By The Sea | Page 6

Herman White Chaplin

should not have married into one of the wealthy families in his own
village. At first there had been a little visiting to and fro; it had lasted
but a little time, and then the two households had settled down, as the
way is in the country, to follow each its own natural course of living.

George Pelham's wife had always lived in an odd little house, all doors
and windows, near by her father, in her native village.
It was from Porto Cabello that that message came,--yellow fever--a
short sickness--a burial in a stranger's grave. George Pelham's wife had
been for two or three years of less than her usual strength. It was not
long after that news came,--came so suddenly, with no warning,--that
she began to fade away; and after ten months she died.
I remember seeing her a week or two before her death. Her bed had
been set up in her little parlor for the convenience of those who were
attending upon her. She lay on her back, bolstered up. The paleness of
her face was intensified by her coal-black hair, lying back heavy on the
pillow. Her hands were thin and transparent, and I remember well the
straining look in her eyes as she talked with me about the boy whom
she was going to leave.
She was living, as I have said, close by her father. It was natural that in
the last few days of her illness the child should be taken to her father's
house, and when she died and the funeral was over, it was there that he
returned.
Picture now to yourself a boy toward nine years old, symmetrically
made, firm and hard. His head is round, his features are good, his hair
is fine and lies down close. He is clothed in a neat print jacket, with a
collar and a little handkerchief at the neck, and a pair of short trousers
buttoned on to the jacket. He is barefoot. He is tanned but not burnt.
His complexion is of a rich dark brown. He is always fresh and clean.
But the great charm about him is the expression of infinite fun and
mirth that is always upon his face. Never for a moment while he is
awake is his face still. Always the same, yet always shifting, with a
thousand varying shades of roguish joy. Quick, bright, full of boyish
repartee, full of shouts and laughter. And the same incessant life which
plays upon his face shows itself in every movement of his limbs. Never
for a moment is he still unless he has some work upon his hands. He
has his little routine of tasks, regularly assigned, which he goes through
with the most amusing good-humor and attention. It is his duty to see
that the skiffs are not jammed under the wharf on the rising tide; to

sweep out the "Annie" when she comes in, and to set her cabin to rights;
to set away the dishes after meals, and to feed the chickens. Aside from
a few such tasks, his time in summer is his own. The rest of the year he
goes to the "primary," and serves to keep the whole room in a state of
mirth. He has the happy gift that to put every one in high spirits he has
only to be present. Such an incessant flow of life you rarely see. His
manners are good, and he comes honestly by them.
There is an amusing union in him of the baby and the man. While the
children of his age at the summer hotel walk about for the most part
with their nurses, he is turned loose upon the shore, and has been, from
his cradle. He can dive and swim and paddle and float and "go
steamboat." He can row a boat that is not too heavy, and up to the limit
of his strength he can steer a sail-boat with substantial skill. He knows
the currents, the tides, and the shoals about his shore, and the nearer
landmarks. He knows that to find the threadlike entrance to the bay you
bring the flag-staff over Cart-wright's barn. He has vague theories of
his own as to the annual shifting of the channel. He knows where to
take the city children to look for tinkle-shells and mussels. He knows
what winds bring in the scallops from their beds. He knows where to
dig for clams, and where to tread for quahaugs without disturbing the
oysters. He has a good deal of fragmentary lore of the sea.
Every morning you will hear his cry, a sort of yodel, or bird-call,
peculiar to him, with which he bursts forth upon the world. Then you
will hear, perhaps, loud peals of laughter at something that
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