<h2><SPAN name="CHAPTER_XIII" id="CHAPTER_XIII"></SPAN>CHAPTER XIII</h2>
<h3>BOY AND GIRL</h3>
<p><span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_120" id="Page_120"></SPAN></span>Zephaniah Pennel was what might be called a Hebrew
of the Hebrews.</p>
<p>New England, in her earlier days, founding her institutions
on the Hebrew Scriptures, bred better Jews than
Moses could, because she read Moses with the amendments
of Christ.</p>
<p>The state of society in some of the districts of Maine, in
these days, much resembled in its spirit that which Moses
labored to produce in ruder ages. It was entirely democratic,
simple, grave, hearty, and sincere,—solemn and
religious in its daily tone, and yet, as to all material good,
full of wholesome thrift and prosperity. Perhaps, taking
the average mass of the people, a more healthful and desirable
state of society never existed. Its better specimens
had a simple Doric grandeur unsurpassed in any age. The
bringing up a child in this state of society was a far more
simple enterprise than in our modern times, when the factious
wants and aspirations are so much more developed.</p>
<p>Zephaniah Pennel was as high as anybody in the land.
He owned not only the neat little schooner, "Brilliant,"
with divers small fishing-boats, but also a snug farm, adjoining
the brown house, together with some fresh, juicy
pasture-lots on neighboring islands, where he raised mutton,
unsurpassed even by the English South-down, and
wool, which furnished homespun to clothe his family on all
every-day occasions.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pennel, to be sure, had silks and satins, and flow<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_121" id="Page_121"></SPAN></span>ered
India chintz, and even a Cashmere shawl, the fruits
of some of her husband's earlier voyages, which were, however,
carefully stowed away for occasions so high and
mighty, that they seldom saw the light. <i>Not to wear best
things every day</i> was a maxim of New England thrift as
little disputed as any verse of the catechism; and so Mrs.
Pennel found the stuff gown of her own dyeing and spinning
so respectable for most purposes, that it figured even
in the meeting-house itself, except on the very finest of
Sundays, when heaven and earth seemed alike propitious.
A person can well afford to wear homespun stuff to meeting,
who is buoyed up by a secret consciousness of an
abundance of fine things that could be worn, if one were so
disposed, and everybody respected Mrs. Pennel's homespun
the more, because they thought of the things she didn't
wear.</p>
<p>As to advantages of education, the island, like all other
New England districts, had its common school, where one
got the key of knowledge,—for having learned to read,
write, and cipher, the young fellow of those regions commonly
regarded himself as in possession of all that a man
needs, to help himself to any further acquisitions he might
desire. The boys then made fishing voyages to the Banks,
and those who were so disposed took their books with them.
If a boy did not wish to be bored with study, there was
nobody to force him; but if a bright one saw visions of
future success in life lying through the avenues of knowledge,
he found many a leisure hour to pore over his books,
and work out the problems of navigation directly over the
element they were meant to control.</p>
<p>Four years having glided by since the commencement
of our story, we find in the brown house of Zephaniah
Pennel a tall, well-knit, handsome boy of ten years, who
knows no fear of wind or sea; who can set you over from
Orr's Island to Harpswell, either in sail or row-boat, he<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_122" id="Page_122"></SPAN></span>
thinks, as well as any man living; who knows every rope
of the schooner Brilliant, and fancies he could command
it as well as "father" himself; and is supporting himself
this spring, during the tamer drudgeries of driving plough,
and dropping potatoes, with the glorious vision of being
taken this year on the annual trip to "the Banks," which
comes on after planting. He reads fluently,—witness the
"Robinson Crusoe," which never departs from under his
pillow, and Goldsmith's "History of Greece and Rome,"
which good Mr. Sewell has lent him,—and he often
brings shrewd criticisms on the character and course of
Romulus or Alexander into the common current of every-day
life, in a way that brings a smile over the grave face
of Zephaniah, and makes Mrs. Pennel think the boy certainly
ought to be sent to college.</p>
<p>As for Mara, she is now a child of seven, still adorned
with long golden curls, still looking dreamily out of soft
hazel eyes into some unknown future not her own. She
has no dreams for herself—they are all for Moses. For
his sake she has learned all the womanly little accomplishments
which Mrs. Kittridge has dragooned into Sally.
She knits his mittens and his stockings, and hems his
pocket-handkerchiefs, and aspires to make his shirts all
herself. Whatever book Moses reads, forthwith she aspires
to read too, and though three years younger, reads with a
far more precocious insight.</p>
<p>Her little form is slight and frail, and her cheek has a
clear transparent brilliancy quite different from the rounded
one of the boy; she looks not exactly in ill health, but has
that sort of transparent appearance which one fancies might
be an attribute of fairies and sylphs. All her outward
senses are finer and more acute than his, and finer and
more delicate all the attributes of her mind. Those who
contend against giving woman the same education as man
do it on the ground that it would make the woman unfem<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_123" id="Page_123"></SPAN></span>inine,
as if Nature had done her work so slightly that it
could be so easily raveled and knit over. In fact, there is
a masculine and a feminine element in all knowledge, and
a man and a woman put to the same study extract only
what their nature fits them to see, so that knowledge can
be fully orbed only when the two unite in the search and
share the spoils.</p>
<p>When Moses was full of Romulus and Numa, Mara pondered
the story of the nymph Egeria—sweet parable, in
which lies all we have been saying. Her trust in him was
boundless. He was a constant hero in her eyes, and in
her he found a steadfast believer as to all possible feats and
exploits to which he felt himself competent, for the boy
often had privately assured her that he could command the
Brilliant as well as father himself.</p>
<p>Spring had already come, loosing the chains of ice in all
the bays and coves round Harpswell, Orr's Island, Maquoit,
and Middle Bay. The magnificent spruces stood forth in
their gala-dresses, tipped on every point with vivid emerald;
the silver firs exuded from their tender shoots the
fragrance of ripe pineapple; the white pines shot forth
long weird fingers at the end of their fringy boughs; and
even every little mimic evergreen in the shadows at their
feet was made beautiful by the addition of a vivid border
of green on the sombre coloring of its last year's leaves.
Arbutus, fragrant with its clean, wholesome odors, gave
forth its thousand dewy pink blossoms, and the trailing
Linnea borealis hung its pendent twin bells round every
mossy stump and old rock damp with green forest mould.
The green and vermilion matting of the partridge-berry
was impearled with white velvet blossoms, the checkerberry
hung forth a translucent bell under its varnished green
leaf, and a thousand more fairy bells, white or red, hung
on blueberry and huckleberry bushes. The little Pearl of
Orr's Island had wandered many an hour gathering bou<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_124" id="Page_124"></SPAN></span>quets
of all these, to fill the brown house with sweetness
when her grandfather and Moses should come in from
work.</p>
<p>The love of flowers seemed to be one of her earliest
characteristics, and the young spring flowers of New England,
in their airy delicacy and fragility, were much like
herself; and so strong seemed the affinity between them,
that not only Mrs. Pennel's best India china vases on the
keeping-room mantel were filled, but here stood a tumbler
of scarlet rock columbine, and there a bowl of blue and
white violets, and in another place a saucer of shell-tinted
crowfoot, blue liverwort, and white anemone, so that
Zephaniah Pennel was wont to say there wasn't a drink of
water to be got, for Mara's flowers; but he always said it
with a smile that made his weather-beaten, hard features
look like a rock lit up by a sunbeam. Little Mara was
the pearl of the old seaman's life, every finer particle of
his nature came out in her concentrated and polished, and
he often wondered at a creature so ethereal belonging to
him—as if down on some shaggy sea-green rock an old
pearl oyster should muse and marvel on the strange silvery
mystery of beauty that was growing in the silence of his
heart.</p>
<p>But May has passed; the arbutus and the Linnea are
gone from the woods, and the pine tips have grown into
young shoots, which wilt at noon under a direct reflection
from sun and sea, and the blue sky has that metallic clearness
and brilliancy which distinguishes those regions, and
the planting is at last over, and this very morning Moses
is to set off in the Brilliant for his first voyage to the
Banks. Glorious knight he! the world all before him,
and the blood of ten years racing and throbbing in his veins
as he talks knowingly of hooks, and sinkers, and bait, and
lines, and wears proudly the red flannel shirt which Mara
had just finished for him.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_125" id="Page_125"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"How I do wish I were going with you!" she says.
"I could do something, couldn't I—take care of your
hooks, or something?"</p>
<p>"Pooh!" said Moses, sublimely regarding her while he
settled the collar of his shirt, "you're a girl; and what
can girls do at sea? you never like to catch fish—it always
makes you cry to see 'em flop."</p>
<p>"Oh, yes, poor fish!" said Mara, perplexed between
her sympathy for the fish and her desire for the glory of
her hero, which must be founded on their pain; "I can't
help feeling sorry when they gasp so."</p>
<p>"Well, and what do you suppose you would do when
the men are pulling up twenty and forty pounder?" said
Moses, striding sublimely. "Why, they flop so, they'd
knock you over in a minute."</p>
<p>"Do they? Oh, Moses, do be careful. What if they
should hurt you?"</p>
<p>"Hurt me!" said Moses, laughing; "that's a good one.
I'd like to see a fish that could hurt me."</p>
<p>"Do hear that boy talk!" said Mrs. Pennel to her husband,
as they stood within their chamber-door.</p>
<p>"Yes, yes," said Captain Pennel, smiling; "he's full
of the matter. I believe he'd take the command of the
schooner this morning, if I'd let him."</p>
<p>The Brilliant lay all this while courtesying on the waves,
which kissed and whispered to the little coquettish craft.
A fairer June morning had not risen on the shores that
week; the blue mirror of the ocean was all dotted over
with the tiny white sails of fishing-craft bound on the
same errand, and the breeze that was just crisping the
waters had the very spirit of energy and adventure in it.</p>
<p>Everything and everybody was now on board, and she
began to spread her fair wings, and slowly and gracefully
to retreat from the shore. Little Moses stood on the deck,
his black curls blowing in the wind, and his large eyes<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_126" id="Page_126"></SPAN></span>
dancing with excitement,—his clear olive complexion and
glowing cheeks well set off by his red shirt.</p>
<p>Mrs. Pennel stood with Mara on the shore to see them
go. The fair little golden-haired Ariadne shaded her eyes
with one arm, and stretched the other after her Theseus,
till the vessel grew smaller, and finally seemed to melt
away into the eternal blue. Many be the wives and lovers
that have watched those little fishing-craft as they went
gayly out like this, but have waited long—too long—and
seen them again no more. In night and fog they have
gone down under the keel of some ocean packet or Indiaman,
and sunk with brave hearts and hands, like a bubble
in the mighty waters. Yet Mrs. Pennel did not turn back
to her house in apprehension of this. Her husband had
made so many voyages, and always returned safely, that
she confidently expected before long to see them home
again.</p>
<p>The next Sunday the seat of Zephaniah Pennel was
vacant in church. According to custom, a note was put
up asking prayers for his safe return, and then everybody
knew that he was gone to the Banks; and as the roguish,
handsome face of Moses was also missing, Miss Roxy whispered
to Miss Ruey, "There! Captain Pennel's took Moses
on his first voyage. We must contrive to call round on
Mis' Pennel afore long. She'll be lonesome."</p>
<p>Sunday evening Mrs. Pennel was sitting pensively with
little Mara by the kitchen hearth, where they had been
boiling the tea-kettle for their solitary meal. They heard
a brisk step without, and soon Captain and Mrs. Kittridge
made their appearance.</p>
<p>"Good evening, Mis' Pennel," said the Captain; "I's
a-tellin' my good woman we must come down and see how
you's a-getting along. It's raly a work of necessity and
mercy proper for the Lord's day. Rather lonesome, now
the Captain's gone, ain't ye? Took little Moses, too, I<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_127" id="Page_127"></SPAN></span>
see. Wasn't at meetin' to-day, so I says, Mis' Kittridge,
we'll just step down and chirk 'em up a little."</p>
<p>"I didn't really know how to come," said Mrs. Kittridge,
as she allowed Mrs. Pennel to take her bonnet;
"but Aunt Roxy's to our house now, and she said she'd
see to Sally. So you've let the boy go to the Banks?
He's young, ain't he, for that?"</p>
<p>"Not a bit of it," said Captain Kittridge. "Why, I
was off to the Banks long afore I was his age, and a capital
time we had of it, too. Golly! how them fish did bite!
We stood up to our knees in fish before we'd fished half
an hour."</p>
<p>Mara, who had always a shy affinity for the Captain,
now drew towards him and climbed on his knee. "Did
the wind blow very hard?" she said.</p>
<p>"What, my little maid?"</p>
<p>"Does the wind blow at the Banks?"</p>
<p>"Why, yes, my little girl, that it does, sometimes; but
then there ain't the least danger. Our craft ride out
storms like live creatures. I've stood it out in gales that
was tight enough, I'm sure. 'Member once I turned in
'tween twelve and one, and hadn't more'n got asleep,
afore I came <i>clump</i> out of my berth, and found everything
upside down. And 'stead of goin' upstairs to get on deck,
I had to go right down. Fact was, that 'ere vessel jist
turned clean over in the water, and come right side up like
a duck."</p>
<p>"Well, now, Cap'n, I wouldn't be tellin' such a story
as that," said his helpmeet.</p>
<p>"Why, Polly, what do you know about it? you never
was to sea. We did turn clear over, for I 'member I saw
a bunch of seaweed big as a peck measure stickin' top of
the mast next day. Jist shows how safe them ar little
fishing craft is,—for all they look like an egg-shell on the
mighty deep, as Parson Sewell calls it."<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_128" id="Page_128"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"I was very much pleased with Mr. Sewell's exercise in
prayer this morning," said Mrs. Kittridge; "it must have
been a comfort to you, Mis' Pennel."</p>
<p>"It was, to be sure," said Mrs. Pennel.</p>
<p>"Puts me in mind of poor Mary Jane Simpson. Her
husband went out, you know, last June, and hain't been
heard of since. Mary Jane don't really know whether to
put on mourning or not."</p>
<p>"Law! I don't think Mary Jane need give up yet,"
said the Captain. "'Member one year I was out, we got
blowed clear up to Baffin's Bay, and got shut up in the
ice, and had to go ashore and live jist as we could among
them Esquimaux. Didn't get home for a year. Old
folks had clean giv' us up. Don't need never despair
of folks gone to sea, for they's sure to turn up, first or
last."</p>
<p>"But I hope," said Mara, apprehensively, "that grandpapa
won't get blown up to Baffin's Bay. I've seen that
on his chart,—it's a good ways."</p>
<p>"And then there's them 'ere icebergs," said Mrs. Kittridge;
"I'm always 'fraid of running into them in the
fog."</p>
<p>"Law!" said Captain Kittridge, "I've met 'em bigger
than all the colleges up to Brunswick,—great white bears
on 'em,—hungry as Time in the Primer. Once we came
kersmash on to one of 'em, and if the Flying Betsey hadn't
been made of whalebone and injer-rubber, she'd a-been
stove all to pieces. Them white bears, they was so hungry,
that they stood there with the water jist runnin' out
of their chops in a perfect stream."</p>
<p>"Oh, dear, dear," said Mara, with wide round eyes,
"what will Moses do if they get on the icebergs?"</p>
<p>"Yes," said Mrs. Kittridge, looking solemnly at the
child through the black bows of her spectacles, "we can
truly say:<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_129" id="Page_129"></SPAN></span>—</p>
<p style="margin-left:2em">
"'Dangers stand thick through all the ground,<br/>
<span style="margin-left: 2em;">To push us to the tomb,'</span><br/></p>
<p>as the hymn-book says."</p>
<p>The kind-hearted Captain, feeling the fluttering heart of
little Mara, and seeing the tears start in her eyes, addressed
himself forthwith to consolation. "Oh, never you mind,
Mara," he said, "there won't nothing hurt 'em. Look at
me. Why, I've been everywhere on the face of the earth.
I've been on icebergs, and among white bears and Indians,
and seen storms that would blow the very hair off your
head, and here I am, dry and tight as ever. You'll see
'em back before long."</p>
<p>The cheerful laugh with which the Captain was wont to
chorus his sentences sounded like the crackling of dry pine
wood on the social hearth. One would hardly hear it
without being lightened in heart; and little Mara gazed at
his long, dry, ropy figure, and wrinkled thin face, as a sort
of monument of hope; and his uproarious laugh, which
Mrs. Kittridge sometimes ungraciously compared to "the
crackling of thorns under a pot," seemed to her the most
delightful thing in the world.</p>
<p>"Mary Jane was a-tellin' me," resumed Mrs. Kittridge,
"that when her husband had been out a month, she
dreamed she see him, and three other men, a-floatin' on an
iceberg."</p>
<p>"Laws," said Captain Kittridge, "that's jist what my
old mother dreamed about me, and 'twas true enough, too,
till we got off the ice on to the shore up in the Esquimaux
territory, as I was a-tellin'. So you tell Mary Jane she
needn't look out for a second husband <i>yet</i>, for that ar
dream's a sartin sign he'll be back."</p>
<p>"Cap'n Kittridge!" said his helpmeet, drawing herself
up, and giving him an austere glance over her spectacles;
"how often must I tell you that there <i>is</i> subjects which
shouldn't be treated with levity?"<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_130" id="Page_130"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"Who's been a-treatin' of 'em with levity?" said the
Captain. "I'm sure I ain't. Mary Jane's good-lookin',
and there's plenty of young fellows as sees it as well as
me. I declare, she looked as pretty as any young gal
when she ris up in the singers' seats to-day. Put me
in mind of you, Polly, when I first come home from the
Injies."</p>
<p>"Oh, come now, Cap'n Kittridge! we're gettin' too old
for that sort o' talk."</p>
<p>"We ain't too old, be we, Mara?" said the Captain,
trotting the little girl gayly on his knee; "and we ain't
afraid of icebergs and no sich, be we? I tell you they's
a fine sight of a bright day; they has millions of steeples,
all white and glistering, like the New Jerusalem, and the
white bears have capital times trampin' round on 'em.
Wouldn't little Mara like a great, nice white bear to ride
on, with his white fur, so soft and warm, and a saddle
made of pearls, and a gold bridle?"</p>
<p>"You haven't seen any little girls ride so," said Mara,
doubtfully.</p>
<p>"I shouldn't wonder if I had; but you see, Mis' Kittridge
there, she won't let me tell all I know," said the
Captain, sinking his voice to a confidential tone; "you jist
wait till we get alone."</p>
<p>"But, you are sure," said Mara, confidingly, in return,
"that white bears will be kind to Moses?"</p>
<p>"Lord bless you, yes, child, the kindest critturs in the
world they be, if you only get the right side of 'em," said
the Captain.</p>
<p>"Oh, yes! because," said Mara, "I know how good a
wolf was to Romulus and Remus once, and nursed them
when they were cast out to die. I read that in the Roman
history."</p>
<p>"Jist so," said the Captain, enchanted at this historic
confirmation of his apocrypha.<span class='pagenum'><SPAN name="Page_131" id="Page_131"></SPAN></span></p>
<p>"And so," said Mara, "if Moses should happen to get
on an iceberg, a bear might take care of him, you know."</p>
<p>"Jist so, jist so," said the Captain; "so don't you
worry your little curly head one bit. Some time when
you come down to see Sally, we'll go down to the cove,
and I'll tell you lots of stories about chil'en that have
been fetched up by white bears, jist like Romulus and
what's his name there."</p>
<p>"Come, Mis' Kittridge," added the cheery Captain;
"you and I mustn't be keepin' the folks up till nine
o'clock."</p>
<p>"Well now," said Mrs. Kittridge, in a doleful tone, as
she began to put on her bonnet, "Mis' Pennel, you must
keep up your spirits—it's one's duty to take cheerful
views of things. I'm sure many's the night, when the
Captain's been gone to sea, I've laid and shook in my bed,
hearin' the wind blow, and thinking what if I should be
left a lone widow."</p>
<p>"There'd a-been a dozen fellows a-wanting to get you
in six months, Polly," interposed the Captain. "Well,
good-night, Mis' Pennel; there'll be a splendid haul of
fish at the Banks this year, or there's no truth in signs.
Come, my little Mara, got a kiss for the dry old daddy?
That's my good girl. Well, good night, and the Lord
bless you."</p>
<p>And so the cheery Captain took up his line of march
homeward, leaving little Mara's head full of dazzling visions
of the land of romance to which Moses had gone. She
was yet on that shadowy boundary between the dreamland
of childhood and the real land of life; so all things looked
to her quite possible; and gentle white bears, with warm,
soft fur and pearl and gold saddles, walked through her
dreams, and the victorious curls of Moses appeared, with
his bright eyes and cheeks, over glittering pinnacles of
frost in the ice-land.</p>
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