"_My_!" exclaimed Uncle Jack. "What a lot there"ll be for you to see, my hearty, eh?"
What is more, he showed him, too, all that was to be seen, taking Teddy to monuments and exhibitions, to galleries and even to the theatre.
The time pa.s.sed by rapidly enough--too rapidly, granny thought, when the day came for her to say good-bye to Teddy; but he was nothing loth to go, longing to be on board the _Greenock_ as one belonging to her of right, and feel himself really at sea.
Granny wanted him to have another little dog in place of Puck; however, he couldn"t make up his mind to a subst.i.tute to supersede the former animal"s hold on his affections. Besides this, Uncle Jack said the captain did not allow anybody to have dogs on board, and that was a clincher to the argument at once.
Monday morning came, and with it another railway journey. It really seemed to Teddy as if he were "on the line," like Jupp!
The _Greenock_, having taken in all her cargo, had been warped out of dock and then towed down the river to Gravesend, where she was now lying moored in the stream off the Lobster.
"There she is!" cried Uncle Jack when they got down to the beach.
"Where?" asked Teddy, not recognising the dirty untidy hulk he had seen in the docks, as she first appeared to him before he was taken on board and noticed the elegance of her cabins, in the thing of beauty he saw now before him; with every spar in its place and snow-white canvas extended in peaceful folds from the yards, as the vessel lay at anchor with her topsails dropped and her courses half clewed up, ready to spread her wings like an ocean bird.
What a change there was in her!
"Look, right in front there, laddie," said Uncle Jack. "Can"t you see?
She"s just about making-sail, so we"d better get on board as soon as possible. Hi, boatman, seen any one belonging to the _Greenock_ ash.o.r.e?"
"Aye, aye, sir," answered the man addressed, "her boat"s just over there by the p"int, just agoin" to shove off."
"Thank you, my hearty," said Uncle Jack, giving him a trifle for the information; and in another minute or so Teddy found himself in the _Greenock"s_ jolly-boat in company with a lot of the new hands, like himself, going off to join the ship. Here on his arrival on board, he was introduced to Captain Lennard, the monarch of all he surveyed as far as the deck of the _Greenock_ was concerned, and his future commander.
Teddy liked the look of him; while he, on his part, seemed to like the look of Teddy, smiling kindly when he saw him come over the gangway after Uncle Jack. He had the general appearance of a brown Jupp, being of the same height and with just such a smiling good-humoured face, with the exception that his hair and beard, instead of being black, was of a lighter and ruddier hue.
Oh, yes, Teddy thought, Captain Lennard was the man for him. He looked easy and kind-hearted and would not bully people, as he had read of some brutal captains doing.
"This your nephew?" he asked Uncle Jack politely.
"Yes, sir," replied the other, touching his cap, being in regular nautical rig now, as also was Teddy, who, clad in spick-and-span reefer costume, felt as proud as Punch.
"Ah! then, if he"s like you I think we"ll get along very well together, Mr Althorp," said the captain with a bow and smile. "He looks like a chip of the old block too!"
"You"re very good to say that, sir," stammered Uncle Jack, blushing at the compliment. "The youngster"s very like my poor sister, and I suppose resembles me, as she and I were twins. I"ve no doubt, though, you"ll find him teachable when he"s licked into shape; for, he isn"t a bad lad from what I have seen of him as yet, and is plucky enough, if all I"ve heard of him down at Endleigh be true."
"Well, Master Vernon, I hope you"ll justify the character your uncle gives of you. If you only obey orders there"ll be no fear of our falling out. But, mind, I"m captain of this ship; so look out for squalls if you shirk duty or try on any tricks!"
The captain said this pleasantly, but there was a stern look combined in the twinkle of his hazel eyes beneath their thick brown eyebrows, like penthouses overshadowing them; and Teddy felt that, with all his gentleness and joking way, he was a man who intended to command and likewise to be obeyed.
A moment later Captain Lennard changed the conversation by asking Uncle Jack if all the hands were on board.
"Aye, aye, sir," said the other. "The whole batch, I think, came out with us. Isn"t that so, Mr Capstan?" he asked, turning to the second- mate, who was standing close by.
"Yes, all hands aboard," replied the second-mate laconically.
"Then make sail at once," said Captain Lennard, going aft on the p.o.o.p; while Mr Capstan bustled forwards, shouting out as he scrambled up on the windla.s.s bitts and thence to the fo"c"s"le, "All hands make sa-i- il!" drawling out the last word as if it were a chorus to some mariner"s ditty he were singing.
The crew were all picked men, the majority having been in the ship on one or two previous voyages; so they were quite at home, and sprang into the rigging long before the second-mate had got to the end of his refrain.
In a second, the topsails were dropped and sheeted home, and the rattling of the clewgarnet blocks told of the courses following their example; after which the hands aloft then loosed the topgallant, there being a fine breeze fair for the Downs.
Teddy was puzzled for a moment by all the seeming confusion that reigned in the ship, with ropes flying about and cordage cracking, while the hoa.r.s.e orders issued by Mr Capstan and Uncle Jack were answered by the cheery cry of the men, singing out l.u.s.tily as they hoisted and pulled at the halliards with a will. But, the confusion was only momentary and in appearance only; for, hardly had he begun to realise what all the bustle was about, than the ship was clothed in canvas from truck to deck, like a lady attired for a ball all in white!
The headyards were then backed, and Captain Lennard"s voice rang through the vessel fore and aft as clear as a bell--
"Hands up anchor!"
Then, the windla.s.s was wound; and, slip, slap, click, clack, it went round the pawl belaying every inch of cable got in.
"Cheerily, men! heave with a will!" urged the second-mate; and the brawny fellows bent all their strength to the handspikes, heaving them down with sheer brute force.
"Hove short!" presently sang out Mr Capstan.
"Up with it!" responded Captain Lennard from the p.o.o.p, where the pilot now appeared by his side awaiting all these preparations to be completed before taking charge of the ship.
Half-a-dozen more heaves and the anchor-stock showed above the water.
"Hook cat!" cried the second-mate.
"I wonder what that means!" thought Teddy. "I hope they won"t hurt the poor thing!"
But, the next moment, he was undeceived.
Nothing in the shape of cruelty to animals was about to be perpetrated.
Mr Capstan only ordered the men to hook on the tackle by which the head of the anchor was to be braced up; and, before he could say "Jack Robinson," if he had been that way inclined, the falls were manned and the anchor run up to the cathead with a rousing chorus as the men scampered aft with the tail-end of the rope.
The headyards were then filled, and the ship bowed her head as if in salute to Father Neptune, the next instant gathering way as the sails began to draw.
"Port!" sang out the pilot from the bridge.
"Port it is," responded the man at the wheel, shifting the spokes with both hands like a squirrel in a cage, it seemed to Teddy, who was looking at him from the break of the p.o.o.p, where he had taken up his station by Captain Lennard"s orders so that he might the more easily see all that was going on.
"Steady!"
"Steady it is," repeated the helmsman in parrot fashion.
And so, conning and steering along, the _Greenock_ was soon bounding on her way down channel, pa.s.sing Deal and rounding the South Foreland before noon.
Teddy at last was really at sea!
CHAPTER TEN.
TAKING FRENCH LEAVE.