The Pilots of Pomona eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about The Pilots of Pomona.

The Pilots of Pomona eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 327 pages of information about The Pilots of Pomona.

Chapter I. In Which I Am Late For School.

On a certain bright morning in the month of May, 1843, the little port of Stromness wore an aspect of unwonted commotion.  The great whaling fleet that every year sailed from this place for the Greenland fisheries was busily preparing for sea.  The sun was shining over the brown hills of Orphir, and casting a golden sheen over the calm bay.  Out beyond the Holms the whaling ships lay at anchor, the Blue Peter flying at each forepeak, and between them and the town many boats were passing to and fro.

I remember the day, not so much in connection with the whaling ships themselves as by the fact that their sailing fixes upon my memory the date of other more personal events which I am about to set forth in the following pages.  Indeed, I was altogether unaffected by the departure of the ships.  As I sat on the edge of one of the tiny stone piers that support the old houses along the shoreline, my bare feet dangling above the clear green water, I thought only of my fishing line and of the row of bright-scaled sillocks that lay on a stone at my side, being quite unmindful that the school bell had long since begun to ring.

A small boat passed within a few yards of the jetty, rowed by Tom Kinlay, one of my schoolfellows.

“Now, then, Ericson,” he cried out as he saw me; “d’ye not hear the bell?  Hurry up, lad, or you’ll be late again.  Aha!  I’ll tell the dominie that you’re sitting there fishing when you should be at the school.  Come away now, or ye’ll get your licks.”

Without seeming to hear his warning, I drew in my line with a good young coal fish at the end of it, and quietly counted my catch.  There were just three-and-twenty fish, and I could not resist the temptation of making up the even two dozen; so I baited my hook again and cast it into the water, meditating as I did so upon Kinlay’s unnecessary interference.

Now Tom Kinlay, I must tell you, was some twelve months older than I, and, as I had reason to remember, much taller and stronger.  In our early school days he had exercised a tyranny over me which I even now recall with feelings partly of indignation against him, and partly of shame in myself for having so foolishly bent under the yoke of his oppression.  When we went bathing, as we frequently did, out on the further shores of the bay, he would not scruple to lead us younger lads into the deepest waters, and, when we were far beyond our depth and almost exhausted, he would swim behind us and force us under, for the mere cruel pleasure, I believe, of seeing our struggles and hearing our cries below the surface.  From some fancied sense of duty we allowed ourselves meekly to serve and obey him.  When we went on a cliff-climbing expedition he would choose to remain in safety up above on the banks holding the rope, while it was we who were sent down the dangerous precipice to harry the sea-birds’ nests.

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Project Gutenberg
The Pilots of Pomona from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.