Micah Clarke<br />His Statement as made to his three grandchildren Joseph, Gervas and Reuben During by Arthur Conan Doyle (read e books online free txt) ๐
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- Author: Arthur Conan Doyle
Read book online ยซMicah Clarke<br />His Statement as made to his three grandchildren Joseph, Gervas and Reuben During by Arthur Conan Doyle (read e books online free txt) ๐ยป. Author - Arthur Conan Doyle
โI have looked upon sights,โ said I, โwhich might well add ten years to a manโs age.โ
โAye, aye!โ he answered, with a hollow groan, shaking his head from side to side. โIt is a most accursed affair. Yet, bad as the tempest is, the calm will ever come afterwards if you will but ride it out with your anchor placed deep in Providence. Ah, lad, that is good holding ground! But if I know you aright, your grief is more for these poor wretches around you than for yourself.โ
โIt is, indeed, a sore sight to see them suffer so patiently and uncomplainingly,โ I answered, โand for such a man, too!โ
โAye, the chicken-livered swab!โ growled the seaman, grinding his teeth.
โHow are my mother and my father,โ I asked, โand how came you so far from home?โ
โNay, I should have grounded on my beef bones had I waited longer at my moorings. I cut my cable, therefore, and, making a northerly tack as far as Salisbury, I run down with a fair wind. Thy father hath set his face hard, and goes about his work as usual, though much troubled by the Justices, who have twice had him up to Winchester for examination, but have found his papers all right and no charge to be brought against him. Your mother, poor soul, hath little time to mope or to pipe her eye, for she hath such a sense of duty that, were the ship to founder under her, it is a plate galleon to a china orange that she would stand fast in the caboose curing marigolds or rolling pastry. They have taken to prayer as some would to rum, and warm their hearts with it when the wind of misfortune blows chill. They were right glad that I should come down to you, and I gave them the word of a sailor that I would get you out of the bilboes if it might anyhow be done.โ
โGet me out, Solomon!โ said I; โnay, that may be put outside the question. How could you get me out?โ
โThere are many ways,โ he answered, sinking his voice to a whisper, and nodding his grizzled head as one who talks upon what has cost him much time and thought. โThere is scuttling.โ
โScuttling?โ
โAye, lad! When I was quartermaster of the galley Providence in the second Dutch war, we were caught betwixt a lee shore and Van Trompโs squadron, so that after fighting until our sticks were shot away and our scuppers were arun with blood, we were carried by boarding and sent as prisoners to the Texel. We were stowed away in irons in the afterhold, amongst the bilge water and the rats, with hatches battened down and guards atop, but even then they could not keep us, for the irons got adrift, and Will Adams, the carpenterโs mate, picked a hole in the seams so that the vessel nearly foundered, and in the confusion we fell upon the prize crew, and, using our fetters as cudgels, regained possession of the vessel. But you smile, as though there were little hopes from any such plan!โ
โIf this wool-house were the galley Providence and Taunton Deane were the Bay of Biscay, it might be attempted,โ I said.
โI have indeed got out oโ the channel,โ he answered, with a wrinkled brow. โThere is, however, another most excellent plan which I have conceived, which is to blow up the building.โ
โTo blow it up!โ I cried.
โAye! A brace of kegs and a slow match would do it any dark night. Then where would be these walls which now shut ye in?โ
โWhere would be the folk that are now inside them!โ I asked. โWould you not blow them up as well?โ
โPlague take it, I had forgot that,โ cried Solomon. โNay, then, I leave it with you. What have you to propose? Do but give your sailing orders, and, with or without a consort, you will find that I will steer by them as long as this old hulk can answer to her helm.โ
โThen my advice is, my dear old friend,โ said I, โthat you leave matters to take their course, and hie back to Havant with a message from me to those who know me, telling them to be of good cheer, and to hope for the best. Neither you nor any other man can help me now, for I have thrown in my lot with these poor folk, and I would not leave them if I could. Do what you can to cheer my motherโs heart, and commend me to Zachary Palmer. Your visit hath been a joy to me, and your return will be the same to them. You can serve me better so than by biding here.โ
โSink me if I like going back without a blow struck,โ he growled. โYet if it is your will there is an end of the matter. Tell me, lad. Has that lank-sparred, slab-sided, herring-gutted friend of yours played you false? for if he has, by the eternal, old as I am, my hanger shall scrape acquaintance with the longshore tuck which hangs at his girdle. I know where he hath laid himself up, moored stem and stern, all snug and shipshape, waiting for the turn of the tide.โ
โWhat, Saxon!โ I cried. โDo you indeed know where he is? For Godโs sake speak low, for it would mean a commission and five hundred good pounds to any one of these soldiers could he lay hands upon him.โ
โThey are scarce like to do that,โ said Solomon. โOn my journey hither I chanced to put into port at a place called Bruton, where there is an inn that will compare with most, and the skipper is a wench with a glib tongue and a merry eye. I was drinking a glass of spiced ale, as is my custom about six bells of the middle watch, when I chanced to notice a great lanky carter, who was loading up a waggon in the yard with a cargo oโ beer casks. Looking closer it seemed to me that the manโs nose, like the beak of a goshawk, and his glinting eyes with the lids only half-reefed, were known to me, but when I overheard him swearing to himself in good High Dutch, then his figurehead came back to me in a moment. I put out into the yard, and touched him on the shoulder. Zounds, lad! you should have seen him spring back and spit at me like a wildcat with every hair of his head in a bristle. He whipped a knife from under his smock, for he thought, doubtless, that I was about to earn the reward by handing him over to the red-coats. I told him that his secret was safe with me, and I asked him if he had heard that you were laid by the heels. He answered that he knew it, and that he would be answerable that no harm befell you, though in truth it seemed to me that he had his hands full in trimming his own sails, without acting as pilot to another. However, there I left him, and there I shall find him again if so be as he has done you an injury.โ
โNay,โ I answered, โI am right glad that he has found this refuge. We did separate upon a difference of opinion, but I have no cause to complain of him. In many ways he hath shown me both kindness and goodwill.โ
โHe is as crafty as a purserโs clerk,โ quoth Solomon. โI have seen Reuben Lockarby,
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