Shandygaff eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about Shandygaff.

Shandygaff eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 257 pages of information about Shandygaff.

Joe Hogan, the steward, was there in his white jacket.  He introduced me to the cook, the bosun, the “chief,” the wireless, and the “second.”  The first officer was too heavy with liquor to notice the arrival of a stranger.  Messrs. Haig and Haig, those Dioscuri of seamen, had been at work.  The skipper was ashore.  He owns a saloon.

The Alvina is a lovely little vessel, 215 feet long, they told me, and about 525 tons.  She is fitted with mahogany throughout; the staterooms all have brass double beds and private bathrooms attached; she has her own wireless telegraph and telephone, refrigerating apparatus, and everything to make the owner and his guests comfortable.  But her beautiful furnishings were tumbled this way and that in preparation for the sterner duties that lay before her.  The lower deck was cumbered with sacks of coal lashed down.  A transatlantic voyage in January is likely to be a lively one for a yacht of 500 tons.

I found Tommy below in his bunk, cleaning up.  He is a typical Dutch lad—­round, open face, fair hair, and guileless blue eyes.  He showed me all his treasures—­his certificates of good conduct from all the ships (both sail and steam) on which he has served; a picture of his mother, who died when he was six; and of his sister Greta—­a very pretty girl—­who is also mentioned in Casuals of the Sea. The drunken fireman in the story who dies after a debauch was Tommy’s father who died in the same way.  And with these other treasures Tommy showed me a packet of letters from Mr. McFee.

I do not want to offend Mr. McFee by describing his letters to this Dutch sailor-boy as “sensible,” but that is just what they were.  Tommy is one of his own “casuals”—­

—­those frail craft upon the restless Sea Of Human Life, who strike the rocks uncharted, Who loom, sad phantoms, near us, drearily, Storm-driven, rudderless, with timbers started—­

and these sailormen who drift from port to port on the winds of chance are most in need of sound Ben Franklin advice.  Save your money; put it in the bank; read books; go to see the museums, libraries, and art galleries; get to know something about this great America if you intend to settle down there—­that is the kind of word Tommy gets from his friend.

Gradually, as I talked with him, I began to see into the laboratory of life where “Casuals of the Sea” originated.  This book is valuable because it is a triumphant expression of the haphazard, strangely woven chances that govern the lives of the humble.  In Tommy’s honest, gentle face, and in the talk of his shipmates when we sat down to dinner together, I saw a microcosm of the strange barren life of the sea where men float about for years like driftwood.  And out of all this ebbing tide of aimless, happy-go-lucky humanity McFee had chanced upon this boy from Amsterdam and had tried to pound into him some good sound common sense.

When I left her that afternoon, the Alvina was getting up steam, and she sailed within a few hours.  I had eaten and talked with her crew, and for a short space had a glimpse of the lives and thoughts of the simple, childlike men who live on ships.  I realized for the first time the truth of that background of aimless hazard that makes “Casuals of the Sea” a book of more than passing merit.

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
Shandygaff from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.