The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 6, April, 1858 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 6, April, 1858.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 6, April, 1858 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 311 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 6, April, 1858.

Clarice had neither brother nor sister, and she made little of the children of the neighboring fishermen; for her life was one of toil, and her inheritance seemed very different from theirs, though they were all poor, and ate the crusts of labor.

Her father, had Nature only given him what she seemed to have intended at the outset, might have been as successful a fisherman as lived at the Bay.  But he trusted to luck, and contrived to make half of what he earned a serious damage to him.  The remainder was little enough for the comfort of his family, small though that family was.

Briton was a good fellow, everybody said.  They meant that he was always ready for sport, and time-wasting, and drinking, and that sort of generosity which is the shabbiest sort of selfishness.  They called him “Old Briton,” but he was not, by many, the oldest man in Diver’s Bay; he might have been the wickedest, had he not been the jolliest, and incapable of hiding malice in his heart.  And if I said he was out and out the wickedest, I should request that people would refrain from lifting up their hands in horror, on account of the poor old fellow.  We all know—­alas, perhaps, we all love—­wickeder souls than could have been produced from among the older fishermen, had all their sins been concentrated in one individual.

Old Briton was what the people called a lucky fisherman.  In seasons when he chose to work, the result was sufficiently obvious, to himself and others, to astonish both.  But even in the best seasons he was a bad manager.  He trusted everybody, and found, to his astonishment, how few deserve to be trusted.

Dame Briton was a stout, loud-talking woman, whom experience had not softened in her ways of speech or thought or action.  She was generally at strife with her husband, but the strife was most illogical.  It did not admit of a single legitimate deduction in the mind of a third person.  It seemed sometimes as if the pair were possessed of the instincts of those animals which unite for mutual destruction, and as if their purpose were to fulfil their destiny with the utmost rapidity.

In the years when Dame Briton, by nature proud and ambitious, was putting forth the most successful efforts she ever made at decent housekeeping, endeavoring to transform her husband into such a person as he was not born to be, striving hard to work her will,—­in those years Clarice was born.

Is the pearl a product of disease?

Clarice grew up in the midst of influences not the purest or most elevating.  She was not by nature gay, but silent, truthful, and industrious.  She was no coward by nature, and her training made her brave and hardy.  Sometimes Old Briton called her his boy, and exacted from her the service of a son.  Dame Briton did not quarrel with him for that; she was as proud as the fisherman of any feat of skill or strength or courage performed by Clarice.  In their way they were both fond of the child, but their fondness had strange manifestation; and of much tender speech, or fondling, or praise, the girl stood in no danger.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 01, No. 6, April, 1858 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.