My First Voyage to Southern Seas | Page 2

W.H.G. Kingston
a pious Christian and a perfect gentlewoman,
thoroughly educated, and capable of bringing up her daughters to fill
the same station in life she occupied, which was all she desired for
them. Indeed, we boys also received much of our early instruction from
her, and I feel very certain that we retained far more of what she taught
us than we acquired from any other source. To her we owed, especially,
lessons of piety and instruction in the Holy Scriptures, never, I trust, to
be forgotten, as well as much elementary secular knowledge, which
probably we should otherwise have been very long in picking up. My
mother had no relations of whom we, at all events, knew anything in
England. She was the daughter of an Englishman, however, who had,
when the Mauritius first came under the dominion of Great Britain,

gone out there as a settler and planter, leaving her, his only child, to be
educated in England.
Mr Coventry, my grandfather, was, we understood, of a somewhat
eccentric disposition, and had for some years wandered about in the
Eastern seas and among the islands of the Pacific, although he had
ultimately returned again to his estate. He had transmitted home ample
funds for his daughter's education, but he kept up very little
communication with her, and had never even expressed any intention of
sending for her to join him. The lady under whose charge she had been
left was a very excellent person, and had thoroughly done her duty by
her in cultivating to the utmost all the good qualities and talents she
possessed. That lady was a friend of my father's family, and thus my
father became acquainted with her pupil, to whom he was before long
married.
It was necessary for me to give this brief account of my family history,
to explain the causes which produced some of my subsequent
adventures.
We were a large family. I had several brothers and sisters. I was the
third son, and I had two elder sisters. Alfred, my eldest brother, was a
fine joyous-spirited fellow. Some said he was too spirited, and
unwilling to submit to discipline. He was just cut out for a sailor,-- so
everybody said, and so he thought himself, and to sea he had resolved
to go. Our father exerted all the interest he possessed to get him into the
navy, and succeeded. We thought it a very fine thing for him when we
heard that he really and truly was going to be a midshipman. It
appeared to us as if there was but one step between that and being an
admiral, or, at all events, a post-captain in command of a fine
line-of-battle ship. Neither our mother nor sisters had at first at all
wished that Alfred should go to sea; indeed, our father would, I believe,
have much rather seen him enter into the business of a merchant; but as
soon as the matter was settled, they all set to work with the utmost zeal
and energy to get his kit ready for sea. Many a sigh I heard, and many a
tear I saw dropped over the shirts, and stockings, and
pocket-handkerchiefs, as they were being marked, when he was not

near. Too often had they read of dreadful shipwrecks, of pestiferous
climates, of malignant fevers carrying off the young as well as the old,
the strong as well as the weak, not to feel anxious about Alfred, and to
dread that he might be among those gallant spirits who go away
out-flowing with health, and hope, and confidence, and yet are destined
never again to visit their native land, or to see the faces of those who
love them so much. Alfred was full of life and animation, and very
active in assisting in the preparations making for his departure. Well do
I remember the evening when his uniform came down. With what
hurried fingers we undid the parcel, and how eagerly I rushed up-stairs
with him to help him to put it on! What a fine fellow I thought he
looked; how proud I felt of him, as I walked round and round him,
admiring the gold lace and the white patches worn by midshipmen in
those days, and the dirk by his side, and the glossy belt, and the crown
and anchor on his buttons and in his cap, and more than all, when I felt
that he was really and truly an officer in the navy! Still more delighted
was I when I accompanied him down-stairs, and heard the
commendations of all the family on his appearance. Our father, with a
hand on his shoulder, could not help exclaiming, "Well, Alfred, you are
a jolly midshipman, my boy." And then all the servants had collected in
the hall
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