[Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2) by Herman Melville]@TWC D-Link book
Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2)

CHAPTER XXVIII
8/8

Rude language for feminine ears; but how to be avoided?
Here was an infatuated woman, who, according to Samoa's account, had been repeatedly detected in the act of essaying to draw out the screw-bolts which held together the planks.

Tell me; was she not worse than the Load-Stone Rock, sailing by which a stout ship fell to pieces?
During this scene, Samoa said little.

Perhaps he was secretly pleased that his matrimonial authority was reinforced by myself and my Viking, whose views of the proper position of wives at sea, so fully corresponded with his own; however difficult to practice, those purely theoretical ideas of his had hitherto proved.
Once more turning to Annatoo, now looking any thing but amiable, I observed, that all her clamors would be useless; and that if it came to the worst, the Parki had a hull that would hold her.
In the end she went off in a fit of the sulks; sitting down on the windlass and glaring; her arms akimbo, and swaying from side to side; while ever and anon she gave utterance to a dismal chant.

It sounded like an invocation to the Cholos to rise and dispatch us..


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