ntmen so clean?"
John Paul smiled.
"Not all, Miss Manners," he said.
"And you are still sailing at the ebb?" I asked.
"In an hour, Richard, if the wind holds good."
With what pride he showed us over his ship, the sailors gaping at the
fine young lady. It had taken him just a day to institute his navy
discipline. And Dolly went about exclaiming, and asking an hundred
questions, and merrily catechising me upon the run of the ropes. All was
order and readiness for dropping down the stream when he led us into
his cabin, where he had a bottle of wine and some refreshments laid out
against my coming.
"Had I presumed to anticipate your visit, Miss Manners, I should have
had something more suitable for a lady," he said. "What, you will not
eat, either, Richard?"
I could not, so downcast had I become at the thought of parting. I
had sat up half the night before with him in restless argument and
indecision, and even when he had left for Rotherhithe, early that
morning, my mind had not been made. My conscience had insisted that I
should sail with John Paul; that I might never see my deaf grandfather
on earth again. I had gone to Arlington Street that morning resolved to
say farewell to Dorothy. I will not recount the history of that defeat,
my dears. Nay, to this day I know not how she accomplished the matter.
Not once had she asked me to remain, or referred to my going. Nor had
I spoken of it, weakling that I was. She had come down in the pink
lutestring, smiling but pale; and traces of tears in her eyes, I
thought. From that moment I knew that I was defeated. It was she herself
who had proposed going with me to see the Betsy sail.
"I will drink some Madeira to wish you Godspeed, captain," I said.
"What is the matter with you, Richard?" Dolly cried; "you are as sour
as my Lord Sandwich after a bad Newmarket. Why, captain," said she, "I
really believe he wants to go, too. The swain pines for his provincial
beauty."
Poor John Paul! He had not yet learned that good society is seldom
literal.
"Upon my soul, Miss Manners, there you do him wrong," he retorted, with
ludicrous heat; "you, above all, should know for whom he pines."
"He has misled you by praising me. This Richard, despite his frank
exterior, is most secretive."
"There you have hit him, Miss Manners," he declared; "there you have hit
him! We were together night and day, on the sea and on the road, and,
while I poured out my life to him, the rog
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