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
Reuben Lockarby was ill for many months, but when he at last recovered he found a pardon awaiting him through the interest of Major Ogilvy. After a time, when the troubles were all blown over, he married the daughter of Mayor Timewell, and he still lives in Taunton, a well-to-do and prosperous citizen. Thirty years ago there was a little Micah Lockarby, and now I am told that there is another, the son of the first, who promises to be as arrant a little Roundhead as ever marched to the tuck of drum.
Of Saxon I have heard more than once. So skilfully did he use his hold over the Duke of Beaufort, that he was appointed through his interest to the command of an expedition which had been sent to chastise the savages of Virginia, who had wrought great cruelties upon the settlers. There he did so out-ambush their ambushes, and out-trick their most cunning warriors, that he hath left a great name among them, and is still remembered there by an Indian word which signifieth โThe long-legged wily one with the eye of a rat.โ Having at last driven the tribes far into the wilderness he was presented with a tract of country for his services, where he settled down. There he married, and spent the rest of his days in rearing tobacco and in teaching the principles of war to a long line of gaunt and slab-sided children. They tell me that a great nation of exceeding strength and of wondrous size promises some day to rise up on the other side of the water. If this should indeed come to pass, it may perhaps happen that these young Saxons or their children may have a hand in the building of it. God grant that they may never let their hearts harden to the little isle of the sea, which is and must ever be the cradle of their race.
Solomon Sprent married and lived for many years as happily as his friends could wish. I had a letter from him when I was abroad, in which he said that though his consort and he had started alone on the voyage of wedlock, they were now accompanied by a jolly-boat and a gig. One winterโs night when the snow was on the ground he sent down for my father, who hurried up to his house. He found the old man sitting up in bed, with his flask of rumbo within reach, his tobacco-box beside him, and a great brown Bible balanced against his updrawn knees. He was breathing heavily, and was in sore distress.
โIโve strained a plank, and have nine feet in the well,โ said he. โIt comes in quicker than I can put it out. In truth, friend, I have not been seaworthy this many a day, and it is time that I was condemned and broken up.โ
My father shook his head sadly as he marked his dusky face and laboured breathing. โHow of your soul?โ he asked.
โAye!โ said Solomon, โthatโs a cargo that we carry under our hatches, though we canโt see it, and had no hand in the stowing of it. Iโve been overhauling the sailing orders here, and the ten articles of war, but I canโt find that Iโve gone so far out of my course that I may not hope to come into the channel again.โ
โTrust not in yourself, but in Christ,โ said my father.
โHe is the pilot, in course,โ replied the old seaman. โWhen I had a pilot aboard oโ my ship, however, it was my way always to keep my own weather eye open, dโye see, and so Iโll do now. The pilot donโt think none the worse of ye for it. So Iโll throw my own lead line, though I hear as how there are no soundings in the ocean of Godโs mercy. Say, friend, dโye think this very body, this same hull oโ mine, will rise again?โ
โSo we are taught,โ my father answered.
โIโd know it anywhere from the tattoo marks,โ said Solomon. โThey was done when I was with Sir Christopher in the West Indies, and Iโd be sorry to part with them. For myself, dโye see, Iโve never borne ill-will to any one, not even to the Dutch lubbers, though I fought three wars wiโ them, and they carried off one of my spars, and be hanged to them! If Iโve let daylight into a few of them, dโye see, itโs all in good part and by way of duty. Iโve drunk my shareโenough to sweeten my bilge-waterโbut there are few that have seen me cranky in the upper rigging or refusing to answer to my helm. I never drew pay or prize-money that my mate in distress was not welcome to the half of it. As to the Polls, the less said the better. Iโve been a true consort to my Phoebe since she agreed to look to me for signals. Those are my papers, all clear and aboveboard. If Iโm summoned aft this very night by the great Lord High Admiral of all, I ainโt afeared that Heโll clap me into the bilboes, for though Iโm only a poor sailor man, Iโve got His promise in this here book, and Iโm not afraid of His going back from it.โ
My father sat with the old man for some hours and did all that he could to comfort and assist him, for it was clear that he was sinking rapidly. When he at last left him, with his faithful wife beside him, he grasped the brown but wasted hand which lay above the clothes.
โIโll see you again soon,โ he said.
โYes. In the latitude of heaven,โ replied the dying seaman. His foreboding was right, for in the early hours of the morning his wife, bending over him, saw a bright smile upon his tanned, weather-beaten face. Raising himself upon his pillow he touched his forelock, as is the habit of sailor-men, and so sank slowly and peacefully back into the long sleep which wakes when the night has ceased to be.
You will ask me doubtless what became of Hector Marot and of the strange shipload which had set sail from Poole Harbour. There was never a word heard of them again, unless indeed a story which was spread some months afterwards by Captain Elias Hopkins, of the Bristol ship Caroline, may be taken as bearing upon their fate. For Captain Hopkins relates that, being on his homeward voyage from our settlements, he chanced to meet with thick fogs and a head wind in the neighbourhood of the great cod banks. One night as he was beating about, with the weather so thick that he could scarce see the
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