<h2><SPAN name="Ch1" name="Ch1">Chapter 1</SPAN>: Leaving Home.</h2>
<p>A lady in deep mourning was sitting, crying bitterly, by a fire
in small lodgings in the town of Yarmouth. Beside her stood a tall
lad of sixteen. He was slight in build, but his schoolfellows knew
that Charlie Marryat's muscles were as firm and hard as those of
any boy in the school. In all sports requiring activity and
endurance, rather than weight and strength, he was always
conspicuous. Not one in the school could compete with him in
long-distance running, and when he was one of the hares there was
but little chance for the hounds. He was a capital swimmer, and one
of the best boxers in the school. He had a reputation for being a
leader in every mischievous prank; but he was honorable and manly,
would scorn to shelter himself under the semblance of a lie, and
was a prime favourite with his masters, as well as his
schoolfellows. His mother bewailed the frequency with which he
returned home with blackened eyes and bruised face; for between Dr.
Willet's school and the fisher lads of Yarmouth there was a
standing feud, whose origin dated so far back that none of those
now at school could trace it. Consequently, fierce fights often
took place in the narrow rows, and sometimes the fisher boys would
be driven back on to the broad quay shaded by trees, by the river,
and there being reinforced from the craft along the side, would
reassume the offensive and drive their opponents back into the main
street.</p>
<p>It was but six months since Charlie had lost his father, who was
the officer in command at the coast guard station, and his scanty
pension was now all that remained for the support of his widow and
children. His mother had talked his future prospects over, many
times, with Charlie. The latter was willing to do anything, but
could suggest nothing. His father had but little naval interest,
and had for years been employed on coast guard service. Charlie
agreed that, although he should have liked of all things to go to
sea, it was useless to think of it now, for he was past the age at
which he could have entered as a midshipman.</p>
<p>The matter had been talked over four years before, with his
father; but the latter had pointed out that a life in the navy,
without interest, is in most cases a very hard one. If a chance of
distinguishing himself happened, promotion would follow; but if
not, he might be for years on shore, starving on half pay and
waiting in vain for an appointment, while officers with more luck
and better interest went over his head.</p>
<p>Other professions had been discussed, but nothing determined
upon, when Lieutenant Marryat suddenly died. Charlie, although an
only son, was not an only child, as he had two sisters both younger
than himself. After a few months of effort, Mrs. Marryat found that
the utmost she could hope to do, with her scanty income, was to
maintain herself and daughters, and to educate them until they
should reach an age when they could earn their own living as
governesses; but that Charlie's keep and education were beyond her
resources. She had, therefore, very reluctantly written to an
uncle, whom she had not seen for many years, her family having
objected very strongly to her marriage with a penniless lieutenant
in the navy. She informed him of the loss of her husband, and that,
although her income was sufficient to maintain herself and her
daughters, she was most anxious to start her son, who was now
sixteen, in life; and therefore begged him to use his influence to
obtain for him a situation of some sort. The letter which she now
held in her hand was the answer to the appeal.</p>
<p>"My dear Niece," it began, "Since you, by your own foolish
conduct and opposition to all our wishes, separated yourself from
your family, and went your own way in life, I have heard little of
you, as the death of your parents so shortly afterwards deprived me
of all sources of information. I regret to hear of the loss which
you have suffered. I have already taken the necessary steps to
carry out your wishes. I yesterday dined with a friend, who is one
of the directors of the Honorable East India Company, and at my
request he has kindly placed a writership in the Company at your
son's service. He will have to come up to London to see the board,
next week, and will probably have to embark for India a fortnight
later. I shall be glad if he will take up his abode with me, during
the intervening time. I shall be glad also if you will favour me
with a statement of your income and expenses, with such details as
you may think necessary. I inclose four five-pound bank notes, in
order that your son may obtain such garments as may be immediately
needful for his appearance before the board of directors, and for
his journey to London. I remain, my dear niece, yours
sincerely,</p>
<p>"Joshua Tufton."</p>
<p>"It is cruel," Mrs. Marryat sobbed, "cruel to take you away from
us, and send you to India, where you will most likely die of fever,
or be killed by a tiger, or stabbed by one of those horrid natives,
in a fortnight."</p>
<p>"Not so bad as that, Mother, I hope," Charlie said
sympathizingly, although he could not repress a smile; "other
people have managed to live out there, and have come back
safe."</p>
<p>"Yes," Mrs. Marryat said, sobbing; "I know how you will come
back. A little, yellow, shrivelled up old man with no liver, and a
dreadful temper, and a black servant. I know what it will be."</p>
<p>This time Charlie could not help laughing.</p>
<p>"That's looking too far ahead altogether, Mother. You take the
two extremes. If I don't die in a fortnight, I am to live to be a
shrivelled old man. I'd rather take a happy medium, and look
forward to coming back before my liver is all gone, or my temper
all destroyed, with lots of money to make you and the girls
comfortable.</p>
<p>"There is only one thing. I wish it had been a cadetship,
instead of a writership."</p>
<p>"That is my only comfort," Mrs. Marryat said. "If it had been a
cadetship, I should have written to say that I would not let you
go. It is bad enough as it is; but if you had had to fight, I could
not have borne it."</p>
<p>Charlie did his best to console his mother, by telling her how
everyone who went to India made fortunes, and how he should be sure
to come back with plenty of money; and that, when the girls grew
up, he should be able to find rich husbands for them; and at last
he succeeded in getting her to look at matters in a less gloomy
light.</p>
<p>"And I'm sure, Mother," he said, "Uncle means most kindly. He
sends twenty pounds, you see, and says that that is for immediate
necessities; so I have no doubt he means to help to get my outfit,
or at any rate to advance money, which I can repay him out of my
salary. The letter is rather stiff and businesslike, of course, but
I suppose that's his way; and you see he asks about your income, so
perhaps he means to help for the girls' education. I should go away
very happy, if I knew that you would be able to get on comfortably.
Of course it's a long way off, Mother, and I should have liked to
stay at home, to be a help to you and the girls; but one can't have
all one wishes. As far as I am concerned, myself, I would rather go
out as a writer there, where I shall see strange sights and a
strange country, than be stuck all my life at a desk in London.</p>
<p>"What is Uncle like?"</p>
<p>"He is a short man, my dear, rather stiff and pompous, with a
very stiff cravat. He used to give me his finger to shake, when I
was a child, and I was always afraid of him. He married a most
disagreeable woman, only a year or two before I married, myself.
But I heard she died not very long afterwards;" and so Mrs. Marryat
got talking of her early days and relations, and was quite in good
spirits again, by the time her daughters returned from school; and
she told them what she was now coming to regard as the good fortune
which had befallen their brother.</p>
<p>The girls were greatly affected. They adored their brother, and
the thought that he was going away for years was terrible to them.
Nothing that could be said pacified them in the slightest degree,
and they did nothing but cry, until they retired to bed. Charlie
was much affected by their sorrow; but when they had retired, he
took his hat and went out to tell the news of his approaching
departure to some of his chums.</p>
<p>The next day, Mrs. Marryat wrote thanking her uncle for his
kindness, and saying that Charlie would go round to London by the
packet which sailed on the following Monday; and would, if the wind
were fair and all went well, reach London on the Wednesday.</p>
<p>School was, of course, at once given up, and the girls also had
a holiday till their brother's departure. When the necessary
clothes were ordered, there was little more to do; and Charlie
spent the time, when his boy friends were in school, in walking
with the girls along the shore, talking to them of the future, of
the presents he would send them home, and of the life he should
lead in India; while at other times he went out with his favourite
schoolfellows, and joined in one last grand battle with the smack
boys.</p>
<p>On Monday morning, after a sad farewell to his family, Charlie
embarked on board the Yarmouth Belle, a packet which performed the
journey to and from London once a fortnight. She was a roomy
lugger, built for stowage rather than speed, and her hold was
crammed and her deck piled with packages of salted fish. There were
five or six other persons also bound for London, the journey to
which was, in those days, regarded as an arduous undertaking.</p>
<p>As soon as the Yarmouth Belle issued from the mouth of the
river, she began to pitch heavily; and Charlie, who from frequently
going out with his father in the revenue cutter, was a good sailor,
busied himself in doing his best for his afflicted fellow
passengers. Towards evening the wind got up, and shifting ahead,
the captain dropped anchor off Lowestoft. The next morning was
finer, and the Yarmouth Belle continued her way. It was not,
however, till Thursday afternoon that she dropped anchor in the
Pool.</p>
<p>Charlie was soon on shore, and giving his trunk to a porter,
desired him to lead the way to Bread Street, in which his uncle
resided; for in the last century, such things as country villas
were almost unknown, and the merchants of London for the most part
resided in the houses where they carried on their business. Keeping
close to the porter, to see that he did not make off with his
trunk, for Charlie had received many warnings as to the extreme
wickedness of London, he followed him through the busy streets, and
arrived safely at his uncle's door.</p>
<p>It was now dusk, and Charlie, on giving his name, was shown
upstairs to a large room, which was lighted by a fire blazing in
the hearth. Standing with his back to this was a gentleman whom he
at once recognized, from his mother's description, as her uncle,
although he was a good deal more portly than when she had seen him
last.</p>
<p>"So you are my grandnephew," he said, holding out what Charlie
considered to be a very limp and flabby hand towards him.</p>
<p>"Yes, Uncle," Charlie said cheerfully; "and we are very much
obliged to you, Mamma and I, for your kindness."</p>
<p>"Humph!" the old gentleman grunted.</p>
<p>"And how is it," he asked severely, "that you were not here
yesterday? My niece's letter led me to expect that you would arrive
yesterday."</p>
<p>"We came as fast as we could, Uncle," Charlie laughed; "but of
course the time depends upon the wind. The captain tells me that he
has been as much as three weeks coming round."</p>
<p>Mr. Tufton grunted again as if to signify that such
unpunctuality was altogether displeasing to him.</p>
<p>"You are tall," he said, looking up at Charlie, who stood half a
head above him, "and thin, very thin. You have a loose way of
standing, which I don't approve of."</p>
<p>"I'm sorry I'm loose, sir," Charlie said gravely, "if you do not
approve of it; but you see, running about and playing games make
one lissome. I suppose, now that's all over and I am going to spend
my time in writing, I shall get stiffer."</p>
<p>"I hope so, I hope so," Mr. Tufton said encouragingly, and as if
stiffness were one of the most desirable things in life. "I like to
see young men with a sedate bearing.</p>
<p>"And you left my niece and grandnieces well, I hope?"</p>
<p>"Quite well, thank you, sir," Charlie said; "but, of course, a
good deal upset with parting from me."</p>
<p>"Yes," Mr. Tufton said; "I suppose so. Women are so emotional.
Now there's nothing I object to more than emotion."</p>
<p>As Charlie thought that this was probably the case, he was
silent, although the idea vaguely occurred to him that he should
like to excite a little emotion in his uncle, by the sudden
insertion of a pin, or some other such means. The silence continued
for some little time, and then Mr. Tufton said:</p>
<p>"I always dine at two o'clock; but as probably you are hungry--I
have observed that boys always are hungry--some food will be served
you in the next room. I had already given my housekeeper orders. No
doubt you will find it prepared. After that, you may like to take a
walk in the streets. I have supper at nine, by which hour you will,
of course, have returned."</p>
<p>Charlie, as he ate his meal, thought to himself that his uncle
was a pompous old gentleman, and that it would be very hard work
getting on with him, for the next three weeks. However, he consoled
himself by the thought:</p>
<p>"Kind is as kind does after all, and I expect the old gentleman
is not as crusty as he looks."</p>
<p>Charlie had handed to Mr. Tufton a letter which his mother had
given him, and when he returned from a ramble through the streets,
he found that gentleman sitting by the fire, with lights upon a
small table beside him. Upon this Mrs. Marryat's letter lay
open.</p>
<p>"So you have soon become tired of the streets of London,
Grandnephew!" he said.</p>
<p>"There is not much to see, sir. The lamps do not burn very
brightly, and the fog is coming on. I thought that, if it grew
thicker, I might lose my way, and in that case I might not have
been in at the hour you named for supper."</p>
<p>"Humph!" the other gentleman grunted. "So your mother has taught
you to be punctual to meals. But, no; boys' appetites teach them to
be punctual then, if never at any other time.</p>
<p>"And why, sir?" he asked severely, "Did my niece not write to me
before?"</p>
<p>"I don't know, sir," Charlie said. "I suppose she did not
like--that is, she didn't think--that is--"</p>
<p>"Think, sir! Like, sir!" said his uncle. "What right had she
either to think or to like? Her duty clearly was to have made me
acquainted, at once, with all the circumstances. I suppose I had a
right to say whether I approved of my grandnieces going tramping
about the world as governesses, or not. It isn't because a woman
chooses, by her folly, to separate herself from her family, that
they are to be deprived of their rights in a matter of this kind.
Eh, sir, what do you say to that?" and Mr. Tufton looked very
angry, indeed.</p>
<p>"I don't know, sir," Charlie said. "I have never thought the
matter over."</p>
<p>"Why, sir, suppose she had made you a tinker, sir, and you
turned out a thief, as likely as not you would have done, and you'd
been hung, sir, what then? Am I to have such discredit as this
brought upon me, without my having any option in the matter?"</p>
<p>"I suppose not, sir," Charlie said. "I hope I shouldn't have
turned out a thief, even if I'd been a tinker; but perhaps it was
because my mother feared that this might be the case, that she did
give you the option."</p>
<p>His uncle looked at him keenly; but Charlie, though with some
difficulty, maintained the gravest face.</p>
<p>"It is well she did so," Mr. Tufton said; "very well. If she had
not done so, I should have known the reason why. And you, sir, do
you like the thought of going to India?"</p>
<p>"Yes, Uncle, I like the thought very much, though I would
rather, if I may say so, have gone as a cadet."</p>
<p>"I thought so," Mr. Tufton said, sarcastically. "I was sure of
it. You wanted to wear a red coat and a sword, and to swagger about
the streets of Calcutta, instead of making an honorable living and
acquiring a fortune."</p>
<p>"I don't think, sir," Charlie said, "that the idea of the red
coat and sword entered into my mind; but it seemed to me the choice
of a life of activity and adventure, against one as a mere
clerk."</p>
<p>"Had you entered the military service of the Company, even if
you didn't get shot, you could only hope to rise to the command of
a regiment, ranking with a civilian very low down on the list. The
stupidity of boys is unaccountable. It's a splendid career, sir,
that I have opened to you; but if I'd known that you had no
ambition, I would have put you into my own counting house; though
there, that wouldn't have done either, for I know you would have
blotted the ledger, and turned all the accounts topsy-turvy.</p>
<p>"And now, sir, supper is ready;" and the old gentleman led the
way into the next room.</p>
<p>Upon the following day Charlie was introduced, by his uncle, to
the director who had given him his nomination, and was told by him
that the board would sit upon the following day, and that he must
call at the India House, at eleven o'clock. The ordeal was not a
formidable one. He was shown into a room where eight or ten elderly
gentlemen were sitting round a large table. Among these was his
friend of the day before. He was asked a question or two about his
age, his father's profession, and his place of education. Then the
gentleman at the head of the table nodded to him, and said he could
go, and instructions would be sent to him, and that he was to
prepare to sail in the Lizzie Anderson, which would leave the docks
in ten days' time, and that he would be, for the present, stationed
at Madras.</p>
<p>Much delighted at having got through the ordeal so easily,
Charlie returned to his uncle's. He did not venture to penetrate
into the latter's counting house, but awaited his coming upstairs
to dinner, to tell him the news.</p>
<p>"Humph!" said his uncle; "it is lucky they did not find out what
a fool you were, at once. I was rather afraid that even the two
minutes would do it. After dinner, I will send my clerk round with
you, to get the few things which are necessary for your voyage.</p>
<p>"I suppose you will want to, what you call amuse yourself, to
see the beasts at Exeter Change, and the playhouses. Here are two
sovereigns. Don't get into loose company, and don't get drinking,
sir, or out of the house you go."</p>
<p>Charlie attempted to express his thanks, but his uncle stopped
him abruptly.</p>
<p>"Hold your tongue, sir. I am doing what is right; a thing, sir,
Joshua Tufton always has done, and doesn't expect to be thanked for
it. All I ask you is, that if you rob the Company's till and are
hung, don't mention that you are related to me."</p>
<p>After dinner was over, Charlie went out under the charge of an
old clerk, and visited tailors' and outfitters' shops, and found
that his uncle's idea of the few necessaries for a voyage differed
very widely from his own. The clerk, in each case, inquired from
the tradesmen what was the outfit which gentlemen going to India
generally took with them, and Charlie was absolutely appalled at
the magnitude of the orders. Four dozen shirts, ten dozen pairs of
stockings, two dozen suits of white cotton cloth, and everything
else in proportion. Charlie in vain remonstrated, and even implored
the clerk to abstain from ordering what appeared to him such a
fabulous amount of things; and begged him, at any rate, to wait
until he had spoken to his uncle. The clerk, however, replied that
he had received instructions that the full usual outfit was to be
obtained, and that Mr. Tufton never permitted his orders to be
questioned. Charlie was forced to submit, but he was absolutely
oppressed with the magnitude of his outfit, to carry which six huge
trunks were required.</p>
<p>"It is awful," Charlie said to himself, "positively awful. How
much it will all come to, goodness only knows; three or four
hundred pounds, at least."</p>
<p>In those days, before steam was thought of, and the journey to
India was often of six months' duration, men never came home more
than once in seven years, and often remained in India from the day
of their arrival until they finally retired, without once
revisiting England. The outfits taken out were, therefore,
necessarily much larger than at the present time, when a run home
to England can be accomplished in three weeks, and there are plenty
of shops, in every town in India, where all European articles of
necessity or luxury can be purchased.</p>
<p>After separating from the clerk, Charlie felt altogether unable
to start out in search of amusement. He wandered about vaguely till
supper time, and then attempted to address his uncle on the
subject.</p>
<p>"My dear Uncle," he began, "you've been so awfully kind to me,
that I really do not like to trespass upon you. I am positively
frightened at the outfit your clerk has ordered. It is enormous.
I'm sure I can't want so many things, possibly, and I would really
rather take a much smaller outfit; and then, as I want them, I can
have more things out from England, and pay for them myself."</p>
<p>"You don't suppose," Mr. Tufton said sternly, "that I'm going to
have my nephew go out to India with the outfit of a cabin boy. I
ordered that you were to have the proper outfit of a gentleman, and
I requested my clerk to order a considerable portion of the things
to be made of a size which will allow for your growing, for you
look to me as if you were likely enough to run up into a lanky
giant, of six feet high. I suppose he has done as I ordered him.
Don't let me hear another word on the subject."</p>
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