The beginning—My early
life and character—I thirst for adventure
in foreign lands, and go to sea.
Roving has always been, and still
is, my ruling passion, the joy of my heart, the very
sunshine of my existence. In childhood, in boyhood,
and in man’s estate, I have been a rover; not
a mere rambler among the woody glens and upon the
hilltops of my own native land, but an enthusiastic
rover throughout the length and breadth of the wide,
wide world.
It was a wild, black night of howling
storm, the night on which I was born on the foaming
bosom of the broad Atlantic Ocean. My father was
a sea-captain; my grandfather was a sea-captain; my
great-grandfather had been a marine. Nobody could
tell positively what occupation his father
had followed; but my dear mother used to assert that
he had been a midshipman, whose grandfather, on the
mother’s side, had been an admiral in the Royal
Navy. At any rate, we knew that, as far back as
our family could be traced, it had been intimately
connected with the great watery waste. Indeed,
this was the case on both sides of the house; for
my mother always went to sea with my father on his
long voyages, and so spent the greater part of her
life upon the water.
Thus it was, I suppose, that I came
to inherit a roving disposition. Soon after I
was born, my father, being old, retired from a seafaring
life, purchased a small cottage in a fishing village
on the west coast of England, and settled down to
spend the evening of his life on the shores of that
sea which had for so many years been his home.
It was not long after this that I began to show the
roving spirit that dwelt within me. For some
time past my infant legs had been gaining strength,
so that I came to be dissatisfied with rubbing the
skin off my chubby knees by walking on them, and made
many attempts to stand up and walk like a man, all
of which attempts, however, resulted in my sitting
down violently and in sudden surprise. One day
I took advantage of my dear mother’s absence
to make another effort; and, to my joy, I actually
succeeded in reaching the doorstep, over which I tumbled
into a pool of muddy water that lay before my father’s
cottage door. Ah, how vividly I remember the
horror of my poor mother when she found me sweltering
in the mud amongst a group of cackling ducks, and
the tenderness with which she stripped off my dripping
clothes and washed my dirty little body! From
this time forth my rambles became more frequent, and,
as I grew older, more distant, until at last I had
wandered far and near on the shore and in the woods
around our humble dwelling, and did not rest content
until my father bound me apprentice to a coasting vessel,
and let me go to sea.
For some years I was happy in visiting
the seaports, and in coasting along the shores of
my native land. My Christian name was Ralph, and
my comrades added to this the name of Rover, in consequence
of the passion which I always evinced for travelling.
Rover was not my real name, but as I never received
any other, I came at last to answer to it as naturally
as to my proper name; and as it is not a bad one, I
see no good reason why I should not introduce myself
to the reader as Ralph Rover. My shipmates were
kind, good-natured fellows, and they and I got on
very well together. They did, indeed, very frequently
make game of and banter me, but not unkindly; and
I overheard them sometimes saying that Ralph Rover
was a “queer, old-fashioned fellow.”
This, I must confess, surprised me much, and I pondered
the saying long, but could come at no satisfactory
conclusion as to that wherein my old-fashionedness
lay. It is true I was a quiet lad, and seldom
spoke except when spoken to. Moreover, I never
could understand the jokes of my companions, even
when they were explained to me: which dulness
in apprehension occasioned me much grief. However,
I tried to make up for it by smiling and looking pleased
when I observed that they were laughing at some witticism
which I had failed to detect. I was also very
fond of inquiring into the nature of things and their
causes, and often fell into fits of abstraction while
thus engaged in my mind. But in all this I saw
nothing that did not seem to be exceedingly natural,
and could by no means understand why my comrades should
call me “an old-fashioned fellow.”
Now, while engaged in the coasting
trade, I fell in with many seamen who had travelled
to almost every quarter of the globe; and I freely
confess that my heart glowed ardently within me as
they recounted their wild adventures in foreign lands—the
dreadful storms they had weathered, the appalling
dangers they had escaped, the wonderful creatures
they had seen both on the land and in the sea, and
the interesting lands and strange people they had
visited. But of all the places of which they
told me, none captivated and charmed my imagination
so much as the Coral Islands of the Southern Seas.
They told me of thousands of beautiful, fertile islands
that had been formed by a small creature called the
coral insect, where summer reigned nearly all the
year round; where the trees were laden with a constant
harvest of luxuriant fruit; where the climate was almost
perpetually delightful; yet where, strange to say,
men were wild, bloodthirsty savages, excepting in
those favoured isles to which the Gospel of our Saviour
had been conveyed. These exciting accounts had
so great an effect upon my mind that, when I reached
the age of fifteen, I resolved to make a voyage to
the South Seas.
I had no little difficulty at first
in prevailing on my dear parents to let me go; but
when I urged on my father that he would never have
become a great captain had he remained in the coasting
trade, he saw the truth of what I said, and gave his
consent. My dear mother, seeing that my father
had made up his mind, no longer offered opposition
to my wishes. “But oh, Ralph,” she
said, on the day I bade her adieu, “come back
soon to us, my dear boy, for we are getting old now,
Ralph, and may not have many years to live.”
I will not take up my readers’
time with a minute account of all that occurred before
I took my final leave of my dear parents. Suffice
it to say that my father placed me under the charge
of an old messmate of his own, a merchant captain,
who was on the point of sailing to the South Seas
in his own ship, the Arrow. My mother gave
me her blessing and a small Bible; and her last request
was that I would never forget to read a chapter every
day, and say my prayers; which I promised, with tears
in my eyes, that I would certainly do.
Soon afterwards, I went on board the
Arrow, which was a fine large ship, and set
sail for the islands of the Pacific Ocean.