The Amateur Gentleman - Page 229/395

"Sir?"

"Do you know the Duchess of Camberhurst well?"

"Know her, sir?" repeated the Bo'sun, giving a dubious pull at his

starboard whisker; "why, Mr. Beverley, sir, there's two things as I

knows on, as no man never did know on, nor never will know on,--and

one on 'em's a ship and t' other's a woman."

"But do you know her well enough to like and--trust?"

"Why, Mr. Beverley, sir, since you ax me, I'll tell you--plain and

to the p'int. We'll take 'er Grace the Duchess and say, clap her

helm a-lee to tack up ag'in a beam wind, a wind, mind you, as ain't

strong enough to lift her pennant,--and yet she'll fall off and miss

her stays, d'ye see, or get took a-back and yaw to port or starboard,

though, if you ax me why or wherefore, I'll tell you as how,--her

being a woman and me only a man,--I don't know. Then, again, on the

contrary, let it blow up foul--a roaring hurricane say, wi' the seas

running high, ah! wi' the scud flying over her top-s'l yard, and she'll

rise to it like a bird, answer to a spoke, and come up into the

wind as sweet as ever you see. The Duchess ain't no fair-weather

craft, I'll allow, but in 'owling, raging tempest she's staunch, sir,

--ah, that she is,--from truck to keelson! And there y'are, Mr. Beverley,

sir!"

"Do you mean," inquired Barnabas, puzzled of look, "that she is to

be depended on--in an emergency?"

"Ay, sir--that she is!"

"Ah!" said Barnabas, nodding, "I'm glad to know that, Bo'sun,--very

glad." And here he became thoughtful all at once. Yet after a while

he spoke again, this time to Peterby.

"You are very silent, John."

"I am--your valet, sir!"

"Then, oh! man," exclaimed Barnabas, touching up the galloping bays

quite unnecessarily, "oh, man--forget it a while! Here we sit--three

men together, with London miles behind us, and the Fashionable World

further still. Here we sit, three men, with no difference between us,

except that the Bo'sun has fought and bled for this England of ours,

you have travelled and seen much of the world, and I, being the

youngest, have done neither the one nor the other, and very little

else--as yet. So, John,--be yourself; talk, John, talk!"

Now hereupon John Peterby's grave dignity relaxed, a twinkle dawned

in his eyes, and his lips took on their old-time, humorous curve.

And lo! the valet became merged and lost in the cosmopolitan, the

dweller in many cities, who had done and seen much, and could tell

of such things so wittily and well that the miles passed unheeded,

while the gallant bays whirled the light phaeton up hill and down

dale, contemptuous of fatigue.