PAGE 17
My Summer With Dr. Singletary. A Fragment
by
“‘You’re right, Skipper,’ says Wilson to me;
Nature is better than books.’
“And from that time he was on deck as much as his health would allow of, and took a deal of notice of everything new and uncommon. But, for all that, the poor fellow was so sick, and pale, and peaking, that we all thought we should have to heave him overboard some day or bury him in Labrador moss.”
“But he did n’t die after all, did he?” said I.
“Die? No!” cried the Skipper; “not he!”
“And so your fishing voyage really cured him?”
“I can’t say as it did, exactly,” returned the Skipper, shifting his quid from one cheek to the other, with a sly wink at the Doctor. “The fact is, after the doctors and the old herb-women had given him up at home, he got cured by a little black-eyed French girl on the Labrador coast.”
“A very agreeable prescription, no doubt,” quoth the Doctor, turning to me. “How do you think it would suit your case?”
“It does n’t become the patient to choose his own nostrums,” said I, laughing. “But I wonder, Doctor, that you have n’t long ago tested the value of this by an experiment upon yourself.”
“Physicians are proverbially shy of their own medicines,” said he.
“Well, you see,” continued the Skipper, “we had a rough run down the Labrador shore; rainstorms and fogs so thick you could cut ’em up into junks with your jack-knife. At last we reached a small fishing station away down where the sun does n’t sleep in summer, but just takes a bit of a nap at midnight. Here Wilson went ashore, more dead than alive, and found comfortable lodgings with a little, dingy French oil merchant, who had a snug, warm house, and a garden patch, where he raised a few potatoes and turnips in the short summers, and a tolerable field of grass, which kept his two cows alive through the winter. The country all about was dismal enough; as far as you could see there was nothing but moss, and rocks, and bare hills, and ponds of shallow water, with now and then a patch of stunted firs. But it doubtless looked pleasant to our poor sick passenger, who for some days had been longing for land. The Frenchman gave him a neat little room looking out on the harbor, all alive with fishermen and Indians hunting seals; and to my notion no place is very dull where you can see the salt-water and the ships at anchor on it, or scudding over it with sails set in a stiff breeze, and where you can watch its changes of lights and colors in fair and foul weather, morning and night. The family was made up of the Frenchman, his wife, and his daughter,–a little witch of a girl, with bright black eyes lighting up her brown, good-natured face like lamps in a binnacle. They all took a mighty liking to young Wilson, and were ready to do anything for him. He was soon able to walk about; and we used to see him with the Frenchman’s daughter strolling along the shore and among the mosses, talking with her in her own language. Many and many a time, as we sat in our boats under the rocks, we could hear her merry laugh ringing down to us.
“We stayed at the station about three weeks; and when we got ready to sail I called at the Frenchman’s to let Wilson know when to come aboard. He really seemed sorry to leave; for the two old people urged him to remain with them, and poor little Lucille would n’t hear a word of his going. She said he would be sick and die on board the vessel, but that if he stayed with them he would soon be well and strong; that they should have plenty of milk and eggs for him in the winter; and he should ride in the dog-sledge with her, and she would take care of him as if he was her brother. She hid his cap and great-coat; and what with crying, and scolding, and coaxing, she fairly carried her point.