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"Hard? Did the skipper hit him hard, sir? What says you, Barney, and you, Neb Dumlow?"
This was to the two sailors who were generally pretty close to his heels, all three men being thorough messmates, and having, as I afterwards learned, sailed together for years.
"Did he hit him hard?" said Barney, slowly, and giving his mouth a rub with the back of his hand.
"That's what I said, messmate; don't get chewin' o' my words over five hundred times to show off afore our young orficer. Did he hit him hard?"
"Orfle!" said Barney.
"Then why didn't you say so afore, 'stead o' getting into bad habits, a-saying things for the sake o' talking. Now, Neb Dumlow, just look the young gent straight in the face and say what you thinks."
"Couldn't ha' hit him no harder," growled the great fellow in his deep ba.s.s voice.
"Not with one hand," acquiesced Hampton; "but you needn't ha' screwed both your eyes out o' sight to say it, matey. Bad habit o' hisn, sir,"
he continued, turning to me, "but I'm a-trying to break him on it.
Neb's a good sort o' chap if you could straighten his eyes; arn't you Neb?"
"Dunno," growled the man.
"Then it's a good job for you as I do, mate. Ay, the skipper did give Master Jarette a floorer, and I'm sorry for it."
"Why," I said, "if he deserved it?"
"Well, you see, sir, it's like this; if me or Neb or Barney there had scared one of the officers, and the skipper had knocked us down, why, we shouldn't ha' liked it--eh, mates?"
"No," came in a growl.
"Course not; but then we're Englishmen, and knowing as we was in the wrong, why, next day we should have forgot all about it."
"Ay, ay," growled Dumlow, and Barney nodded his acquiescence.
"But strikes me, sir--you needn't tell the skipper I says so, because p'r'aps I'm wrong--strikes me as that chap won't forget it, and I should be sorry for there to be any more rows with ladies on board, 'cause they don't like it. But I say, sir!"
"Yes, Hampton," I replied.
"I thought as Mr Walters as had been to sea afore was going to put you through it all. When's he going to show on deck?"
"Oh, he'll come up as soon as he's well enough," I said.
"If I was skipper, he'd be well enough now," said the sailor, roughly.
"More you gives way to being sea-sick, more you may. I don't say as it's nice, far from it; but if a man shows fight, he soon gets too many for it. Here's him been a voyage, and you arn't. He lies below, below, below in his bunk, and you goes about just as if you was at home."
"Because I haven't been ill," I said, laughing.
"No, sir, you arn't; but if I was you, I'd soon go down and cure him."
"How?" I said, expecting to hear of some good old remedy.
"Physic, sir."
"Yes, what physic?" I said.
"Bucket o' water, sir,--take a hair o' the dog as bit you, as the Scotch chaps say,--fresh dipped."
"Rubbish, Bob Hampton; how could he drink a bucket of salt water?"
"Who said anything about drinking it, sir? I meant as lotion, 'Outward application only,' as Mr Frewen puts on his bottles o' stuff sometimes."
"What! bathe him with salt water?"
"Yes, sir, on'y we calls it dowsin'. Sharp and sudden like. Furst dollop fails, give him another, and keep it up till he walks on deck to get dry; then call me to swab up the cabin, and he's all right."
"I'll tell Mr Walters what you say, Hampton."
"No, sir, I wouldn't do that; 'cause if you do, he'll have his knife into me. I on'y meant it as good advice. He on'y wants rousin' up.
Why, if you was to set some of us to rattle a chain over his head, and then make a rash, and you went down and telled him the s.h.i.+p was sinking, he'd be quite well, thank ye, and come on deck and look out for a place in the first boat."
"You're too hard upon him," I said, and not liking to hear the man talk in this way, which sounded like an attempt to, what my father used to call, curry favour, I went aft to find that the invalid pa.s.senger, Mr John Denning, had been helped out on to the p.o.o.p-deck by his sister and the steward, and was now having a cane-chair lashed for him close up by the mizzen-mast.
He beckoned as he caught sight of me, just as he was being lowered into his place, and I went up slowly, for the captain and Mr Frewen were by his side, and as I approached I heard him say rather irritably--
"Thank you, doctor. If I feel unwell I will ask you to help me. I'm quite right, only half-suffocated by being down so long."
"Very good, Mr Denning. I only thought you might wish to avail yourself of my services."
"Thank you; yes--of course."
I saw Miss Denning look pained, and press her brother's arm.
He turned upon her impatiently.
"Yes, yes, Lena, I know," he said; "and I have thanked Mr Frewen for his attention. Now I want to be alone."
Mr Frewen raised his cap, and walked forward, descending to the main-deck, and the invalid said something angrily to his sister which made her eyes fill with tears.
I was pa.s.sing on, but Mr Denning made a sharp gesture.
"No, no, I want you," he cried sharply.
"Then I'll say good-morning," said the captain, smiling at Miss Denning.
"I only wanted to say I was glad to see you on deck, sir."
"Thank you, captain; but don't go. I can't help being a bit irritable; I've had so much to do with doctors that I hate them."
"John, dear!"
"Well, so I do, Lena. I was dying for want of some fresh air, and as soon as I get on deck, captain, down swoops the doctor as if he were a vulture and I was so much carrion."
"Oh, come, come, my lad, you won't talk like that when you've been on deck a bit. Nothing like fresh air, sir. Keep yourself warm, though, and we mustn't have you wet."