
The
£200 Millionaire
A Story by Weston Martyr, 1932
My wife and I were sailing a hireling yacht through the waterways of
Zeeland last summer,
when one day a westerly gale drove us into the harbour of Dintelsas for
shelter. A little
green sloop, flying the Red Ensign, followed us into port. She was
manned solely by one
elderly gentleman, but we noted that he handled the boat with ease and
skill. It was
blowing hard, and the little yacht ran down the harbour at speed, but
when abreast of us
she luffed head to wind, her violently flapping sails were lowered with
a run, and she
brought up alongside us so gently that she would not have crushed an
egg. We took her
lines and made them fast, while her owner hung cork fenders over the
side and proceeded
to stow his sails. Urged by a look from my wife which said, 'he is old
and all alone. Help
him,' I offered to lend the lone mariner a hand. But he refused to be
helped. Said he,
'Thank you, but please don't trouble. I like to do everything myself;
it's part of the fun. But do
come aboard if you will, and look round. You'll see there's nothing
here that one man can't
tackle easily.'
We went aboard and found the green sloop to be one of the cleverest
little ships
imaginable. It is difficult to describe her gear on deck and aloft
without being technical;
suffice it to say, therefore, that everything was very eff'cient and
simple, and so designed
that all sail could be set or lowered by the man at the helm without
leaving the cockpit. The
boat was 30 feet long by 9 feet wide, and my short wife, at any rate,
could stand upright in
her cabin. Her fore end was a storeroom, full of convenient lockers,
shelves and a small
but adequate water-closet. Abaft this came the cabin, an apartment 12
feet long, with a
broad bunk along one side of it and a comfortable settee along the
other. A table with
hinged flaps stood in the middle, while in the four corners were a
wardrobe, a desk, a
pantry and a galley. Abaft all this was a motor, hidden beneath the
cockpit floor. A clock
ticked on one bulkhead, a rack full of books ran along the other, a
tray of pipes lay on the
table, and a copper kettle sang softly to itself on the little stove.
'What do you think of her?' said our host, descending the companion.
'Before you tell me,
though, I must warn you I'm very house-proud. I've owned this boat for
ten years, and I've
been doing little things to her all the time. Improving her, I call it.
It's great fun. For instance,
I made this matchbox-holder for the galley last week. It sounds a
trivial thing; but I wish I'd
thought of it ten years ago, because during all that time I've had to
use both hands
whenever I struck a match.. Now I have only to use one hand, and you
know all that implies
in a small boat, especially if she's dancing about and you're trying to
hold on and cook and
light the Primus at one and the same moment. Then there was the fun of
carving the holder
out of a bit of wood I picked up, to say nothing of the pleasure it
gives me to look at a
useful thing I've made with my own hands. The carving brought out the
grain of the wood
nicely, don't you think? Now I'm going to make tea, and you must stay
and have some with
me.' We did stay to tea. And we are glad we did. For one thing, it was
a remarkably fine
tea, and, for another, we listened to the most entertaining and
thought-provoking discourse
we have ever heard in our lives. That discourse, in fact, was so
provocative of thought that
it looks as if it were going to change the whole course of our lives
for my wife and me.
Said our host, 'I hope you will like this tea. It's brick tea, caravan
tea. I got hold of it in
Odessa, where it was really absurdly cheap. That's one of the
advantages of this kind of
life, I find. Cruising about all over Europe in my own boat, I can buy
luxuries at the source,
so to speak, at practically cost prices. There are four bottles of
Burgundy, for example,
stowed in the bilges under your feet, the remains of a dozen I bought
at Cadaujac while
cruising along the Garonne canal. I bought the lot for less than twenty
shillings, and it's the
sort of wine you pay a pound a bottle for in London. When I come across
bargains like that
it makes me wish this boat was a bit bigger. It's surprising what a lot
of stuff I can stow
away in her, but I really need more storage space. If I had room I
would buy enough cigars,
for instance, in this country where they are good and cheap, to last me
over the winter. You
see, I like the sun, and in two months I shall be going down the Rhone
to spend the winter
in the south of France, and the tobacco there is horrible and
expensive.'
'Do you live aboard here all alone always?' exclaimed my wife, making
her eyes very
round. 'Most certainly,' replied our host. 'Now do try some of this
Macassar redfish paste
on your toast. I got it in Rotterdam from the purser of the Java Mail
that arrived last week,
so it's as fresh as it's possible to get it. It's really a shame to
toast this bread, though. It's
just the ordinary bread the bargees buy, but I find Dutch bread is the
best in all Europe.
Some French bread is good, but it won't keep as long as this stuff
will. Sailing down the
Danube a year or so ago I got some really excellent bread in Vienna,
but it was a little
sweet and not so good for a steady diet as this Dutch stuff. The worst
bread I ever got was
in Poland. I was cruising through the East German canals and I thought
I would sail up the
Vistula via Cracow, with the intention of putting the boat on the
railway when I got to the
head of the Vistula navigation at Myslowitz, shipping her across the
few miles to the
Klodnitz canal, and then cruising through Silesia and Brandenburg via
Breslau down the
Oder. It was a good and perfectly feasible plan, and I fancy it would
have been interesting.
But that horrible Polish bread defeated me completely. It was about all
I could get to eat,
and it seemed to consist entirely of straw and potatoes. So I turned
back after passing
Warsaw, and fled down the Vistula and the Bromberg canal and on by the
Netze to
Frankfurt. Do have some more tea.'
We had some more tea. It was a marvellous brew, as stimulating as good
wine, and while
we drank it our curiosity concerning our host and his extraordinary
mode of life welled up
within us, to drown at last our manners and overflow in a stream of
questions.
'Do you really mean,' said we, 'that you live aboard here always? All
the year round? And
quite alone? And cruise to Odessa? And Warsaw? And how did you get to
the Danube?
And the Black Sea? And—? And —?' Thus we went on,
while our host smiled at us-the
kind of smile that told us we had made a new friend.
'I'll tell you,' he said, when we stopped at last for breath. 'you
understand boats and this
sort of life, I think, so you'll understand me. I've been living aboard
this boat for ten years
now, and I hope I shall never have to live anywhere else as long as I'm
alive. It's a good life.
It's the best kind of life a man can lead—or a woman either.
It really is life, you see. Yes.
And I think I ought to know. I shan't see sixty again, and I've seen a
good deal of life—of
different kinds. I'm a doctor, or was once. And I've worked very hard
all my life trying to be
a good doctor, but failing, I fear, on the whole. I married and we had
five children, and it
meant hard work bringing them up properly and educating them. But I
worked and did it.
Then I moved to London to try to make some money. That was the hardest
work of all.
Then the war came, and more hard work in a base hospital. The war
killed two of my
sons—and my wife. And when it was all over I looked around,
and I didn't like the look of
the life I saw ahead of me. To go on working hard seemed the only thing
left to do, but I
found there was no zest left in my work any more. My daughters were
married and my
remaining son was doing well in a practice of his own. I found my
children could get on
very well without me. So there was no one left to work for, and I found
I was very tired. 'I
sold my practice and retired to Harwich, where I was born. And there I
soon found out that
having nothing to do at all is even worse that working hard at
something you've lost interest
in. I did nothing for six months, and I think another six months of
that would have been the
death of me. By then I feel I should have been glad to die. But this
little boat saved me. I
began by hiring her from a local boatman for one weekend. We sailed up
the Orwell to
Ipswich and back again. The weather was fine, the Orwell is a lovely
river, and I enjoyed
my little sail. I enjoyed it so much, in fact, that I hired the boat
again. I hired her for a week,
and this time I left the boatman behind and sailed alone. Of course, I
had sailed boats
before. As a boy I got myself afloat in something or other whenever I
had a chance, and my
holidays as a young man were nearly all spent aboard yachts. So I found
I could still handle
a boat especially this little thing in those sheltered waters, and I
remembered enough
seamanship to keep myself out of trouble. I sailed to Pin Mill, and
then up the Stour to
Manningtree and Mistley. After that I grew bolder, and one fine day
with a fair wind for the
passage, I coasted along the Essex shore to Brightlingsea. I explored
the Colne and its
creeks, and the end of my week found me at West Mersea, so I had to
write to the
boatman and extend the time of hire. While I was about it I chartered
the boat for a month.
You see, I discovered I was happy, and I could not remember being happy
for a very long
while. The exercise and the fresh air and the plain food were all doing
me good, too. I'd
been getting flabby and running to fat, but the work on the boat very
soon altered all that. I
would turn into my bunk every night physically tired, knowing I would
fall fast asleep at
once, and looking forward to waking up again to another day of seeing
after myself and
the boat, and pottering about and enioying my little adventures. The
life, in fact, was
making me young again—and I knew it. I would get up in the
morning as soon as the light
woke me and wash and shave and cook my breakfast. I used to stick
pretty faithfully to
coffee, bacon and eggs, and bread and marmalade in those first days, I
remember. I was
not much of a cook then, and I had yet to learn the pleasure one can
get out of cooking a
really good meal, not to mention eating it. Then I washed the breakfast
things, cleaned up
the cabin and washed down the deck. Housemaids' work, but there's not
much of it
needed to keep this small boat clean and tidy. And what little work
there is soon became a
labour of love. When I had made the boat all ship-shape I would sit in
the cockpit and
smoke, and look at her with great pride and contentment. I still do
that. It gives me
pleasure to see my home in perfect order and to feel that I've done it
all myself. And I
know, now, that if I paid someone else to do the work for me I should
be depriving myself
of a deal of the charm of life. 'When my morning chores were done, and
if the weather was
fine and I felt like moving on, I would heave up my anchor and make
sail. During that first
month I think I must have explored nearly all the rivers and creeks
that run into the Thames
Estuary. Most of them, as you probably know, are charming. If I wanted
company I would
bring up in the evening in one of the anchorages frequented by yachts,
or alongside some
Thames barges. There's a delightful freemasonry amongst sailors,
whether yachtsman or
bargees, and I'd generally find myself yarning and smoking with some
congenial souls in
my own or someone else's cabin until it was time to turn in. At other
times I would let go my
anchor for the night in some quiet creek, with never a human being
within miles. I liked that
best. I needed peace and quietness and I found them, to perfection, in
those little lost
Essex creeks.
'When the weather was bad, or the wind and tide did not serve, I would
have a major clean-
up, perhaps, or merely potter about, doing the little jobs of work a
boat can always provide
for you. Or I'd put my watertank and a big basket in the dinghy and row
to the nearest
village to replenish my stores. One thing is certain, I never for a
moment found time
hanging heavily on my hands. There was always something to occupy me
and always
something interesting to see or to do. The life suited me and I throve
on it, body and mind.
And the way I threw off the years and turned into a boy again was
perfectly amazing.
'My month was up almost before I knew it, and when it did get time to
go back to Harwich
and all that meant, I simply could not bear the thought of it. To think
of returning to the sort
of life I'd been leading on shore was as dreadful as the prospect of
having to serve a life
sentence in prison. I did not like the thought of it but there did not
seem to be anything else
I could do. You see, I've not got very much money. I had just enough to
allow me to live,
very simply, and even the expense of hiring this boat was really more
than I could afford.
What I wanted to do, of course, was to go on living aboard here, but,
to my sorrow, that
seemed quite impossible.
'Then, one night, I sat down in this cabin and thought the thing
out—right out, in all its
bearings. First I considered the question of finance. I don't want to
bore you with my
private affairs, but the figures are, I think, instructive and
valuable, as they show what a lot
can be done with very little. My capital amounted to a little over
£4,000, and my yearly
income just touched £200. The problem I set out to solve was:
can I buy the boat out of my
capital and still have suff'cient income to live aboard her all the
year around, and to
maintain the boat and myself adequately? The price of the boat I knew
already; she was
for sale for £200. If I bought her my income would be reduced
to £190, or less than £16 a
month. Was this enough? It did not look like it, by any means. It meant
only £3 17s. a week
to cover food, clothing, light and heat, and upkeep and repairs to the
boat, to say nothing
of depreciation and insurance. The figure seemed so ridiculous that I
nearly gave up my
idea in despair.
'However, I am, thank goodness, a methodical sort of man, and I'd kept
a list of my
expenses during the time I'd been living aboard the boat. I analysed
that list, and found that
my food and oil for the lamps and stove had cost me only £7
15s. for the month. I had also
spent 30s. on gear for the boat, such as paint, ropes, shackles and
such things, while my
bill for petrol and lubricating oil came to 15s. only, as I had sailed
as much as possible and
used the motor as little as I could. Not counting the cost of hiring
the boat, my total
expenditure had, therefore, been only £10 for the month, or
£120 a year. This left £70 over
for repairs, accidents, depreciation and insurance. As far as the
finance was concerned,
the thing began to look possible after all.
'I was very cheered by this discovery, and I then asked myself: "Can I
continue to live
aboard this little boat from year's end to year's end in health and
comfort of body and
mind?" As far as the summers were concerned I knew I could answer that
with a whole-
hearted "Yes." But what about the winters? Could I endure being shut up
in a small
confined space while the gales blew and it was cold and wet, and the
nights were long and
dark? I wondered. And I had to admit to myseif, very much against the
grain, that I
probably would not be able to endure these things. I remember I went to
bed after that,
feeling very miserable. But when I woke up next morning the first thing
I said to myself was
"but why stay in England in the winter: Why be cold and wet when all
you have to do is to
follow the sun and sail your boat (your Home) south?" 'To cut all this
short, I sailed back to
Harwich and sent to London for a map of the French canals. And when it
came I found my
idea of following the sun south was entirely feasible. All I had to do
was to choose a fine
day in early autumn and sail across the Channel from Dover to Calais.
From Calais the
map showed me a network of canals and navigable rivers spreading over
the whole face
of France, and I discovered that a boat of this size and draught could
proceed through
those inland waterways right through the heart of France to the
Mediterranean. I bought
this boat that same day. I had a few small alterations made to her, and
the following week I
sailed from Harvvich, bound south—for Ramsgate, Dover,
Calais, Paris, Lyons, and the
Riviera.'
'Well done!' I cried. And my wife said, 'Hush! And then? Then?' Our new
friend smiled at us
again. 'Yes,' he said. 'You're right. It was a bit of a rash
proceeding—at my age. But I've
never regretted it. That first cruise was perfectly delightful and, on
the whole, a very simple
affair. I had my troubles, of course. I got to Dover easily enough by
coasting all round the
Thames Estuary and putting in somewhere snug every night. But I stayed
in Dover for ten
days before I judged the weather was fine enough for me to sail to
Calais. The truth is, I
was rather scared. The passage is only twenty-one miles, but I felt a
regular Christopher
Columbus when I ventured across the Channel at last. It was a fine day,
with a light north-
east wind, and under sail and motor I got across in four hours. But I
assure you Columbus
was nothing to me when I sailed into Calais harbour! I felt I had
triumphantly accomplished
a most tremendous adventure, and I was immensely pleased and proud. And
I can assure
you it's rather remarkable for anything to make a cynical and
disillusioned old man of my
age feel like that.
'From Calais onward it was all canal and river work. It took me two
months to get to
Marseilles, because I went a round-about way and took my time over it.
I had no need to
hurry, of course, but I don't think anything could have made me hurry
through the lovely
country in which I found myself. I wandered down the Oise to Paris,
where I stayed a week,
moored in the Seine almost in the Shadow of the Champs- Elysees' tree.
It was amusing
and comfortable, too, living in the middle of Paris like that. I could
dine ashore if I wanted
to and go to a theatre, and then walk back and go to bed in my own
floating hotel without
any fuss or bother. And when I got tired of the city I just moved on,
hotel and all. I went up
the Marne to Chalons, along the canals to Bar-le-Duc and Epinal, and
down through the
Haute-Saone and Cote d'Or country to Macon and Lyons. I mention these
towns to show
you the route I took, but it was all the little out-of-the-world places
between them that I used
to stop at and which I found so interesting. I met all sorts of people
and everyone was very
helpful and kind, and by the time I got to Lyons I could speak about
four different brands of
French quite well.
'The passage down the Rhone to Arles was rather strenuous. The current
is very strong
and I had to take a pilot, which spoilt my fun; but it was soon over,
and I got to Marseilles
without any more bother. I had got as far south then as I could get, so
I spent the rest of the
winter in most of those delightful little harbours which sprinkle the
coast between
Marseilles and Frejus. I found practically no winter along that stretch
of coast, which is
much better, I think, than the Riviera proper. I can recommend
Porquerolles if ever you find
yourselves down that way, while Port Cros must be one of the loveliest
places there are on
this earth. I enjoyed every minute of that first winter, and by the
time the spring came round
I knew I had discovered the perfect life. I was happier than I ever
hoped to be, and
healthier than I had ever been. I found myself looking forward to each
day, and every day
had some new interest. Life was, without exaggeration, nearly perfect.
If I found myself
anywhere or amongst people I did not care for, all I had to do was to
heave up my anchor
and go somewhere else. That's one of the many advantages of living
aboard a boat.
When you want to go away there's no packing, no taxis, no tips, no
trains and no bother.
And you haven't got to find a place to lay your head when you get to
your journey's end. In a
boat you just move on, and your sitting-room, your kitchen, your
bedroom and all your little
personal comforts and conveniences move on with you. And when you get
to your
destination there you are, at Home.
'It added to my peace of mind, too, to find I was living well within my
income, in spite of the
fact that I was living very well and doing myself a great deal better
than I had, for instance,
in my Harwich lodgings. Of course I had to be careful and not go in for
too many luxuries,
but I lived as I wanted to live, and it surprised me to find how little
it cost me to do it. I'll
show you my account book, if it will interest you, but first I'll show
you where I've been
during these last ten years.
'Look at this! It's the offcial French canal map, showing all the
canals and navigable rivers
in the country. You'll notice there's very little of France you can't
get at by water. It's almost
unbelievable where you can go; everywhere, practically, except to the
tops of the
mountains. It's the same in Belgium and Holland, and in Germany, too,
and until I got these
canal maps I had no idea of the extraordinary manner the inland
waterways of Europe
have been developed. The ordinary maps don't give the details, so
perhaps it's not
surprising that people in England don't realise they can travel in a
yacht from Calais
through every country in Europe, except Spain and Italy, entirely by
river and canal. It
sounds incredible, doesn't it? But I've done it myself, in this boat.
Including Switzerland!'
'Switzerland!' cried my wife. 'How did you?' 'There are two ways of
getting there,' said our
extraordinary friend. 'Up the Rhine Lateral canal, or the way I
went—up the Rhine-Rhone
canal from Strassburg to Mulhause and along the Huningue canal to
Basle. That was as
far as I could conveniently get then, but I believe the new canal is
open now, running right
through to Lake Constance and Bregenz. But I'm ahead of my yarn. When
the spring .
came round that first year I went from Marseilles by canal all the way
to Bordeaux. I spent
that summer cruising up the coast to L'Orient and from there along the
canals, right
through Central Brittany from Brest to Nantes. Then I came south again,
away from the
cold, and spent the winter exploring South-West France, along the
Dordogne and the
Garrone and its tributaries. I saw most of that lovely country between
Perigueux and
Bordeaux in the north, Floirac and Albi in the east, and from
Carcassonne in the south to
Lacave, which is pretty well on the Spanish border. The whole country
down there flows
with milk and honey, to say nothing of the wine and the scenery. I had
a good time. 'Then I
went up north via the Midi canal and the Rhone, got into the Rhine at
Strassburg, sailed all
down that river to Rotterdam, and spent the summer in Holland. I liked
this country and the
people so much that I stayed here all that winter. Then I branched out.
I was beginning to
see the possibilities of this game by then, and I had gained confidence
in myself and the
boat. I won't bore you with all the details of my travels, but I went
through North Germany to
the Mecklenburg lakes. You ought to go there. More lakes than you could
explore in two
years, set in a park-like country. Perfect. But take a mosquito-net.
Then I sailed south to
Dresden and Prague, then north to the Danish archipelago and the
Swedish islands. I
wintered in the Moselle valley, explored Central France and tried to go
through the Loire
country, but found a diff~culty there owing to the shallowness of those
particular rivers.
After that I pottered about in Belgium and up the Rhine to Mainz, and
from there up the
Main and through the Ludwigs canal into the headwaters of the Danube. I
can recommend
Bavaria and all the lost country around there. It's the Middle Ages.
And, of course, once I
got on the Danube I had to go down it. And I am glad I did, because
it's a wonderful river
and the scenery is magnificent. I drifted down it, taking my time and
meaning to go as far
as Vienna, or maybe Budapesth. But you know how it is. There was the
river, going on and
on all across Europe, so I went on too—to Belgrade, the Iron
Gates, Rustchuck and
Galatz, until I came to Sulina and the Black Sea.
'I turned back that time, because I did not like the idea of venturing
into Russian waters,
the political situation being what it was. So I went up the Danube
again. It took me two
years to get to Passau on the German border. The Danube runs very
swiftly, so progress
was slow, and at times I had to take a tow, but the real reason I took
so long was the
number of side trips I felt I simply had to take up the various
tributaries. I could write a book
about it all, and some day I think I must, but so far I've been so busy
moving about and
enjoying life that I never have time for writing. And I wonder if my
book would be readable if
I wrote it? Yousee, I've had few "interesting adventures" or things
like that. I got thoroughly
lost once on the willow swamps on the lower Tisza, and went down with a
bad go of fever
in the middle of it. But I got out all right. And some Bulgarians above
Sistove fired at me
one day, but it turned out they were Customs guards and thought I was a
smuggler, and we
finished up the best of friends. Beyond that, and a little
unpleasantness with a Ruthenian
gentleman who tried to steal my dinghy, nothing much out of the
ordinary happened. But I
met a lot of very strange and interesting people. I had a wonderfully
good time. In fact the
country and the people along the Danube fascinated me; so much so that,
after sailing
about over Eastern Germany and a little of Poland, I went down the
Danube again. This
time I went as far as Odessa. I wanted to go on, either up the Dnieper,
or through the Sea
of Azoff, up the Don, through the Katchalinskay canal, and then either
up the Volga to Nijni
Novgorod, or down river to Astrakhan and the Caspian. Unfortunately I
could not get
permission from the Russians to make either of those trips. Perhaps it
is just as well, as
the country was rather disturbed and I might have got into trouble. But
one of these days,
when things have settled down, I intend to make that trip yet, because,
bar politics, there's
absolutely nothing to prevent it.'
I remember it was at this point in our friend's discourse that I
interrupted him by crying out
in a loud voice, 'By God!' and hitting the cabin table hard with my
fist. My wife said nothing,
but there was a look in her eyes and a light in them that showed me she
understood and
approved the wild and fascinating thought that had flashed into my
mind. And our friend, it
appeared, understood me also, for said he, 'Yes. Why not? All you need
is a boat drawing
less than four feet, with a motor in her for choice and her mast in a
tabernacle. That and
the—well, let's call it courage; the courage to step out of
your rut. It looks hard; but a mere
step does it—as I found out. Of course, it costs money.
Following the seasons all over
Europe in your own home is a millionaire's life; but I've managed to
live it at an average
cost, over the last ten years, of less than £150 per annum.
Look at this!'
He put an open book before us on the table. It was his account book,
and it contained. in
full detail, his daily expenditures during all the years he had been
living aboard his boat. It
was, I can assure you, a most engrossing work, and was full of items
such as these, which
I found on a single page and copied there and then. And I shall regret
it till I die that I had
no time to copy any more:—
'Sept. 5. Capdenac. 8 duck eggs and I duck (cooked), 3s. ld. 7th. 10
lb. grapes in fine
willow basket, gratis. 6 boxes matches, 2s.! Sulphur at that! Note:
Smuggle in big stock of
matches when next I come to France. 8th. Very hard cheese, 1 ft. in
dia., 1 basket
peaches, 1 jeroboam peach brandy, 1 kiss on both cheeks, gratis, or
perhaps fee for
removing flint from farmer's eye. 9th. Mule hire, lOd. Alms to leper,
ls., interesting case.
Castets, 15th. 6 feet of bread, ls., 1 pint turps, i/:d. 16th. 2
gallons turps, 8d.
Castelsarrasin. Oct. 2nd Bribe to gendarme, Sd.' I should dearly love
to publish that
account book, just as it stands, without any comment or explanation. It
would, I think, make
fascinating and suggestive reading.
'Look here,' said our friend, turning over the unique pages and
exposing the following
figures to our devouring eyes. 'This is a summary of my first twelve
months' income and
outgoings:—
£ s. d.
Income
190 0 0
Expenditure:
Upkeepofboat(at9s.perweek)
23 8 0
Petrol and oil
10 4 0
(distance covered under motor 1220 miles)
Charts, canal dues
13 8 0
Food, drink, clothes, light and heat
100 0 0 (at just under f 2 a week)
147 0 0
Balance
43 0 0
£190 0 0
'I managed to save £43, you see, that first year, enough to
buy a new boat like this one,
every five years, if I continued to save at the same rate. I was extra
careful that year. I didn't
spend much on myself, but I bought the boat all she needed and kept her
up in first-class
shape. I painted her inside once and three times outside, doing it all
myself, and I had her
sails tanned to preserve them. The tanning was done by a fisherman I
made friends with in
Toulon. He did a good job. In the end he wouldntt let me pay for
anything except the cost of
the materials, because he said we were amis and he liked English
sailors. And one day I
came across a broken-down motor-boat, drifting off Cape Camaret, and
towed her into
port. Her owner was scared to death, and very grateful accordingly. He
was no sailor, but
he was a mighty good mechanic, and he insisted on giving my little
engine a first-class
overhaul, just to show his gratitude.
'My fuel bill was very small, because I never use the motor if I can
sail. The £13 odd for
dues, etc., was mostly spent on maps and charts, not that many charts
are necessary, but I
simply can't resist buying the things. I spend hours poring over them,
and planning more
voyages than I shall ever have time to make. As for the canal and
harbour dues—they're
ridiculous; generally some fraction of a penny per ton. And this boat's
registered tonnage
is only two ton. The only expensive piece of water to travel over in
Europe is the Rhone. It's
got a terrific current, pilotage is compulsory, and to get up it you
have to be towed. But
everywhere else the only trouble about the charges is to find change
small enough to pay
them with. £2 a week for food and so on sounds very little,
but all I can say is I live well on
that sum. You see, if I want, say vegetables I don't go to a shop in a
city for them. No.
Perhaps I see a good-looking garden on the river bank. I stop and have
a yarn with the
owner, and when I depart I'm richer by a basket full of fresh
vegetables, and maybe a
chicken and some eggs and fruit as well, while the gardener is left
with a fair price for his
produce and something to talk about for weeks. He's pleased and I'm
pleased. I've paid
less than I would if I bought from a shop, and he's received more than
he would if he sold
to a dealer. And when I say I've got fresh vegetables I mean
fresh—which is something you
can't get from a shop.
'Clothes don't bother me much. It's not essential to dress in the
latest style, living this life. I
keep my goashore clothes in that tin uniform case, and when I get to a
city and want to see
the sights I put on a civilised suit. Otherwise I use soft shirts,
jerseys and flannel trousers. I
do my washing myself; half an hour a fortnight does it, which is
nothing to grumble about. I
use paraff'n oil for light and cooking in the summer, and in the winter
I keep that little stove
going on coal and wood. I find I burn wood mostly, because I've got a
passion, apparently,
for collecting any odd pieces I find drifting about. There must be a
strain of longshoreman
blood in me somewhere, I think, for I can't resist picking up bits of
driftwood, even though I
have to throw most of them overboard again, and I generally have a
bigger collection of
the stuff on deck than I can ever hope to burn.
'So you see, one way and another, my expenses are very small. The
£30 or f40 I save
every year I put by for accidents, major repairs, depreciation and a
sort of insurance fund.
I've bought a new suit of sails and had the whole boat surveyed and
recaulked and the
engine practically renewed, all out of the fund, and I've still got
enough left to buy a new
boat if I want one. I'm getting so rich, in fact, that I don't know
what to do with all my money.
I tried to get rid of some of it by buying extra fine gear for the
boat, but I found that scheme
merely saved me more money in the long-run. For instance, I scrapped my
Manilla running
rigging and replaced it with best hemp at twice the cost, but I'll be
bothered if the hemp
hasn't lasted four times as long as the Manilla already! And to make it
worse, people will
persist in giving me things, bless 'em. I've made a lot of friends in
pretty well every corner
of Europe. Can't help it, living this sort of life, it seems. And most
of them have an idea
that, living as I do, I am to be regarded with compassion. A poor old
man, living all alone
aboard a little boat—that's how they seem to feel about me, I
fear. So, whenever I turn up,
my compassionate friends appear, bearing gifts! It's quite embarrassing
sometimes. And
sometimes it's a real nuisance. The Middelburg canal is barred to me,
for instance,
because the keeper of one of the swing bridges refuses to let me
through until he's been
aboard to greet me and give me a box of cigars or a jar of schnapps;
which things he
really can't afford, as he's a poor man with a very large family. He
does it, it seems,
because I'm leading just the kind of life l~e'd like to lead if he
hadn't been blessed with a
wife, his mother-in-law and nine children. The result is I have to go
round now by
Terneuzen, instead of through Middelburg, whenever I want to pass from
Holland into
Belgium. And I always have to go through Strassburg by night to dodge a
dear old
gentleman, who invariably presses on me about a stone of the smelliest
cheese on earth
whenever he catches sight of me. He calls me his brave ancient ami so
lonely. Lonely!
Why, I should think I must have a larger and more varied assortment of
friends than any
man in Europe. And I keep on making more all the time. For instance, I
hope I've made
two today.'
He had; and we are glad to say he dined with them that evening,
entrancing them with his
talk until far into the night. He talked of gentle rivers wandering
through valleys of
everlasting peace; of a quiet canal, lost amongst scented reeds and
covered with a pink-
and white carpet of water-lilies; of a string of tiny lakes, their blue
waters ringed with the
green of forest pines; of a narrow canal, built by old Romans, but
navigable still, that
climbs up through clouds into the high mountains; of aqueducts spanning
bottomless
ravines and a view from the yacht's deck of half Southern Germany; of a
Red Ensign flying
at the peak and a Black Forest eagle's screamings at that sight; of the
Croatian mayor
who had never heard of a certain country called England; of a thousand
square miles of
bloodred swamp, studded with giant willows; of Wallachian water-gipsies
and their cats
who catch fish; of the mile-long log raft commanded by a Russian
exadmiral; of a spiked
helmet dredged from out the Meuse by the yacht's anchor; of the
warm-hearted kindliness
of Bulgarian brigands and the barbarous fines of Frs. 25,000 extorted
(unsuccessfully) by
'the most civilised country in Europe'; of pack-ice and ice-breakers in
the heart of old
Amsterdam; of the 1000 ton motor-barge that trades each year between
Groningen and
Sulina; of the 300-ton barge proceeding from Bruges to Dunkerque in tow
of a jolly old
lady of seventy; of a spilliken-like traff'c jam in the old moat at
Furnes and the Fordson
tractor that extricated twenty-eight barges; of the Flemish barge named
No. 27 Park Lane,
because the wounds of her skipper had been succoured at that address in
1914; of pig-
manure, chemical fumes and rotting flax on the Lys, and the barge with
a deckload of
potted hyacinths that outdid all those scents; of the ten-knot currents
on the Rhone and the
silent waters of the Oude Ryn that ebb and flow no more; of the charm
of this old earth and
the fun of living on it, if only you understand the proper way to live.
Said our friend, 'I've
found one good way to live and be happy. There must be other ways, too,
but I don't know
'em, so I mean to stick to my way—till I come to the end of
it. The secret seems to be, to
do everything you can yourselJ: It's diff~cult to explain, but take an
example. Take travel.
Allow yourself to be carried about the world in Wagon-Lits and
cabins-deluxe, and what do
you get out of it? You get bored to death. Everything is done for you
and you don't even
have to think. All you have to do is to pay. You're carried about with
the greatest care and
wrapped up and fed and insulated from—from everything. You
see about as much of life
as a suckling in the arms of its nurse. No wonder you get bored! But
get yourself about the
world, on your own feet, or in your own boat, and you're bound, you're
bound to fill your life
with interest and charm and fun—and beauty. You'll have your
disagreeable and
uncomfortable times, of course, but they merely serve to make the good
times taste better.
"Sleep after toyle, port after stormie seas ." Old Spenser knew. He'd
been through it. Sail
all day in the wet and cold, then bring up in some quiet harbour and go
below and toast
your feet before the galley fire and you'll realise what bliss means.
Travel in a steam-
heated Pullman and then put up at the Ritz and see if you find any
bliss there! You see
what I mean? Stewart Edward White put it all much better than I can. He
wrote, "I've often
noted two things about trees: the stunted little twisted fellows have
had a hard time, what
with wind and snow and poor soil; and they grow farthest up on the big
peaks."
Next morning our friend must have risen with the sun, and we were still
beneath our
blankets when the incense of his coffee and bacon drifted down our
cabin hatch. Presently
the sound of ropes falling on deck warned us he was getting under
weigh, and we arose to
say goodbye to him. 'Good morning,' said he. 'I'm sorry to disturb you
so early, but I want to
catch the first of the flood. With luck it'll carry me into the Rhine
and I'll be in Germany by
evening. Now I'll cast off and go—and see what this good
day's got in store for me. A fair
tide and a fair wind is a fine beginning, anyway. Good-bye, you two.
We'll meet again
somewhere, for certain, if only you follow that impulse you had last
night. I don't want to
influence you unduly; but, remember—one step does it and
you're out of the rut for good.
Good-bye. God bless you both.'
He set his jib and the little green yacht fell off before the wind and
headed for the harbour
entrance. She sailed away with the sun shining bright upon her, and
upon the white head
of the man at her helm. Presently she entered the broad river, and we
saw our friend look
back and wave his hand in farewell. Then the boat was hidden by a bank
of golden sand,
and the last we saw of her was her little Red Ensign, a tiny flame
outlined against the sky.
This seems to be the end of the story, but I do not know. I am not
sure. I am not sure,
because the words of that elderly adventurer seem to have set us
thinking. I notice we do
not say very much, but I know we think a lot. For, at intervals during
the cold and fogs of
this last winter, there have passed between my wife and me some
detached but
significant utterances—such as: 'I don't see why I couldn't
get on with my writing aboard a
boat just as well as I can inside this flat.'
'Only £200 a year! Hang it! We ought to be able to earn that
much between us, you'd
think?' 'I think, my dear, one of those steam-cookers would be a
splendid thing to have if
we, for anyone living aboard a small boat.' 'What a foul fog! It hurts
to think of the sun
shining, now, in the south of France.'
'May the Devil run away with that damned loudspeaker next door. You
know, if this flat was
a boat, we could move it out of hearing.' 'If I get bronchitis again
next winter. My dear, I
don't think I could stand another winter here.'
Also we have purchased a monumental work entitled, Guide Officiel de la
Navigation
Interieure, published by the Ministere des Travaux Publiques. This is a
fascinating work,
heartily to be recommended. It has a lovely map.
Also we have just heard of a little boat. In fact, we have been to look
at her. She is sound
and very strong. She has two good berths and a galley and lots of
stowage space. Also
she has a little auxiliary motor. And her mast is in a tabernacle. And
she is for sale. And
we have fallen in love with her. So perhaps this is not the end of this
story. In fact, we hope
and we pray this story has only just begun.