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Hob’s Tommy
by
Sometimes, when the paths were so foul that nothing but wading would take a man over the moor, Tommy was greatly puzzled about finding his way, and one night he and Musgrave walked unsuspectingly over a low cliff, and fell softly upon a great ridge of sand. But these little misadventures did not by any means daunt Tommy. His new religion was that he must be at chapel twice every Sunday, and at prayer-meetings as often through the week as Musgrave chose to take him. To this he held. The Squire’s pheasants suffered no longer, and Tommy’s big lurcher displayed a tendency towards virtue which earned him the admiration of all the gamekeepers on the estate. Efforts were made to get the big man to pray at the ordinary love-feasts that were held in connection with the chapel, but he always said, “No; my Father and me has all our conversations to ourselves. It is not as if God didn’t know; but I don’t think a blackguard like me should address Him face to face after the life I have led.”
The years went by, and Tommy’s shaggy beard showed signs of grizzling. His huge limbs were more deliberate in their movement, and his low forehead had somehow or other acquired a certain spiritual aspect. He wrought at his trade, saved money, and spent some in decorating his mother’s grave. One night, when he was smoking his pipe with Musgrave, he said–
“Christ died for all the lot of us, didn’t He? That was a rare thing to do. Now, suppose He says, when I meet Him, ‘What are you doing here? You have done nothing but go to chapel.’ Now, Mr. Musgrave, will you tell me this: what should I say in a case of that sort?”
Old Musgrave wrinkled his wise brows and replied, “Thomas, my man, He knows your heart. I suppose you think you ought to save life, or something of that kind, don’t you?”
“Yes, sir, that’s just what I do think,” said Thomas.
“Well, believe me, your chance will come. Now let’s light up our pipes, and walk over the moor home, Thomas, and puzzle yourself no more about these things.”
A bad winter came, and the thundering seas broke so continually over the rocks that it was impossible for the men to get bait on their own rocks. All day long the loungers walked the cliff edge, and watched the columns of spray hissing up from the black rocks. Day after day the clouds seemed to mix themselves with the sea as they laid their grey shoulders to the water. Money became scarce in the village, and the men who had savings had to help those who were poorer. When things got almost too bad for bearing, Billy Armstrong said to one of his friends–
“Look here, you and me and Hob’s Tommy will run round to the Tyne, and get some mussels, or else the whole place will be starved when the fine weather comes.”
A big coble was got out, and ran down to the Tyne with a northerly wind through the shrewd and vicious sea. The men got the cargo of mussels, and at four in the afternoon prepared to beat their way northward. It was then blowing half a gale, but the wind had shifted round from the shore, so that very little tacking was required. As the shades fell lower and lower, the wind rose higher and higher. The blasts galloped down through the hollows, and struck the brown sail of the coble like the sound of musketry. The boat lay hard over, and the water leaped in spurts over her lee gunwale. They reached the point where the Cobbler’s Stone stood. Tommy was in a strange state of exaltation. He pointed to the misty shore, then to the black stone round which the water was seething. He said quietly, “Yonder, my lads!”
They rounded the point, and put the boat’s head nearer to windward. A harsh ripping sound was heard under the bottom. She lay hard over until a blast came and tore her clear. Billy Armstrong said–