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- 1011
- extracted_at
- 2026-01-30T20:48:14.838Z
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- structure-extraction-lambda
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- 927
- text
- CHAPTER V.
HE PURCHASES HIS SEA-WARDROBE, AND ON A DISMAL RAINY DAY PICKS UP HIS
BOARD AND LODGING ALONG THE WHARVES
The first thing I now did was to buy a little stationery, and keep my
promise to my mother, by writing her; and I also wrote to my brother
informing him of the voyage I purposed making, and indulging in some
romantic and misanthropic views of life, such as many boys in my
circumstances, are accustomed to do.
The rest of the two dollars and a half I laid out that very morning in
buying a red woolen shirt near Catharine Market, a tarpaulin hat, which
I got at an out-door stand near Peck Slip, a belt and jackknife, and
two or three trifles. After these purchases, I had only one penny left,
so I walked out to the end of the pier, and threw the penny into the
water. The reason why I did this, was because I somehow felt almost
desperate again, and didn’t care what became of me. But if the penny
had been a dollar, I would have kept it.
I went home to dinner at Mr. Jones’, and they welcomed me very kindly,
and Mrs. Jones kept my plate full all the time during dinner, so that I
had no chance to empty it. She seemed to see that I felt bad, and
thought plenty of pudding might help me. At any rate, I never felt so
bad yet but I could eat a good dinner. And once, years afterward, when
I expected to be killed every day, I remember my appetite was very
keen, and I said to myself, “Eat away, Wellingborough, while you can,
for this may be the last supper you will have.”
After dinner I went into my room, locked the door carefully, and hung a
towel over the knob, so that no one could peep through the keyhole, and
then went to trying on my red woolen shirt before the glass, to see
what sort of a looking sailor I was going to make. As soon as I got
into the shirt I began to feel sort of warm and red about the face,
which I found was owing to the reflection of the dyed wool upon my
skin. After that, I took a pair of scissors and went to cutting my
hair, which was very long. I thought every little would help, in making
me a light hand to run aloft.
Next morning I bade my kind host and hostess good-by, and left the
house with my bundle, feeling somewhat misanthropical and desperate
again.
Before I reached the ship, it began to rain hard; and as soon as I
arrived at the wharf, it was plain that there would be no getting to
sea that day.
This was a great disappointment to me, for I did not want to return to
Mr. Jones’ again after bidding them good-by; it would be so awkward. So
I concluded to go on board ship for the present.
When I reached the deck, I saw no one but a large man in a large
dripping pea-jacket, who was calking down the main-hatches.
“What do you want, Pillgarlic?” said he.
“I’ve shipped to sail in this ship,” I replied, assuming a little
dignity, to chastise his familiarity.
“What for? a tailor?” said he, looking at my shooting jacket.
I answered that I was going as a “boy;” for so I was technically put
down on the articles.
“Well,” said he, “have you got your traps aboard?”
I told him I didn’t know there were any rats in the ship, and hadn’t
brought any “trap.”
At this he laughed out with a great guffaw, and said there must be
hay-seed in my hair.
This made me mad; but thinking he must be one of the sailors who was
going in the ship, I thought it wouldn’t be wise to make an enemy of
him, so only asked him where the men slept in the vessel, for I wanted
to put my clothes away.
_“Where’s_ your clothes?” said he.
“Here in my bundle,” said I, holding it up.
“Well if that’s all you’ve got,” he cried, “you’d better chuck it
overboard. But go forward, go forward to the forecastle; that’s the
place you’ll live in aboard here.”
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