Jacob Faithful Part 47
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"Have you had your breakfast, Jacob?" said Mrs Beazeley.
"No," replied I; "I was obliged to go up to Mr Turnbull's, and that detained me."
"No more sodgers, Jacob," said Tom; "father and I eat them all."
"Have you?" replied Mrs Beazeley, taking two more red herrings out of the cupboard, and putting them on the fire to grill; "no, no, master Tom, there's some for Jacob yet."
"Well, mother, you make nets to some purpose, for you've always a fish when it's wanted."
I despatched my breakfast, and as soon as all had been cleared away by his wife, old Tom, crossing his two timber legs, commenced business, for it appeared, what I was not aware of, that we had met on a sort of council-of-war.
"Jacob, sit down by me; old woman, bring yourself to an anchor in the high chair. Tom, sit anywhere, so you sit still."
"And leave my net alone, Tom," cried his mother, in parenthesis.--"You see, Jacob, the whole long and short of it is this--I feel my toes more and more, and flannel's no longer warm. I can't tide it any longer, and I think it high time to lie up in ordinary and moor abreast of the old woman. Now, there's Tom, in the first place, what's to do with he? I think that I'll build him a wherry, and as I'm free of the river he can finish his apprentices.h.i.+p with my name on the boat; but to build him a wherry would be rather a heavy pull for me."
"If you mean to build it yourself, I think it will prove a _heavy pull_ for me," replied Tom.
"Silence, Tom; I built you, and G.o.d knows you're light enough."
"And, Tom, leave my net alone," cried his mother.
"Father made me light-fingered, mother."
"Ay, and light-hearted too, boy," rejoined the dame, looking fondly at her son.
"Well," continued old Tom, "supposing that Tom be provided for in that way; then now I comes to myself. I've an idea that I can do a good bit of work in patching up boats; for you see I always was a bit of a carpenter, and I know how the builders extortionate the poor watermen when there's a trifle amiss. Now, if they knew I could do it, they'd all come to me fast enough; but then there's a puzzle. I've been thinking this week how I can make them know it. I can't put out a board and say, Beazeley, _Boat-builder_, because I'm no boatbuilder, but still I want a sign."
"Lord, father, haven't you got one already?" interrupted young Tom; "you've half a boat stuck up there, and that means that you're half a boat-builder."
"Silence, Tom, with your frippery; what do you think. Jacob?"
"Could you not say, 'Boats repaired here?'"
"Yes, but that won't exactly do; they like to employ a builder--and there's the puzzle."
"Not half so puzzling as this net," observed Tom, who had taken up the needle, unseen by his mother, and begun to work; "I've made only ten st.i.tches, and six of them are long ones."
"Tom, Tom, you good-for-nothing--why don't you let my net alone?" cried Mrs Beazeley; "now 'twill take me as much time to undo ten st.i.tches as to have made fifty."
"All right, mother."
"No, Tom, all's wrong; look at these meshes?"
"Well, then, all's fair, mother."
"No, all's foul, boy; look how it's tangled."
"Still, I say, all's fair, mother, for it is but fair to give the fish one or two chances to get away, and that's just what I've done; and now, father, I'll settle your affair to your own satisfaction, as I have mother's."
"That will be queer satisfaction, Tom, I guess; but let's hear what you have to say."
"Then, father, it seems that you're no boat-builder, but you want people to fancy that you are--a'n't that the question?"
"Why, 'tis something like it, Tom, but I do n.o.body no harm."
"Certainly not; it's only the boats which will suffer. Now, get a large board, with 'Boats _built to order_, and boats repaired, by Tom Beazeley.' You know if any man is fool enough to order a boat, that's his concern; you didn't say you're a boat-builder, although you have no objection to try your hand."
"What do you say Jacob?" said old Tom, appealing to me.
"I think that Tom has given very good advice, and I would follow it."
"Ah! Tom has a head," said Mrs Beazeley, fondly. "Tom, let go my net again, will you? What a boy you are! Now touch it again if you dare,"
and Mrs Beazeley took up a little poker from the fire-place and shook it at him.
"Tom has a head, indeed," said young Tom, "but as he has no wish to have it broken, Jacob, lend me your wherry for half-an-hour, and I'll be off."
I a.s.sented, and Tom, first tossing the cat upon his mother's back, made his escape, crying:
"Lord, Molly, what a fish--"
as the animal fixed in its claws to save herself from falling, making Mrs Beazeley roar out and vow vengeance, while old Tom and I could not refrain from laughter.
After Tom's departure the conversation was renewed, and everything was finally arranged between old Tom and his wife, except the building of the wherry, at which the old woman shook her head. The debate would be too long, and not sufficiently interesting to detail; one part, however, I must make the reader acquainted with. After entering into all the arrangements of the house, Mrs Beazeley took me upstairs to show me the rooms, which were very neat and clean. I came down with her, and old Tom said, "Did the old woman show you the room with the white curtains, Jacob?"
"Yes," replied I, "and a very nice one it is."
"Well, Jacob, there's nothing sure in this world. You're well off at present, and 'leave well alone' is a good motto; but recollect this, that room is for you when you want it, and everything else we can share with you. It's offered freely, and you will accept it the same. Is it not, old lady?"
"Yes, that it is, Jacob; but may you do better--if not, I'll be your mother for want of a better."
I was moved with the kindness of the old couple; the more so as I did not know what I had done to deserve it. Old Tom gave me a hearty squeeze of the hand, and then continued--"But about this wherry--what do you say, old woman?"
"What will it cost?" replied she, gravely.
"Cost; let me see--a good wherry, with sculls and oars, will be a matter of thirty pounds."
The old woman screwed up her mouth, shook her head, and then walked away to prepare for dinner.
"I think she could muster the blunt, Jacob, but she don't like to part with it. Tom must coax her. I wish he hadn't s.h.i.+ed the cat at her.
He's too full of fun."
As old Beazeley finished, I perceived a wherry pulling in with some ladies. I looked attentively, and recognised my own boat, and Tom pulling. In a minute more they were at the _hard_, and who, to my astonishment, were there seated, but Mrs Drummond and Sarah. As Tom got out of the boat and held it steady against the _hard_, he called to me; I could not do otherwise than go and a.s.sist them out; and once more did I touch the hands of those whom I never thought to meet again. Mrs Drummond retained my hand a short time after she landed, saying, "We are friends, Jacob, are we not!"
"Oh, yes, madam," replied I, much moved, in a faltering voice.
"I shall not ask that question," said Sarah, gaily, "for we parted friends."
And as I recalled to mind her affectionate behaviour, I pressed her hand, and the tears glistened in my eyes as I looked into her sweet face. As I afterwards discovered, this was an arranged plan with old and young Tom, to bring about a meeting without my knowledge. Mrs Beazeley courtesied and stroked her ap.r.o.n--smiled at the ladies, looked very _cat_-ish at Tom, showed the ladies into the house, where old Tom a.s.sisted to do the honours after his own fas.h.i.+on, by asking Mrs Drummond if she would like to _whet her whistle_ after her _pull_. Mrs Drummond looked round to me for explanation, but young Tom thought proper to be interpreter. "Father wants to know, if you please, ma'am, whether, after your _pull_ in the boat, you wouldn't like to have a _pull_ at the brandy bottle?"
Jacob Faithful Part 47
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Jacob Faithful Part 47 summary
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