Читать книгу Christmas Penny Readings: Original Sketches for the Season - George Manville Fenn - Страница 5

A Ghastly Deed.

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In Portsmouth harbour the good ship lay,

Her cruising ended for many a day,

And gathered on deck while receiving their pay,

The sailors most thickly were mustered.

The Jews on the wharves were all eagerly bent

On supplying poor Jack, while most likely by scent,

There were sharks by the score

On all parts of the shore.

Both he sharks and she sharks enough, ay and more,

To devour poor Jack,

When they made their attack,

And there on the land they all clustered.


Only think; from a cruise of four years returned,

And paid in clean money! No wonder it burned,

And Jack’s canvass pockets were ready to give.

But, there: not so ready as Jack who would live

To the top of his income - the very main truck,

And when to the bottom of pocket, why luck,

Would never turn back

On poor happy-faced Jack,

Who never said die

In his life. And would try

To face any storm if his officers spoke,

Or the wildest of sights that the hurricane woke.


Now Dick Sprit was a sailor,

Tight and bold in a gale or

A storm. He would cheer in a fight,

’Mid the bullets’ flight,

And sooner than hear any praise or flattery,

Would have run his head in a “Rooshun” battery.

Now Dick his pockets had ten times slapped,

His fingers snapped, and his trousers clapped;

He had thought of his home and the Christmas-time,

The long shore days ’mid the frosty rime.

He had gone on shore, run the gauntlet well,

’Scaped the Jews’ oiled words and the grog-shops’ smell.

The night was cold and the way was dark,

What mattered when Dick was free of his bark,

And with kit on his back, and stick in his fist,

His pay in his pocket, and cheek full of twist,

He started off for his six miles’ tramp

To his native spot, spite of snow or damp.


Dick twisted his twist, and he flourished his stick,

And vowed he could fourteen footpads lick,

For in war or in peace, a scrimmage or spar

Is heartily welcome to every tar.

The night was cold and the way was dark,

And the town lights shone here and there like a spark,

As merrily on through the snow Dick tramped,

Though he certainly wished that the way were lamped.

But what was that when with four years’ pay,

And a leave of absence for many a day,

With the old folks waiting their boy to meet,

Their sailor lad who, now fleet of feet,

Hurried along o’er the crunching snow,

As the thoughts of home made his heart to glow.


Some three miles past, and the sailor now

Paused by a hedge where the holly bough

Grew thick and dense, and though dim the night

There were memories many within that sight,

For the days of old came hurrying by,

And that Christmas past when he said good-bye;

While then came the thoughts of years soon sped,

Of the distant climes and the blood he’d shed,

Of the battles with storms in the ocean wild,

Of the torrid heat or the breezes mild.

But now once more he was nearing home

After his four years’ tiring roam;

And with bounding heart how the night he blest,

And thought of the coming days of rest.


Some three miles past, when his blood was chilled

By a shriek which through every muscle thrilled;

He stood for a moment, and then could hear

The sounds of a struggle and trampling near;

Panting and sobs, as of mortal fight,

While from over a hedge gleamed rays of light.

Dick’s feelings were wrought to the highest pitch;

His bundle he dropped, gave his slack a hitch,

Then tightening his grasp of his sapling oak,

With a bounding rush through the hedge he broke,

When hard by a cottage a lanthorn’s light

Cast its flickering rays on a ghastly sight:

With gory features and blade in hand

Two ruffians stooped and their victim scanned;

As over the struggling form they leant,

Dick paused no more, but his sapling went,

Cut one - cut two on each villain’s head,

Thud like the fall of a pestle of lead,

And then they fell with a deep drawn groan,

While Dick leaned forward on hearing a moan,

But suddenly turning, he ran like mad,

And breathlessly muttered, “ ’Twas really too bad.

Be blest if he ever did see such a rig

As to topper two lubbers for killing a pig!”


And Dick was right, for ’twas really no joke,

Though our sailor lad here had no “pig in a poke;”

But though courage should merit the best of our praise,

There’s a certain fair maiden whose limpid eyes’ rays

Should be shed on our mind when we think to engage,

And not in our hurry go blind in our rage;

Discretion should lead us, or else every whit,

We may turn out as blind as the sailor - Dick Sprit.

Christmas Penny Readings: Original Sketches for the Season

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