Bennie Ben Cree 
by Arthur Colton 
Copyright, 1900 by Doubleday & McClure Company 
Dedicated To My Mother 
 
CHAPTER I. 
BENSON AND CREE--THE COMMODORE INN, FORE AND AFT; 
AND A POINT STATED BY MY UNCLE BENSON. 
If anyone would understand how Ben Cree comes to be what he is for 
better or worse, he should know first the Commodore Inn and what it 
meant in those days to have the great wharves for a playground. And I 
cannot conceive to this day how one can amuse oneself, or be satisfied 
with any neat door-yard or inland village street, unless one is born a 
girl with a starched pinafore, which I should think would be a pity. 
First, then, you should picture the Commodore Inn; its red bricks 
streaked with the rain and the beat of damp winds; its high veranda, 
with the paint coming off the white pillars, and the worn stone steps 
leading underneath. In front is the brick sidewalk, the cobbled street, 
the bit of open space with Harrier's junkshop on the right corner; and 
then the warehouses on either side, all leading down to the slip, Doty's 
Slip, which is flanked by noble wharves, with huge piles leaning awry 
and very slippery. The warehouses are roomy and full of queer smells, 
as if the varied merchandize of fifty years had left something for its old 
friends, the warehouses, to remember it by. The contents of these 
warehouses changed continually: cotton, tobacco, slabs of crude rubber, 
and multitudes of boxes whose contents might be learned sometimes by 
asking the wharf-master, if you did not mind his cuffing you on the ears.
Next there would be the river and its hurrying tides, its choppy waves, 
the ferryboats, sailboats, and tugs going to and fro: to right and 
left--seen well by climbing the ware-house roofs--are masts of many 
ships with innumerable amusing ropes, other wharves with the like 
slippery brown piles and dark places underneath where the water 
thieves hid and bored holes up through the planks into the molasses 
barrels. Mr. Hooley, the wharf policeman, told me of that, and there 
was much that was attractive in it. For there was a time, before my 
ideas became settled, when I thought of many different careers. To be a 
wharf policeman seemed too ambitious a thought, too vain and far 
away; so that I asked Mr. Hooley's advice about water thieving, having 
respect for his opinion. 
"Naw, Bennie Ben," he said, "'tis low. 'Tis not for the son of yer father, 
an' yer mother a lady as was ever bor-rn." 
"Do you think I could be a wharf policeman, Mr. Hooley?" 
"Ah," he said, looking mysterious, "who knows that? Don't ye let 
young Dillon lick ye, an' maybe--but 'tis a long way fer ye to grow." 
But I was speaking of the river. The navy yard lay nearly opposite, and 
the Wallabout, as that water is called behind the Government Cob Dock. 
And that stretch of busy river, with its tumult and tides, I love still no 
less, and love the thick smell of the wharves and ware-houses. 
My two grandfathers, Benson and Cree, were shipping merchants 
together, "Benson & Cree," long ago, when you did not have to go 
beyond the Harlem for a bit of country. Indeed, my Grandmother Cree, 
I am told, had a great flower and vegetable garden, and there was an 
orchard behind the house, where in my time was but a little yard. The 
house was built for some colonial gentleman's residence, and my 
grandfathers bought it when prosperity came to them. And there they 
lived together with their families, and there were my father and mother 
born, for they were cousins, and also Uncle Benson and the two others 
who went down off Barnegat: a great, warm-hearted house, red-walled 
and white-pillared.
The firm in its best days owned five ships. And by an odd arrangement 
one of them was always sailed by a member of the firm. They had their 
turns, one abroad and one at home. From this came the rhyme, 
"Benson and Cree, One at home and one at sea"; 
my father used to sing it, when absentminded, to a queer haphazard 
tune. And I have heard Harrier, the junk-shop man, sing it too. But my 
father, if he saw me listening, would stop and seem ashamed, which I 
could not explain at first. 
My father was an only child, and my mother an only daughter, but 
there were once three Benson boys. I am not sure of my Grandfather 
Cree, nor of my two grandmothers, at what dates they died, but in the 
year 1838 three of the five ships were lost: one of them with 
Grandfather Benson (in what waters is unknown), one of them with two 
of his sons off    
    
		
	
	
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