us
sort o’ chap, and when he wa’n’t
sober he could tell you interestin’ things.
He hadn’t been a sailor al’ays took
to it ’cause he liked it, he said. And he
tol’ me a good deal about the goings-on of the
earth. Like enough ’t wa’n’t
so some on it but it was interestin’.
He told me ’t the earth was all red-hot once,
and cooled off quicker on the outside like
a hot pertater, I s’pose. You’ve
heard about it?” He looked inquiringly at the
artist.
The artist nodded. “Yes.”
“Well, I’ve thought about
that a good many times when I’ve been sailin’.
I could see it all, jest the way he put it, the earth
a-whirlin’ and twirlin’, and the fire
and flames a-shootin’ up to the sky, and rocks
and stones and stuff a’b’ilin’ and
flyin’ ” Uncle William’s
eye dwelt lovingly on the picture. “I’d
seem to see it all jest the way he tol’ it,
and then I’d put my hand out over the side of
the boat and trail it along in the water to cool off
a little.” Uncle William chuckled.
“Sometimes it seems ’s if you’d come
a million miles all in a minute rocks all
along the shore, good hard rocks ’t you could
set on, and the hill up to the sky with grass on it,
green and soft, and the water all round. It a’most
takes your breath away to come back like that from
that red-hot ball he talked about and see it all lyin’
there, so cool and still, and the sun shinin’
on it. I got to thinkin’ ’bout it,
days when I was sailin’, and wondering if mebbe
the Lord wa’n’t gettin’ folks
ready jest the way he did the rocks rollin’
’em over and havin’ ’em pound each
other and claw and fight and cool off, slow-like,
till byme-by they’d be good sweet earth and grass
and little flowers comf’tabul to
live with.”
The artist sat up. “Do
you mean to say you wouldn’t stop folks fighting
if you could?”
Uncle William eyed the proposition.
“Well I dunno’s I’d say jest that.
I’ve thought about it a good many times.
Men al’ays hev fit and I reckon they
will quite a spell yet. There’s
Russia and Japan now: you couldn’t ‘a’
stopped them fightin’ no more’n two boys
that had got at it. All them Russians and them
little Japs we couldn’t ‘a’
stopped ’em fightin’ the whole
of us couldn’t hev stopped ’em not
unless we’d ‘a’ took ’em by
the scruff o’ the neck and thrown ’em down
and set on ‘em one apiece. And
I dunno’s that’d be much better’n
fightin’ settin’ on ’em
one apiece.”
The artist laughed out.
Uncle William beamed on him.
“You see, this is the way I figger it:
Russia and Japan wa’n’t fightin’
so much for anything they reely wanted to git.
It was suthin’ in ’em that made
’em go for each other, tooth and nail, and pommel
so a kind o’ pizen bubbling and sizzling
inside ’em; we’ve all got a little of
it.” He smiled genially. “It
has to work out slow-like. Some does it by fightin’
and some does it by prayin’; and I reckon the
Lord’s in the fightin’, same as in the
prayin’.”
The artist looked at him curiously.
“Some people call that the devil, you know.”
Uncle William cleared his throat.
He picked up a little stone and balanced it thoughtfully
on the palm of his hand. Then he looked up with
a slow smile. “I ain’t so well acquainted
with the devil as I ust to be,” he said.
“I ust to know him reel well; ust to think about
him when I was out sailin’ figger
how to get ahead of him. But late years I’d
kind o’ forgot He’s livin’
still, is he?”
The artist laughed quietly. “They say so some
of them.”
Uncle William’s smile grew wider
and sweeter. “Well, let him live. Poor
old thing! ‘T won’t hurt none, and
he is a kind o’ comfort to lay things
on when you’ve been, more’n usual, cussed.
That’s the Andrew Halloran over there
to the left.” He pointed to a dusky boat
that was coming in slowly. “That’s
his last tack, if he makes it, and I reckon he will.
Now, if you’ll go in and start the chowder, I’ll
see if he want’s any help about makin’
fast.”