登陆注册
15454400000020

第20章 CAPTAIN ELI'S BEST EAR(5)

The next morning Mrs. Trimmer went to Captain Eli's house, and finding Captain Cephas there, they all set to work at the Christmas tree, which was a very fine one, and had been planted in a box. Captain Cephas had brought over a bundle of things from his house, and Captain Eli kept running here and there, bringing, each time that he returned, some new object, wonderful or pretty, which he had brought from China or Japan or Corea, or some spicy island of the Eastern seas; and nearly every time he came with these treasures Mrs. Trimmer declared that such things were too good to put upon a Christmas tree, even for such a nice little girl as the one for which that tree was intended. The presents which Captain Cephas brought were much more suitable for the purpose; they were odd and funny, and some of them pretty, but not expensive, as were the fans and bits of shellwork and carved ivories which Captain Eli wished to tie upon the twigs of the tree.

There was a good deal of talk about all this, but Captain Eli had his own way.

"I don't suppose, after all," said he, "that the little gal ought to have all the things. This is such a big tree that it's more like a family tree. Cap'n Cephas can take some of my things, and I can take some of his things, and, Mrs. Trimmer, if there's anything you like, you can call it your present and take it for your own, so that will be fair and comfortable all round.

What I want is to make everybody satisfied."

"I'm sure I think they ought to be," said Mrs. Trimmer, looking very kindly at Captain Eli.

Mrs. Trimmer went home to her own house to dinner, and in the afternoon she brought the little girl. She had said there ought to be an early supper, so that the child would have time to enjoy the Christmas tree before she became sleepy.

This meal was prepared entirely by Captain Eli, and in sailor fashion, not woman fashion, so that Captain Cephas could make no excuse for eating his supper at home. Of course they all ought to be together the whole of that Christmas eve. As for the big dinner on the morrow, that was another affair, for Mrs. Trimmer undertook to make Captain Cephas understand that she had always cooked for Captain Trimmer in sailor fashion, and if he objected to her plum-duff, or if anybody else objected to her mince-pie, she was going to be very much surprised.

Captain Cephas ate his supper with a good relish, and was still eating when the rest had finished. As to the Christmas tree, it was the most valuable, if not the most beautiful, that had ever been set up in that region. It had no candles upon it, but was lighted by three lamps and a ship's lantern placed in the four corners of the room, and the little girl was as happy as if the tree were decorated with little dolls and glass balls. Mrs.

Trimmer was intensely pleased and interested to see the child so happy, and Captain Eli was much pleased and interested to see the child and Mrs. Trimmer so happy, and Captain Cephas was interested, and perhaps a little amused in a superior fashion, to see Captain Eli and Mrs. Trimmer and the little child so happy.

Then the distribution of the presents began. Captain Eli asked Captain Cephas if he might have the wooden pipe that the latter had brought for his present. Captain Cephas said he might take it, for all he cared, and be welcome to it. Then Captain Eli gave Captain Cephas a red bandanna handkerchief of a very curious pattern, and Captain Cephas thanked him kindly. After which Captain Eli bestowed upon Mrs. Trimmer a most beautiful tortoise-shell comb, carved and cut and polished in a wonderful way, and with it he gave a tortoise-shell fan, carved in the same fashion, because he said the two things seemed to belong to each other and ought to go together; and he would not listen to one word of what Mrs. Trimmer said about the gifts being too good for her, and that she was not likely ever to use them.

"It seems to me," said Captain Cephas, "that you might be giving something to the little gal."Then Captain Eli remembered that the child ought not to be forgotten, and her soul was lifted into ecstasy by many gifts, some of which Mrs. Trimmer declared were too good for any child in this wide, wide world. But Captain Eli answered that they could be taken care of by somebody until the little girl was old enough to know their value.

Then it was discovered that, unbeknown to anybody else, Mrs.

Trimmer had put some presents on the tree, which were things which had been brought by Captain Trimmer from somewhere in the far East or the distant West. These she bestowed upon Captain Cephas and Captain Eli. And the end of all this was that in the whole of Sponkannis, from the foot of the bluff to the east, to the very last house on the shore to the west, there was not one Christmas eve party so happy as this one.

Captain Cephas was not quite so happy as the three others were, but he was very much interested. About nine o'clock the party broke up, and the two captains put on their caps and buttoned up their pea-jackets, and started for Captain Cephas's house, but not before Captain Eli had carefully fastened every window and every door except the front door, and had told Mrs.

Trimmer how to fasten that when they had gone, and had given her a boatswain's whistle, which she might blow out of the window if there should be a sudden croup and it should be necessary for any one to go anywhere. He was sure he could hear it, for the wind was exactly right for him to hear a whistle from his house. When they had gone Mrs. Trimmer put the little girl to bed, and was delighted to find in what a wonderfully neat and womanlike fashion that house was kept.

It was nearly twelve o'clock that night when Captain Eli, sleeping in his bunk opposite that of Captain Cephas, was aroused by hearing a sound. He had been lying with his best ear uppermost, so that he should hear anything if there happened to be anything to hear. He did hear something, but it was not a boatswain's whistle; it was a prolonged cry, and it seemed to come from the sea.

同类推荐
热门推荐
  • 我和纸灵有个约会

    我和纸灵有个约会

    一场委托婚礼令我坚持了十年的纸牌驱灵师生涯有了转折,追踪中遇到的车祸男人,以神秘莫测之姿闯入我的生活。谁料嗜赌如命的父亲更将房子连同我都输给了他,相继失踪的纸灵人,痴缠凄婉的三世前生,我试图挣脱他口中所谓的命中注定。“我就是我,不是任何人的影子。”这是我对于他的全盘否定,随之换来的却是身边的人被无情抹杀。父亲的背叛,失去灵力被解约,面临崩溃的边缘,他如施舍般指给了我一条道路:成为侍琴师。即使被伤得遍体鳞伤,我仍抽丝剥茧,愿找出他的破绽,当真相披露才明白,高冷之于我是不可或缺的存在。“我从不后悔用这样的方式爱你。”他抚我之首如是说。浮世经年,繁华若梦,谁又能伴我风云人生?
  • 给你的工作挠挠痒

    给你的工作挠挠痒

    很多身在职场中的人都有这样或那样的困扰,种种困扰成了工作之痒,让人身心备受煎熬。本书从实际出发,告诉读者如何解决工作中的种种困扰、怎样凸现工作价值、怎样搞好人际关系、如何提高工作效率等,旨在帮助读者从根本上解决工作之痒,在职场中如鱼得水。
  • 如来惹的祸

    如来惹的祸

    西游本身就隐藏种种意想不到的内幕,而作为西游最大包工头的唐三藏,难道他真的是众所周知的老好人?活佛如来灵山脚下,接引佛祖南无宝幢光王佛望着远方的唐僧师徒四人道:“金蝉子,该你上场了,准备下,别被那唐三藏给识破了。”金蝉子收回目光,嘴角上挑道:“哼!就凭那厮的肉眼凡胎,能识得我佛真身?”接引佛祖:“话虽如此,但面上工作不可免,我等都是顾脸皮的。”
  • 男神在都我班上

    男神在都我班上

    失恋、分手,经历了太多导致林珊出现精神分裂症,也就是俗称的双重人格。但事实上并非如此,因为两个都叫林珊的人她们的灵魂互换了!失恋的林珊发现自己的灵魂穿越欣喜但又同时讶异不已。”我居然还是个学生,哇还有好多帅哥“
  • RE隐沫

    RE隐沫

    RE学院发生的有趣故事,Alisa和知音是从地球穿越而来的天真少女即将和来自各个世界来到RE学院同学发生摩擦
  • 洪荒东王公

    洪荒东王公

    洪荒大地,广阔无边,神秘无尽一次命运长河的暴动,将21世纪青年叶天带回到了洪荒,成为了洪荒大神东王公。自此,一段属于叶天的传奇就此展开----------
  • 阿修罗之王

    阿修罗之王

    一介平民子弟阴差阳错中得到一个被封印的妖兽的辅助却被卷入一起离奇命案为了一个简单的承诺主角历经奇遇挫折与机遇并存困难与荣耀起飞一本构思独特的小说能让您欲罢不能。
  • 亚蒂斯战记:双子星

    亚蒂斯战记:双子星

    两个来自地球的天才少年,分别拥有着地球上两位主神的力量。胜似兄弟的二人在不同的国度中闪耀着各自的光芒。强大的实力!打破亚蒂斯常规的修炼法则,一个是手握百万雄兵的霸主,一个是拥有着逆天实力的战神!突破附着境界,向着更高更神秘的实力攀登。可全大陆只有少数人知道,在他们二人的背后,有着一个个更加恐怖的“影子”,在光明历史中,他们被称为“鬼”……
  • 马克·吐温

    马克·吐温

    马克·吐温(Mark Twain),美国著名作家和演说家,真实姓名是萨缪尔·兰亨·克莱门(Samuel Langhorne Clemens)。“马克·吐温”是他的笔名,原是密西西比河水手使用的表示在航道上所测水的深度的术语。
  • 打桩的

    打桩的

    在建筑工地上,存在着太多的形形色色的人,这些形形色色的人制造者太多的形形色色的事,本书就向你们描述一个鲜活的工地。