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ng to do for two days. What shall us do--go and have a bit of fun, or get on board at the docks?" "Get on board the _Albatross_," I said. "There don't seem to me as if there is any more fun in the world." "Well now, that is a strange thing," said Esau; "that's just how I feel. Look here." "What at?" "I feel just in the humour for it--as cross and nasty as can be. Let's go and say good-bye to old Demp." But we did not; we went sadly to the docks, where our boxes already were, and that night took possession of our berths. CHAPTER ELEVEN. SEVENTEEN WEEKS AT SEA. "Much better have let me had it my way, sir," said Esau, who, ever since he had seen the John Dempsters and their treatment of me, had grown to behave as if I was his superior. He spoke those words one day when we had been at sea about a week, the weather having been terribly rough, and the passengers suffering severely. "Oh, I don't know, Esau," I said, rather dolefully. "I do, sir. If you'd done as I wanted you we should ha' been walking about Woolwich now in uniform, with swords under our arms; and I don't know how you get on, but I can't walk at all." "You should catch hold of something." "Catch hold o' something? What's the good when the ship chucks you about just as if you were a ball. See that chap over there?" "What, that one-eyed man?" "Yes; he was going to hit me just now." "What for?" "'Cause I run my head into his chest. I couldn't help it. I'd got my legs precious wide apart, and was going steadily, when the ship gave a regular jump and then seemed to wag her tail, and sent me flying, and when I pollergized to him he said I was always doing it, and ought to sit down." "Well, it is safest, Esau," I said; "I've got several nasty bruises." "Bruises! Why, I'm bruised all over, and haven't got a place left clear for another, so I've begun again making fresh bruises top of the old 'uns." I laughed. "Ah, I don't see nothing to grin at. If you was as sore as I am you wouldn't laugh. Wouldn't have ketched me coming to sea if I'd known how bad it was. Why, it's like being knocked about by old Demp, only worse, for you've got no one to hit back at." "It's only a storm, Esau, and you'll like it when the weather's fine again." "Not me. Like it! Look here; I've read books about your yo-ho sailors and jolly tars, and your bright blue seas, but them as wrote 'em ought to be flogged. Why, it's h
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