Down by the sea lived Ben the fisherman,
with his wife, and little son, who was called Dandelion,
because he wore yellow pinafores, and had curly, yellow
hair, that covered his head with a golden fuzz.
A very happy family, for Ben was kind and industrious,
Hetty, his wife, a cheerful, busy creature, and Dandelion
the jolliest three-year-old baby who ever made sand-pies
and paddled on the beach.
But one day a great trouble came to
them. Ben and his fellow-fishermen sailed blithely
away as usual, and Hetty watched the fleet of white-winged
boats out of the bay, thinking how pretty they looked
with the sunshine on them; while Dandelion stood clapping
his chubby hands, and saying, as he always did, ‘Daddy
tummin’ soon.’ But Daddy did not
come soon that time; for a great storm arose, and when
some of the boats came scudding home at nightfall,
Ben’s was not among them. All night the
gale raged, and in the morning, Ben’s boat lay
empty and broken on the shore. His mates shook
their heads when they saw the wreck, and drew their
rough hands over their eyes; for Ben was a good seaman,
and they knew he never would desert his boat alive.
They looked for him far and wide, but could hear nothing
of him, and felt sure that he had perished in the
storm. They tried to comfort poor Hetty, but she
would not be comforted. Her heart seemed broken;
and if it had not been for her baby, her neighbours
feared that she would have gone to join Ben in his
grave under the sea. Dandelion didn’t understand
why every one was so sad, and why his father stayed
away so long; but he never lost his cheerfulness,
never gave up hoping, or stopped saying, with a contented
smile, ’Daddy tummin’ soon.’
The sunshiny little face was Hetty’s only comfort.
The sight of the fuzzy yellow head, bobbing round
the house, alone made it endurable; and the touch
of the loving baby hands kept her from the despair
which made her long to end her sorrow in the sea.
People don’t believe in fairies
now-a-days; nevertheless, good spirits still exist,
and help us in our times of trouble, better even than
the little people we used to read about. One
of these household spirits is called Love, and it
took the shape of Dandelion to comfort poor Hetty.
Another is called Labor: a beautiful, happy spirit
this is, and it did its part so well that there was
little time for bitter thoughts or vain regrets; for
Hetty’s spinning-wheel must go, in order to earn
bread for Dandelion, whose mouth was always ready
for food, like a hungry bird’s. Busily
hummed the wheel: and, as it flew, it seemed to
catch an echo of the baby’s cheerful song, saying,
over and over, ‘Daddy tummin’ soon,’
till Hetty stopped crying as she worked, and listened
to the cheerful whirr. ’Yes, I shall see
my good Ben again, if I wait patiently. Baby
takes comfort in saying that, and I will, too; though
the poor dear will get tired of it soon,’ she
said.
But Dandelion didn’t get tired.
He firmly believed what he said, and nothing could
change his mind. He had been much troubled at
seeing the boat laid up on the beach all broken and
dismantled, but his little mind couldn’t take
in the idea of shipwreck and death; so, after thinking
it over, he decided that Daddy was waiting somewhere
for a new boat to be sent to bring him home.
This idea was so strong that the child gathered together
his store of toy-boats, — for he had many,
as they were his favourite plaything, — and
launched them, one after another, telling them to
find his father, and bring him home.
As Dandelion was not allowed to play
on the beach, except at low tide, the little boats
sailed safely away on the receding waves, and the child
was sure that some of them would get safely into the
distant port where Daddy was waiting. All the
boats were launched at last, all sailed bravely away;
but none came back, and little Dandy was much disappointed.
He babbled about it to himself; told the peeps and
the horse-shoes, the snails and the lobsters, of his
trouble; begged the gulls to fly away and find Daddy;
and every windy night when the sea dashed on the shore
and the shutters rattled, he would want the lamp put
in the window, as it used to be when they expected
Ben, and tried to make home look cheerful, even before
he got there.
Hetty used to humour the child, though
it made her heart ache to know that the light shone
in vain. At such times Dandy would prance about
the room in his little shirt, and talk about Daddy
as happily as if long months had not passed without
bringing him back. When fairly in his big, old-fashioned
cradle, the boy would lie, looking more like a dandelion
than ever, in his yellow flannel night-gown, playing
with his toes, or rocking himself to and fro, calling
the cradle his boat, and blithely telling his mother
that he was sailing ‘far way to find Daddy.’
When tired of play, he lay still and asked her to
sing to him. She had no heart for the gay old
sea-songs she used to sing for lullabies; so she sung
hymns in her soft, motherly voice, till the blue eyes
closed and the golden head lay still, looking so pretty,
with the circle of bright hair above the rosy face.
‘My little saint,’ Hetty called him; and
though she often wept sadly as she watched him, the
bitterness of her grief passed away, and a patient
hope came to her; for the child’s firm faith
impressed her deeply, the pious music of the sweet
old hymns comforted her sore heart, and daily labor
kept her cheerful in spite of herself. The neighbours
wondered at the change that came over her, but she
could not explain it; and no one knew that the three
good spirits called Love, Labor, and Hope, were working
their pleasant miracles.
Six long months went by, and no one
ever thought of seeing Ben again, — no one
but his little son, who still watched for him here,
and his wife, who waited to meet him hereafter.
One bright spring day something happened.
The house was as tidy as ever; the wheel hummed briskly
as Hetty sung softly to herself with a cheerful face,
though there were white hairs among the brown, and
her eyes had a thoughtful, absent look at times.
Dandelion, more chubby and cheery than ever, sat at
her feet, with the sunshine making a golden glory of
his yellow hair, as he tried his new boat in the tub
of water his mother kept for her little sailor, or
tugged away with his fat fingers at a big needle which
he was trying to pull through a bit of cloth intended
for a sail. The faithful little soul had not
forgotten his father, but had come to the conclusion
that the reason his boats never prospered was because
they hadn’t large enough sails; so he was intent
on rigging a new boat lately given him, with a sail
that could not fail to waft Ben safely home.
With his mouth puckered up, his downy eyebrows knit,
and both hands pulling at the big needle, he was so
wrapped in his work that he did not mind the stopping
of the wheel when Hetty fell into a reverie, thinking
of the happy time when she and Ben should meet again.
Sitting so, neither heard a step come softly over the
sand; neither saw an eager, brown face peer in at
the door; and neither knew for a minute, that Ben
was watching them, with a love and longing in his heart
that made him tremble like a woman.
Dandelion saw him first; for, as he
pulled the thread through with a triumphant jerk,
the small sailmaker lost his balance, tumbled over,
and lay staring up at the tall man with his blue eyes
so wide open, they looked as if they would never shut
again. All of a sudden, he shouted, with a joyful
shout, ‘Daddy’s tummin’!’ and
the next instant, vanished, ship and all, in the arms
of the man who wore the rough jacket. Over went
the spinning-wheel, as Hetty vanished likewise; and
for a time there was nothing but sobbing and kissing,
clinging, and thanking Heaven for its kindness to
them. When they grew quieter, and Ben got into
his old chair, with his wife on one knee and his boy
on the other, he told them how he was wrecked in the
gale, picked up by an outward-bound ship, and only
able to get back after months of sickness and delay.
‘My boaty fetched him,’
said Dandelion, feeling that every thing had turned
out just as he expected.
’So it did, my precious; leastways,
your faith helped, I haven’t a doubt,’
cried Hetty, hugging the curly headed prophet close,
as she told Ben all that had happened.
Ben didn’t say much, but a few
great tears rolled down the rough blue jacket, as
he looked from the queer sail with its two big stitches
to the little son, whose love, he firmly believed,
had kept him safe through many dangers and brought
him home at last.
When the fine new boat was built,
no one thought it strange that Ben named it ‘Dandelion;’
no one laughed at the little sail which always hung
over the fire-place in the small house: and long
years after, when Ben was an old man, and sat by the
door with his grand-children on his knee, the story
which always pleased them best was that which ended
with the funny words, ‘Daddy tummin’ soon.’