He was born with a nature as simple
and primitive as the physical conditions surrounding
him, and endowed with a body so frail and delicate
that he barely survived these conditions-which
were of frost, and snow, and ice, with winter hurricanes
straight from Greenland and summer fogs fed by the
Gulf Stream to breed pneumonia and kindred diseases
into stronger lungs than his.
But he survived to reach the age of
eighteen, a tall, flat-chested, weak-witted butt of
the local school, who, while able to struggle along
with the ordinary studies at the foot of the class,
was yet so poorly endowed with the mathematical sense
that he could only master the first four rules of
arithmetic. Fractions and decimals were unsolvable
mysteries to him. His name was Quinbey-first
name John, later Jack.
He was of American birth, the only
son of a fisherman, who had taken his smack to an
isolated village on the Nova Scotian coast. Here
the fisherman did well, and before the boy was half
grown owned the finest cottage in the village-which
he bought cheap because it was perched on the crest
of the hill, exposed to every storm that blew, a nest
that none but a sailor could live in. With increasing
prosperity he installed a big base-burner, good for
the anæmic boy, but bad for himself.
The boy rid himself of coughs and
colds; but the father, changing from the chill and
the wet of fishing to the warmth and ease of home life,
contracted pneumonia and died, leaving the boy in possession
of the house and the smack, but not enough ready money
to last for a month.
Young Quinbey closed up the house,
took in a partner with money, and went fishing for
a season, at the end of which the partner-a
shrewd business man-owned the smack.
The boy acquired a wonderful increase
of health and strength, and a consuming love for a
pretty girl of the village, a trader’s daughter
named Minnie, who repulsed him firmly and emphatically
because of his poverty-for the house and
base-burner were not desirable assets-and
because of his weak mental and physical equipment.
But there is a school for weak mentality
and physique-the Seven Seas. And to
this school went John Quinbey, first, however, putting
in one season on the Georges Bank, where, in a lucky
craft, he made money. Richer than ever before
in his life, he returned home, to try again for the
heart and hand of Minnie, but found her married to
the minister, a man as weak, flat-chested, and anæmic
as he himself had been.
He reasoned crudely. He did not
meet Minnie, but took stock and measure of the minister,
a gentleman named Simpson; then, feeling his own expanding
chest and enlarging muscles, decided that Minnie would
soon be a widow, and he a strong man with money; for
he could work, and, having no vices, could save.
So, for love of Minnie, he went back to sea, resolved
to become a captain, resolved to save every cent he
earned, and resolved to balk at no hardship that would
lead him to success.
At Boston, he shipped before the mast
as able seaman in a big deep-water ship. He was
not an able seaman, nor did he become one on this
voyage; it required several; but each one marked a
steady advance in muscular strength, mental activity,
and bank account; and, at the end of the fifth, he
signed as boatswain-an able man who knew
his work.
He was strong, broad-shouldered, and
active; the slightly vacant look in his face that
had come from his boyhood incapacity had changed to
a frank stare that demanded consideration and respect.
He seldom asked a question twice now-once
was usually enough. He had a fist that could
smash the panels of a door, a voice that he could not
modulate to conversational tones-so used
was he to sending it against the wind. He did
not use tobacco, nor did he drink, for these things
cost money, and he was thinking of Minnie, most precious
of all things in the world.
At the end of each voyage he visited
home, deposited the money he had brought, and waited
in the street just long enough for a sight of Minnie,
sweet and matronly, and for a sight of the minister,
who was holding on to life with a remarkable tenacity.
Then he would work his way to Boston, and sign again.
Soon he became a second mate, but
never a first, nor a captain. His limitations
in arithmetic prevented him from mastering navigation,
a necessary acquirement in a first mate or a skipper,
and he remained in the position he had reached, close
to the sailors, but not of them; sharing their hardships
and hard work-for with every reefing or
furling match a second mate must go aloft with the
men-standing watch with them, washing down
decks with them, getting drenched to the skin as often
as they, and differing from them only in increase of
pay, cabin food, and a dryer bed to sleep in.
But the dryer bed preserved him from
the rheumatism and pulmonary troubles that kill all
sailors who do not drown, the better food preserved
his now iron physique, and the increased pay went into
the bank at home.
And so it continued until he was forty
years old, when he went home to find Minnie a widow
with a grown-up son-a fat, weak-chinned,
pale-faced parody on manhood, who never had done a
day’s work in his life-a “mamma’s
boy,” who was destined for the ministry.
The dark, seamy-faced man of storm
and strength, of stress and strain, asked her again
to be his wife. He asked her as he would have
asked a sailor to sign articles; and the frightened
little woman accepted in about the same spirit that
would have influenced the sailor; but she made one
condition-that he would educate her son
for the ministry.
He agreed. Her husband had left
her almost nothing, while Quinbey had about ten thousand
dollars in the bank. From this he drew the expense
of a four years’ course at Andover; and, taking
the youth to this famous theological college, arranged
for his stay there in such a manner as would insure
his completing the course-that is, he paid
to the president for everything in advance, including,
beside tuition and board, a moderate amount of spending
money, and traveling expense home and back in vacation.
Then, with Sammy Simpson off his mind
for four years at least, Quinbey returned, and married
the woman he loved, feeling that he had now earned
happiness and the right to remain on land-and
smoke.
But he was not born for happiness,
and did not recognize it when it came to him.
He opened up his house on the hill, fired up the base-burner,
and the two sat around it for a month trying to assimilate
each other; but they could not. He knew nothing
of women; she nothing of such men as him. He
never smiled; and, when he joked, the joke was lost
in the rumble and grumble of his voice. He caressed
her with the gentleness of a grizzly fondling the
hunter, and was nonplussed and set back when she cried
out in pain.
Afraid of him at first, she soon realized
that he knew no better, and responded with the weapons
of woman. The man, inured to cold and pain and
fatigue, yet was sensitive as a child when it came
to his feelings. When she learned this, she kept
his nerves quivering with quiet smiles, soft and sarcastic
little speeches, and deadening silences, the meaning
of which did not strike him at the time because of
his transparent frankness and honesty.
He became afraid of her; and she,
following up her advantage, wheedled him out of money
for clothes, which, though he could not see the need
of them, he cheerfully gave her. He loved her
devotedly; and, though he never smiled, yet he never
frowned, nor spoke a harsh word to her.
But she thought him harsh, and, justified
by the thought, continued the marital loot until she
grew brave enough to demand a gold watch for Sammy’s
birthday.
This was not in his program, and he
told her so. Then followed a lecture on the duties
and shortcomings of fathers, which lasted an hour,
and left him shaking like a sick man, sprawled out
in the big chair by the fire, and smoking like a high-pressure
tug. But she had brought him around, and he had
arisen to go out to the town’s one jeweler,
when she lost all she had won.
“Where are you going?”
she asked sharply, as he put on his hat.
“Going out, Minnie,” he
said, in his jokeless voice, “to get some catnip
for you.”
He meant it good-humoredly; but it
was taken otherwise. The jeweler had no gold
watches; but, after a two hours’ search, he dug
up a wholesaler’s catalogue, and, with this
in his pocket, Quinbey returned to have Minnie select
a watch from it; but she, her trunks, and her belongings
were gone, while a note on the table apprised him that
she would live with no man who called her a cat.
Troubled in mind, he followed her
to the home of her parents, but he was not admitted-nor
given a chance to show her the catalogue.
He slept on the problem, and in the
morning resolved that a little absence would be good
for her; so, as the season had opened, he packed his
bag and went out on a fishing trip with friends of
his, expecting to be back in a month. It was
eight years later when he returned.
His adventures during those eight
years can only be summarized. The fishing schooner
was cut down by a big ship out of Halifax bound around
the Horn; and Quinbey alone of her crew succeeded in
springing to her martingale-stay as the smaller craft
went under. No one else was saved, though the
ship hove to and put out boats to search. Then
the ship went on, and, as she met no inbound craft,
Quinbey was forced to go with her.
But she did not round Cape Horn.
A strong current threw her onto the Patagonian coast
near Cape Virgins in a dead calm, and a sudden gale
of wind and heavy sea ground her to pieces.
Only John Quinbey was a swimmer of
sufficient strength to reach the beach, and here he
lay, half dead, for a day, when he arose and struck
inland, knowing that Punta Arenas was about a hundred
and fifty miles along the coast of the Magellan Strait,
and hoping to reach it.
He did not at once. The giant
savages of this region caught him and made him one
of them, preventing his escape. He was accustomed
to hardship, and lived their life, tormented only
by the thought that the money at home was deposited
in his name, and that he had made no provision whereby
the foolish little wife could draw from the bank.
But he still hoped to escape; and,
as the tribe drifted inland, he was allowed more liberty.
He never abused it, waiting for a final dash, always
returning from a jaunt in reasonable time, and earning
the confidence of his captors.
When over seven years had passed,
he found, in the foothills of the Latorre Mountains,
a large, heavy lump of dark metal, which he scraped
with his knife and recognized as gold. It was
fully the size of a draw bucket, but of what value
he could not determine, except that it represented
a fortune.
Strong man though he was, he could
not carry it a hundred yards without resting, yet
he carried it, not back to the tribe, but in a southwesterly
direction, toward Punta Arenas. When forced to
return, he hid it, taking careful bearings, and rejoined
his masters. He waited a few days before the
next trip, then moved it a few miles farther on.
In this way, exciting no suspicion,
he shifted his find, step by step, until he had it
on a well-defined trail that could lead nowhere but
to the lonely port he was making for. Then, after
a few days’ rest, he packed a bundle of dried
meat, took with him a native-made rope by which to
drag the heavy nugget, and left the camp in the dark
of night.
He reached his treasure by daylight,
and started along the trail. He was not pursued,
and ten days later, half starved, half mad, his shoulders
bleeding from the chafe of the rope, and every bone
in his body aching with the pain of fatigue, he dragged
his burden onto a rickety wharf at Punta Arenas where
an eastbound steamer was coaling. Her captain
was an honest man. He took Quinbey on board, took
him to Boston, and helped him turn the nugget into
cash-fifty thousand dollars. Then
Quinbey went home.
II
Quinbey had been right about the money
in the bank. It was a tidy sum to retain on deposit,
and the bank officials had heartlessly refused to
pay any of it out to Mrs. Quinbey. She did not
attempt to draw until her sulks left her, which occurred
after the jeweler, intent upon the sale of a watch,
had called upon her, and when the villagers had informed
her that Quinbey had gone fishing. Then, disappointed,
and somewhat worried over the future, she returned
to the house on the hill, and, as it was still cold,
lit up the big base-burner from the scanty stock of
coal.
As the weeks grew into months and
the fishing schooner did not return, she did not,
like the rest of the villagers, give her husband up
as lost-rather, she believed him alive,
hoped for his return, and revised her opinion of him.
Soon-yet long before the
grocer, the butcher, and the coal man had refused
further credit-she realized that she loved
the crude man she had known but a month, but who had
loved her for twenty years; and, with tears streaming
down her face, she prayed for his safety and return
with more fervency than for the beloved son at Andover.
This person wrote filial letters home, assuring her
of protection and support when he returned; but they
brought her small comfort, for the time was at hand
when she must pay cash or go without the necessities
of life.
Then Sammy came home on his first
vacation, and, learning of the money in the bank,
used his prestige and address to such advantage that
he persuaded the local authorities to declare Quinbey
legally dead-an easy matter on that coast
of many wrecks.
Righteously indignant at the selfishness
of the bank officials, he induced his mother to withdraw
the money-shrunk to eight thousand dollars-from
the bank, and allow him to take it to Boston, where,
in a larger and safer bank, it would draw interest,
and on which she could write checks in payment of
her bills.
She consented, and Sammy departed
with the money. But at Boston, before reaching
the bank, he traversed the highways and the byways
of the big city, imbibed certain and sundry liquids
known to him only by name, loved his fellow men, and
met fellow men of like state of mind, who, seeing
a stranger, took him in.
He was stripped to empty pockets,
spent a night in a cell, and only by the help of another
clergyman was he shipped back to Andover with a letter
to the president.
From here he wrote to his mother a
garbled account of his adventures; and, as the president
of the college mercifully forbore writing her the
truth, the poor woman merely wept a little, prayed
a little, and took up her burden.
Her parents were old and indigent,
unable to more than house her for a few days at a
time. As minister’s wife, she had made no
friends that would help her now in a way befitting
her position. As for herself, with only a village
education, she could not even teach, even though able
to found a school.
But every mother and daughter, sister
and grand-ma’am in the village was willing to
give her work by the day for the mere pleasure of
gloating; and at this work she went bravely.
The sneers and insults she received
soon limited her journeyings from home, and she finally
became the village wash-woman. The kitchen of
the house was turned into a laundry, and the big base-burner
allowed to grow cold; for she could not afford two
fires.
In her laundry she worked, and in
wintertime slept, and only on Saturdays was she seen
on the street, when, with deepening lines in her face
and a growing gray tinge to her hair, she struggled
back and forth with her basket of clothes. But
she earned her living, and looked forward hopefully
to the return of her husband and assuredly to the
return of her son, who would care for her.
Sammy only came home on the first
vacation; the next three he spent at the homes of
classmates. But at last the four years’
course was ended, and, with nowhere else to go, he
appeared, an ordained minister of the Gospel, but
unattached.
The Reverend Samuel Simpson, as we
must know him now, was twenty-four years old, as pale
as ever, fatter than ever, with a chin that, because
of the fat, seemed to recede still farther into his
neck. His mother rejoiced over him, was proud
of him, and believed that her troubles were now ended.
The villagers welcomed him, and the
gray old pastor of the church once presided over by
his father invited him to preach. He did so,
delivering his one sermon; but the delivery and the
sermon were not of a character that would inspire
the congregation to empty the pulpit for him, so the
young preacher went home to wait, as Quinbey had waited,
for that pulpit to become vacant by death.
But he deplored the coldness of the
house, and ordered coal on credit for the base-burner;
also he deplored the hard labor of his mother, assured
her that the necessity for it would soon end, but did
nothing himself toward this end; for, in truth, there
was nothing he could do but preach; and the gray old
pastor seemed as tenacious of life as his own father
had been.
The mother was content, however, except
for the always present, but lessening, hope that her
husband would return, and happy in the company of
her educated and accomplished son. And so, as
bravely as ever, she carried her burden through the
streets, not only on Saturdays now, but on Wednesdays,
because, with another mouth to feed, she must of needs
wash more clothes.
And so the time went on, the Reverend
Samuel Simpson growing seedier of raiment and fatter
of body, enduring patiently the sneers and sarcasms
of the indignant men of the village, while the mother’s
face grew thinner, her body weaker, and her once blond
hair so gray that she looked ten years beyond her
age. Then, four years after the son’s return,
the breaking point came. With the front of her
garments dripping wet, she stood erect from her tub,
looked at him where he sat near the kitchen fire-the
base-burner had long been cold-and said:
“Sammy, you must go to work.
I can do no more. It is killing me.”
“But what can I do, mother dear?” he answered
kindly.
“I do not know,” she said
weariedly. “Something, maybe, that will
help. You are educated. You might write
for the Boston papers, or the magazines. Or you
might find a pulpit somewhere else, and send me some
money once in a while.”
“What, and leave you alone,
mother? Not for the world would I desert you.
You are my mother, and have cared for me. But
I have thought of writing. I have been thinking
for years of a literary career, only I have not been
able to decide which branch of literature I am best
fitted for.”
“Well, Sammy,” said the
mother, as she bent over her tub, “I cannot
decide for you; but something must be done.”
“And I will do it, mother,”
he shouted loudly-so loudly that neither
heard the opening of the front door, nor the sound
of heavy footsteps coming toward the kitchen.
Then a big, dark-faced man, with hair
as gray as her own, seized her around the waist, lifted
her into his arms, and rained kisses on her face and
lips while she screamed, then, as she recognized him,
fainted away. Still holding her, he lifted his
foot, exerted a slight effort of strength, and pushed
the tubful of suds and clothes off its base, upsetting
it squarely over the head of the Reverend Samuel Simpson,
who nearly choked before getting himself clear.
“I’ve been hearing things
about you down at the store,” said Quinbey,
“and I’ll ’tend to your case directly.”
Then he carried the limp little woman
into the bedroom, stripped off her wet garments, and
covered her warmly, while he kissed her back to consciousness.
“Oh, John,” she said,
when she could speak, “I knew you’d come
back, but, oh, the long waiting! I’ve been
punished, John, punished bitterly.”
“There’ll be no more of
it, Minnie,” he said. “I’ve
come home rich-that is, rich for this town.
Your work is ended. They told me at the store
about your son loafing on you all these years while
you took in washing. But how about the money
in the bank? Couldn’t you get it?”
“Oh, yes, John,” she answered
simply. “But Sammy took it to Boston to
deposit, and was robbed of it.”
“Um-hum-m-m,” grunted
Quinbey. “The savings of twenty years at
sea!” Briefly she recounted Sammy’s story
of the wrong done him; but he made no comment beyond
saying that he would look into it.
“He’s got to go to work,”
he added grimly. “I don’t know what
he can do except preach, and perhaps he can’t
do that. I’ll write to Andover and get
his record. But how about the house? It’s
cold. Out of coal?”
“We’ve got very little,
John. We couldn’t afford two fires.”
Quinbey left her, and found his stepson
in his room, changing his wet clothing for dry.
“Take this money,” he
said, handing him a bill, “and go down to the
coal dock. Order a ton up here at once.”
“I will, sir,” answered
Sammy, with dignity, “when I’ve recovered
somewhat from your extremely brutal treatment of me.
I must be dry before I go out on this cold day.”
But he went out, shirtless and coatless,
at the end of Quinbey’s arm; and, as it really
was cold, he hurried on his errand, and returned.
Before long the base-burner was roaring, and Quinbey
was recounting his adventures to his happy-faced wife;
while Sammy, in the kitchen, finished up the wash.
Later on he delivered it; but no more washing of other
folks’ clothing was ever done in that house.
Quinbey wrote to Andover, and in a
few days received a reply, which he read to his wife.
It was a true account of Sammy’s mishap in Boston;
and, while Quinbey grinned-he could not
smile-the mother wept silently, but asked
no forgiveness for her wayward son. And when he
rummaged a bureau, and brought forth an old jeweler’s
catalogue, asking her to choose a watch for Sammy,
she felt that it was granted; but she did not yet
know Quinbey.
Sammy wore the watch proudly; and
for the rest of the cold weather the three sat about
the base-burner, while the color came back to the
little woman’s face, and self-confidence to the
shaken mind of Sammy. He actually began to like
his rough stepfather; and only an outsider might have
guessed, by the somber light in Quinbey’s dark
eyes when they rested upon him, that he did not like
his stepson.
In the spring, as soon as the frost
and snow were gone, Quinbey employed laborers to flatten
the ground near his house to the extent of a hundred
feet by ten; then, with stakes, he laid out the plan
of a ship’s deck. Next he contracted with
spar makers, ship carpenters, and ship chandlers for
material and labor; and before June three masts were
erected, each with topmast, top-gallant, and royal
mast, the standing rigging of which was set up to
strong posts driven into the ground; then followed
yards, canvas, and running gear, and soon a complete
ship of small dimensions, but without a hull, adorned
the crest of the hill.
As Quinbey explained to the questioning
villagers, he would go to sea no more, but, having
spent his life at sea, wanted a reminder-something
to look at-a plaything.
Sammy was an interested spectator
of the work, and Quinbey was kind to him, answering
his questions, and even betraying some solicitude that
he should understand the rig of a ship, the names of
the ropes and sails, and the manner of handling them.
He even went so far as to hire a couple of sailors
to climb aloft, to loose and furl canvas, again and
again, until Sammy understood.
Then the cold weather came on, and
the base-burner was lit; and with the cold weather
came the snow, and the icy sleet, and the hurricane
gales from Greenland, striking the crest of that hill
with a force that threatened to tear the dummy ship
from the ground. And on particularly stormy nights,
the villagers, snug in their warm beds, would waken
for a moment at a sound louder than the gale-the
sound of Quinbey’s voice, which, in a calm,
would carry a mile. And the voice would cry:
“All hands on deck to make sail.
Out wi’ you, you blasted lubber, and lay aloft.
Up wi’ you, and loose that mainsail, and, when
you’ve got it loose, furl it. I’ll
show you how I earned that money. Up wi’
you, ’fore I give you a rope’s end.”
And sometimes, in the lulls, they
could hear Sammy’s shrieks of pain, and the
thwack of the rope’s end.