The Rudder Grangers Abroad and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 200 pages of information about The Rudder Grangers Abroad and Other Stories.

The Rudder Grangers Abroad and Other Stories eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 200 pages of information about The Rudder Grangers Abroad and Other Stories.

Then the parson began his appointed work, and the heart of the baker swelled, as the widow’s hand trembled in his own.

“Wilt thou have this woman to be thy wedded wife?” asked the parson.

“Now for this,” quoth the poor baker to himself, “I may bake forever, but I cannot draw back nor keep the good man waiting.”  And he said, “Yes.”

Then it was that the baker received what he had come for,—­the parson’s blessing; and, immediately, his fair companion, brimming with tears, threw herself into his arms.

“Now,” said the baker to himself, “when I leave this house, may the devil take me, and right welcome shall he be!”

“Dearest,” she exclaimed, as she looked into his face, “you cannot know how happy I am.  My wedding day, and my brother back from the cruel seas!”

Struck by a sudden blast of bewildering ecstasy, the baker raised his eyes, and beheld the tall form of the sun-browned stranger who had been standing behind them.

“You are not a sailor-man,” quoth the jovial brother, “like my old mate, who went down in the brig Mistletoe, but my sister tells me you are a jolly good fellow, and I wish you fair winds and paying cargoes.”  And after giving the baker a powerful handshake, the sailor kissed the bride, the parson’s wife, the parson’s daughter, and the parson’s maid, and wished the family were larger, having just returned from the cruel seas.

The only people in the village of Barnbury, who thoroughly enjoyed the Christmas of that year, were the baker, his wife, and the sailor brother.  And a rare good time they had; for a big sea-chest arrived, and there were curious presents, and a tall flask of rare old wine, and plenty of time for three merry people to cook for themselves.

The baker told his wife of his soul-harrowing plight of the day before.

“Now, then,” said he, “don’t you think that by rights I should bake all the same?”

“Oh, that will be skipped,” she said, with a laugh; “and now go you and make ready for the cakes, pastry, and sweetmeats, the baked meats and the poultry, with which the people of Barnbury are to be made right happy on New Year’s day.”

THE WATER-DEVIL

A MARINE TALE.

In the village of Riprock there was neither tavern nor inn, for it was but a small place through which few travellers passed; but it could not be said to be without a place of entertainment, for if by chance a stranger—­or two or three of them, for that matter—­wished to stop at Riprock for a meal, or to pass the night, there was the house of blacksmith Fryker, which was understood to be always open to decent travellers.

The blacksmith was a prominent man in the village, and his house was a large one, with several spare bedrooms, and it was said by those who had had an opportunity of judging, that nobody in the village lived better than blacksmith Fryker and his family.

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Project Gutenberg
The Rudder Grangers Abroad and Other Stories from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.