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    Chapter 2

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    "To be a sweetness more desired
    than spring,--
    This is the flower of life."



    Joris Van Heemskirk had not thought of prayer; but, in his vague fear
    and apprehension, his soul beat at his lips, and its natural language
    had been that appeal at his daughter's closed door. For Semple's words
    had been like a hand lifting the curtain in a dark room: only a clouded
    and uncertain light had been thrown, but in it even familiar objects
    looked portentous. In these days, the tendency is to tone down and to
    assimilate, to deprecate every thing positive and demonstrative. But
    Joris lived when the great motives of humanity stood out sharp and bold,
    and surrounded by a religious halo.

    Many of his people had begun to associate with the governing race, to
    sit at their banquets, and even to worship in their church; but Joris,
    in his heart, looked upon such "indifferents" as renegades to their God
    and their fatherland. He was a Dutchman, soul and body; and no English
    duke was prouder of his line, or his royal quarterings, than was Joris
    Van Heemskirk of the race of sailors and patriots from whom he had
    sprung.

    Through his father, he clasped hands with men who had swept the narrow
    seas with De Ruyter, and sailed into Arctic darkness and icefields with
    Van Heemskirk. Farther back, among that mysterious, legendary army of
    patriots called "The Beggars of the Sea," he could proudly name his
    fore-goers,--rough, austere men, covered with scars, who followed
    Willemsen to the succour of Leyden. The likeness of one of them, Adrian
    Van Heemskirk, was in his best bedroom,--the big, square form wrapped in
    a pea-jacket; a crescent in his hat, with the device, "_Rather Turk than
    Papist_;" and upon his breast one of those medals, still hoarded in the
    Low Countries, which bore the significant words, "_In defiance of the
    Mass_."

    He knew all the stories of these men,--how, fortified by their natural
    bravery, and by their Calvinistic acquiescence in the purposes of
    Providence, they put out to sea in any weather, braved any danger,
    fought their enemies wherever they found them, worked like beavers
    behind their dams, and yet defiantly flung open their sluice-gates, and

    let in the ocean, to drown out their enemies.

    Through his mother, a beautiful Zealand woman, he was related to the
    Evertsens, the victorious admirals of Zealand, and also to the great
    mercantile family of Doversteghe; and he thought the enterprise of the
    one as honourable as the valour of the other. Beside the sailor pictures
    of Cornelius and Jan Evertsen, and the famous "Keesje the Devil," he
    hung sundry likenesses of men with grave, calm faces, proud and lofty of
    aspect,
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