OUR HERO INTRODUCED WITH SOME OF HIS FRIENDS
A poor schoolmaster named Benson died,
not long ago, in a little town on the south-east coast
of England, which shall be called Cranby.
He left an only son, Jeffrey, and
an elder brother, Jacob, to mourn his loss.
The son mourned for his father profoundly, for he loved
him much. The brother mourned him moderately,
for he was a close-fisted, hard-hearted, stern man
of the law, whose little soul, enclosed in a large
body, had not risen to the conception of any nobler
aim in life than the acquisition of wealth, or any
higher enjoyment than a social evening with men like
himself.
The son Jeffrey was a free-and-easy,
hearty, good-natured lad, with an overgrown and handsome
person, an enthusiastic spirit, a strong will, and
a thorough belief in his own ability to achieve anything
to which he chose to set his mind.
Up to the time of his father’s
death, Jeff’s main idea of the desirable in
life was fun! Fun in all its
more innocent phases seemed to him the sum of what
was wanted by man. He had experienced it in all
its scholastic forms ever since he was a little boy;
and even when, at the mature age of fifteen, he was
promoted to the rank of usher in his father’s
school, his chief source of solace and relaxation was
the old play-ground, where he naturally reigned supreme,
being the best runner, rower, wrestler, jumper, gymnast,
and, generally, the best fellow in the school.
He had never known a mother’s
love, and his father’s death was the first blow
that helped to shatter his early notions of felicity.
The cloud that overshadowed him at that time was
very dark, and he received no sympathy worth mentioning
from his only relative, the solicitor.
“Well, Jeff, what d’you
think of doing?” asked that austere relative,
two days after the funeral. “Of course
at your age you can’t carry on the school alone.”
“Of course not,” answered the boy, with
a suppressed sob.
“What say you to entering my office and becoming
a lawyer, Jeff?”
“Thanks, uncle, I’d rather not.”
“What will you do, then?”
demanded the uncle, somewhat offended at this flat
rejection of his proposal.
The lad thought for a moment, and
then said quietly but decidedly, “I’ll
go to sea.”
“Go to the world’s end
if you like,” returned the uncle, who was proud
and touchy, and hated the sea; “but don’t
ask me to help you.”
“Thank you, uncle,” replied
the lad, who was as proud as himself, though not touchy,
and had a strong affection for the sea; “having
no particular business at the world’s end just
now, I’ll put off my visit to a more convenient
season.”
They parted, and we need scarcely
add that the brief intercourse of uncle and nephew
which had thus suddenly begun as suddenly ceased.
It is not usually difficult for a
strong, active lad, with merry black eyes and cheery
manners, to obtain employment. At least Jeffrey
Benson did not find it so. A few miles from
his native town there was a seaport. Thither
he repaired, and looked about him. In the harbour
lay a small vessel which looked like a yacht, it was
so trim and clean. On the quay near to it stood
a seafaring man with an amiable expression of countenance.
“Is that your schooner?” asked Jeff of
this man.
“Yes, it is.”
“D’you want a hand?”
“No, I don’t.”
Jeff turned on his heel, and was walking
away, when the seafaring man recalled him.
“Have ’ee ever bin to sea, lad?”
he asked.
“No, never.”
“D’ye know anything about ships?”
“Next to nothing.”
“D’ye think you could do anything, now,
aboard of a ship?”
“Perhaps.”
“Come along, then, wi’ me to the office,
an’ I’ll see to this.”
Thus was Jeff introduced to the skipper
of the coasting vessel in which he spent the succeeding
six years of his life. At the end of that time
his schooner was totally wrecked in a gale that sent
more than two hundred vessels on the rocks of the
British Isles. The skipper was washed overboard
and drowned, but Jeff was saved along with the rest
of the crew, by means of the rocket apparatus.
By that time our hero had become a
tall, powerful man, with a curly black beard and moustache.
Through the influence of a friend he was offered
a situation in the coastguard; accepted it, and, to
his great satisfaction, was stationed in the neighbourhood
of Cranby, his native town.
Now, near to that town Jeff had a
confidante, into whose sympathetic bosom he had poured
his joys and sorrows from the days of little boyhood.
Of course this confidante was a woman a
thin, little, elderly creature, with bright blue eyes,
and grey hair that had once been golden, who had a
sort of tremble in her voice, and whose frame was so
light that the fishermen were wont to say of her that
if she was to show her nose outside when it was blowing
only half a gale she’d be blowed away like a
fleck of foam. Nevertheless Miss Millet was a
distinct power in Cranby.
Being off duty one fine afternoon,
our coastguardsman walked along the beach in the direction
of Cranby, bent on paying a visit to Miss Millet,
whom he had not seen for several years. On his
way he had to pass a piece of common close to the
town, where he found that a number of the townsmen
and some of the fishermen from the neighbouring hamlet
had assembled to hold high holiday and engage in athletic
exercises. The memory of school-days came strong
upon him as he watched the sport, and he longed to
join, but was modest enough to feel that his offering
to do so in connection with games which seemed to
have been already organised might be an intrusion.
Two men were wrestling when he joined
the circle of spectators one was a fisherman,
the other a huge blacksmith of the town. They
were well matched; for, although the fisherman was
shorter than the blacksmith, he was an unusually powerful
man.
Great was the excitement as the two
herculean men strove for the mastery, and loud was
the cheer when at last the blacksmith prevailed and
threw his adversary.
But the enthusiasm was somewhat damped
by the boastful manner in which the victor behaved;
for it is not easy to sing the praises of a man whose
looks and words show that he greatly overrates himself.
“You don’t need to look
so cocky, Rodger,” cried a cynical voice in the
crowd. “There be lots o’ men as could
throw thee, though they ben’t here just now.”
Rodger turned sharply round, intending
to give an angry defiance to the speaker; but seeing
that it was only Reuben Drew, a white-haired old shoemaker
of small stature, he burst into a sarcastic laugh.
“Well, I don’t deny,”
he said, “that there may be many men as could
throw me, but I defy any of ’ee now present to
do it.”
This was an opening for Jeff Benson,
who was not slow to avail himself of it. Stepping
into the ring he threw off his coat.
“Come along, Rodger,”
he said, with a good-humoured look; “you’ll
have to make good your words.”
Of course our hero was received with
a cheer of satisfaction; for although Jeff was two
inches shorter than his adversary the latter
being six feet two it could be seen at a
glance that he was at least his match in breadth of
shoulder and development of muscle. But in truth
the young coastguardsman was much more than the blacksmith’s
match, for at school he had received special training
in the art of wrestling from his father, who was a
Cornishman, and hard service in the coasting trade
had raised his strength of limb to the highest possible
point.
“Surely I’ve seen that
young man somewhere,” whispered one of the spectators
to Reuben.
“So have I,” returned
the latter. “Don’t he look uncommon
like the old schoolmaster’s son? Hallo!”
And well might Reuben exclaim “hallo!”
for Jeff, instead of grasping his opponent round the
waist, had suddenly seized him with one hand by the
neck, with the other by the leg, and lifting him completely
off the ground, had flung him on his back.
The people were too much astonished
at first to cheer. They burst into a fit of
laughter, which, however, extended into a hearty cheer
when Reuben cried out, “It is Jeffrey Benson,
as sure as I’m alive,” and claimed him
as a townsman.
“You’re right, Reuben,”
said Jeff, as he put on his coat, “though I am
a good bit changed, no doubt, since I was here last.”
“Then the townsman have beaten
the seaman after all,” exclaimed one who was
inclined to triumph.
“Not so,” returned Jeff
quickly, “for I’m a seaman myself and take
sides with the fishermen.”
“Well said; give us your hand,
mate,” cried John Golding, one of the latter,
holding out his hand, which our hero grasped warmly,
for he had known the man in former years.
“You’ve done well in credit o’ the
sea.”
“An’ better still,”
said little Reuben, “in doing credit to the land
by refusin’ to boast.”
Nevertheless, though Jeff Benson did
not boast, it is but just to say that he felt
considerable satisfaction in his triumph, and rejoiced
in the possession of so powerful a frame, as he continued
his walk to Miss Millet’s house. It did
not occur to him, however, to thank God for his strength
of body, because at that time “God was not in
all his thoughts.”
Miss Millet was a woman of action
and projects. Her whole being was absorbed in
one idea that of doing good; but her means
were small, very small, for, besides being exceedingly
poor, she was in delicate health and getting old.
She subsisted on quite a microscopic annuity; but,
instead of trying to increase it, she devoted the whole
of her time to labours of love and charity.
The labour that suited her health and circumstances
best was knitting socks for the poor, because that
demanded little thought and set her mind free to form
unlimited projects.
The delight which Miss Millet, experienced
in meeting with her old friend Jeffrey Benson was
displayed in the vivacity of her reception of him
and the tremulosity of her little cap.
“It’s just like coming
home, auntie may I still venture to call
you so?”
Jeff had been wont to sit on a stool
at the good lady’s feet. He did so now on
the old stool.
“You may call me what you please,
Jeff. It was your child-fancy to accord to me
that honourable relationship; so you may continue it
if you will. How you are grown, too! I
could not have known you had I met you so
big, and with that horrible black beard.”
“Horrible! Miss Millet?”
“Well, terrible, if you prefer
it. It’s so bushy and unnatural for one
so young.”
“That can hardly be, auntie,”
rejoined the youth, with a smile that sent quite a
ripple down the objectionable beard, “because
my beard was provided by Nature.”
“Well, Jeff,” returned
the spinster promptly, “were not scissors and
razors provided by no, it was art that provided
them,” she continued with a little smile
of confusion; “but they are provided all
the same, and But we won’t pursue
that subject, for you men are incorrigible! Now
tell me, Jeff, where you have been, and why you didn’t
come to see me sooner, and why your letters have been
so few though I admit they were long.”
We will not inflict on the reader
all the conversation that ensued. When Jeff had
exhausted his narrative, Miss Millet discovered that
it was tea-time; and, while engaged in preparations
for the evening meal, she enlarged upon some of her
projects, being encouraged thereto by Jeff, whose
heart was naturally sympathetic.
“But some of my projects are
impossible,” she said, with a little sigh.
“Some small things, indeed, I have accomplished,
with God’s blessing; but there are others which
are quite beyond me.”
“Indeed! Tell me now,
auntie, if you had Aladdin’s wonderful lamp,
what would you ask for?”
“I’d ask for let
me see (the old face became quite thoughtful here)
I’d ask for a library. You see, Cranby
is very badly off for books, and people cannot
easily improve without reading, you know. Then
I would ask for a new church, and a school room, and
a town-hall where we might have lectures and concerts,
and for a whole street of model-houses for the poor,
and a gymnasium, and a swimming-bath and ”
“A swimming-bath, auntie!”
exclaimed Jeff. “Isn’t the sea big
enough?”
“Yes, but children won’t
learn in the sea. They’re too fond of running
about the edge, and of romping in the shallow water.
Besides, the bath could be used in winter, when the
sea is too cold. But I’m praying for all
these things. If God sees fit, He will give them.
If not, I am content with what He has already given.”
A somewhat sceptical smile rested
for a moment on the young man’s lips. Happily
his heavy moustache concealed it, and saved Miss Millet’s
feelings. But she went on to vindicate the ways
of God with man, and to impress upon Jeff the fact
that in His good wisdom “ills” or “wells,”
and things that seem to us only evil, work out gracious
ends.
Jeff listened, but said little, and
evidently his difficulties were not all removed.
Presently, observing that three cups were laid on
the table, he asked, “Do you expect company?”
“Yes, my brother the captain
is coming to tea. He is about to start for China,
and I’m so glad you happen to be here; for I’d
like you to know each other, and you’re sure
to like him.”
Jeff did not feel quite so sure on
that point, for he had counted on a long tete-a-tete
with his old friend. He took care, however, to
conceal his disappointment, and before he had time
to reply, the door opened with a crash.
“What cheer, old girl? what
cheer?” resounded in bo’sun’s-mate
tones through the house, and next moment a rugged
sea-captain stood before them.