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breath

ā€œBen Ireson he was skipper oā€™ the Betty, young feller, cominā€™ home frum the Banksā€”that was before the war of 1812, but jestice is jestice at all times. They fund the Active oā€™ Portland, anā€™ Gibbons oā€™ that town he was her skipper; they fund her leakinā€™ off Cape Cod Light. There was a terrā€™ble gale on, anā€™ they was gettinā€™ the Betty home ā€˜s fast as they could craowd her. Well, Ireson he said there warnā€™t any sense to reskinā€™ a boat in that sea; the men they wouldnā€™t hev it; and he laid it before them to stay by the Active till the sea run daown a piece. They wouldnā€™t hev that either, hanginā€™ araound the Cape in any sech weather, leak or no leak. They jest up staysā€™l anā€™ quit, natā€™rally takinā€™ Ireson with ā€˜em. Folks to Marblehead was mad at him not runninā€™ the risk, and becaze nexā€™ day, when the sea was caā€™am (they never stopped to think oā€™ that), some of the Activeā€™s folks was took off by a Truro man. They come into Marblehead with their own tale to tell, sayinā€™ how Ireson had shamed his town, anā€™ so forth anā€™ so on, anā€™ Iresonā€™s men they was scared, seeinā€™ public feelinā€™ aginā€™ ā€˜em, anā€™ they went back on Ireson, anā€™ swore he was responsā€™ble for the hull act. ā€˜Twerenā€™t the women neither that tarred and feathered himā€”Marblehead women donā€™t act that wayā€”ā€˜twas a passel oā€™ men anā€™ boys, anā€™ they carted him araound town in an old dory till the bottom fell aout, and Ireson he told ā€˜em theyā€™d be sorry for it some day. Well, the facts come aout later, sameā€™s they usually do, too late to be any ways useful to an honest man; anā€™ Whittier he come along anā€™ picked up the slack eend of a lyinā€™ tale, anā€™ tarred and feathered Ben Ireson all over onct more after he was dead. ā€˜Twas the only tune Whittier ever slipped up, anā€™ ā€˜twerenā€™t fair. I whaled Dan good when he brought that piece back from school. You donā€™t know no better, oā€™ course; but Iā€™ve give you the facts, hereafter anā€™ evermore to be remembered. Ben Ireson werenā€™t no sech kind oā€™ man as Whittier makes aout; my father he knew him well, before anā€™ after that business, anā€™ you beware oā€™ hasty jedgments, young feller. Next!ā€

Harvey had never heard Disko talk so long, and collapsed with burning cheeks; but, as Dan said promptly, a boy could only learn what he was taught at school, and life was too short to keep track of every lie along the coast.

Then Manuel touched the jangling, jarring little machette to a queer tune, and sang something in Portuguese about ā€œNina, innocente!ā€ ending with a full-handed sweep that brought the song up with a jerk. Then Disko obliged with his second song, to an old-fashioned creaky tune, and all joined in the chorus. This is one stanza:

ā€œNow Aprile is over and melted the snow, And outer Noo Bedford we shortly must tow; Yes, out oā€™ Noo Bedford we shortly must clear, Weā€™re the whalers that never see wheat in the ear.ā€

Here the fiddle went very softly for a while by itself, and then:

ā€œWheat-in-the-ear, my true-loveā€™s posy blowin, Wheat-in-the-ear, weā€™re goinā€™ off to sea; Wheat-in-the-ear, I left you fit for sowin, When I come back a loaf oā€™ bread youā€™ll be!ā€

That made Harvey almost weep, though he could not tell why. But it was much worse when the cook dropped the potatoes and held out his hands for the fiddle. Still leaning against the locker door, he struck into a tune that was like something very bad but sure to happen whatever you did. After a little he sang, in an unknown tongue, his big chin down on the fiddle-tail, his white eyeballs glaring in the lamplight. Harvey swung out of his bunk to hear better; and amid the straining of the timbers and the wash of the waters the tune crooned and moaned on, like lee surf in a blind fog, till it ended with a wail.

ā€œJimmy Christmas! Thet gives me the blue creevles,ā€ said Dan. ā€œWhat in thunder is it?ā€

ā€œThe song of Fin McCoul,ā€ said the cook, ā€œwhen he wass going to Norway.ā€ His English was not thick, but all clear-cut, as though it came from a phonograph.

ā€œFaith, Iā€™ve been to Norway, but I didnā€™t make that unwholesim noise. ā€˜Tis like some of the old songs, though,ā€ said Long Jack, sighing.

ā€œDonā€™t letā€™s hev another ā€˜thout somethinā€™ between,ā€ said Dan; and the accordion struck up a rattling, catchy tune that ended:

ā€œItā€™s six anā€™ twenty Sundays sence lasā€™ we saw the land, With fifteen hunder quintal, Anā€™ fifteen hunder quintal, ā€˜Teen hunder toppinā€™ quintal, ā€˜Twixā€™ old ā€˜Queereau anā€™ Grand!ā€

ā€œHold on!ā€ roared Tom Platt. ā€œDā€™ye want to nail the trip, Dan? Thatā€™s Jonah sure, ā€˜less you sing it after all our saltā€™s wet.ā€

ā€œNo, ā€˜tainā€™t, is it, Dad? Not unless you sing the very lasā€™ verse. You canā€™t learn me anything on Jonahs!ā€

ā€œWhatā€™s that?ā€ said Harvey. ā€œWhatā€™s a Jonah?ā€

ā€œA Jonahā€™s anything that spoils the luck. Sometimes itā€™s a manā€”sometimes itā€™s a boyā€”or a bucket. Iā€™ve known a splittinā€™-knife Jonah two trips till we was on to her,ā€ said Tom Platt. ā€œThereā€™s all sorts oā€™ Jonahs. Jim Bourke was one till he was drowned on Georges. Iā€™d never ship with Jim Bourke, not if I was starvinā€™. There wuz a green dory on the Ezra Flood. Thet was a Jonah, too, the worst sort oā€™ Jonah. Drowned four men, she did, anā€™ used to shine fiery O, nights in the nestā€

ā€œAnd you believe that?ā€ said Harvey, remembering what Tom Platt had said about candles and models. ā€œHavenā€™t we all got to take whatā€™s served?ā€

A mutter of dissent ran round the bunks. ā€œOutboard, yes; inboard, things can happen,ā€ said Disko. ā€œDonā€™t you go makinā€™ a mock of Jonahs, young feller.ā€

ā€œWell, Harve ainā€™t no Jonah. Day after we catched him,ā€ Dan cut in, ā€œwe had a toppinā€™ good catch.ā€

The cook threw up his head and laughed suddenlyā€”a queer, thin laugh. He was a most disconcerting nigger.

ā€œMurder!ā€ said Long Jack. ā€œDonā€™t do that again, doctor. We ainā€™t used to ut.ā€

ā€œWhatā€™s wrong?ā€ said Dan. ā€œAinā€™t he our mascot, and didnā€™t they strike on good after weā€™d struck him?ā€

ā€œOh! yess,ā€ said the cook. ā€œI know that, but the catch iss not finish yet.ā€

ā€œHe ainā€™t goinā€™ to do us any harm,ā€ said Dan, hotly. ā€œWhere are ye hintinā€™ anā€™ edginā€™ to? Heā€™s all rightā€

ā€œNo harm. No. But one day he will be your master, Danny.ā€

ā€œThat all?ā€ said Dan, placidly. ā€œHe wunā€™tā€”not by a jugful.ā€

ā€œMaster!ā€ said the cook, pointing to Harvey. ā€œMan!ā€ and he pointed to Dan.

ā€œThatā€™s news. Haow soon?ā€ said Dan, with a laugh.

ā€œIn some years, and I shall see it. Master and manā€”man and master.ā€

ā€œHow in thunder dā€™ye work that out?ā€ said Tom Platt.

ā€œIn my head, where I can see.ā€

ā€œHaow?ā€ This from all the others at once.

ā€œI do not know, but so it will be.ā€ He dropped his head, and went on peeling the potatoes, and not another word could they get out of him.

ā€œWell,ā€ said Dan, ā€œa heap oā€™ thingsā€™ll hev to come abaout ā€˜fore Harveā€™s any master oā€™ mine; but Iā€™m glad the doctor ainā€™t choosen to mark him for a Jonah. Now, I mistrust Uncle Salters fer the Jonerest Jonah in the Fleet regardinā€™ his own special luck. Dunno ef itā€™s spreadinā€™ sameā€™s smallpox. He ought to be on the Carrie Pitman. That boatā€™s her own Jonah, sureā€”crews anā€™ gear made no differ to her driftinā€™. Jiminy Christmas! Sheā€™ll etch loose in a flat caā€™am.ā€

ā€œWeā€™re well clear oā€™ the Fleet, anyway,ā€ said Disko. ā€œCarrie Pitman anā€™ all.ā€ There was a rapping on the deck.

ā€œUncle Salters has catched his luck,ā€ said Dan as his father departed.

ā€œItā€™s blown clear,ā€ Disko cried, and all the focā€™sle tumbled up for a bit of fresh air. The fog had gone, but a sullen sea ran in great rollers behind it. The ā€˜Weā€™re Hereā€™ slid, as it were, into long, sunk avenues and ditches which felt quite sheltered and homelike if they would only stay still; but they changed without rest or mercy, and flung up the schooner to crown one peak of a thousand gray hills, while the wind hooted through her rigging as she zigzagged down the slopes. Far away a sea would burst into a sheet of foam, and the others would follow suit as at a signal, till Harveyā€™s eyes swam with the vision of interlacing whites and grays. Four or five Mother Careyā€™s chickens stormed round in circles, shrieking as they swept past the bows. A rain-squall or two strayed aimlessly over the hopeless waste, ran down ā€˜wind and back again, and melted away.

ā€œSeems to me I saw somethinā€™ flicker jest naow over yonder,ā€ said Uncle Salters, pointing to the northeast.

ā€œCanā€™t be any of the fleet,ā€ said Disko, peering under his eyebrows, a hand on the focā€™sle gangway as the solid bows hatcheted into the troughs. ā€œSeaā€™s oilinā€™ over dretful fast. Danny, donā€™t you want to skip up a piece anā€™ see how aour trawl-buoy lays?ā€

Danny, in his big boots, trotted rather than climbed up the main rigging (this consumed Harvey with envy), hitched himself around the reeling crosstrees, and let his eye rove till it caught the tiny black buoy-flag on the shoulder of a mile-away swell.

ā€œSheā€™s all right,ā€ he hailed. ā€œSail O! Dead to the noā€™thā€™ard, corainā€™ down like smoke! Schooner she be, too.ā€™ā€

They waited yet another half-hour, the sky clearing in patches, with a flicker of sickly sun from time to time that made patches of olive-green water. Then a stump-foremast lifted, ducked, and disappeared, to be followed on the next wave by a high stern with old-fashioned wooden snailā€™s-horn davits. The snails were red-tanned.

ā€œFrenchmen!ā€ shouted Dan. ā€œNo, ā€˜tainā€™t, neither. Daad!ā€

ā€œThatā€™s no French,ā€ said Disko. ā€œSalters, your blame luck holds tighterā€™n a screw in a keg-head.ā€

ā€œIā€™ve eyes. Itā€™s Uncle Abishai.ā€

ā€œYou canā€™t nowise tell fer sure.ā€

ā€œThe head-king of all Jonahs,ā€ groaned Tom Platt. ā€œOh, Salters, Salters, why wasnā€™t you abed anā€™ asleep?ā€

ā€œHow could I tell?ā€ said poor Salters, as the schooner swung up.

She might have been the very Flying Dutchman, so foul, draggled, and unkempt was every rope and stick aboard. Her old-style quarterdeck was some or five feet high, and her rigging flew knotted and tangled like weed at a wharf-end. She was running before the windā€”yawing frightfullyā€”her staysail let down to act as a sort of extra foresail,ā€”ā€œscandalized,ā€ they call it,ā€”and her foreboom guyed out over the side. Her bowsprit cocked up like an old-fashioned frigateā€™s; her jib-boom had been fished and spliced and nailed and clamped beyond further repair; and as she hove herself forward, and sat down on her broad tail, she looked for all the world like a blouzy, frouzy, bad old woman sneering at a decent girl.

ā€œThatā€™s Abishal,ā€ said Salters. ā€œFull oā€™ gin anā€™ Judique men, anā€™ the judgments oā€™ Providence layinā€™ fer him anā€™ never takinā€™ good holt Heā€™s run in to bait, Miquelon way.ā€

ā€œHeā€™ll run her under,ā€ said Long Jack. ā€œThatā€™s no rig fer this weather.ā€

ā€œNot he, ā€˜r heā€™dā€™a done it long ago,ā€ Disko replied. ā€œLooks ā€˜s if he calā€™lated to run us under. Ainā€™t she daown by the head more ā€˜n natural, Tom Platt?ā€

ā€œEf itā€™s his style oā€™ loadinā€™ her she ainā€™t safe,ā€ said the sailor slowly. ā€œEf sheā€™s spewed her oakum heā€™d better git to his pumps mighty quick.ā€

The creature threshed up, wore round with a clatter and raffle, and lay head to wind within ear-shot.

A gray-beard wagged over the bulwark, and a thick voice yelled something Harvey could not understand. But Diskoā€™s face darkened. ā€œHeā€™d resk every stick he hez to carry bad

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