there he stood, blunkun’ an’ noddun’ an’ talkun’ tull humsel’. ’Keep off,’ says he ot last tull the
mon ot the wheel. ’My God!’ says the second mate, standun’ beside hum. The skupper never
looks tull hum ot all, but keeps on mutterun” an’ jabberun’ tull humsel’. All of a suddent-like he
straightens up an’ throws hus head back, an’ says: ’Put your wheel over, me mon – now domn
ye! Are ye deef thot ye’ll no be hearun’ me?’
SAMUEL
11
“Ut was a drunken mon’s luck, for the Starry Grace wore off afore thot God-Almighty gale
wuthout shuppun’ a bucket o’ watter, the second mate shoutun’ orders an’ the crew jumpun’ like
mod. An’ wuth thot the skupper nods contented-like tull humself an’ goes below after more
whusky. Ut was plain murder o’ the lives o’ all of us, for ut was no the time for the buggest shup
afloat tull be runnun’. Run? Never hov I seen the like! Ut was beyond all thunkun’, an’ me goun’
tull sea, boy an’ men, for forty year. I tell you ut was fair awesome.
“The face o’ the second mate was white oz death, an’ he stood ut alone for half an hour, when ut
was too much for hum an’ he went below an’ called Samuel an’ the third. Aye, a fine sailor-mon
thot Samuel, but ut was too much for hum. He looked an’ studied, and looked an’ studied, but he
could no see hus way. He durst na heave tull. She would ha’ been sweeput o’ all honds an’
stucks an’ everythung afore she could a-fetched up. There was naught tull do but keep on
runnun’. An’ uf ut worsened we were lost ony way, for soon or late that overtakun’ sea was sure
tull sweep us clear over poop an’ all.
“Dud I say ut was a God-Almighty gale? Ut was worse nor thot. The devil himself must ha’ hod
a hond un the brewun’ o’ ut, ut was thot fearsome. I ha’ looked on some sights, but I om no
carun’ tull look on the like o’ thot again. No mon dared tull be un hus bunk. No, nor no mon on
the decks. All honds of us stood on top the house an’ held on an’ watched. The three mates was
on the poop, with two men ot the wheel, an’ the only mon below was thot whusky-blighted
captain snorun’ drunk.
“An’ then I see ut comun’, a mile away, risun’ above all the waves like an island un the sea – the
buggest wave ever I looked upon. The three mates stood tulgether an’ watched ut comun’, aprayun’
like we thot she would no break un passun’ us. But ut was no tull be. Ot the last, when
she rose up like a mountain, curlun’ above the stern an’ blottun’ out the sky, the mates scattered,
the second an’ third runnun’ for the mizzen-shrouds an’ climbun’ up, but the first runnun’ tull
the wheel tull lend a hond. He was a brave men, thot Samuel Henan. He run straight un tull the
face o’ thot father o’ all waves, no thunkun’ on humself but thunkun’ only o’ the shup. The two
men was lashed tull the wheel, but he would be ready tull hond un the case they was kult. An’
then she took ut. We on the house could no see the poop for the thousand tons o’ watter thot hod
hut ut. Thot wave cleaned them out, took everythung along wuth ut – the two mates, climbun’ up
the mizzen-ruggun’, Samuel Henan runnun’ tull the wheel, the two men ot the wheel, aye, an’
the wheel utself. We never saw aught o’ them, for she broached tull what o’ the wheel goun’, an’
two men o’ us was drownded off the house, no tull mention the carpenter thot we pucked up ot
the break o’ the poop wuth every bone o’ hus body broke tull he was like so much jelly.”
And here enters the marvel of it, the miraculous wonder of that woman’s heroic spirit. Margaret
Henan was forty-seven when the news came home of the loss of Samuel; and it was not long
after that the unbelievable rumour went around Island McGill. I say unbelievable. Island McGill
would not believe. Doctor Hall pooh-pooh’d it. Everybody laughed at it as a good joke. They
traced back the gossip to Sara Dack, servant to the Henans’, and who alone lived with Margaret
and her husband. But Sara Dack persisted in her assertion and was called a low-mouthed liar.
One or two dared question Tom Henan himself, but beyond black looks and curses for their
presumption they elicited nothing from him.
SAMUEL
12
The rumour died down, and the island fell to discussing in all its ramifications the loss of the
Grenoble in the China seas, with all her officers and half her crew born and married on Island
McGill. But the rumour would not stay down. Sara Dack was louder in her assertions, the looks
Tom Henan cast about him were blacker than ever, and Dr. Hall, after a visit to the Henan house,
no longer pooh-pooh’d. Then Island McGill sat up, and there was a tremendous wagging of
tongues. It was unnatural and ungodly. The like had never been heard. And when, as time
passed, the truth of Sara Dack’s utterances was manifest, the island folk decided, like the bos’n
of the Starry Grace, that only the devil could have had a hand in so untoward a happening. And
the infatuated woman, so Sara Dack reported, insisted that it would be a boy. “Eleven bairns ha’
I borne,” she said; “sux o’ them lossies an’ five o’ them loddies. An’ sunce there be balance un
all thungs, so wull there be balance wuth me. Sux o’ one an’ half a dozen o’ the other – there uz
the balance, an’ oz sure oz the sun rises un the marnun’, thot sure wull ut be a boy.”
And boy it was, and a prodigy. Dr. Hall raved about its unblemished perfection and massive
strength, and wrote a brochure on it for the Dublin Medical Society as the most interesting case
of the sort in his long career. When Sara Dack gave the babe’s unbelievable weight, Island
McGill refused to believe and once again called her liar. But when Doctor Hall attested that he
had himself weighed it and seen it tip that very notch, Island McGill held its breath and accepted
whatever report Sara Dack made of the infant’s progress or appetite. And once again Margaret
Henan carried a babe to Belfast and had it christened Samuel.
“Oz good oz gold ut was,” said Sara Dack to me.
Sara, at the time I met her, was a buxom, phlegmatic spinster of sixty, equipped with an
experience so tragic and unusual that though her tongue ran on for decades its output would still
be of imperishable interest to her cronies.
“Oz good oz good,” said Sara Dack. “Ut never fretted. Sut ut down un the sun by the hour an’
never a sound ut would make oz long oz ut was no hungered! An’ thot strong! The grup o’ uts
honds was like a mon’s. I mind me, when ut was but hours old, ut grupped me so mighty thot I
fetched a scream I was thot frightened. Ut was the punk o’ health. Ut slept an’ ate, an’ grew. Ut
never bothered. Never a night’s sleep ut lost tull no one, nor ever a munut’s, an’ thot wuth cuttin’
uts teeth an’ all. An’ Margaret would dandle ut on her knee an’ ask was there ever so fine a
loddie un the three Kungdoms.
“The way ut grew! Ut was un keepun’ wuth the way ut ate. Ot a year ut was the size o’ a bairn of
two. Ut was slow tull walk an’ talk. Exceptun’ for gurgly noises un uts throat an’ for creepun’ on
all fours, ut dudna monage much un the walkun’ an’ talkun’ line. But thot was tull be expected
from the way ut grew. Ut all went tull growun’ strong an’ healthy. An’ even old Tom Henan
cheered up ot the might of ut an’ said was there ever the like o’ ut un the three Kungdoms. Ut
was Doctor Hall thot first suspicioned, I mind me well, though ut was luttle I dreamt what he was
up tull ot the time. I seehum holdun’ thungs’ un fronto’ luttle Sammy’s eyes, an’ a-makun’
noises, loud an’ soft, an’ far an’ near, un luttle Sammy’s ears. An’ then I see Doctor Hall go
away, wrunklun’ hus eyebrows an’ shakun’ hus head like the bairn was ailun’. But he was no
ailun’, oz I could swear tull, me a-seeun’ hum eat an’ grow. But Doctor Hall no said a word tull
Margaret an’ I was no for guessun’ the why he was sore puzzled.
SAMUEL
13
“I mind me when luttle Sammy first spoke. He was two years old an’ the size of a child o five,