PAGE 3
By The Morning Boat
by
But when the lad waked, it was to a joyful sense of manliness and responsibility; for him the change of surroundings was coming through natural processes of growth, not through the uprooting which gave his mother such an aching heart.
A little later Elisha came out to the breakfast-table, arrayed in his best sandy-brown clothes set off with a bright blue satin cravat, which had been the pride and delight of pleasant Sundays and rare holidays. He already felt unrelated to the familiar scene of things, and was impatient to be gone. For one thing, it was strange to sit down to breakfast in Sunday splendor, while his mother and grandfather and little sister Lydia were in their humble every-day attire. They ate in silence and haste, as they always did, but with a new constraint and awkwardness that forbade their looking at one another. At last the head of the household broke the silence with simple straightforwardness.
“You’ve got an excellent good day, ‘Lisha. I like to have a fair start myself. ‘T ain’t goin’ to be too hot; the wind’s working into the north a little.”
“Yes, sir,” responded Elisha.
“The great p’int about gittin’ on in life is bein’ able to cope with your headwinds,” continued the old man earnestly, pushing away his plate. “Any fool can run before a fair breeze, but I tell ye a good seaman is one that gits the best out o’ his disadvantages. You won’t be treated so pretty as you expect in the store, and you’ll git plenty o’ blows to your pride; but you keep right ahead, and if you can’t run before the wind you can always beat. I ain’t no hand to preach, but preachin’ ain’t goin’ to sarve ye now. We’ve gone an’ fetched ye up the best we could, your mother an’ me, an’ you can’t never say but you’ve started amongst honest folks. If a vessel’s built out o’ sound timber an’ has got good lines for sailin’, why then she’s seaworthy; but if she ain’t, she ain’t; an’ a mess o’ preachin’ ain’t goin’ to alter her over. Now you’re standin’ out to sea, my boy, an’ you can bear your home in mind and work your way, same’s plenty of others has done.”
It was a solemn moment; the speaker’s voice faltered, and little Lydia dried her tearful blue eyes with her gingham apron. Elisha hung his head, and patted the old spotted cat which came to rub herself against his trowsers-leg. The mother rose hastily, and hurried into the pantry close by. She was always an appealing figure, with her thin shoulders and faded calico gowns; it was difficult to believe that she had once been the prettiest girl in that neighborhood. But her son loved her in his sober, undemonstrative way, and was full of plans for coming home, rich and generous enough to make her proud and happy. He was half pleased and half annoyed because his leave-taking was of such deep concern to the household.
“Come, Lyddy, don’t you take on,” he said, with rough kindliness. “Let’s go out, and I’ll show you how to feed the pig and ‘tend to the chickens. You’ll have to be chief clerk when I’m gone.”
They went out to the yard, hand in hand. Elisha stopped to stroke the old cat again, as she ran by his side and mewed. “I wish I was off and done with it; this morning does seem awful long,” said the boy.
“Ain’t you afraid you’ll be homesick an’ want to come back?” asked the little sister timidly; but Elisha scorned so poor a thought.
“You’ll have to see if grandpa has ‘tended to these things, the pig an’ the chickens,” he advised her gravely. “He forgets ’em sometimes when I’m away, but he would be cast down if you told him so, and you just keep an eye open, Lyddy. Mother’s got enough to do inside the house. But grandsir’ll keep her in kindlin’s; he likes to set and chop in the shed rainy days, an’ he’ll do a sight more if you’ll set with him, an’ let him get goin’ on his old seafarin’ times.”