The Skipper and the Skipped: Being the Shore Log of Cap'n Aaron Sproul
THE SKIPPER TELLS OF THE GLORIOUS, FASCINATING SEA. See Chapter II.
Cap'n Aaron Sproul, late skipper of the Jefferson P. Benn , sat by the bedside of his uncle, One-arm Jerry, and gazed into the latter's dimming eyes.
It ain't bein' a crowned head, but it's honer'ble, pleaded the sick man, continuing the conversation.
His eager gaze found only gloominess in his nephew's countenance.
One way you look at it, Uncle Jed, said the Cap'n, it's a come-down swifter'n a slide from the foretop the whole length of the boomstay. I've been master since I was twenty-four, and I'm goin' onto fifty-six now. I've licked every kind in the sailorman line, from a nigger up to Six-fingered Jack the Portugee. If it wa'n't for—ow, Josephus Henry!—for this rheumatiz, I'd be aboard the Benn this minute with a marlinespike in my hand, and op'nin' a fresh package of language.
But you ain't fit for the sea no longer, mumbled One-arm Jerry through one corner of the mouth that paralysis had drawn awry.
That's what I told the owners of the Benn when I fit 'em off'm me and resigned, agreed the Cap'n. I tell ye, good skippers ain't born ev'ry minute—and they knowed it. I've been turnin' 'em in ten per cent. on her, and that's good property. I've got an eighth into her myself, and with a man as good as I am to run her, I shouldn't need to worry about doin' anything else all my life—me a single man with no one dependent. I reckon I'll sell. Shipmasters ain't what they used to be.
Better leave it where it is, counselled Jerry, his cautious thrift dominating even in that hour of death. Land-sharks is allus lookin' out sharp for sailormen that git on shore.
It's why I don't dast to go into business—me that's follered the sea so long, returned the skipper, nursing his aching leg.
Then do as I tell ye to do, said the old man on the bed. It may be a come-down for a man that's had men under him all his life, but it amounts to more'n five hundred a year, sure and stiddy. It's something to do, and you couldn't stand it to loaf—you that's always been so active. It ain't reskin' anything, and with all the passin' and the meetin' folks, and the gossipin' and the chattin', and all that, all your time is took up. It's honer'ble, it's stiddy. Leave your money where it is, take my place, and keep this job in the family.
Holman Day
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THE SKIPPER AND THE SKIPPED
BEING THE SHORE LOG OF CAP'N AARON SPROUL
HOLMAN DAY
THE SKIPPER AND THE SKIPPED
I
II
III
FROM SHORE TO SHORE
IV
"NOTICE TO BACHELORS
V
VI
VII
FROM SHORE TO SHORE
VIII
IX
X
XI
XII
XIII
XIV
XV
XVI
XVII
XVIII
XIX
XX
XXI
XXII
XXIII
XXIV
XXV
LOANTHA REEVES,
XXVI
XXVII
XXVIII
XXIX
T. TAYLOR
XXX
XXXI
XXXII
XXXIII
THE END