Hague, made acquaintance with
the widow Vandersloosh, who kept a Lust Haus, [_Pleasure house_] a place
of resort for sailors, where they drank and danced. Discovering that
the comfortably fat lady was also very comfortably rich, Mr
Vanslyperken had made advances, with the hope of obtaining her hand and
handling her money. The widow had, however, no idea of accepting the
offer, but was too wise to give him a decided refusal, as she knew it
would be attended with his preventing the crew of the cutter from
frequenting her house, and thereby losing much custom. Thus did she, at
every return, receive him kindly and give him hopes, but nothing more.
Since the peace, as we before observed, the cutter had been ordered for
the prevention of smuggling.
When and how Mr Vanslyperken had picked up his favourite Snarleyyow
cannot be discovered, and must remain a secret. The men said that the
dog had appeared on the deck of the cutter in a supernatural way, and
most of them looked upon him with as much awe as ill-will.
This is certain, that the cutter had been a little while before in a
state of mutiny, and a forcible entry attempted at night into the
lieutenant's cabin. It is therefore not unreasonable to suppose that
Vanslyperken felt that a good watch-dog might be a very useful appendage
to his establishment, and had procured one accordingly. All the
affection he ever showed to anything living was certainly concentrated
on this one animal, and, next to his money, Snarleyyow had possession of
his master's heart.
Poor Smallbones, cast on the world without father or mother, had become
starved before he was on board the cutter, and had been starved ever
since. As the reader will perceive, his allowance was mostly eaten up
by the dog, and he was left to beg a precarious support from the
good-will and charity of his shipmates, all of whom were equally
disgusted with the commander's cruelty and the ungain temper of his
brute companion.
Having entered into this retrospect for the benefit of the reader, we
will now proceed.
Mr Vanslyperken walked the deck for nearly a quarter of an hour without
speaking: the men had finished their breakfasts, and were lounging about
the deck, for there was nothing for them to do, except to look out for
the return of the two boats which had been sent away the night before.
The lieutenant's thoughts were at one minute, upon Mrs Vandersloosh
thinking how he could persuade her, and, at anothe
|