<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0036" id="link2H_4_0036"></SPAN></p>
<h2> SIMPLE SIMON </h2>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0037" id="link2H_4_0037"></SPAN></p>
<h2> The Thousandth Man </h2>
<p>One man in a thousand, Solomon says,<br/>
Will stick more close than a brother.<br/>
And it's worth while seeking him half your days<br/>
If you find him before the other.<br/>
Nine hundred and ninety-nine depend<br/>
on what the world sees in you,<br/>
But the Thousandth Man will stand your friend<br/>
With the whole round world agin you.<br/>
<br/>
'Tis neither promise nor prayer nor show<br/>
Will settle the finding for 'ee.<br/>
Nine hundred and ninety-nine of 'em go<br/>
By your looks or your acts or your glory.<br/>
But if he finds you and you find him,<br/>
The rest of the world don't matter;<br/>
For the Thousandth Man will sink or swim<br/>
With you in any water.<br/>
<br/>
You can use his purse with no more shame<br/>
Than he uses yours for his spendings;<br/>
And laugh and mention it just the same<br/>
As though there had been no lendings.<br/>
Nine hundred and ninety-nine of 'em call<br/>
For silver and gold in their dealings;<br/>
But the Thousandth Man he's worth 'em all,<br/>
Because you can show him your feelings!<br/>
<br/>
His wrong's your wrong, and his right's your right,<br/>
In season or out of season.<br/>
Stand up and back it in all men's sight—<br/>
With that for your only reason!<br/>
Nine hundred and ninety-nine can't bide<br/>
The shame or mocking or laughter,<br/>
But the Thousandth Man will stand by your side<br/>
To the gallows-foot—and after!<br/></p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0038" id="link2H_4_0038"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Simple Simon </h2>
<p>Cattiwow came down the steep lane with his five-horse timber-tug. He
stopped by the wood-lump at the back gate to take off the brakes. His real
name was Brabon, but the first time the children met him, years and years
ago, he told them he was 'carting wood,' and it sounded so exactly like
'cattiwow' that they never called him anything else.</p>
<p>'HI!' Una shouted from the top of the wood-lump, where they had been
watching the lane. 'What are you doing? Why weren't we told?'</p>
<p>'They've just sent for me,' Cattiwow answered. 'There's a middlin' big log
stacked in the dirt at Rabbit Shaw, and'—he flicked his whip back
along the line—'so they've sent for us all.'</p>
<p>Dan and Una threw themselves off the wood-lump almost under black Sailor's
nose. Cattiwow never let them ride the big beam that makes the body of the
timber-tug, but they hung on behind while their teeth thuttered.</p>
<p>The Wood road beyond the brook climbs at once into the woods, and you see
all the horses' backs rising, one above another, like moving stairs.
Cattiwow strode ahead in his sackcloth woodman's petticoat, belted at the
waist with a leather strap; and when he turned and grinned, his red lips
showed under his sackcloth-coloured beard. His cap was sackcloth too, with
a flap behind, to keep twigs and bark out of his neck. He navigated the
tug among pools of heather-water that splashed in their faces, and through
clumps of young birches that slashed at their legs, and when they hit an
old toadstooled stump, they never knew whether it would give way in
showers of rotten wood, or jar them back again.</p>
<p>At the top of Rabbit Shaw half-a-dozen men and a team of horses stood
round a forty-foot oak log in a muddy hollow. The ground about was poached
and stoached with sliding hoofmarks, and a wave of dirt was driven up in
front of the butt.</p>
<p>'What did you want to bury her for this way?' said Cattiwow. He took his
broad-axe and went up the log tapping it.</p>
<p>'She's sticked fast,' said 'Bunny' Lewknor, who managed the other team.</p>
<p>Cattiwow unfastened the five wise horses from the tug. They cocked their
ears forward, looked, and shook themselves.</p>
<p>'I believe Sailor knows,' Dan whispered to Una.</p>
<p>'He do,' said a man behind them. He was dressed in flour sacks like the
others, and he leaned on his broad-axe, but the children, who knew all the
wood-gangs, knew he was a stranger. In his size and oily hairiness he
might have been Bunny Lewknor's brother, except that his brown eyes were
as soft as a spaniel's, and his rounded black beard, beginning close up
under them, reminded Una of the walrus in 'The Walrus and the Carpenter.'</p>
<p>'Don't he justabout know?' he said shyly, and shifted from one foot to the
other.</p>
<p>'Yes. "What Cattiwow can't get out of the woods must have roots growing to
her."' Dan had heard old Hobden say this a few days before.</p>
<p>At that minute Puck pranced up, picking his way through the pools of black
water in the ling.</p>
<p>'Look out!' cried Una, jumping forward. 'He'll see you, Puck!'</p>
<p>'Me and Mus' Robin are pretty middlin' well acquainted,' the man answered
with a smile that made them forget all about walruses.</p>
<p>'This is Simon Cheyneys,' Puck began, and cleared his throat. 'Shipbuilder
of Rye Port; burgess of the said town, and the only—'</p>
<p>'Oh, look! Look ye! That's a knowing one,' said the man.</p>
<p>Cattiwow had fastened his team to the thin end of the log, and was moving
them about with his whip till they stood at right angles to it, heading
downhill. Then he grunted. The horses took the strain, beginning with
Sailor next the log, like a tug-of-war team, and dropped almost to their
knees. The log shifted a nail's breadth in the clinging dirt, with the
noise of a giant's kiss.</p>
<p>'You're getting her!' Simon Cheyneys slapped his knee. 'Hing on! Hing on,
lads, or she'll master ye! Ah!'</p>
<p>Sailor's left hind hoof had slipped on a heather-tuft. One of the men
whipped off his sack apron and spread it down. They saw Sailor feel for
it, and recover. Still the log hung, and the team grunted in despair.</p>
<p>'Hai!' shouted Cattiwow, and brought his dreadful whip twice across
Sailor's loins with the crack of a shot-gun. The horse almost screamed as
he pulled that extra last ounce which he did not know was in him. The thin
end of the log left the dirt and rasped on dry gravel. The butt ground
round like a buffalo in his wallow. Quick as an axe-cut, Lewknor snapped
on his five horses, and sliding, trampling, jingling, and snorting, they
had the whole thing out on the heather.</p>
<p>'Dat's the very first time I've knowed you lay into Sailor—to hurt
him,' said Lewknor.</p>
<p>'It is,' said Cattiwow, and passed his hand over the two wheals. 'But I'd
ha' laid my own brother open at that pinch. Now we'll twitch her down the
hill a piece—she lies just about right—and get her home by the
low road. My team'll do it, Bunny; you bring the tug along. Mind out!'</p>
<p>He spoke to the horses, who tightened the chains. The great log half
rolled over, and slowly drew itself out of sight downhill, followed by the
wood-gang and the timber-tug. In half a minute there was nothing to see
but the deserted hollow of the torn-up dirt, the birch undergrowth still
shaking, and the water draining back into the hoof-prints.</p>
<p>'Ye heard him?' Simon Cheyneys asked. 'He cherished his horse, but he'd
ha' laid him open in that pinch.'</p>
<p>'Not for his own advantage,' said Puck quickly. ''Twas only to shift the
log.'</p>
<p>'I reckon every man born of woman has his log to shift in the world—if
so be you're hintin' at any o' Frankie's doings. He never hit beyond
reason or without reason,' said Simon.</p>
<p>'I never said a word against Frankie,' Puck retorted, with a wink at the
children. 'An' if I did, do it lie in your mouth to contest my say-so,
seeing how you—'</p>
<p>'Why don't it lie in my mouth, seeing I was the first which knowed Frankie
for all he was?' The burly sack-clad man puffed down at cool little Puck.</p>
<p>'Yes, and the first which set out to poison him—Frankie—on the
high seas—'</p>
<p>Simon's angry face changed to a sheepish grin. He waggled his immense
hands, but Puck stood off and laughed mercilessly.</p>
<p>'But let me tell you, Mus' Robin,'he pleaded.</p>
<p>'I've heard the tale. Tell the children here. Look, Dan! Look, Una!'—-Puck's
straight brown finger levelled like an arrow. 'There's the only man that
ever tried to poison Sir Francis Drake!'</p>
<p>'Oh, Mus' Robin! 'Tidn't fair. You've the 'vantage of us all in your
upbringin's by hundreds o' years. Stands to nature you know all the tales
against every one.'</p>
<p>He turned his soft eyes so helplessly on Una that she cried, 'Stop ragging
him, Puck! You know he didn't really.'</p>
<p>'I do. But why are you so sure, little maid?' 'Because—because he
doesn't look like it,' said Una stoutly.</p>
<p>'I thank you,' said Simon to Una. 'I—I was always trustable-like
with children if you let me alone, you double handful o' mischief.' He
pretended to heave up his axe on Puck; and then his shyness overtook him
afresh.</p>
<p>'Where did you know Sir Francis Drake?' said Dan, not liking being called
a child.</p>
<p>'At Rye Port, to be sure,' said Simon, and seeing Dan's bewilderment,
repeated it.</p>
<p>'Yes, but look here,'said Dan. '"Drake he was a Devon man." The song says
so.'</p>
<p>'"And ruled the Devon seas,"' Una went on. 'That's what I was thinking—if
you don't mind.'</p>
<p>Simon Cheyneys seemed to mind very much indeed, for he swelled in silence
while Puck laughed.</p>
<p>'Hutt!' he burst out at last, 'I've heard that talk too. If you listen to
them West Country folk, you'll listen to a pack o' lies. I believe Frankie
was born somewhere out west among the Shires, but his father had to run
for it when Frankie was a baby, because the neighbours was wishful to kill
him, d'ye see? He run to Chatham, old Parson Drake did, an' Frankie was
brought up in a old hulks of a ship moored in the Medway river, same as it
might ha' been the Rother. Brought up at sea, you might say, before he
could walk on land—nigh Chatham in Kent. And ain't Kent back-door to
Sussex? And don't that make Frankie Sussex? O' course it do. Devon man!
Bah! Those West Country boats they're always fishin' in other folks'
water.'</p>
<p>'I beg your pardon,' said Dan. 'I'm sorry.</p>
<p>'No call to be sorry. You've been misled. I met Frankie at Rye Port when
my Uncle, that was the shipbuilder there, pushed me off his wharf-edge on
to Frankie's ship. Frankie had put in from Chatham with his rudder
splutted, and a man's arm—Moon's that 'ud be—broken at the
tiller. "Take this boy aboard an' drown him," says my Uncle, "and I'll
mend your rudder-piece for love."</p>
<p>'What did your Uncle want you drowned for?'said Una.</p>
<p>'That was only his fashion of say-so, same as Mus' Robin. I'd a
foolishness in my head that ships could be builded out of iron. Yes—iron
ships! I'd made me a liddle toy one of iron plates beat out thin—and
she floated a wonder! But my Uncle, bein' a burgess of Rye, and a
shipbuilder, he 'prenticed me to Frankie in the fetchin' trade, to cure
this foolishness.'</p>
<p>'What was the fetchin' trade?' Dan interrupted.</p>
<p>'Fetchin' poor Flemishers and Dutchmen out o' the Low Countries into
England. The King o' Spain, d'ye see, he was burnin' 'em in those parts,
for to make 'em Papishers, so Frankie he fetched 'em away to our parts,
and a risky trade it was. His master wouldn't never touch it while he
lived, but he left his ship to Frankie when he died, and Frankie turned
her into this fetchin' trade. Outrageous cruel hard work—on
besom-black nights bulting back and forth off they Dutch roads with shoals
on all sides, and having to hark out for the frish-frish-frish-like of a
Spanish galliwopses' oars creepin' up on ye. Frankie 'ud have the tiller
and Moon he'd peer forth at the bows, our lantern under his skirts, till
the boat we was lookin' for 'ud blurt up out o' the dark, and we'd lay
hold and haul aboard whoever 'twas—man, woman, or babe—an'
round we'd go again, the wind bewling like a kite in our riggin's, and
they'd drop into the hold and praise God for happy deliverance till they
was all sick.</p>
<p>'I had nigh a year at it, an' we must have fetched off—oh, a hundred
pore folk, I reckon. Outrageous bold, too, Frankie growed to be.
Outrageous cunnin' he was. Once we was as near as nothin' nipped by a tall
ship off Tergoes Sands in a snowstorm. She had the wind of us, and spooned
straight before it, shootin' all bow guns. Frankie fled inshore smack for
the beach, till he was atop of the first breakers. Then he hove his anchor
out, which nigh tore our bows off, but it twitched us round end-for-end
into the wind, d'ye see, an' we clawed off them sands like a drunk man
rubbin' along a tavern bench. When we could see, the Spanisher was laid
flat along in the breakers with the snows whitening on his wet belly. He
thought he could go where Frankie went.'</p>
<p>'What happened to the crew?' said Una.</p>
<p>'We didn't stop,' Simon answered. 'There was a very liddle new baby in our
hold, and the mother she wanted to get to some dry bed middlin' quick. We
runned into Dover, and said nothing.'</p>
<p>'Was Sir Francis Drake very much pleased?' 'Heart alive, maid, he'd no
head to his name in those days. He was just a outrageous, valiant,
crop-haired, tutt-mouthed boy, roarin' up an' down the narrer seas, with
his beard not yet quilted out. He made a laughing-stock of everything all
day, and he'd hold our lives in the bight of his arm all the besom-black
night among they Dutch sands; and we'd ha' jumped overside to behove him
any one time, all of us.'</p>
<p>'Then why did you try to poison him?' Una asked wickedly, and Simon hung
his head like a shy child.</p>
<p>'Oh, that was when he set me to make a pudden, for because our cook was
hurted. I done my uttermost, but she all fetched adrift like in the bag,
an' the more I biled the bits of her, the less she favoured any fashion o'
pudden. Moon he chawed and chammed his piece, and Frankie chawed and
chammed his'n, and—no words to it—he took me by the ear an'
walked me out over the bow-end, an' him an' Moon hove the pudden at me on
the bowsprit gub by gub, something cruel hard!' Simon rubbed his hairy
cheek.</p>
<p>'"Nex' time you bring me anything," says Frankie, "you bring me
cannon-shot an' I'll know what I'm getting." But as for poisonin'—'
He stopped, the children laughed so.</p>
<p>'Of course you didn't,' said Una. 'Oh, Simon, we do like you!'</p>
<p>'I was always likeable with children.' His smile crinkled up through the
hair round his eyes. 'Simple Simon they used to call me through our yard
gates.'</p>
<p>'Did Sir Francis mock you?' Dan asked.</p>
<p>'Ah, no. He was gentle-born. Laugh he did—he was always laughing—but
not so as to hurt a feather. An' I loved 'en. I loved 'en before England
knew 'en, or Queen Bess she broke his heart.'</p>
<p>'But he hadn't really done anything when you knew him, had he?' Una
insisted. 'Armadas and those things, I mean.'</p>
<p>Simon pointed to the scars and scrapes left by Cattiwow's great log. 'You
tell me that that good ship's timber never done nothing against winds and
weathers since her up-springing, and I'll confess ye that young Frankie
never done nothing neither. Nothing? He adventured and suffered and made
shift on they Dutch sands as much in any one month as ever he had occasion
for to do in a half-year on the high seas afterwards. An' what was his
tools? A coaster boat—a liddle box o' walty plankin' an' some few
fathom feeble rope held together an' made able by him sole. He drawed our
spirits up In our bodies same as a chimney-towel draws a fire. 'Twas in
him, and it comed out all times and shapes.' 'I wonder did he ever 'magine
what he was going to be? Tell himself stories about it?' said Dan with a
flush.</p>
<p>'I expect so. We mostly do—even when we're grown. But bein' Frankie,
he took good care to find out beforehand what his fortune might be. Had I
rightly ought to tell 'em this piece?' Simon turned to Puck, who nodded.</p>
<p>'My Mother, she was just a fair woman, but my Aunt, her sister, she had
gifts by inheritance laid up in her,' Simon began.</p>
<p>'Oh, that'll never do,' cried Puck, for the children stared blankly. 'Do
you remember what Robin promised to the Widow Whitgift so long as her
blood and get lasted?' [See 'Dymchurch Flit' in PUCK OF POOK'S HILL.]
'Yes. There was always to be one of them that could see farther through a
millstone than most,' Dan answered promptly.</p>
<p>'Well, Simon's Aunt's mother,' said Puck slowly, 'married the Widow's
blind son on the Marsh, and Simon's Aunt was the one chosen to see
farthest through millstones. Do you understand?'</p>
<p>'That was what I was gettin' at,' said Simon, 'but you're so desperate
quick. My Aunt she knew what was comin' to people. My Uncle being a
burgess of Rye, he counted all such things odious, and my Aunt she
couldn't be got to practise her gifts hardly at all, because it hurted her
head for a week after-wards; but when Frankie heard she had 'em, he was
all for nothin' till she foretold on him—till she looked in his hand
to tell his fortune, d'ye see? One time we was at Rye she come aboard with
my other shirt and some apples, and he fair beazled the life out of her
about it.</p>
<p>'"Oh, you'll be twice wed, and die childless," she says, and pushes his
hand away.</p>
<p>'"That's the woman's part," he says. "What'll come to me-to me?" an' he
thrusts it back under her nose.</p>
<p>'"Gold—gold, past belief or counting," she says. "Let go o' me,
lad."</p>
<p>'"Sink the gold!" he says. "What'll I do, mother?" He coaxed her like no
woman could well withstand. I've seen him with 'em—even when they
were sea-sick.</p>
<p>'"If you will have it," she says at last, "you shall have it. You'll do a
many things, and eating and drinking with a dead man beyond the world's
end will be the least of them. For you'll open a road from the East unto
the West, and back again, and you'll bury your heart with your best friend
by that road-side, and the road you open none shall shut so long as you're
let lie quiet in your grave."</p>
<p>[The old lady's prophecy is in a fair way to come true, for now the Panama
Canal is finished, one end of it opens into the very bay where Sir Francis
Drake was buried. So ships are taken through the Canal, and the road round
Cape Horn which Sir Francis opened is very little used.]</p>
<p>'"And if I'm not?" he says.</p>
<p>'"Why, then," she says, "Sim's iron ships will be sailing on dry land. Now
ha' done with this foolishness. Where's Sim's shirt?"</p>
<p>'He couldn't fetch no more out of her, and when we come up from the cabin,
he stood mazed-like by the tiller, playing with a apple. '"My Sorrow!"
says my Aunt; "d'ye see that? The great world lying in his hand, liddle
and round like a apple."</p>
<p>'"Why, 'tis one you gived him," I says.</p>
<p>'"To be sure," she says. "'Tis just a apple," and she went ashore with her
hand to her head. It always hurted her to show her gifts.</p>
<p>Him and me puzzled over that talk plenty. It sticked in his mind quite
extravagant. The very next time we slipped out for some fetchin' trade, we
met Mus' Stenning's boat over by Calais sands; and he warned us that the
Spanishers had shut down all their Dutch ports against us English, and
their galliwopses was out picking up our boats like flies off hogs' backs.
Mus' Stenning he runs for Shoreham, but Frankie held on a piece, knowin'
that Mus Stenning was jealous of our good trade. Over by Dunkirk a great
gor-bellied Spanisher, with the Cross on his sails, came rampin' at us. We
left him. We left him all they bare seas to conquest in.</p>
<p>'"Looks like this road was going to be shut pretty soon," says Frankie,
humourin' her at the tiller. "I'll have to open that other one your Aunt
foretold of."</p>
<p>'"The Spanisher's crowdin' down on us middlin' quick," I says. "No odds,"
says Frankie, "he'll have the inshore tide against him. Did your Aunt say
I was to be quiet in my grave for ever?"</p>
<p>'"Till my iron ships sailed dry land," I says.</p>
<p>'"That's foolishness," he says. "Who cares where Frankie Drake makes a
hole in the water now or twenty years from now?"</p>
<p>'The Spanisher kept muckin' on more and more canvas. I told him so.</p>
<p>'"He's feelin' the tide," was all he says. "If he was among Tergoes Sands
with this wind, we'd be picking his bones proper. I'd give my heart to
have all their tall ships there some night before a north gale, and me to
windward. There'd be gold in My hands then. Did your Aunt say she saw the
world settin' in my hand, Sim?"</p>
<p>'"Yes, but 'twas a apple," says I, and he laughed like he always did at
me. "Do you ever feel minded to jump overside and be done with
everything?" he asks after a while.</p>
<p>'"No. What water comes aboard is too wet as 'tis," I says. "The
Spanisher's going about."</p>
<p>'"I told you," says he, never looking back. "He'll give us the Pope's
Blessing as he swings. Come down off that rail. There's no knowin' where
stray shots may hit." So I came down off the rail, and leaned against it,
and the Spanisher he ruffled round in the wind, and his port-lids opened
all red inside.</p>
<p>'"Now what'll happen to my road if they don't let me lie quiet in my
grave?" he says. "Does your Aunt mean there's two roads to be found and
kept open—or what does she mean? I don't like that talk about
t'other road. D'you believe in your iron ships, Sim?"</p>
<p>'He knowed I did, so I only nodded, and he nodded back again. '"Anybody
but me 'ud call you a fool, Sim," he says. "Lie down. Here comes the
Pope's Blessing!"</p>
<p>'The Spanisher gave us his broadside as he went about. They all fell short
except one that smack-smooth hit the rail behind my back, an' I felt most
won'erful cold.</p>
<p>'"Be you hit anywhere to signify?" he says. "Come over to me."</p>
<p>'"O Lord, Mus' Drake," I says, "my legs won't move," and that was the last
I spoke for months.'</p>
<p>'Why? What had happened?' cried Dan and Una together.</p>
<p>'The rail had jarred me in here like.' Simon reached behind him clumsily.
'From my shoulders down I didn't act no shape. Frankie carried me
piggyback to my Aunt's house, and I lay bed-rid and tongue-tied while she
rubbed me day and night, month in and month out. She had faith in rubbing
with the hands. P'raps she put some of her gifts into it, too. Last of
all, something loosed itself in my pore back, and lo! I was whole restored
again, but kitten-feeble.</p>
<p>'"Where's Frankie?" I says, thinking I'd been a longish while abed.</p>
<p>'"Down-wind amongst the Dons—months ago," says my Aunt.</p>
<p>'"When can I go after 'en?" I says.</p>
<p>'"Your duty's to your town and trade now," says she. "Your Uncle he died
last Michaelmas and he've left you and me the yard. So no more iron ships,
mind ye."</p>
<p>'"What?" I says. "And you the only one that beleft in 'em!"</p>
<p>'"Maybe I do still," she says, "but I'm a woman before I'm a Whitgift, and
wooden ships is what England needs us to build. I lay on ye to do so."</p>
<p>'That's why I've never teched iron since that day—not to build a toy
ship of. I've never even drawed a draft of one for my pleasure of
evenings.' Simon smiled down on them all. 'Whitgift blood is terrible
resolute—on the she-side,'said Puck.</p>
<p>'Didn't You ever see Sir Francis Drake again?'Dan asked.</p>
<p>'With one thing and another, and my being made a burgess of Rye, I never
clapped eyes on him for the next twenty years. Oh, I had the news of his
mighty doings the world over. They was the very same bold, cunning shifts
and passes he'd worked with beforetimes off they Dutch sands, but,
naturally, folk took more note of them. When Queen Bess made him knight,
he sent my Aunt a dried orange stuffed with spiceries to smell to. She
cried outrageous on it. She blamed herself for her foretellings, having
set him on his won'erful road; but I reckon he'd ha' gone that way all
withstanding. Curious how close she foretelled it! The world in his hand
like an apple, an' he burying his best friend, Mus' Doughty—'</p>
<p>'Never mind for Mus' Doughty,' Puck interrupted. 'Tell us where you met
Sir Francis next.'</p>
<p>'Oh, ha! That was the year I was made a burgess of Rye—the same year
which King Philip sent his ships to take England without Frankie's leave.'</p>
<p>'The Armada!' said Dan contentedly. 'I was hoping that would come.'</p>
<p>'I knowed Frankie would never let 'em smell London smoke, but plenty good
men in Rye was two-three minded about the upshot. 'Twas the noise of the
gun-fire tarrified us. The wind favoured it our way from off behind the
Isle of Wight. It made a mutter like, which growed and growed, and by the
end of a week women was shruckin' in the streets. Then they come
slidderin' past Fairlight in a great smoky pat vambrished with red
gun-fire, and our ships flyin' forth and duckin' in again. The smoke-pat
sliddered over to the French shore, so I knowed Frankie was edgin' the
Spanishers toward they Dutch sands where he was master. I says to my Aunt,
"The smoke's thinnin' out. I lay Frankie's just about scrapin' his hold
for a few last rounds shot. 'Tis time for me to go."</p>
<p>'"Never in them clothes," she says. "Do on the doublet I bought you to be
made burgess in, and don't you shame this day."</p>
<p>'So I mucked it on, and my chain, and my stiffed Dutch breeches and all.</p>
<p>'"I be comin', too," she says from her chamber, and forth she come
pavisandin' like a peacock—stuff, ruff, stomacher and all. She was a
notable woman.'</p>
<p>'But how did you go? You haven't told us,' said Una.</p>
<p>'In my own ship—but half-share was my Aunt's. In the ANTONY OF RYE,
to be sure; and not empty-handed. I'd been loadin' her for three days with
the pick of our yard. We was ballasted on cannon-shot of all three sizes;
and iron rods and straps for his carpenters; and a nice passel of clean
three-inch oak planking and hide breech-ropes for his cannon, and gubs of
good oakum, and bolts o' canvas, and all the sound rope in the yard. What
else could I ha' done? I knowed what he'd need most after a week's such
work. I'm a shipbuilder, little maid.</p>
<p>'We'd a fair slant o' wind off Dungeness, and we crept on till it fell
light airs and puffed out. The Spanishers was all in a huddle over by
Calais, and our ships was strawed about mending 'emselves like dogs
lickin' bites. Now and then a Spanisher would fire from a low port, and
the ball 'ud troll across the flat swells, but both sides was finished
fightin' for that tide.</p>
<p>'The first ship we foreslowed on, her breastworks was crushed in, an' men
was shorin' 'em up. She said nothing. The next was a black pinnace, his
pumps clackin' middling quick, and he said nothing. But the third, mending
shot-holes, he spoke out plenty. I asked him where Mus' Drake might be,
and a shiny-suited man on the poop looked down into us, and saw what we
carried.</p>
<p>'"Lay alongside you!" he says. "We'll take that all."</p>
<p>'"'Tis for Mus' Drake," I says, keeping away lest his size should lee the
wind out of my sails.</p>
<p>'"Hi! Ho! Hither! We're Lord High Admiral of England! Come alongside, or
we'll hang ye," he says.</p>
<p>''Twas none of my affairs who he was if he wasn't Frankie, and while he
talked so hot I slipped behind a green-painted ship with her top-sides
splintered. We was all in the middest of 'em then.</p>
<p>'"Hi! Hoi!" the green ship says. "Come alongside, honest man, and I'll buy
your load. I'm Fenner that fought the seven Portugals—clean out of
shot or bullets. Frankie knows me."</p>
<p>'"Ay, but I don't," I says, and I slacked nothing.</p>
<p>'He was a masterpiece. Seein' I was for goin' on, he hails a Bridport hoy
beyond us and shouts, "George! Oh, George! Wing that duck. He's fat!" An'
true as we're all here, that squatty Bridport boat rounds to acrost our
bows, intendin' to stop us by means o' shooting.</p>
<p>'My Aunt looks over our rail. "George," she says, "you finish with your
enemies afore you begin on your friends."</p>
<p>'Him that was laying the liddle swivel-gun at us sweeps off his hat an'
calls her Queen Bess, and asks if she was selling liquor to pore dry
sailors. My Aunt answered him quite a piece. She was a notable woman.</p>
<p>'Then he come up—his long pennant trailing overside—his
waistcloths and netting tore all to pieces where the Spanishers had
grappled, and his sides black-smeared with their gun-blasts like
candle-smoke in a bottle. We hooked on to a lower port and hung.</p>
<p>'"Oh, Mus' Drake! Mus' Drake!" I calls up.</p>
<p>'He stood on the great anchor cathead, his shirt open to the middle, and
his face shining like the sun.</p>
<p>'"Why, Sim!" he says. Just like that—after twenty year! "Sim," he
says, "what brings you?"</p>
<p>'"Pudden," I says, not knowing whether to laugh or cry.</p>
<p>'"You told me to bring cannon-shot next time, an' I've brought 'em."</p>
<p>'He saw we had. He ripped out a fathom and a half o' brimstone Spanish,
and he swung down on our rail, and he kissed me before all his fine young
captains. His men was swarming out of the lower ports ready to unload us.
When he saw how I'd considered all his likely wants, he kissed me again.</p>
<p>'"Here's a friend that sticketh closer than a brother!" he says.
"Mistress," he says to my Aunt, "all you foretold on me was true. I've
opened that road from the East to the West, and I've buried my heart
beside it."</p>
<p>'"I know," she says. "That's why I be come."</p>
<p>'"But ye never foretold this"; he points to both they great fleets.</p>
<p>'"This don't seem to me to make much odds compared to what happens to a
man," she says. "Do it?"</p>
<p>'"Certain sure a man forgets to remember when he's proper mucked up with
work. Sim," he says to me, "we must shift every living Spanisher round
Dunkirk corner on to our Dutch sands before morning. The wind'll come out
of the North after this calm—same as it used—and then they're
our meat."</p>
<p>'"Amen," says I. "I've brought you what I could scutchel up of odds and
ends. Be you hit anywhere to signify?"</p>
<p>'"Oh, our folk'll attend to all that when we've time," he says. He turns
to talk to my Aunt, while his men flew the stuff out of our hold. I think
I saw old Moon amongst 'em, but he was too busy to more than nod like. Yet
the Spanishers was going to prayers with their bells and candles before
we'd cleaned out the ANTONY. Twenty-two ton o' useful stuff I'd fetched
him. '"Now, Sim," says my Aunt, "no more devouring of Mus' Drake's time.
He's sending us home in the Bridport hoy. I want to speak to them young
springalds again."</p>
<p>'"But here's our ship all ready and swept," I says.</p>
<p>'"Swep' an' garnished," says Frankie. "I'm going to fill her with devils
in the likeness o' pitch and sulphur. We must shift the Dons round Dunkirk
corner, and if shot can't do it, we'll send down fireships."</p>
<p>'"I've given him my share of the ANTONY," says my Aunt. "What do you
reckon to do about yours?"</p>
<p>'"She offered it," said Frankie, laughing.</p>
<p>'"She wouldn't have if I'd overheard her," I says; "because I'd have
offered my share first." Then I told him how the ANTONY's sails was best
trimmed to drive before the wind, and seeing he was full of occupations we
went acrost to that Bridport hoy, and left him.</p>
<p>'But Frankie was gentle-born, d'ye see, and that sort they never overlook
any folks' dues.</p>
<p>'When the hoy passed under his stern, he stood bare-headed on the poop
same as if my Aunt had been his Queen, and his musicianers played "Mary
Ambree" on their silver trumpets quite a long while. Heart alive, little
maid! I never meaned to make you look sorrowful!</p>
<p>'Bunny Lewknor in his sackcloth petticoats burst through the birch scrub
wiping his forehead.</p>
<p>'We've got the stick to rights now! She've been a whole hatful o' trouble.
You come an' ride her home, Mus' Dan and Miss Una!'</p>
<p>'They found the proud wood-gang at the foot of the slope, with the log
double-chained on the tug.</p>
<p>'Cattiwow, what are you going to do with it?'said Dan, as they straddled
the thin part.</p>
<p>'She's going down to Rye to make a keel for a Lowestoft fishin'-boat, I've
heard. Hold tight!'</p>
<p>'Cattiwow cracked his whip, and the great log dipped and tilted, and
leaned and dipped again, exactly like a stately ship upon the high seas.</p>
<p><SPAN name="link2H_4_0039" id="link2H_4_0039"></SPAN></p>
<h2> Frankie's Trade </h2>
<p>Old Horn to All Atlantic said:<br/>
(A-hay O! To me O!)<br/>
'Now where did Frankie learn his trade?<br/>
For he ran me down with a three-reef mains'le.'<br/>
(All round the Horn!)<br/>
<br/>
Atlantic answered: 'Not from me!<br/>
You'd better ask the cold North Sea,<br/>
For he ran me down under all plain canvas.'<br/>
(All round the Horn!)<br/>
<br/>
The North Sea answered: 'He's my man,<br/>
For he came to me when he began—<br/>
Frankie Drake in an open coaster.<br/>
(All round the Sands!)<br/>
<br/>
'I caught him young and I used him sore,<br/>
So you never shall startle Frankie more,<br/>
Without capsizing Earth and her waters.<br/>
(All round the Sands!)<br/>
<br/>
'I did not favour him at all,<br/>
I made him pull and I made him haul—<br/>
And stand his trick with the common sailors.<br/>
(All round the Sands!)<br/>
<br/>
'I froze him stiff and I fogged him blind,<br/>
And kicked him home with his road to find<br/>
By what he could see of a three-day snow-storm.<br/>
(All round the Sands!)<br/>
<br/>
'I learned him his trade o' winter nights,<br/>
'Twixt Mardyk Fort and Dunkirk lights<br/>
On a five-knot tide with the forts a-firing.<br/>
(All round the Sands!)<br/>
<br/>
'Before his beard began to shoot,<br/>
I showed him the length of the Spaniard's foot—<br/>
And I reckon he clapped the boot on it later.<br/>
(All round the Sands!)<br/>
'If there's a risk which you can make<br/>
That's worse than he was used to take<br/>
Nigh every week in the way of his business;<br/>
(All round the Sands!)<br/>
<br/>
'If there's a trick that you can try<br/>
Which he hasn't met in time gone by,<br/>
Not once or twice, but ten times over;<br/>
(All round the Sands!)<br/>
<br/>
'If you can teach him aught that's new,<br/>
(A-hay O! To me O!)<br/>
I'll give you Bruges and Niewport too,<br/>
And the ten tall churches that stand between 'em.'<br/>
Storm along, my gallant Captains!<br/>
(All round the Horn!)<br/></p>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />