Read Ebook: Captain John's Adventures; or The Story of a Fatherless Boy by Anonymous
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CAPTAIN JOHN'S ADVENTURES
CAPTAIN JOHN'S ADVENTURES
The Story of a Fatherless Boy
EDINBURGH & LONDON OLIPHANT ANDERSON & FERRIER
MORRISON AND GIBB, PRINTERS, EDINBURGH.
CAPTAIN JOHN'S ADVENTURES
THE FISHERMAN'S DWELLING--HOME MADE DESOLATE.
Richard Leddam was a poor man, who obtained a subsistence by toiling in all weathers in catching fish and oysters, which he sold to persons whose business it was to supply the city market. The village in which he lived was exposed on one side to the ocean waves, the other was washed by the calmer waters of a bay. Here a few families were induced to dwell, invited by the facilities for procuring fish.
Lonely as the village was, it was not an unpleasant spot; the grounds were shaded by fine trees, and the constant sea breeze rendered the atmosphere cool and healthy. On a little indenture of the shore, where the bay setting in formed a cove, stood the cabin of the fisherman. It was built of logs, and a sloping shed protected the house from winter storms and summer suns. Beneath this shelter were kept, when not in use, the fishing boat and the fishing tackle. Here too the family assembled in fine weather, and thence the anxious wife sent many a wishful glance, when expecting her husband's return.
Their family consisted of two boys, John and Henry, and three daughters.
Here they lived in rude comfort--poor, but not destitute; and when, after a successful day, the family met in their humble home, from which they looked out on the sparkling waters, while the father related his adventures, they might be called happy, as far as exemption from care could make immortal beings happy.
But of his glorious birthright as an immortal spirit, Richard Leddam thought not. If he mentioned the name of his Creator, it was only to profane it. There was no prayer offered to God in that family, and Sabbaths came and went, not reverenced, almost unheeded. Once, while at a neighbouring city, where he had gone with a boat load, his little vessel was visited by a Christian gentleman, who gave him a Bible, which he brought to his wife; but whether it was prized as it deserved to be, or whether the fisherman, in his solitary hours upon the sea, ever turned in repentance to his God and Saviour, none can tell.
One boisterous day in November he left the cove, thinking that the wind would lull by noon. His wife remembered that when he had gone a few steps from the door he returned to bid them farewell again, and placing his hand on John's head, told him to be good, and help his mother.
The wind increased through the day, and the tempest was fearful all night. When the light dawned, the distressed family beheld the boat floating upwards,--but their only friend they never saw again.
With the assistance of a neighbour the boat was drawn up, and placed in its usual resting-place in the shed. The children gathered around it with sorrowful faces, as if it had been their father's coffin. The mother looked silently on the helpless little ones; then, leaning her face on her hand, as she rested on the side of the boat, she wept piteously. One of the neighbours perceiving a Bible, which lay on a shelf, took it down and read the eleventh chapter of John. The word of God soothed the poor widow's grief; and when they were alone she said to her son, 'Read to me those good words again.' How many sorrowful hearts have those good words relieved!
THEY MOVE TO THE CITY.
The kind neighbour who loved the Bible, and had read it to the poor widow, came daily to read more of the 'good words.' The clergyman too came to visit her in her sorrow, and explained to her the words that had soothed her even while she understood them but imperfectly. Mrs Leddam felt how sinful she had been in living all her life without a thought of God, and now in her affliction she turned to Him whom she had so long forgotten.
The good clergyman spoke to her of Jesus, the Saviour of sinners, through whom alone we can receive pardon and peace; and the poor widow prayed to this blessed Saviour as she had never prayed before, and He heard her and comforted her heart; for He has said, 'Him that cometh unto me, I will in no wise cast out.'
As John was too young to manage the boat, it was sold with the nets and fishing tackle, and the widow with her five children removed to the neighbouring town, where she hoped to find employment in sewing. She hired a small house in the outskirts of the town; and there, with her little flock around her, she felt like a desolate stranger.
How little do those children who are blessed with many comforts know of the trials of the poor and fatherless!
But the widow had now a source of comfort in her trials. John daily read some of the 'good words' to his mother. They rejoiced in God's many promises to the widow and the fatherless, and trusted that He would provide. The town was situated on the bank of a broad river, and the widow's cottage stood not far from the water. Near it stood a small house, which one would have said had been built by a sailor; and he would have said rightly, for Captain Sam had made his dwelling as much like the vessel in which he had spent his best days as he could. In front of the house was a small porch, shaded by a sail; and here the old man passed the most of his time, smoking his pipe. The poor neighbours thought that Captain Sam was a rich man, because he could afford to do nothing.
Within sight of the captain's house was a grocer's shop, where every morning numbers of poor children came to procure supplies for the day. Among them the captain observed John and Henry, as having clean faces, and as being neatly dressed. John's attention had been attracted by the captain's house. He admired the bright colour with which it was painted, and had conceived a great respect for its happy owner; for John, like the rest, thought it must be very pleasant to be idle,--a great mistake, as any one who will try it may soon discover. Hearing the shopkeeper call him captain, he asked, 'Is he a real captain, sir?'
'How do I know, youngster?' replied the man. 'You had better ask him that yourself.'
The next day, observing his mother weeping, John said, 'Mother, can't I get work?'
She laid her hand on his head as she replied, 'What could you do, my son?'
'A heap of things,' he said earnestly. 'I can help to row, and mend the nets.'
'But we are now far away from the fishing. We are in a strange place, full of people, where, in the midst of plenty, we are likely to come to want; for this is the last money I have in the world.'
'Oh, mother!' said the terrified boy, 'will they let us starve? won't some of the rich people help you?'
'I am going in search of work,' replied his mother. 'Take care of your brother and sisters until I return.'
'May I walk as far as the corner, mother?'
Giving him permission to do so, Mrs Leddam left the house.
Now John had a plan of his own, but he was puzzled to know how to bring it about. He had often accompanied his father to the vessels in the bay, and had a strong partiality for sailors. He thought if he could but make a friend of this rich captain, who lived in the fine house, how happy he should be. So, after thinking it over, he resolved to see the captain, and tell him how poor his mother was. Bidding Henry watch his baby sister, he set out for the corner; but as he walked on he felt his courage become fainter, until his young heart almost failed.
But we will turn to a new chapter to relate his introduction to the captain.
JOHN MAKES SOME ACQUAINTANCES.
John had not walked far when he saw a horse galloping down the street: the people shouted, which only made the horse run the faster; but just as he reached the corner, John made a spring, and, catching the rein, in a moment he was on his back. John's time, when he lived at the fishing village, had been divided between riding ponies and paddling boats; but he had never ridden so fine an animal as this,--his skin shone like satin, and his saddle and bridle were so handsome, that the little boy concluded he must belong to some very rich captain indeed.
Directly a ragged boy came up to him with 'Halloo! there, what are you doing with my horse?'
'I caught him,' said John, 'but I don't believe he belongs to you;' so, touching his side with his heel, the spirited horse set off at full speed, and did not stop till he reached a handsome house, on the steps of which stood a gentleman with a whip in his hand, just ready for a ride. He was pleased to get his horse, and put a shilling in John's hand for his trouble.
So large a piece of money astonished the child; his eyes glistened, and, without knowing it, he spoke his thoughts: 'Oh, mother, you need not have cried so!'
The gentleman was preparing to mount his horse, but hearing these words, he said, 'What was the matter with your mother?'
'She had no money to buy us bread, sir.'
'Has she no work to do?'
'We have just come here, and mother does not know any one.'
'Why did you come here, boy?'
John thought this was a foolish question, but he answered, 'Father was drowned, and mother couldn't fish, and she was afraid we should starve in the village; but I am more afraid of it here.'
The gentleman smiled and said, 'I do not think there is much danger of that.'
But John looked in his face with a serious countenance, and said, 'People are obliged to starve when they have no money. I asked the shopkeeper for one biscuit for the baby, and he said he would whip me.'
'The hard-hearted fellow!' said the stranger to himself; then, looking at his watch, 'I am hurried now, but bring your mother here this evening.' As he spoke he rode away; but checking his horse, he called to John, 'My little lad, have you had your breakfast? Ah! he is gone; I should have thought of that before.' But happy John was already half way home. As he passed he saw Captain Sam seated before his door, lighting his pipe; and he determined to stop and speak to him. John began to think better of the towns-folk, as he called them; and the thought of having some money in his pocket gave him more confidence, in which our fisherman's boy resembled people much older and wiser than himself.
When John came near to the captain, his heart began to beat quickly, and he made the best bow that his country education had taught him. It would have been a hard heart that could not feel for him, as he stood with his straw hat in his hand, his brown curling hair setting off his honest countenance, which, young as it was, wore an expression of care. It is sad to see trouble clouding the brow of childhood; but He who sends affliction, will send strength to bear it, if we ask Him. Though John's father had been dead but a few weeks, he had thought more in that short time than in his whole life before. While he read God's precious promises to his mother, he learned to pray to that merciful God, and love the kind Saviour.
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