Sunshine Bill, according to the world’s
notion, was not “born with a silver spoon in
his mouth;” but he had, which was far better,
kind, honest parents. His mother kept an apple-stall
at Portsmouth, and his father was part owner of a
wherry; but even by their united efforts, in fine
weather, they found it hard work to feed and clothe
their numerous offspring.
Sometimes Sunshine Bill’s father
was laid up with illness, and sometimes his mother
was so; and occasionally he and his brothers and sisters
were sick also. Sometimes they had the measles,
or small-pox, or a fever; and then there was the doctor
to pay, and medicine to buy; consequently, at the
end of these visitations, the family cash-box, consisting
of an old stocking in a cracked basin, kept on the
highest shelf of their sitting-room, was generally
empty, and they considered themselves fortunate if
they were not in debt besides. Still, no one
ever heard them complain, or saw them quarrel, or
beat their children, as some people do when things
do not go straight with them; nor did their children
ever fight among themselves. Even, indeed, in
the worst of times, Sunshine Bill’s mother managed
to find a crust of bread and a bit of cheese, to keep
the family from starving. To be sure, she and
her husband could not give their children much of
an education, as far as school learning was concerned.
They themselves, in spite of all trials, were never
cast down; and they taught Bill, and his brothers and
sisters, to follow their example. They said that
God had always been kind to them, and that they were
sure He would not change while they tried to do their
duty and please Him.
The most contented, and merriest,
and happiest of their children was Sunshine Bill.
That was not his real name, though; indeed, he did
not get it till long after the time I am speaking
of.
He was properly called William Sunnyside,
for, curiously enough, Sunnyside was his father’s
name. His father was known as Merry Tom Sunnyside,
and his mother as Pretty Molly Sunnyside for
pretty she had been when she was young, and good as
she was pretty. It may seem surprising that
they were not better off, but they began the world
without anything, and children came fast upon them a
circumstance which keeps many people poor in worldly
wealth.
Sunshine Bill, when still a very little
fellow, found out how to keep the family pot boiling,
even before some of his brothers had done so.
No occupation came amiss to him. Sometimes he
would go mud-larking, and seldom missed finding some
treasure or other. The occupation was not a
nice one, for the mud in Portsmouth Harbour is far
from clean, or sweet to the nose; but Bill did not
care for that, provided he was successful in his search.
Sometimes, too, he would go fishing, and seldom came
home without a pretty well-filled basket. Then
he would look after seamen’s boats, and place
stools for passengers to walk along when the water
was low; and when the weather was bad, and few persons
were going afloat, he would go on errands, or scamper
alongside gentlemen’s horses, ready to hold
them when they dismounted. He had such a merry,
facetious manner about him, that he generally managed
to pick up twice as much as anybody else engaged in
the same sort of occupation.
This sort of work, however, was very
well for Bill while he was a little fellow; but it
was clear that it would not do for him when he should
grow bigger. His father and mother often talked
over what Bill was to do when that time came.
Tom Sunnyside wished to send him to
sea after his two elder brothers, for his next two
boys were with him in his boat. Molly wanted
to keep him at home to help her in her trade; Bill
was ready to do whatever they wished. He would
serve his country afloat, and do his best to become
an admiral, or he would sell apples all his life.
Nothing, however, was settled; and
Bill continued to mud-lark, catch fish, run errands,
look after boats, and hold gentlemen’s horses,
till he was getting to be a big lad.
At length a heavy affliction and trial
overtook Mrs Sunnyside Bill’s mother.
The wherry, with his father and two of his brothers,
went off one November morning when it was blowing
hard, with a passenger to a ship lying at Spithead.
They put their fare all right on board, received
payment, and shoved off from the ship. The gale
increased, the weather thickened; hour after hour
passed away, and the expected ones did not return
to their home. Three days afterwards, a pilot
vessel brought in an oar, and a board, with the rising
sun painted on it.
The Rising Sun was the name
of Tom Sunnyside’s boat. Such was the
only clue to his fate. Neither he, nor his boys,
nor his boat, were ever seen again. The widow
bowed her head, but she had no time to indulge in
grief, for she had still several younger children to
support.
She sat at her stall, and did her
best to sell her apples. Bill exerted himself
more than ever. His two elder brothers were,
as has been said, on board men-of-war. The next
two surviving children were girls, and could do little
to help themselves or their mother. And now,
for the first time, the family began to feel what
it was to be hungry, and to have no food to put into
their mouths. Bill was up early and late, and
was always so hard at work that he declared he had
no time to be hungry. The truth is, he might
always have had plenty of food for himself, but that
he thought fit to share every farthing of his gains
among his brothers and sisters.
One day he was holding a horse for
an officer, who was, he saw by his uniform, a commander
in the navy, for Bill could distinguish the rank of
naval officers by the gold lace on their coats, and
knew at a glance a post captain from a commander,
and a commander from a lieutenant, and so on.
He especially liked the look of the officer whose
horse he was holding; and while he walked it up and
down as he had been directed, he thought to himself
“If I was to go to sea now I
should not only get a rig out, but have enough to
eat, and be able to send home my pay to mother as soon
as I get any.”
He had just before been taking a survey
of his clothes, which, in spite of all sorts of contrivances,
he had no small difficulty in keeping about him.
He wished to look tolerably decent, though he had
considerable misgivings on that score. He felt
very thin, and not so strong as he used to be, which
is not surprising, considering the small amount of
sustenance he took. The little ones at home were
certainly fatter than he was.
When the officer came out of the house
he cast a kind look at Bill, who, as was his custom
to his superiors, pulled off his battered hat to him.
“I should like to know something
about you, my lad,” said the officer, as he
mounted his horse, in a tone which was as kind as were
his looks.
“Yes, sir,” answered Bill,
pulling a lock of his long, shaggy hair; “I
be called Bill Sunnyside, and mother sells apples out
at the corner of High Street, there.”
“A succinct account of yourself,
my lad,” said the officer.
“It be true though, sir,”
said Bill, not understanding what succinct meant.
“And, sir, I’d like to go to sea with
you.”
“Oh! Would you?”
said the officer, smiling. “But how do
you know that I command a ship?”
“Because you would not otherwise
be in uniform,” answered Bill, promptly.
“Ay, I see you have your wits
about you,” remarked the officer.
“It’s as well I should,
for they be the only things I have got except these
duds,” answered Bill, giving way to a propensity
for humour, which, unknown to himself, he possessed,
though he spoke with perfect respect.
The officer laughed, and said
“Where is your father, boy?”
“He and two brothers were drowned
out at Spithead, last autumn,” answered Bill.
“Ah! I will have a talk
with your mother, one of these days; I think I know
her. Be a good boy meantime,” said the
officer, and he rode away up the street.
Bill looked after him, thinking when
“one of these days” would come, and what
would come out of the talk.
Several days passed by, and Bill heard
nothing of the captain. His clothes became more
and more tattered, and, though his mother mended them
at night, they were so rotten that they often got torn
again the next day. Winter came. Times
were indeed hard with him. He grew thinner and
thinner. Still, whenever he got a penny, he shared
it with those he loved at home. “Never
say die,” was his motto; “it is a long
lane which has no turning,” and “a dull
day when the sun does not shine out before the evening.”
With such expressions he used to cheer and comfort
his mother, though, in spite of all trials, she was
not often disposed to be more cast down than he was.
“Don’t give way, mother,”
Bill used to say, when, on coming home in the evening,
she looked sadder than usual. “Just remember
what the parson said: `The sun is shining up
above the clouds every day in the year, and he is
sure to break through them and shine upon us some time
or other; and God is looking down at all times through
them, let them be ever so thick, and never forgets
us.’”
Still Bill could not help wishing
that the kind captain had remembered, as he said he
would, and made that some day or other arrive rather
more quickly than there appeared a likelihood of its
doing.