Ship's Company, the Entire Collection eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 197 pages of information about Ship's Company, the Entire Collection.

Ship's Company, the Entire Collection eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 197 pages of information about Ship's Company, the Entire Collection.

“I might ha’ known it, too,” he said, after a long silence.  “If I’d only stopped to think, instead o’ being in such a hurry to do good to others, I should ha’ been all right, and the pack o’ monkey-faced swabs on the Lizzie and Annie wot calls themselves sailor-men would ’ave had to ’ave got something else to laugh about.  They’ve told it in every pub for ’arf a mile round, and last night, when I went into the Town of Margate to get a drink, three chaps climbed over the partition to ’ave a look at me.

“It all began with young Ted Sawyer, the mate o’ the Lizzie and Annie.  He calls himself a mate, but if it wasn’t for ’aving the skipper for a brother-in-law ’e’d be called something else, very quick.  Two or three times we’ve ’ad words over one thing and another, and the last time I called ‘im something that I can see now was a mistake.  It was one o’ these ’ere clever things that a man don’t forget, let alone a lop-sided monkey like ’im.

“That was when they was up time afore last, and when they made fast ’ere last week I could see as he ’adn’t forgotten it.  For one thing he pretended not to see me, and, arter I ’ad told him wot I’d do to him if ’e ran into me agin, he said ‘e thought I was a sack o’ potatoes taking a airing on a pair of legs wot somebody ’ad throwed away.  Nasty tongue ’e’s got; not clever, but nasty.

“Arter that I took no notice of ‘im, and, o’ course, that annoyed ’im more than anything.  All I could do I done, and ’e was ringing the gate-bell that night from five minutes to twelve till ha’-past afore I heard it.  Many a night-watchman gets a name for going to sleep when ’e’s only getting a bit of ’is own back.

“We stood there talking for over ’arf-an-hour arter I ’ad let’im in.  Leastways, he did.  And whenever I see as he was getting tired I just said, ‘H’sh!’ and ’e’d start agin as fresh as ever.  He tumbled to it at last, and went aboard shaking ’is little fist at me and telling me wot he’d do to me if it wasn’t for the lor.

“I kept by the gate as soon as I came on dooty next evening, just to give ’im a little smile as ’e went out.  There is nothing more aggravating than a smile when it is properly done; but there was no signs o’ my lord, and, arter practising it on a carman by mistake, I ’ad to go inside for a bit and wait till he ’ad gorn.

“The coast was clear by the time I went back, and I ’ad just stepped outside with my back up agin the gate-post to ’ave a pipe, when I see a boy coming along with a bag.  Good-looking lad of about fifteen ’e was, nicely dressed in a serge suit, and he no sooner gets up to me than ’e puts down the bag and looks up at me with a timid sort o’ little smile.

“‘Good evening, cap’n,’ he ses.

“He wasn’t the fust that has made that mistake; older people than ’im have done it.

“‘Good evening, my lad,’ I ses.

“‘I s’pose,’ he ses, in a trembling voice, ’I suppose you ain’t looking out for a cabin-boy, sir?’

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Ship's Company, the Entire Collection from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.