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"Jesus, lover of my soul, Let me to Thy bosom fly, While the nearer waters roll, While the tempest still is high:
"Hide me, O my Saviour, hide, Till the storm of life is past; Safe into the haven guide, Oh, receive my soul at last!
"Other refuge have I none, Hangs my helpless soul on Thee; Leave, ah! leave me not alone, Still support and comfort----"
"Oh! Colley," Jack said, breaking off, "look!" The little boy's eyes were wide open, gazing upwards. Then a smile, a sweet smile, a shudder as if in answer to a welcome, and the spirit of the child had fled!
Colley bowed his head weeping.
"A pretty little lad!" he said, "his mother's pride aboard s.h.i.+p. Well, well, she is waiting for him, and G.o.d's will be done."
When the shadows crept over the blue expanse that night, Colley lifted the child's body tenderly in his arms, and said to Jack--
"Kiss him for his mother, boy. He is saved from the death which, unless G.o.d send help, lies before you and me--the death of starvation.
You are young, but I am an old man; for all sailors are old at fifty, and few see sixty. I shall go next."
"Oh, Colley, Colley, do not leave me all alone!"
Colley shook his head.
"Again I say, Let G.o.d's will be done. I wish--I wish I had a memory for a text of Scripture to say before I bury this child; for we must bury him, and now. You've been at school, you say, up to the time you ran away. Can't you say the words of Scripture which you have learned?
You must know a lot."
Poor Jack rubbed his head and tried to collect his thoughts, but in vain.
"It's what the Lord said to Mary when her brother Lazarus died. Ah, I've got it now!"
and Colley slowly and solemnly repeated, "I am the Resurrection and the Life; he that liveth and believeth on Me shall never die."
Then the old sailor clasped his weather-beaten hands over the child's lifeless form, and with tears running down his rugged cheeks he said: "O heavenly Father, Thou hast called this child from pain and suffering. In Thy mercy send for me next; but let poor Jack live to go back to his mother. For Christ Jesus' sake."
Then tenderly and gently the little form slipped over the side of the boat; there was a sudden splash, a rippling sound, and all was still--so still, except for the mysterious murmur which always sounds like whispers from another world at nightfall on the sea.
Again the sun rose, and again the silent sea was flooded with the rays of the sun. The inhabitants of the little boat were too weak now to speak much. Even Toby could scarcely wag his tail, but lay with his head on his paws, gazing up to his master's face, questioning as to what it meant--this faintness and weakness which seemed to be creeping over him.
The dead gull lay untouched. There was not strength left to eat it, even if there had been inclination.
Jack still grasped the oar, and still the poor blue jersey fluttered in the breeze. But Colley lay at the bottom of the boat, breathing heavily, though his eyes were open, and his rough weather-beaten hands folded as if in prayer.
They had drifted far out in the Atlantic, but not in the direct line hitherto of the many steamers which continually cross the great dividing waters which lie between the Old World and the New.
Jack had ample time for thought, as the long weary hours went by. But a stupor was fast creeping over him, and everything became dreamlike and unreal. Even the images of his mother and Joy, which had been so vivid, grew taint and indistinct, and he was scarcely conscious, when a loud "Ahoy!" fell on his ear.
He started up, and there, at last, was a boat alongside of theirs.
"Wake up, boy!" said a cheery voice. "What's happened, eh?"
"Oh, Colley, Colley!" Jack cried, "we are saved, we are saved!" And then from excess of joy and emotion he fell p.r.o.ne upon the prostrate figure of the old sailor.
"A man, a boy, and a dog," said one of the boat's crew.
"Half-starved, I declare! Look alive, mates, and let's get 'em aboard our s.h.i.+p as quick as may be. I told you this object we saw was a craft of some sort, though you were so slow to believe me. A happy thing for these poor creatures I got the boat lowered."
In another quarter of an hour two pairs of st.u.r.dy arms were pulling the boat and those in it to the good s.h.i.+p _Claudia_, bound for the islands of the Southern Seas.
CHAPTER X.
"_ONLY A LITTLE BOX._"
Uncle Bobo was sitting at the door of his shop one golden September day, when the atmosphere of the row was oppressive, and his heart was heavy within him.
Little Miss Joy was mending--so the doctors said; for Uncle Bobo had declared two heads were better than one, and had insisted on calling in a second opinion.
Yes; they all said little Miss Joy was better. But in what did this betterness consist? She was still lying in that upper chamber, whence she had always smiled her good-morning on Patience Harrison, and sang her hymn of thanksgiving as the little birds sing their matins to the rising sun.
Better! yes, she was better; for there was now no danger to her life.
But the fall had injured her back, and she could not move without pain.
The colour was gone from her rosy lips, and the light from those lovely gentian eyes was more soft and subdued. Little Miss Joy, who had been as blithe as a bird on the bough and so merry and gladsome, that she deserved her name of "Little Sunbeam," was now a patient sick child, never complaining, never fretful, and always greeting Uncle Bobo with a smile--a smile which used to go to his heart, and send him down to his little shop sighing out--as to-day--
"Better--better! I don't see it; the doctor doesn't know! What are doctors for, if they can't make a child well? I pay enough. I don't grudge them their money, but I expect to see a return for it. And here comes Patience Harrison to tell me what I don't see--that my little sunbeam is better."
Patience Harrison was crossing the row to Uncle Bobo's door as he spoke. Her face wore the same expression of waiting for something or some one that never came, as it did on the morning when we first saw her looking up and looking down the row for Jack.
It was a wonderfully warm September. No news had been brought of the wanderer: the news for which her soul thirsted. George Paterson, it is true, had heard an inkling of news, but it was not anything certain.
He had heard from a sailor that Jack Harrison had been seen aboard the _Galatea_ by a pa.s.senger who had been put ash.o.r.e as the _Galatea_ pa.s.sed the Lizard; and tidings had come that the _Galatea_ had been lost off the coast of Spain, and only nine of the crew or pa.s.sengers aboard had survived to tell the tale! That the _Galatea_ was lost seemed certain, but that Jack was aboard her was not proved. The man who reported that he had seen him could not be sure of his name. He heard him called Jack, but so were hundreds of other boys. He had understood that he was a runaway, kept on sufferance by the captain to please the second mate; but that was all, and it was not much.
Certainly not enough to warrant adding to Patience Harrison's heavy burden of sorrow. So George Paterson kept the suspicion to himself, and waited for confirmation of the report before he mentioned it.
Patience Harrison had nursed and cared for Joy as if she had been her own child, and Uncle Bobo was not ungrateful.
"Well," he said, as she leaned against the door, a variety of articles making a festoon over her head, and a bunch of fis.h.i.+ng-tackle catching a lock of her abundant hair, which was prematurely grey:--"Well, is the grand affair coming off to-morrow?"
"Yes, they are to be married to-morrow at ten o'clock; but there's to be no fuss. They are going to Cromer for a few days, and I have promised to keep shop till they come home."
"And what's Joy to do without you?"
"I shall run over early every morning and late every evening, and poor Bet Skinner is out of her wits with delight because I said I thought you would let her stay by day and take my place."
"To be sure! to be sure! Only don't expect me to hold out a hand to that old lady, Skinner's mother. Is she to be present at the wedding?"
"Yes, and so is Bet; and I have excused myself on account of looking after the shop."
"Well, your poor sister is making a pretty hard bed for herself to lie on, and I am afraid she will live to repent it; though, to be sure, we can't call it marrying in haste. That sly fellow has been sneaking about here for a long time. What's the mother going to do?"
"She will live where she is for the present, and everything will go on the same, except that I cannot live with Skinner. I shall look out for a situation in a shop, as soon as Joy is well again, and does not want me. Or maybe I shall take one of the small houses on the Denes, and let lodgings to folks who can put up with humble accommodation."