PREPARATIONS FOR THE CHASE
Fred Temple was a tall, handsome young
fellow of about five-and-twenty.
He had a romantic spirit, a quiet
gentlemanly manner, a pleasant smile, and a passionate
desire for violent exercise. To look at him you
would have supposed that he was rather a lazy man,
for all his motions were slow and deliberate.
He was never in a hurry, and looked as if it would
take a great deal to excite him. But those who
knew Fred Temple well used to say that there was a
great deal more in him than appeared at first sight.
Sometimes a sudden flush of the brow, or a gleam of
his eyes, told of hidden fires within.
Fred, when a small boy, was extremely
fond of daring and dangerous expeditions. He
had risked his life hundreds of times on tree-tops
and precipices for birds’ nests, and had fought
more hand-to-hand battles than any of the old Greek
or Roman heroes. After he became a man, he risked
his life more than once in saving the lives of others,
and it was a notable fact that many of the antagonists
of his boyhood became, at last, his most intimate
friends.
Fred Temple was fair and ruddy.
At about the age of nineteen certain parts of his
good-looking face became covered with a substance
resembling floss-silk. At twenty-five this substance
had changed into a pair of light whiskers and a lighter
moustache. By means of that barbarous custom
called shaving he kept his chin smooth.
Fred’s father was a wealthy
Liverpool merchant. At the period when our tale
opens Fred himself had become chief manager of the
business. People began, about this time, to say
that the business could not get on without him.
There were a great number of hands, both men and women,
employed by Temple and Son, and there was not one on
the establishment, male or female, who did not say
and believe that Mr Frederick was the best master,
not only in Liverpool, but in the whole world.
He did not by any means overdose the people with
attentions; but he had a hearty offhand way of addressing
them that was very attractive. He was a firm
ruler. No skulker had a chance of escape from
his sharp eye, but, on the other hand, no hard-working
servant was overlooked.
One day it was rumoured in the works
that Mr Frederick was going to take a long holiday.
Since his appointment to the chief charge, Fred had
taken few holidays, and had worked so hard that he
began to have a careworn aspect, so the people said
they were “glad to hear it; no one in the works
deserved a long holiday better than he.”
But the people were not a little puzzled when Bob
Bowie, the office porter, told them that their young
master was going away for three months to chase the
sun!
“Chase the sun, Bob! what d’ye
mean?” said one. “I don’t know
wot I mean; I can only tell ye wot I say,” answered
Bowie bluntly.
Bob Bowie was an old salt a
retired seaman who had sailed long as steward
of one of the ships belonging to the House of Temple
and Son, and, in consequence of gallantry in saving
the life of a comrade, had been pensioned off, and
placed in an easy post about the office, with good
pay. He was called Old Bob because he looked
old, and was weather-worn, but he was stout and hale,
and still fit for active service.
“Come, Bowie,” cried another,
“how d’ye know he’s goin’ to
chase the sun?”
“Cause I heerd him say so,” replied Bob.
“Was he in earnest?” inquired a third.
“In coorse he wos,” said Bob.
“Then it’s my opinion,”
replied the other, “that old Mr Temple’ll
have to chase his son, and clap him in a strait-jacket
w’en he catches him if he talks such
stuff.”
The porter could not understand a
joke, and did not like one, so he turned on his heel,
and, leaving his friends to laugh at their comrade’s
jest, proceeded to the counting-room.
There were two counting-rooms a
small outer and a large inner one. In the outer
room sat a tall middle-aged man, lanky and worn in
appearance and with a red nose. Opposite to
him, at the same desk, sat a small fat boy with a
round red face, and no chin to speak of. The
man was writing busily the boy was drawing
a caricature of the man, also busily.
Passing these, Bob Bowie entered the
inner office, where a dozen clerks were all busily
employed, or pretending to be so. Going straight
onward like a homeward-bound ship, keeping his eyes
right ahead, Bob was stranded at last in front of
a green door, at which he knocked, and was answered
with a hearty “Come in.”
The porter went in and found Fred
Temple seated at a table which was covered with books
and papers.
“Oh! I sent for you, Bowie,
to say that I want you to go with me to Norway to-morrow
morning.”
“To Norway, sir!” said Bowie in surprise.
“Ay, surely you’re not
growing timid in your old age, Bob! It is but
a short voyage of two or three days. My little
schooner is a good sea-boat, and a first-rate sailor.”
“Why, as for bein’ timid,”
said the porter, rubbing the end of his nose, which
was copper-coloured and knotty, “I don’t
think I ever knowed that there feelin’, but
it does take a feller aback to be told all of a suddent,
after he’s reg’larly laid up in port, to
get ready to trip anchor in twelve hours and bear
away over the North Sea not that I cares
a brass fardin’ for that fish-pond, blow high,
blow low, but it’s raither suddent, d’ye
see, and my rig ain’t just seaworthy.”
Bowie glanced uneasily at his garments,
which were a cross between those of a railway-guard
and a policeman.
“Never mind the rig, Bob,”
cried Fred, laughing. “Do you get ready
to start, with all the underclothing you have, by
six to-morrow morning. We shall go to Hull by
rail, and I will see to it that your top-sails are
made all right.”
“Wery good, sir.”
“You’ve not forgotten how to make lobscouse
or plum-duff, I dare say?”
Bob’s eyes brightened as he replied stoutly,
“By no manner o’ means.”
“Then be off, and, remember, sharp six.”
“Ay, ay, sir,” cried the
old seaman in a nautical tone that he had not used
for many years, and the very sound of which stirred
his heart with old memories. He was about to
retire, but paused at the threshold of the green door.
“Beg parding, sir, but if I might make so bold
as to ax ”
“Go on, Bob,” said Fred encouragingly.
“I heerd ye say to our cashier,
sir, that you wos goin’ for to chase the
sun. Wot sort of a chase may that be, sir?”
“Ha! Bowie, that’s
a curious chase, but not a wild goose one, as I hope
to show you in a month or two. You know, of course,
that in the regions of the earth north of the Arctic
Circle the sun shines by night as well as by day for
several weeks in summer?”
“In coorse I do,” answered
Bob; “every seaman knows that or ought for to
know it; and that it’s dark all day as well as
all night in winter for some weeks, just to make up
for it, so to speak.”
“Well, Bob, I am very desirous
to see this wonderful sight with my own eyes, but
I fear I am almost too late of setting out. The
season is so far advanced that the sun is setting
farther and farther north every night, and if the
winds baffle us I won’t be able to catch him
sitting up all night; but if the winds serve, and
we have plenty of them we may yet be in time to see
him draw an unbroken circle in the sky. You see
it will be a regular chase, for the sun travels north
at a rapid pace. D’you understand?”
Bob Bowie grinned, nodded his head
significantly, retired, and shut the door.
Fred Temple, left alone, seized a
quill and scribbled off two notes, one
to a friend in Scotland, the other to a friend in Wales.
The note to Scotland ran as follows:
“My dear Grant, I
have made up my mind to go to Norway for three months.
Principal object to chase the sun. Secondary
objects, health and amusement. Will you go?
You will find my schooner comfortable, my society
charming (if you make yourself agreeable), and no end
of salmon-fishing and scenery. Reply by return
of post. I go to Hull to-morrow, and will be
there a week. This will give you ample time to
get ready.
“Ever thine, Fred Temple.”
The note to Wales was addressed to
Sam Sorrel, and was written in somewhat similar terms,
but Sam being a painter by profession, the beauty
of the scenery was enlarged on and held out as an inducement.
Both of Fred’s friends had been
prepared some time before for this proposal, and both
of them at once agreed to assist him in “chasing
the sun!”
That night Frederick Temple dreamed
that the sun smiled on him in a peculiarly sweet manner;
he dreamed, still further, that it beckoned him to
follow it to the far north, whereupon Fred was suddenly
transformed into a gigantic locomotive engine; the
sun all at once became a green dragon with pink eyes
and a blue tail; and he set off in chase of it into
the Arctic regions with a noise like a long roar of
the loudest thunder!