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"All hands be there."
"Will you come, Nat?" inquired Frank.
"Yes; and swim three rods under water," was Nat's reply.
At this period of Nat's boyhood, there was almost a pa.s.sion among the boys for athletic sports, such as swimming, jumping, running, ball-playing, and kindred amus.e.m.e.nts. For some time they had received special attention, and no one of the boys enjoyed them more than Nat. It was one of the principles on which he lived, to do with all his heart whatever he undertook. In the school-room, he studied with a keen relish for knowledge, and on the play-ground he played with equal gusto. If he had work to do it was attended to at once, and thoroughly finished in the shortest possible time. In this way he engaged in athletic sports.
An hour before sunset, a dozen or more boys were at "the bathing place."
"Now, Nat, for your three rods under water," said Frank. "If I was half as long-winded as you are, I should keep company with the fishes pretty often."
"He swam more than three rods under water the other day," said Charlie.
"I shouldn't want to risk myself so long out of sight. Suppose the cramp should seize you, Nat, I guess you'd like to see the dry land."
"You must remember," suggested John, who was usually ready to turn things over, and look at the funny side, "that doctors won't wade into the water after their patients."
One after another the boys plunged into the water, as if it were their native element. Most of them had practised swimming, diving, and other feats, until they were adepts in these water-arts. Some of them could swim a surprising distance, and feared not to venture a long way from the sh.o.r.e. Frank was very skilful in performing these water feats, but even he could not equal Nat.
"Now for a swim under water," exclaimed Nat, as he disappeared from the view of his companions. All stopped their sports to watch Nat, and see where he would make his appearance. Not a word was spoken as they gazed with breathless interest, and waited to see him rise.
"He's drowned," cried one of the boys.
"No, no," responded Frank. "We shall see him in a moment," and yet Frank began to fear.
"I tell you he _is_ drowned," shouted John, much excited. By this time there was a good deal of consternation among the boys, and some of them were running out of the water. A man who was watching on the sh.o.r.e, was actually stripping his coat off to make a plunge for Nat, when up he came.
"He is safe," shouted half a dozen voices, and the welkin rang with cheer after cheer.
"There, young man, better not try that again," said the gentleman on the sh.o.r.e, as Nat swum around in that direction.
"That was more than three rods," said Frank.
"And more than four," added Charlie. "You beat yourself this time, Nat.
You never swam so far under water before. We thought you were drowned."
"There is no use in trying to beat _you_," continued Frank. "If you had gills you would be a regular fish."
Everybody in the village heard of Nat's swimming feats under water, as well as on the water, and it was not unusual for spectators to a.s.semble on the sh.o.r.e, when they knew that he was going to bathe.
Not far from this time, a little later in the year perhaps, there was to be a special game of ball on Sat.u.r.day afternoon. Ball-playing was one of the favorite games with the boys, and some of them were remarkable players. When the time arrived it was decided that John and Charlie should choose sides, and it fell to the latter to make the first choice.
"I choose Nat," said he.
"I'll take Frank," said John.
It was usually the case that Nat and Frank were pitted against each other in this amus.e.m.e.nt. Nat was considered the best player, so that he was usually the first choice. Frank stood next, so that he was the second choice. In this way they generally found themselves playing against each other. It was so on this occasion.
The game commenced, and John's side had the "ins."
"You must catch," said Charlie to Nat. It was usually Nat's part to catch.
"And you must throw," responded Nat. "I can catch your b.a.l.l.s best."
The very first ball that was thrown, John missed, though he struck with a well-aimed blow, as he thought, and Nat caught it.
"That is too bad," was the exclamation heard on one side, and "good,"
"capital," on the other.
Charlie took the bat, and was fortunate in hitting the ball the first time he struck. Now it was Nat's turn, and, with bat in hand, he took his place.
"Be sure and hit," said Charlie.
"I should like to see a ball go by _him_ without getting a rap,"
answered Frank, who was now the catcher. "The ball always seems to think it is no use to try to pa.s.s him."
"There, take that," said Nat, as he sent the ball, at his first bat, over the heads of all, so far that he had time to run round the whole circle of goals, turning a somerset as he came in.
"A good beginning, Nat; let us see you do that again," said Frank.
"When the time comes I'll give you a chance," replied Nat.
We will not follow the game further, but simply say that, before it was half through, quite a number of men, old and young, were attracted to the place by the sport.
"What a fine player for so young a boy," said one bystander to another, as Nat added one after another to the tallies.
"Yes; no one can excel him; he never plays second fiddle to anybody. He will run faster, catch better, and hit the ball more times in ten, than any other boy. I saw him jump the other day, and he surpa.s.sed any thing I have seen of his age."
"If that is not all he is good for, it is well enough," replied the other.
"He is just as good at studying or working, as he is at playing ball; it seems to be a principle with him _to be the best_ in whatever he undertakes. I was amused at his reply to one of the neighbors, who asked him how he managed to swim better than any one else. 'It is just as easy to swim well as poorly,' said he, and there is a good deal of truth in the remark. At another time he said, 'one might as well run fast as slow.'"
"Does he appear to glory in his feats?"
"Not at all. He does not seem to think there is much credit in being the best at these games. One of the boys said to him one day, 'Nat, you always get all the glory in our games.' He replied, 'I don't think there is much glory in playing ball well. If that is all a person is good for, he is not good for much.' He has very good ideas about such things."
This was really a correct view of Nat's case. He enjoyed athletic sports as much as any of the boys, and yet he actually felt that it was no particular credit to him to be a good swimmer, jumper, runner, or ball-player. He did not study to excel therein because he thought it was honorable to beat every other boy in these things. But what he did, he did with all his soul, and this is necessary to success. He had confidence in his ability to succeed in what he undertook. When he first went into the water, he knew he could learn to swim. When he took his stand to catch the ball, he knew he could catch it. Others did these things, and he could see no reason why he could not. He seemed to feel as one of the Rothschilds did, who said, "I can do what another man can." The same elements of character caused him to excel on the play-ground, that enabled him to bear off the palm in the school-room.
It is generally the case that a boy who does one thing well will do another well also. Employers understand this, and choose those lads who exhibit a disposition to be thorough. Said Samuel Budgett, "In whatever calling a man is found, he ought to be the best in his calling; if only a shoe-black, he ought to be the best shoe-black in the neighborhood."
He acted upon this principle himself from his boyhood; and so did Nat, whether he was fully conscious of it or not. Sir Joshua Reynolds, the great painter, said that his success resulted mainly from one principle upon which he had acted, namely, "_to make every picture the best_."
Buxton, of whom we have spoken already, had as much force of character in his youth as almost any boy who ever lived. His determination was invincible, and his energy and perseverance were equal to his resolution. The consequence was that he became famous for boating, shooting, riding, and all sorts of fieldsports, though he cared little for any thing else. But when, at last, his attention was turned to self-improvement and philanthropy, by the influence of the Gurney family, he carried the same qualities with him there, and through them won a world-wide fame. It was thus with Sir Walter Scott, who was second to no one in his youth for his dexterity and proficiency in athletic, games, and the various forms of recreation. He could "spear a salmon with the best fisher on the Tweed, and ride a wild horse with any hunter in Yarrow." The same energy and unconquerable will helped him achieve that herculean labor afterwards, of paying off a debt of six hundred thousand dollars, with his pen. The Duke of Wellington acknowledged the same principle, when he said, as he stood watching the sports of boys on the play-ground of Eton, where he spent his juvenile years, "It was there that the battle of Waterloo was won."
Twenty-five years after Nat bore off the palm in athletic games, an early a.s.sociate asked him to what he owed his success, and he answered, in a vein of pleasantry, "To swimming under water." Whatever may have been his meaning, it is not at all difficult to discover the same elements of character in squash-raising, declamation, and arithmetic, that appear in the games he played.
His skill in the water served him a good purpose one day, or rather, it served another boy well. Nat and two or three of his companions were at play near the factory, when some one cried out, "A boy in the water!"
In an instant Nat sprung, followed by his companions, and made for the water, when lo! a little boy was seen struggling to keep from sinking.
He had carelessly ventured too near and fallen in, and must have perished but for the timely aid thus rendered him. Nat plunged in after him, and his play-fellows did the same, or brought rails, by which he was saved. He proved to be Charlie's younger brother.