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rom aloft, I hardly know how, reached his side, the doctor, who was bending over him and applying stimulants, said he had only a few moments longer to live. The chaplain, too, was there, having been hastily summoned from his duties of instructing the young middies in the wardroom; as also was the commodore, with a graver face on him than I had ever seen before. I don't know whether he heard my step, or the cry I ejaculated when the doctor spoke of his approaching end. Whatever it was, something made my dying shipmate open his eyes just then, his glance wandering round the circle of those near. "What is it, my poor lad?" asked the chaplain kindly, stooping down, so as to hear better any request he might make. "Is there anything you would like done or said for you?" He was thinking, good man, no doubt, of offering up a prayer. But the mind of Moses Reeks--to call him by his right name, and drop the somewhat opprobrious sobriquet by which I have hitherto styled the poor fellow, and by which, indeed, he was always known on board--was still bent on things terrestrial; though, possibly, his motive might have been as high and had as divine a source as anything the chaplain might have intended to say! His eyes lighted on me and their wandering ceased. "Coom here, lad," he whispered very faintly, so very faintly that his lips seemed to give out no sound at all. "Coom here!" I heard, though, and went to his side, listening earnestly, for I could not speak. He did not notice this, however, making up, with his slowly ebbing senses, what he wished himself to say. "To-am Bowlin'," he faltered out in lisping accents with his failing breath, "ye've done Oi a toorn wanst, lad, an' I wer an oongrateful cur to 'ee, thet Oi wer, ez Oi didn't warnt fur to be a-beholden to yer; but you a' me, To-am, be naow quits, lad!" As he thus spoke, a smile irradiated his rough-hewn features, making them look positively beautiful; and, with the last word he uttered, his spirit fled, with a sigh that was stifled in its birth. The commodore uncovered his head in the presence of Death--the superior officer of even one flying the broad pennant and the personal representative of her Majesty wherever the broad red cross of Saint George, borne on that oblong flag, may float. At that moment the ship's bugler forwards sounded the `assembly.' "Peace to his spirit, poor boy," said our chief solemnly. "He's gone to his last muste
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