FREE BOOKS

Author's List




PREV.   NEXT  
|<   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106  
107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   >>  
ng to the student of human nature, and he regarded his visitor with an air of compassionate interest. Then Captain Thomsett resumed his seat, and, to preserve his own fair fame, betrayed that of George. "I knew it was either you or somebody your kind 'art was interested in," said the discomfited Stubbs, as they resumed the interrupted game. "You can't help your face, cap'n. When you was thinking about that pore chap's danger it was working with emotion. It misled me, I own it, but it ain't often I meet such a feeling 'art as yours." Captain Thomsett, his eyes glowing affectionately, gripped his friend's hand, and in the course of the game listened to an exposition of the law relating to bigamy of a most masterly and complicated nature, seasoned with anecdotes calculated to make the hardiest of men pause on the brink of matrimony and think seriously of their position. "Suppose this woman comes aboard after pore George," said Thomsett. "What's the best thing to be done?" "The first thing," said Captain Stubbs, "is to gain time. Put her off." "Off the ship, d'ye mean?" inquired the other. "No, no," said the jurist "Pretend he's ill and can't see anybody. By gum, I've got it." He slapped the table with his open hand, and regarded the other triumphantly. "Let him turn into his bunk and pretend to be dead," he continued, in a voice trembling with pride at his strategy. "It's pretty dark down your foc'sle, I know. Don't have no light down there, and tell him to keep quiet." Captain Thomsett's eyes shone, but with a qualified admiration. "Ain't it somewhat sudden?" he demurred. Captain Stubbs regarded him with a look of supreme artfulness, and slowly closed one eye. "He got a chill going in the water," he said quietly. "Well, you're a masterpiece," said Thomsett ungrudgingly. "I will say this of you, you're a masterpiece. Mind this is all to be kept quite secret." "Make your mind easy," said the eminent jurist. "If I told all I know there's a good many men in this river as 'ud be doing time at the present moment." Captain Thomsett expressed his pleasure at this information, and, having tried in vain to obtain a few of their names, even going so far as to suggest some, looked at the clock, and, shaking hands, departed to his own ship. Captain Stubbs, left to himself, finished his pipe and retired to rest; and his mate, who had been lying in the adjoining bunk during the consultation, vainly try
PREV.   NEXT  
|<   82   83   84   85   86   87   88   89   90   91   92   93   94   95   96   97   98   99   100   101   102   103   104   105   106  
107   108   109   110   111   112   113   114   115   116   117   118   >>  



Top keywords:
Captain
 

Thomsett

 

Stubbs

 
regarded
 

masterpiece

 

jurist

 

George

 

resumed

 

nature

 

admiration


qualified

 
retired
 

artfulness

 
slowly
 
finished
 

closed

 

supreme

 

sudden

 

demurred

 

trembling


strategy

 

vainly

 

pretend

 

continued

 

pretty

 
adjoining
 

moment

 

expressed

 

looked

 

present


pleasure

 

information

 
obtain
 

consultation

 

departed

 

ungrudgingly

 

quietly

 

suggest

 

eminent

 

shaking


secret
 
working
 

danger

 

emotion

 

misled

 
thinking
 

friend

 
gripped
 
listened
 

exposition