Dead Man's Rock eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 341 pages of information about Dead Man's Rock.

Dead Man's Rock eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 341 pages of information about Dead Man's Rock.

Such was the Will, written on stiff parchment in crabbed and unscholarly characters, without legal forms or witnesses; but all such were needless, as I have pointed out.  And, indeed, my father was wise, as I think, to show it to nobody, but go his way quietly as before, managing the farm as he had managed it during the old man’s last years.  Only by degrees he broke from the seclusion which had been natural to him during his parents’ lifetime, so far as to look about for a wife—­shyly enough at first—­until he caught the dark eyes of Margery Freethy one Sunday morning in Polkimbra Church, whither he had gone of late for freedom, to the no small tribulation of the meeting-house.  Now, whether this tribulation arose from the backsliding of a promising member, or the loss of the owner of Lantrig (who was at the same time unmarried), I need not pause here to discuss.  Nor is it necessary to tell how regularly Margery and Ezekiel found themselves in church, nor how often they caught each other’s eyes straying from the prayer-book.  It is enough that at the year’s end Margery answered Ezekiel’s question, and shortly after came to Lantrig “for good.”

The first years of their married life must have been very happy, as I gather from the hushed joy with which my mother always spoke of them.  I gather also that my first appearance in this world caused more delight than I have ever given since—­God forgive me for it!  But shortly after I was four years old everything began to go wrong.  First of all, two ships in which my father had many shares were lost at sea; then the cattle were seized with plague, and the stock gradually dwindled away to nothing.  Finally, my father’s bank broke—­or, as we say in the West, “went scat!”—­and we were left all but penniless, with the prospect of having to sell Lantrig, being without stock and lacking means to replenish it.  It was at this time, I have since learnt from my mother, that Amos Trenoweth’s Will was first thought about.  She, poor soul! had never heard of the parchment before, and her heart misgave her as she read of peril to soul and body sternly hinted at therein.  Also, her best-beloved brother had gone down in a squall off the Cape of Good Hope, so that she always looked upon the sea as a cruel and treacherous foe, and shuddered to think of it as lying in wait for her Ezekiel’s life.  It came to pass, therefore, that for two years the young wife’s tears and entreaties prevailed; but at the end of this time, matters growing worse and worse, and also because it seemed hard that Lantrig should pass away from the Trenoweths while, for aught we knew, treasure was to be had for the looking, poverty and my father’s wish prevailed, and it was determined, with the tearful assent of my mother, that he should start to seek this Elihu Sanderson, of Bombay, and, with good fortune, save the failing house of the Trenoweths.  Only he waited until the worst of the winter was over, and then, having commended us both to the care of his aunt, Elizabeth Loveday, of Lizard Town, and provided us with the largest sum he could scrape together (and small indeed it was), he started for the port of Plymouth one woeful morning in February, and thence sailed away in the good ship Golden Wave to win his inheritance.

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Project Gutenberg
Dead Man's Rock from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.