The Floating Light of the Goodwin Sands by R. M. Ballantyne (ereader iphone txt) š
- Author: R. M. Ballantyne
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Now that my heart is smitten and my brain gone mad?ā
Queeker fetched a long deep-drawn sigh at this point, the agony of intense composition being for a moment relaxed. Then, catching his breath and glaring, he went on in a somewhat gentler strainā
āForgive me, Floating-light, and you, ye sun,
Moon, stars, and elements of Nature, every one;
I did but vent my misery and spleen
In uttāring words of fury that I hardly mean.
At least I do in partābut hold! why not?
Oh! cease ye fiendish thoughts that rage and plot
To bring about my ruin. Hence! avaunt!
Or else in pity tell me what you want.
I cannot live, and yet I would not die!
My hopes are blighted! Where, oh whither shall I fly?
āTis past! Iāll cease to daily with vain sophistry,
And try the virtue of a calm philosophy.ā
The effect of composition upon Queeker was such that when he had completed his task he felt greatly tranquillised, and, having shut up his portfolio, formed the sudden resolution of dropping in upon the Durants to tea.
Meantime, and before the love-sick youth had begun the lines above quoted, Katie and her cousin walked home by a road which conducted them close past the edge of those extensive sandy plains called the Denes of Yarmouth. Here, at the corner of a quiet street, they were arrested by the sobbing of a little boy who sat on a railing by the roadside, swaying himself to and fro in an agony of grief.
Katieās sympathetic heart was instantly touched. She at once went up to the boy, and made earnest inquiries into the cause of his distress.
āPlease, maāam,ā said the boy, āIāve lost a shillinā, and I canāt find it nowheres. Oh, wot ever shall I do? My mother gave it me to give with two other bobs to my poor sick brother whom Iāve comed all this way to see, and there Iāve gone anā lost it, anā Iāll āave to lay out all night in the cold, for I dursnāt go to see āim without the moneyāboo, hoo!ā
āOh, how very unfortunate!ā exclaimed Katie with real feeling for the boy, whose soul was thus steeped to all appearance in woe unutterable, was very small, and very dirty and ragged, and had an extremely handsome intelligent face, with a profusion of wild brown curls. āBut I can make that up to you, poor boy,ā she added, drawing out her purse, āhere is a shilling for you. Where do you live?ā
āAt Ramsgate, maāam.ā
āAt Ramsgate?ā exclaimed Katie in surprise, āwhy, how did you manage to get here?ā
āI come in a lugger, maāam, as bālongs to a friend oā ourn. Weāve just arrived, anā we goes away agin to-morrow.ā
āIndeed! That will give you little time to see your sick brother. What is the matter with him?ā
āOh, heās took very bad, maāam. Iām sorry to say heās bad altogether, maāam. Bin anā runād away from āome. Aāmost broke his motherās āeart, he has, anā fallād sick here, he did.ā
The small boy paused abruptly at this point, and looked earnestly in Katieās kind and pitiful face.
āWhere does your brother live?ā asked Katie.
The small boy looked rather perplexed, and said that he couldnāt rightly remember the name of the street, but that the owner of the lugger āknowād it.ā Whereat Katie seemed disappointed, and said she would have been so glad to have visited him, and given him such little comforts as his disease might warrant.
āOh, maāam,ā exclaimed the small boy, looking wistfully at her with his large blue eyes, āwot a pity Iāve forgot it! The doctor ordered āim wine tooāit was as much as āis life was worth not to āave wine,ābut of course they couldnāt afford to git āim wineāeven cheap wine would do well enough, at two bob or one bob the bottle. If you was to give me two bobāshillins I mean, maāamāIād git it for āim to-night.ā
Katie and her cousin conversed aside in low tones for a minute or two as to the propriety of complying with this proposal, and came to the conclusion that the boy was such a nice outspoken honest-like fellow, that it would do no harm to risk that sum in the circumstances. Two shillings were therefore put into the boyās dirty little hand, and he was earnestly cautioned to take care of it, which he earnestly, and no doubt honestly, promised to do.
āWhat is your name, boy?ā asked Katie, as she was about to leave him.
āBillyāBilly Towler, maāam,ā answered the urchin, pulling his forelock by way of respectful acknowledgment, ābut my friends they calls me Walleye, chiefly in consikence oā my beinā wery much the rewerse of blind, maāam, and niver capable of beinā cotched in a state oā slumber at no time.ā
This reply had the effect of slightly damaging the small boyās character for simplicity in Katieās mind, although it caused both herself and her companion to laugh.
āWell, Billy,ā she said, opening her card-case, āhere is my cardāgive it to your sick brother, and when he sends it to me with his address written on the back of it Iāll call on him.ā
āThankee, maāam,ā said the small boy.
After he had said this, he stood silently watching the retiring figure of his benefactress, until she was out of sight, and then dashing round the corner of a bye-street which was somewhat retired, he there went off into uncontrollable fits of laughterāslapped his small thighs, held his lean little sides with both hands, threw his ragged cap into the air, and in various other ways gave evidence of ecstatic delight. He was still engaged in these violent demonstrations of feeling when Morley Jonesāhaving just landed at Yarmouth, and left the sloop Nora in charge of young Weltonācame smartly round the corner, and, applying his heavy boot to the small boyās person, kicked him into the middle of the road.
āWhat are ye howlinā there for, anā blockinā up the Queenās highway like that, you precious young villain?ā demanded Morley Jones.
āAnā wot are you breakinā the Queenās laws for like that?ā retorted Billy Towler, dancing into the middle of the road and revolving his small fists in pugilistic fashion. āYou big hairy walrus, I donāt know whether to āave you up before the beaks for assault and battery or turn to anā give āee a good lickinā.ā
Mr Jones showed all his teeth with an approving grin, and the small boy grinned in return, but still kept on revolving his fists, and warning the walrus to ālook hout and defend hisself if he didnāt want his daylights knocked out or his bows stove in!ā
āYouāre a smart youth, you are,ā said Jones.
āHa! youāre afraid, are you? anā wants to make friends, but I wonāt āave it at no price. Come on, will you?ā
Jones, still grinning from ear to ear, made a rush at the urchin, who, however, evaded him with such ease that the man perceived he had not the smallest chance of catching him.
āI say, my lad,ā he asked, stopping and becoming suddenly grave, āwhere dāyou come from?ā
āI comes from where I bālongs to, and where Iām agoinā back to wāen it suits me.ā
āVery good,ā retorted Jones, āand I suppose you donāt object to earn a little money in an easy way?ā
āYes, I do object,ā replied Billy; āit aināt worth my while to earn a little money in any way, no matter how easy; I never deals in small sums. A fiā punā note is the lowest figurā as I can stoop to.ā
āYouāll not object, however, to a gift, I daresay,ā remarked Jones, as he tossed a half-crown towards the boy.
Billy caught it as deftly as a dog catches a bit of biscuit, looked at it in great surprise, tossed it in the air, bit its rim critically, and finally slid it into his trousers pocket.
āWell, you know,ā he said slowly, āto obleege a friend, Iām willinā to accept.ā
āNow then, youngster, if Iām willing to trust that half-crown in your clutches, you may believe I have got something to say to āee worth your while listeninā to; for you may see Iām not the man to give it to āee out oā Christian charity.ā
āThatās true,ā remarked Billy, who by this time had become serious, and stood with his hands in his pockets, still, however, at a respectful distance.
āWell, the fact is,ā said Mr Jones, āthat Iāve bin lookinā out of late for a smart lad with a light heart and a light pocket, and that aināt troubled with much of a conscience.ā
āThatās me to a tee,ā said Billy promptly; āmy āartās as light as a feather, and my pocket is as light as a maginstrateās wisdom. As for conscience, the last beak as I wos introdooced to said I must have bin born without a conscience altogether; anā āpon my honour I think he wos right, for I never felt it yet, though Iāve often triedāāxcept once, wāen Iād cleaned out the pocket of a old ooman as was starinā in at a shop winder in Cheapside, and she fainted dead away wāen she found it out, and her little grand-darter looked so pale and pitiful that I says to myself, āHallo! Walleye, youāve bin to the wrong shop this time; go anā put it back, ye young dog;ā so I obeyed orders, anā slipped back the purse while pretendinā to help the old ooman. It wos risky work, though, for a bobby twigged me, and it was only my good wind and tough pair oā shanks that saved me. Now,ā continued the urchin, knitting his brows as he contemplated the knotty point, āIāve had my doubts whether that wos conscience, or a sort oā natāral weakness pecooliar to my constitootion. Iāve half a mind to call on the Bishop of London on the point one oā these days.ā
āSo, youāre a city bird,ā observed Jones, admiringly.
āAh, and I can see that youāre a provincial one,ā replied Billy, jingling the half-crown against the silver in his pocket.
āWhat brings you so far out of your beat, Walleye?ā inquired Jones.
āOh, Iām on circuit just now, makinā a tower of the provinces. I tried a case just before you came up, anā made three shillins out of it, besides no end oā promisesāwhich, unfortānately, I canāt awail myself ofāfrom a sweet young lady, with such a pleasant face, that I wished I could adopt her for a darter. But thatās an expensive luxury, you see; canāt afford it yet.ā
āWell, youngster,ā said Jones, assuming a more grave yet off-hand air, āif you choose to trust me, Iāll put you in the way of makinā some money without much trouble. It only requires a little false swearing, which I daresay you are used to.ā
āNo, I aināt,ā retorted the urchin indignantly; āI never tells a lie āxcept wāen I canāt help it. Then, of course, a feller must do it!ā
āJust so, Walleye, themās my sentiments. Have you got a father?ā
āNo, nor yet a mother,ā replied Billy. āAs far as Iām aweer of, I wos diskivered on the steps of a city workāus, anā my first impressions in this life wos the knuckles of the old woman as banged me up. The governor used to talk a lot oā balderdash about our beinā brought up; but I knows better. I wos banged up; banged up in the mornins, banged to meals, and banged to bed; banged through thick and thin, for everything anā for nothinā, until I banged myself out oā the door one fine morninā, which I banged arter me, anā āave bin banginā about, a genālemān at large, ever since.ā
āHa! got no friends and nothinā to do?ā said Morley Jones.
āJis so.ā
āWell, if you have a mind to take service with me, come along anā have a pot oā beer.ā
The man turned on his heel and walked off to a neighbouring public-house, leaving the small boy to follow or not as he pleased, and apparently quite indifferent as to what his decision might be.
Billy Towlerāalias Walleyeālooked after him
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