This story was published in Blue Book magazine, February 1928.
Written by Bill Adams and illustrated by O. E. Hake, a
Chicago based artist who did interior illustrations for Blue Book from 1926 to 1930. It won the O'Henry award in 1928.
Home is the Sailor written by Bill Adams, interior illustration by Otto Eugene Hake |
Bill Adams tells us this tale in the first person, as if he
were a shipmate when this happened. It’s the story of a young gentleman
apprenticed as a sailor during the days of sailing ships. The boy Gillan, about
seventeen years old, comes on board in full dress uniform, looking as though he
has stepped out of an advertisement illustration. Adams gives us this
description:
The
newcomer was slight, rather tall and lanky, with dark eyes and straight black
hair. His expression was very open and eager. A boy of about seventeen, he
looked soft even for a first voyager. His delicate face was pink and clear, his
hands white. He looked shy. One could easily see that he was a “gentle-man’s
son.” The tip of a white handkerchief showed in his breast pocket. He wore a
white collar, white shirt, and dark silk tie. And of course he was dressed in
the customary spanking rig of an unsophisticated and unsuspecting green sea
apprentice—a double-breasted blue serge suit with two rows of big bright brass
buttons, an anchor on each of them. A smart new “badge cap” topped him off—a
round blue cloth cap with a shiny black leather peak and gold chin-stay, the
company’s house flag in the loop of the stay. I could have easily guessed what
he afterward told me: he supposed this was to be the rig that he would wear at
sea. “Going to sea with her?” I asked.
The workday starts at daybreak, no breakfast. By eight o’clock,
the boy is hungry, fatigued and disillusioned of the romance of sailing, but
the day has hardly begun. He tries to eat the sailors’ breakfast – hardtack and
coffee, and throws up. By noon, he’s wet through from the rain, and hungry
enough that he manages to eat lunch – fatty pork and hardtack. He eats and
falls asleep, the narrator wakes him up at one o’clock. At six o’clock, he
comes off duty and sleeps till eight o’clock. From midnight, he’s given the duty
of striking the ships bells, once every half-hour. This means he’s not able to
grab any sleep during the shift, as everyone on ship does their duty by the cadence
of the bells, and will not tolerate any delays in their rota. He manages to stay
awake till nine thirty. The narrator, knowing that this is likely to happen,
checks on him and stays with him, kicking him awake every half hour to ring the
bells. The day ends at midnight, and the next workday begins at four o’clock.
When
the second mate’s watch was roused out again at four of the morning and he had
to go back to the poop to keep the time till beginning of the day’s work at
five o’clock, he could hardly keep his eyes open. His fingers trembled as he
slowly dressed. The linings of his sea boots were sodden. He gasped as he put
his bunk-warmed feet down into them.
The life at sea begins to harden the boy physically. His
inexperience leads to him being taken advantage of. One of the men offers him a
week’s worth of his pork ration at lunch in return for his sea boots. Being
hungry and fatigued all the time, Gillan makes the trade. After this, his feet
are wet all the time, as the rain returns – this leads to blisters and boils developing.
The narrator looks out for Gillan, and suggests to him that he can desert if he
doesn’t want to be a sailor. Gillan says nothing, but he doesn’t drop out from
his work even when a couple of more experienced sailors pretend to be sick to
get a break from work.
There are a few bright spots in Gillan’s life. Once, he has
to climb the rigging in a storm to shorten sail, and he sees the roaring sea
from above.
“How
d’you like sailoring?” I shouted.
His
eyes very bright, he glanced at me from amidst folds of white billowing canvas.
His cap had blown away and the wind tossed his black hair about his pale
forehead. He made no reply, but while I passed the gaskets and lashed down the
sail he stood erect on the foot-rope and gazed up to the full round moon above
us. His lips were parted. His face delighted and eager, he drank deep of the
crisp wind.
When
I came down into the topmast rigging he was still standing at the royal mast
head, gazing now skyward, now to the glistening crested seas almost two hundred
feet below.
Gillan soldiers on, doing his duties in the face of the
other crew member’s contempt and the officer’s belief that he will probably
desert. One day, one of the malingering sailors takes Gillan’s uniform and
wears it, taunting the boy. Gillan fights, and routs the other man. The crew
cheer for him, and accept him as a crew member from that time.
Things are going well for Gillan, when one day, near the end
of the voyage ....
I’ll let you read the rest for yourself, as I don’t want to
spoil the ending. A masterful depiction of life before the mast, the
story is only eleven pages long but paints a picture of a sailor’s burden and the
attraction of the sea, despite the suffering it inflicts on men.
Out of the remaining O'Henry award winning stories, the ones with a check mark below are the ones i have access to. Which one should i do next? Leave your suggestion in the comments:
Out of the remaining O'Henry award winning stories, the ones with a check mark below are the ones i have access to. Which one should i do next? Leave your suggestion in the comments:
Bill Adams
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"Jukes"
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Adventure, November 23, 1926
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ü
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"Home is the Sailor"
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Blue Book Magazine, February 1928
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ü
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"The Lubber"
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Adventure, April 1933
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ü
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John D. Swain
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"One Head Well Done"
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Top-Notch, Sep 1931
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ü
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Maryland Allen
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"The Urge"
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Everybody's, September 1921
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ü
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Harry Anable Kniffin
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"The Tribute"
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Brief Stories, September 1921
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Edison Marshall
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"The Elephant Remembers"
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Everybody' s, October 1918
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ü
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"The Heart of Little Shikara"
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Everybody's, January 1921
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ü
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L.H. Robbins
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"Professor Todd's Used Car"
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Everybody's, July 1920
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ü
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"Mr. Downey Sits Down"
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Everybody's, January 1921
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ü
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Raymond S. Spears
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"A River Combine-Professional"
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Argosy-Allstory, May 3, 1924
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Isa Urquhart Glenn
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"The Wager"
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Argosy All-Story, September 18, 1923
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"Old Peter Takes an Afternoon Off"
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Popular, April 7, 1922
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ü
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Albert Payson Terhune
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"On Strike"
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The Popular Magazine, October 1918
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ü
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"The Writer-Upward"
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Popular, May 20, 1922
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Karl W. Detzer
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"The Wreck Job"
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Short Stories Sep 10 1926
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Charles Tenney Jackson
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"The Man Who Cursed the Lillies"
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Short Stories, December 10, 1921
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"The Horse of Hurricane Reef"
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Short Stories, September 10, 1922
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James W. Bennett
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"The Kiss of the Accolade"
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Short Stories, October 10, 1922
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ü
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Robert S. Lemmon
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"The Bamboo Trap"
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Short Stories, April 25, 1923
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Albert Richard Wetjen
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"Command"
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Sea Stories
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Bill Adams wrote some excellent sea stories, many based on his own experiences. This story must also have autobiographical elements. I see from my note in BLUE BOOK that I read the story in 1981 and gave it a high rating. I recommend that you read JUKES next.
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