Jack Mason had been to sea a great
many times when I first knew him, and he has been
a great many times since. He has sailed in a ship
almost all over the world. Such a host of stories
as he can tell! Why, I do believe if he could
find little boys and girls to talk to, he would begin
in the morning as soon as he had got through his breakfast,
and do nothing but tell stories about what he has seen,
until it was time to go to bed at night. I don’t
know but he would want to stop once or twice to eat.
Jack loves a good dinner as well as anybody.
Jack is the one that you see in the
picture, with his pea-jacket on, and a book in his
hand. He is in a ship, telling his stories now
to that boy sitting on a coil of rope. See, the
boy is looking right at the old man, hearing all he
says. I wonder what Jack is talking about now.
He must be telling one of his best stories, I guess;
for the boy lifts his head up, as much as to say,
“Dear me! who ever heard of such a thing!”
Jack is a good man. He is not
like a great many sailors that I have seen. He
does not use bad words. He never drinks rum, or
any thing of the kind. Sailors are apt to swear;
but Jack Mason never swears. He is a Christian:
he loves to pray and read his Bible. The book
which he holds in his hand, as he is talking to that
boy, is a Bible. He often has a Bible in his
jacket pocket, when he is on board of his ship; and
once in a while he stops telling stories about what
he has seen, and reads some of the stories in that
good book.
When I was a little boy, Jack fell
from the high mast of the ship, and hurt himself so
badly that he had to stay at home a long time after
that. Poor fellow! he did not like to be shut
up in the house. It was hard work for him.
But he could not go out, until his hip got well.
When he was able to sit up in a chair, I used to go
and see him, and hear him tell his stories. I
did not go every day, because my mother thought I
had better not go every day. But I went as often
as she would let me go, and staid as long as she would
let me stay.
Jack was always glad to see me, and
glad to tell me stories. I was always glad to
hear his stories. Some sailors, who have spent
a great deal of time on board of a ship, and have
seen a great many places, are not good men. They
do not always tell the truth. So, when they tell
stories about what they saw where they went, we do
not know whether to believe them or not. But
Jack Mason was a good man, and I knew he would not
tell me what was not true.
Shall I tell you some of the stories
that this good old sailor told me when he had to stay
at home, because he had broken his hip? I think
I can remember some worth telling again.
“O yes, Mr. Thinker, tell us
all the stories the old sailor told you.”
“No, I cannot do that. I cannot remember
them all.”
“Well, tell us all you do remember.”
“I will see about it. I
will tell you some of them, at any rate. Let
me see, what story shall I tell first? Shall I
tell you his story about what he saw once, when he
sailed a great way north? I guess I will.”