I Love 
                a Little Ship 
                from Fore 'n' Aft - Aug. 15, 1929 
                by Cleon Mason 
              The stately white-winged square 
                rigger, stuns'ls set, top-gallant flying, every foot of canvas 
                drawing, reeling off the knots before the steady trades, she is 
                an epic. She has run down the Roaring Forties. She has vanquished 
                the redoubtable Horn. She has lazed through the doldrums. She 
                has carried the trade of the world. For sheer beauty man has never 
                produced her equal. One must sing of her in heroics. But: 
                
                "Give me a ship I can handle alone,  
                Sturdy and staunch and true." 
              I love a little ship. A little 
                ship is a lyric, a sweet song to be sung in a delicate meter. 
              Time after time, as I idle across 
                the channel on a warm afternoon, I have watched a big schooner 
                under full press of sail overhaul me and ploy sedately by; yes, 
                even a bit contemptuously at times. I have seen the glasses of 
                the curious leveled at my little craft. I have almost felt the 
                scornful superiority and the sense of patronizing proprietorship 
                which permits me to even sail upon the seas. But somehow it is 
                a thing I cannot resent, for I understand just how they feel, 
                poor jaded souls! I am only sorry, for they have lost something 
                which they now seek, yet they search forever in the wrong place. 
              While I watch the swirling wake 
                of the big ship from ever increasing distance my little one boisterously 
                proceeds upon her care-free way. She picks her rolling course 
                from wave to wave and with all the bubbling happiness of a thing 
                alive dips her graceful bow in foam and fairly laughs to watch 
                the flying spray when she rises quickly. The vixen! She always 
                does that very trick when I dreamily watch the big ship, wondering—wondering. 
                She seems to know when I think of things like that. And I ease 
                off the main sheet and again she takes the swells more gently. 
               I 
                love my little ship and loving her I know her. I know when, I 
                can drive her hard, right into the teeth of the gale, over hills 
                and vales of moving green. I know her little tricks, especially 
                that one of climbing the watery hill as meek as any. lamb; and 
                then suddenly, when I least exfect it, she pays off and I am drenched. 
                There is something of the Devil in her. But I jerk her up quickly, 
                and knowing she has been caught in mischief she settles down and, 
                childlike, tries to make amends. I know all of her faults; she 
                knows mine, too! She knows I often wander from the tiller to search 
                below for a mislaid book or my half smoked pipe. She knows and 
                resents that most annoying habit I have of sailing with the mainsheet 
                too close hauled. Each time she tells me of my faults in no uncertain 
                way. I must forego my search and seize the stick or ease the mainsheet 
                so that she will ride more comfortably. 
              There is not a nook or cranny in 
                my ship I do not know. Up in the eyes the gear, old ropes, chains, 
                blocks and sails, to port and starboard comfortable berths beneath 
                which are my simple supplies, and further aft the galley. Here 
                is the little nook in which I keep tobacco, there the shelf I 
                built to hold my books. You see my little ship is simple beyond 
                words and I think my regard for her would be complete but for 
                one thing. Up in the bow there is a tiny leak. I know it is just 
                a little leak, but its very littleness is aggravating. Three whole 
                years I have searched for it in vain. Oh, well, maybe some day 
                I'll find it. And after all, perhaps our faults are really oblique 
                virtues in that they build our understanding. 
              Little things take on an intimacy 
                which is denied the large. There are the commonplaces of our every-day 
                life, scarcely large enough to be recognized, yet they aggregate 
                surprising totals and go to make living the contented state it 
                should be. To really live one must first learn to love the little 
                things, and having once learned that, the large can be approached 
                without fear. Those whose souls are so myopic that nothing can 
                be seen except it is big lose all the joy which comes with little 
                things. Take that little ship of mine. There isn't one on that 
                big, joyless schooner who could take my craft and make her do 
                his bidding. The schooner is a big machine, no one knows her every 
                nook and cranny, she has no aggravating habits. A soulless mechanic 
                ironed out every flaw. If she tugs too hard upon the wheel the 
                calculating architect is sent for to change the sails. Why, "she 
                hasn't even a little leak to annoy her owner because he has big 
                automatic pumps to keep her dry. Oh, she obeys the helm but gives 
                obedience grudgingly. She carries her burden of unhappy souls 
                much as one performs an unpleasant duty—but no one loves 
                her, she is too big. 
              The songs which have moulded the 
                courses of many peoples and which have been sung by many generations 
                are not. the mighty choruses nor grand Te Deums; rather the world 
                sings and remembers little songs, songs which have a way of snuggling 
                deep into our very beings and filling the spaces left after larger 
                ones have failed to satisfy. Still hungering we leave the vast 
                cathedral; dissatisfied, we wander from the halls of great orchestras, 
                and quite unconsciously we catch ourselves humming or whistling 
                a world-old refrain, a wistful fragment from a great musician's 
                mind. 
              Snug in a quiet harbor, safe from 
                the wind and waves, safe from that big schooner too, the evening 
                is far too short, what with books I have to read. I shudder to 
                think what a high and mighty critic would say if he should read 
                the titles. Or the scorn which would fairly ooze from Mencken, 
                that major prophet of discontent, should he survey the shelf. 
                But discontent somehow has never seemed to ride along with little 
                things, and on my little ship we have no room for heavy tomes, 
                no room for books which are not happy books. There's "Peter 
                Pan", I frankly love the story. There too is "Graziella", 
                "The Wind in the Willows" and "lmennsee". 
                And I must not forget the bit from "Les Miserables" 
                of Gawoche and his elephant! While these may not be the particular 
                volumes which others have read and loved they are, fundamentally, 
                world old stories of the little things, and as such they have 
                been spiritual guides which any who would assume the role of literary 
                censor must scan rather closely before casting them aside. And 
                no self respecting little ship would be complete without the tang 
                of the sea, Slocum's immortal "Cruise of the Spray", 
                "The Venturesome Voyages of Captain Voss", which is 
                a veritable storehouse of sea wisdom, Kipling's "Captain 
                Courageous" — these are alive with the life of little 
                things, even as little as tacks which insured Slocum's final and 
                successful attempt to gain the Pacific after his troubles in the 
                Straits of Magellan. Mixed with the salty volumes are several 
                of the poets — Poe, Mansfield, Byron. You see, altogether, 
                my books are quite a conglomerate assortment. I could hardly believe 
                the particular ones I have named would suit any other taste than 
                my own, but that is a small matter. Yet any row of books with 
                which one had to live day after day would represent - the same 
                general atmosphere of peace and contentment. 
              So I shall sail my little 
                ship. She carries what I want, my simple books, my simple songs 
                and, best of all, a generous store of contentment. Now, if I could 
                only find....... But stop, I think I even love that leak! Such 
                is the way of little ships. 
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