[By Right of Conquest by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link bookBy Right of Conquest CHAPTER 2: Bound To Unknown Parts 13/24
Of the forty men who had sailed with him he had lost nine, and five others had not sufficiently recovered from their wounds to sail with him again.
Of the remainder he engaged twenty, all of whom were stout and willing fellows who would, he knew, sail with him wherever he bid them.
The remaining six, being given to grumbling, he would have none of, good sailors though they were. "Half-a-dozen grumblers are enough to spoil a whole crew," he said. There were, therefore, some sixty new hands to engage.
Towards these he found eighteen who had sailed with him on previous voyages, and were glad enough to rejoin him; for he had the name of being a good captain, considerate to his men; one who would be obeyed, but who did not harass his crew, and did all he could, in reason, to make them comfortable. The others were picked up carefully, one by one.
For this purpose he took some of his best men aside, and confided to them, privately, that the present voyage was to be out of the ordinary, and that he needed not only stout fellows but willing and cheerful ones: men who would take hardships without grumbling, and who, with a prospect of good reward in addition to their pay, would go without question where they were told, and do as they were ordered--were it to singe the beard of the Grand Turk, himself, in his own palace.
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