[At the Point of the Bayonet by G. A. Henty]@TWC D-Link book
At the Point of the Bayonet

CHAPTER 10: A Mission By Sea
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"I generally cruise from the mouth of the Hooghly to Chittagong; and a dreary coast it is, with its low muddy shores and scores of creeks and streams.

In the sunderbunds there is little to look after, the people are quiet and very scattered; but farther east they are piratically inclined, and prey upon the native traders, and we occasionally catch them at it, and give them a lesson.
"Well, I shall be very glad to adopt your suggestion, and to drop all ceremony.

I have not often had to carry civil officials in this craft, she is too small for any such dignified people; but when I was in the Tigris, we often carried civil and military officials from Madras, and some of them were unmitigated nuisances--not the military men, but the civilians.

The absurd airs they gave themselves, as if heaven and earth belonged to them, were sickening; and they seemed to regard us as dust under their feet.
Whenever we heard that we were to take a member of the Council from Calcutta to Madras, or the other way, it was regarded as an infliction of a serious kind." "Well, I propose to begin with that, when we are down here together, we drop titles; you call me Lindsay, and I will call you Fairclough." "With all my heart," the other said.
"What officers have you ?" "A junior lieutenant, and two midshipmen.

The lieutenant, when I am alone, always messes with me.


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