I
THE SANDS OF DEE
The first great adventure in the life of our hero occurred on the twenty-eighth day of February in the year 1865. He was born that day. The greatest adventure as well as the greatest event that ever comes into anybody’s life is the adventure of being born.
If there is such a thing as luck, Wilfred Thomason Grenfell, as his parents named him, fell into luck, when he was born on February twenty-eighth, 1865. He might have been born on February twenty-ninth one year earlier, and that would have been little short of a catastrophe, for in that case his birthdays would have been separated by intervals of four years, and every boy knows what a hardship it would be to wait four years for a birthday, when every one else is having one every year. There are people, to be sure, who would like their birthdays to be four years apart, but they are not boys.
Grenfell was also lucky, or, let us say, fortunate in the place where he was born and spent his early boyhood. His father was Head Master of Mostyn House, a school for boys at Parkgate, England, a little fishing village not far from the historic old city of Chester. By referring to your map you will find Chester a dozen miles or so to the southward of Liverpool, though you may not find Parkgate, for it is so small a village that the map makers are quite likely to overlook it.
Here at Parkgate the River Dee flows down into an estuary that opens out into the Irish Sea, and here spread the famous “Sands of Dee,” known the world over through Charles Kingsley’s pathetic poem, which we have all read, and over which, I confess, I shed tears when a boy:
O Mary, go and call the cattle
home,
And
call the cattle home,
And
call the cattle home,
Across the Sands
o’ Dee;
The western wind was wild
and dank wi’ foam,
And all alone
went she.
The creeping tide came up
along the sand,
And
o’er and o’er the sand,
And
round and round the sand,
As far as eye
could see;
The blinding mist came down
and hid the land—
And never home
came she.
Oh is it weed, or fish, or
floating hair—
A
tress o’ golden hair,
O’
drown’ed maiden’s hair,
Above the nets
at sea?
Was never salmon yet that
shone so fair,
Among the stakes
on Dee.
They rowed her in across the
rolling foam,
The
cruel, crawling foam,
The
cruel, hungry foam,
To her grave beside
the sea;
But still the boatmen hear
her call the cattle home,
Across the Sands
o’ Dee.
Charles Kingsley and the poem become nearer and dearer to us than ever with the knowledge that he was a cousin of Grenfell, and knew the Sands o’ Dee, over which Grenfell tramped and hunted as a boy, for the sandy plain was close by his father’s house.