The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 84, October, 1864 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 308 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 84, October, 1864.

The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 84, October, 1864 eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 308 pages of information about The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 84, October, 1864.

But at last Fausta said,—­“What do you mean, Fred, by saying you remember Denis Duval?”

And I,—­“Did you meet him at the Battle of Pavia, or in Valerius Flaccus’s Games in Numidia?” For we have a habit of calling Ingham “The Wandering Jew.”

But he would not be jeered at; he only called us to witness, that, from the first chapter of Denis Duval, he had said the name was familiar,—­even to the point of looking it out in the Biographical Dictionary; and now that it appeared Duval fought on board the Serapis, he said it all came back to him.  His grandfather, his mother’s father, was a “volunteer"-boy, preparing to be midshipman, on the Serapis,—­and he knew he had heard him speak of Duval!

Oh, how we all screamed!  It was so like Ingham!  Haliburton asked him if his grandfather was not best-man when Denis married Agnes.  Fausta asked him if he would not continue the novel in the “Cornhill.”  I said it was well known that the old gentleman advised Montcalm to surrender Quebec, interpreted between Cook and the first Kamehameha, piloted La Perouse between the Centurion and the Graves in Boston harbor, and called him up with a toast at a school-dinner;—­that I did not doubt, therefore, that it was all right,—­and that he and Duval had sworn eternal friendship in their boyhood, and now formed one constellation in the southern hemisphere.  But after we had all done, Ingham offered to bet Newport for the Six that he would substantiate what he said.  This is by far the most tremendous wager in our little company; it is never offered, unless there be certainty to back it; it is, therefore, never accepted; and the nearest approach we have ever made to Newport, as a company, was one afternoon when we went to South-Boston Point in the horse-car, and found the tide down.  Silence reigned, therefore, and the subject changed.

The next night we were at Ingham’s.  He unlocked a ravishing old black mahogany secretary he has, and produced a pile of parchment-covered books of different sizes, which were diaries of old Captain Heddart’s.  They were often called log-books,—­but, though in later years kept on paper ruled for log-books, and often following to a certain extent the indications of the columns, they were almost wholly personal, and sometimes ran a hundred pages without alluding at all to the ship on which he wrote.  Well! the earliest of these was by far the most elegant in appearance.  My eyes watered a little, as Ingham showed me on the first page, in the stiff Italian hand which our grandmothers wrote in, when they aspired to elegance, the dedication,—­

    “TO MY DEAR FRANCIS,
    who will write something here every day, because he loves his
    MOTHER.”

That old English gentleman, whom I just remember, when Ingham first went to sea, as the model of mild, kind old men, at Ingham’s mother’s house,—­then he went to sea once himself for the first time,—­and he had a mother himself,—­and as he went off, she gave him the best album-book that Thetford Regis could make,—­and wrote this inscription in ink that was not rusty then!

Copyrights
Project Gutenberg
The Atlantic Monthly, Volume 14, No. 84, October, 1864 from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.