'How are you, boys? huzza! huzza!'
'Do, Ned, stop your noise, and don't carry on so; you'll have us all in the water.'
'Never mind, Jim, we'll soon work ourselves dry. Huzza! huzza!'
'I'm afraid you'll set the old boat a leaking, Ned.'
'Well, Sam, I'll stop; but how can you fellows keep so still when you've had such good luck?'
Sam would have been perfectly contented with the product of his clams and oysters for his day's work, but Jim would insist upon giving him a certain proportion of what he had received, which was finally fixed at one quarter; so that Sam was to have, besides all he could procure from the sale of his own articles, one-fourth of whatever other things were sold, as his pay for the boat, and his labor in rowing.
And when Sam took the money which Jim handed to him, and put it with what he had already received, and looked at it, a crowd of thoughts rushed into his mind. Parents, sisters, home, the past, the present, and the future—and that future bright with prospect of employment, and the means of making those he loved as happy as himself. He could make no answer to the cheerful 'Good bye' of Ned and Jim, but he turned his bright and glistening eye towards them; and they went on their way the happier that they saw how full of joy Sam was.
Sam kept his money in his hand until he reached home, and, going directly to his mother, put the whole of his treasure into her lap.
'Why, Sam, where did you get all this?'
'Earned it, mother;' and then he told her all about it, and what he was expecting to do in future.