Monday, November 18, 2013
Sunday, January 29, 2012
Michael Goes Climbing
Two women stood talking in the sunlit streets of old flushing* three hundred
years ago.
They were talking, as their descendents
do today, of their children, of their husbands’
wages, of the price of food. Suddenly one of
them broke off and, pointing to a little boy
cried, “Ah, there goes that Michael! I can
hardly keep my hands off that little rascal!”.
“Why?” asked the other turning to look
at a lively little boy who walked past with
his hands in his pockets.
“I never saw such a spoiled, proud and
useless rascal of a boy in my life! Cried the
first. “He is never happy unless he’s making
mischief or doing something to call attention
to himself. He must always be the first. He’ll
come to a bad end, and I hope I shall live to
see it.”
The other woman thought for a while. She said, “Ah well, daring some-
times turns to courage.
He’s a bold little rascal; he’ll never make a poor, respectable citizen like
his father; he’ll go far but whether on the right road or the wrong one, who can
tell yet?”
Meanwhile the boy had passed on into the market place. He was idling
about in the sunshine on the look out for mischief. All at once he saw it calling to
him. Workmen had been salting* the church spire, and their ladders starched
invitingly from earth to steeple.
II
All children like climbing up into high places to see if the world looks any
different from an apple tree or a housetop; over and above this love of climbing
Michael had, as the woman said, an argue to think that had never been done
before. As he gazed at the spire, an idea leaped into his mind – he would the first
person in Flushing to stand on the golden ball beneath the weather-vane.
He turned his eyes around. No one was looking Michael began to climb up
the ladders. At the top of the tower there rose a slated spire, crowned by a
golden ball and weather vane. Michael at the last found himself sitting on the top
of the ball, holding on by the van. He was hot, out of breath and not a little giddy.
Presently he heard workmen moving below. He did not bend over to look,
or speak. He was not going to be pulled before Flushing had been seen him. He
died away, and Michael sat resting.
At last he felt ready to give the town a surprise. He pulled himself to his
feet, and, keeping firm hold of the weather vane, managed to stand on the top of
the ball. It was well that he had a cool head and iron nerves.
Someone must have looked at the vane by chance and seen his little figure
outlined against the blue sky and cried out .In a minute or two Michael was
delighted to see the market place full of people who had rushed out of their
shops and houses to gaze at the giddy sight. It was wonderful have all those eyes
and hearts fixed upon oneself !
III
But Michael did not intend to stay there until he was taken down, to be
handed over his father and punished before the crowd. After a little he prepared
to descend of his own free will.
He learned over the ball. The ladder had gone. The workmen had taken it
away!
A sudden feeling of sickness and giddiness came over Michael. He mas-
tered it. No doubt the people saw what had happened and would send for the
ladders.
But to wait for rescue was a poor sort of end to his mischievous adventure.
He would come down alone, even if it coast cost him his life.
The spire at the base of the ball was only half slated. And Michael saw
some hope of gaining a foothold on the old part. He put his arms round the top of
the ball and left his body swing down; he was just able to feel the first slate with
his toes. Those to d were sod with iron toecaps, for Michael was hard in his
shoes. Michael kicked with his armoured toes till the slate broke and fell in; then
he got a foothold on the wooden laths beneath. *
He rested for a minute, with aching arms and a stiff body. He could not slide
down with his arms around the ball; for the middle of the ball was much too big
for his arms. He must let go his hold on the ball, and some how grasp the spire
below. One false movement, and he would be thrown to his death on the hard
ground below.
Slowly he begins to slide his hands together at the top of the ball, and then
downwards over its sides. Every inch is packed with peril; every inch pushed
him backward toward death. It seemed to him that he would be too weak to hold
on when the time came for him to grasp the spire.
But at last the steady, deadly creeping of his figures brought him to a point
where he could bend forward. With a sudden snatch he caught the base of the
ball.
IV
The next moment he was kicking out a stairway in the old slates on the
spire, and climbing down rapidly. He reached the foot of the spire, lifted the
trapdoor* of the tower, ran down the steps, and was caught by his father in the
church.
The streets were filled with white-faced people telling each other that never
in their lives had they seen anything so dreadful as that child leaning backward
in the air.
“ I said he’d come to a bad end!” cried a woman, wiping the moisture from
her forehead with a trembling hand.
“Wait and see!” replied her neighbor.
They waited. Michael took care to maintain his reputation for mischief,
until his father lost all hope for him and sent him to sea. Suddenly he grew tiered
of the wrong road and determined to give the right one a trial. As the women had
foreseen, he marched down it with the same courage and determination.
***
One day an old woman visited her bedridden neighbor. “ Have you heard
the news?” she cried. “The English fleet has been destroyed off Chatham. What
a victory for little neighbour? Do you remembered the day be climbed the church
spire? Who could have guessed then that whole world would ring with the name
of Admiral Michael Adrianzoon de Ruyter?”
(Adapted from The Children’s Encyclopedia)
Note – During the 17th century the English and the Dutch often fought
against each other on the high seas. There were great seamen on both sides.
As the Admiral of the Dutch Navy, de Ruyter won several victories over the
English. There was great fear in London on one occasion when he sailed up
the Thames victoriously. He is considered the greatest seaman ever produced
by Holland and one forth greatest ever in the world. You may be interested to
now that as a young man de Ruyter came to India with the Dutch merchantships.
*A town in Holland
*Covering the spire with pieces of slate.
* The slates were fixed on a framework of wooden laths. When the slates were broken the
laths would appear.
*A door in the roof.
Tuesday, January 24, 2012
The Glorious Whitewasher
[This story is an incident in The Adventures of Tom Sawyer, by Mark Twain.
Tom has been troublesome at home; moreover, after playing and fighting
with the other boy he had came home late at night. His aunt saw the state of
his clothes and decided to turn it Saturday holiday into a day of hard labour.]
I
Saturday morning came, and all the summer world was bright and fresh and
full of life. There was a song in every heart and cheerfulness in every face. The
hill beyond the village was covered with summer green and it lay just far to
seem enough a wonderland of joy-dreamy, restful, and inviting.
Tom appeared on the pavement with a bucket of whitewash and a
long-handled brush. He surveyed the fence, and at the uninspiring sight all
gladness left him, and a deep sadness settled down on his spirit. Thirty yards of
broad fence nine feet high. Life to him, seemed hollow, and existence a burden.
Sighing, he dipped his brush and passed it along the topmost plank, repeated the
action, did it again, compared the insignificant bit of whitewashed space with
the far-reaching continent of unwhitewashed fence, and sat down on a tree-box,
discouraged. He began to think of the fun he had planned for this day, and his
sorrows multiplied. Soon the free boys would come tripping along on all sports
of interesting adventure, and they would ridicule him for having to work. The
very thought of it burnt him like fire. He got out his worldly wealth and examined
it bits of toys, marbles, all worthless things. They were enough to buy an ex-
change of work, may be, not enough to buy half an hour of pure freedom. So he
put them back into his pocket and gave up the idea of trying to buy the toys. At
this dark and hopeless moment an inspiration burst on him nothing less than a
great, magnificent idea.
II
He took up his brush and calmly resumed work. Ben Rogers came into view
presently –the very boy of all boys whose ridicule he had been dreading. Ben
was eating an apple, and seemed to be in high spirits. Tom went on dipping the
brush into the bucket and whitewashing, and paid no attention to Ben. Ben con-
templated him for a moment and then said, “Hi-yi! You are in trouble, aren’t
you?”
No answer! Tom surveyed his last touch with the eye of an artist, gave his
brush another gentle sweep, and surveyed the result as before. Ben went up and
stood by the side of Tom. Tom’s mouth watered for the apple but he stuck to his
work.
Ben said, “Hello, you’ve got to work, hey?”
Tom turned round suddenly and said, “Why, it’s you, Ben? I wasn’t
noticing.”
“I am going swimming, Tom,” said Ben. “Don’t you wish you could? But of
course you prefer to work”.
“Why, isn’t that work?”
Tom resumed his whitewashing and answered carelessly, “Well, may
be it is and may it isn’t. All I know is, it suits Tom Sawyer.”
Now, you don’t mean to say, Tom, that you like it
The brush continued to move. “Like it? Said Tom. “Well, I don’t see why I
ought not to like it.
Does a boy get a chance to whitewash a fence every day?”
III
That put the thing in a new light. Ben stopped eating his apple. Tom swept
his brush back and forth softly like an artist-stepped back to note the effect again,
while Ben watched every movement and got more and more absorbed. Presently
he said, “Tom, let me whitewash a little.”
Tom considered, and was about to consent; but he changed his mind. “No-
no-I suppose it would hardly do, Ben,” he said. “You see, Aunt Polly is awfully
particular about this fence; it has got to be very carefully; I supposed there isn’t
one boy in a thousand, may be two thousand, that can do the right way.”
“No- is that so? Oh come now –lemme* just try-Only just a little-I’d let you
if you were me. Tom.”
“Ben, I would like to, honestly; but would Aunt Poly like it? Well, Jim
wanted to do it, but she wouldn’t let him; she wanted to do it, and she wouldn’t
let Sid. You see this is the front fence and Aunt Poly is awfully particular about
it. Now don’t you see how I’m caught? If you were to try whitewashing this
fence and anything was to happen to it....”
“Oh! Come, I’ll be just as careful. Now lemme try. I’ll give you half my
apple.”
“Well, here, take this.... No, sorry, I can’t let you. I am afraid.......”
IV
“I’ll give you all of it.”
Tom gave up the brush, pretending to do so half-heartedly. And while Ben
worked and sweated in the sun, the retired artist sat on a barrel swinging his
legs, eating his apple, and lying plots to take in other boys.
Boys came along every little while; that came to laugh, but remained to
whitewash. By the time Ben was tired out, Tom had sold the next chance to Billy
Fisher for a kit in good repair. And when he was out, Johny bought the next time
chance for a dead rat and a string to swing it with, and so on and so on, hour after
hour. And when the middle of the afternoon came, Tom was just rolling in wealth.
He had, in addition to the things mentioned, twelve marbles, a piece of blue
bottle glass to look through, a key that wouldn’t unlock anything, a piece of
chalk, a tin soldier, six fire-crackers, a kitten with only one eye, a dog-collar-but
no dog-the handle of a knife, and a number of other things of the kind. While
others bore his burdens for him, he had a nice, good, idle time all the while-
plenty of company-and the fence had three coats of whitewash on it. It was just
magnificent! If he had not run out of whitewash he would have ruined every bit
in the village.
Tom said to himself that it was not such a hollow world after all. He had
discovered a great law of human action without knowing it –namely, that in
order to make a man or boy desire a thing it is only necessary to make the thing
difficult to obtain. The boy contemplated with pleasure the possessions that has
come into his hands, and then got up and walked home to report.
“It’s all done, Aunt, the whole fence,” he said to his aunt.
“Tom, I hate your lying so,” said Aunt Polly and marched out to see for
herself.
“Oh, Tom,” she said in surprise when she saw the fence, “you can work
when you want to, only you hardly ever want to,” She took him home and gave
him the best apple she had, and allowed him to go and play.
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