[Captains Courageous by Rudyard Kipling]@TWC D-Link bookCaptains Courageous CHAPTER IX 48/52
Suppose you take him in hand this winter, and I'll send for him early in the spring.
I know the Pacific's a long ways off--" "Pshaw! We Troops, livin' an' dead, are all around the earth an' the seas thereof." "But I want you to understand--and I mean this--any time you think you'd like to see him, tell me, and I'll attend to the transportation. 'Twon't cost you a cent." "If you'll walk a piece with me, we'll go to my house an' talk this to my woman.
I've bin so crazy mistook in all my jedgments, it don't seem to me this was like to be real." They went blue-trimmed of nasturtiums over to Troop's eighteen-hundred-dollar, white house, with a retired dory full in the front yard and a shuttered parlour which was a museum of oversea plunder.
There sat a large woman, silent and grave, with the dim eyes of those who look long to sea for the return of their beloved.
Cheyne addressed himself to her, and she gave consent wearily. "We lose one hundred a year from Gloucester only, Mr.Cheyne," she said--"one hundred boys an' men; and I've come so's to hate the sea as if 'twuz alive an' listenin'.
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