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<h1> Jim Davis </h1>
<b><i>By</i><br/>
John Masefield<br/>
<br/>
<br/>
For Judith<br/></b>
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<h2> CHAPTER I </h2>
<h3> MY FIRST JOURNEY </h3>
<p>I was born in the year 1800, in the town of
Newnham-on-Severn, in Gloucestershire. I am sure of the year,
because my father always told me that I was born at the end
of the century, in the year that they began to build the
great house. The house has been finished now these many
years. The red-brick wall, which shuts its garden from the
road (and the Severn), is all covered with valerian and
creeping plants. One of my earliest memories is of the masons
at work, shaping the two great bows. I remember how my nurse
used to stop to watch them, at the corner of the road, on the
green strip by the river-bank, where the gipsies camped on
the way to Gloucester horse-fair. One of the masons was her
sweetheart (Tom Farrell his name was), but he got into bad
ways, I remember, and was hanged or transported, though that
was years afterwards, when I had left that countryside.</p>
<p>My father and mother died when I was still a boy—my
mother on the day of Trafalgar battle, in 1805, my father
four years later. It was very sad at home after mother died;
my father shut himself up in his study, never seeing anybody.
When my father died, my uncle came to Newnham from his home
in Devonshire; my old home was sold then, and I was taken
away. I remember the day so very clearly. It was one sunny
morning in early April. My uncle and I caught the coach at
the top of the hill, at the door of the old inn opposite the
church. The coachman had a hot drink handed up to him, and
the ostlers hitched up the new team. Then the guard (he had a
red coat, like a soldier) blew his horn, and the coach
started off down the hill, going so very fast that I was
afraid, for I had never ridden on a coach before, though I
had seen them every day. The last that I saw of Newnham was
the great house at the corner. It was finished by that time,
of course, and as we drove past I saw the beautiful woman who
lived there walking up and down the lawn with her husband,
Captain Rylands, a very tall, handsome man, who used to give
me apples. I was always afraid to eat the apples, because my
nurse said that the Captain had killed a man. That was in the
wars in Spain, fighting against the French.</p>
<p>I remember a great deal about my first coach-ride. We slept
that night at Bristol in one of the famous coaching inns,
where, as a great treat, I had bacon and eggs for supper,
instead of bread-and-milk. In the morning, my uncle took me
with him to the docks, where he had some business to do. That
was the first time I ever really saw big ships, and that was
the first time I spoke with the sailors. There was a capstan
on one of the wharves, and men were at work, heaving round
it, hoisting casks out of a West Indiaman. One of the men
said, "Come on, young master; give us a hand on the bar
here." So I put my hands on to the bar and pushed my best,
walking beside him till my uncle called me away. There were
many ships there at the time, all a West Indian convoy, and
it was fine to see their great figureheads, and the brass
cannon at the ports, and to hear the men singing out aloft as
they shifted spars and bent and unbent sails. They were all
very lofty ships, built for speed; all were beautifully kept,
like men-of-war, and all of them had their house-flags and
red ensigns flying, so that in the sun they looked splendid.
I shall never forget them.</p>
<p>After that, we went back to the inn, and climbed into another
coach, and drove for a long, long time, often very slowly,
till we reached a place near Newton Abbot, where there was a
kind woman who put me to bed (I was too tired to notice
more). Then, the next morning, I remember a strange man who
was very cross at breakfast, so that the kind woman cried
till my uncle sent me out of the room. It is funny how these
things came back to me; it might have been only yesterday.</p>
<p>Late that afternoon we reached the south coast of Devon, so
that we had the sea close beside us until the sun set. I
heard the sea, as I thought, when we reached my uncle's
house, at the end of the twilight; but they told me that it
was a trout-stream, brawling over its boulders, and that the
sea was a full mile away. My aunt helped to put me to bed,
but I was too much excited to sleep well. I lay awake for a
long, long time, listening to the noise of the brook, and to
the wind among the trees outside, and to the cuckoo clock on
the landing calling out the hours and half-hours. When I fell
asleep I seemed to hear the sea and the crying out of the
sailors. Voices seemed to be talking close beside me in the
room; I seemed to hear all sorts of things, strange things,
which afterwards really happened. There was a night-light
burning on the wash-handstand. Whenever I woke up in the
night the light would show me the shadow of the water jug
upon the ceiling. It looked like an old, old man, with a
humped back, walking the road, bowed over his cudgel.</p>
<p>I am not going to say very much about my life during the next
few years. My aunt and uncle had no children of their own,
and no great fondness for the children of others. Sometimes I
was very lonely there; but after my tenth birthday I was at
school most of my time, at Newton Abbot. I used to spend my
Easter holidays (never more than a week) with the kind woman
who put me to bed that night of my journey. My summer and
winter holidays I spent with my uncle and aunt in their
little house above the trout-stream.</p>
<p>The trout-stream rose about three miles from my uncle's
house, in a boggy wood full of springs. It was a very rapid
brook, nowhere more than three or four feet deep, and never
more than twenty feet across, even near its mouth. Below my
uncle's house it was full of little falls, with great mossy
boulders which checked its flow, and pools where the bubbles
spun. Further down, its course was gentler, for the last mile
to the sea was a flat valley, with combes on each side
covered with gorse and bramble. The sea had once come right
up that valley to just below my uncle's house; but that was
many years before—long before anybody could remember.
Just after I went to live there, one of the farmers dug a
drain, or "rhine," in the valley, to clear a boggy patch. He
dug up the wreck of a large fishing-boat, with her anchor and
a few rusty hoops lying beside her under the ooze about a
foot below the surface. She must have sailed right up from
the sea hundreds of years ago, before the brook's mouth got
blocked with shingle (as I suppose it was) during some summer
gale when the stream was nearly dry. Often, when I was a boy,
I used to imagine the ships coming up from the sea, along
that valley, firing their cannon. In the winter, when the
snow melted, the valley would be flooded, till it looked just
like a sea, and then I would imagine sea-fights there, with
pirates in red caps boarding Spanish treasure galleons.</p>
<p>The seacoast is mostly very bold in that part of Devon. Even
where there are no cliffs, the land rises steeply from the
sea, in grassy hills, with boulders and broken rock, instead
of a beach, below them. There are small sandy beaches
wherever the brooks run into the sea. Everywhere else the
shore is "steep-to"—so much so that in many places it
is very difficult to reach the sea. I mention this because,
later on, that steep coast gave me some queer adventures.</p>
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