e with her. How I
escaped I don't know. I seemed to be choking and fighting for my breath
for years, and then I found myself floating on the sea and clinging to a
grating. I clung to it all night, and next day I was picked up by a
native who was paddling about in a canoe, and taken ashore to an island,
where I lived for over two years. It was right out o' the way o' craft,
but at last I was picked up by a trading schooner named the _Pearl,_
belonging to Sydney, and taken there. At Sydney I shipped aboard the
_Marston Towers,_ a steamer, and landed at the Albert Docks this
morning."
"Poor John," said his wife, holding on to his arm. "How you must have
suffered!"
"I did," said Mr. Boxer. "Mother got a cold?" he inquired, eying that
lady.
"No, I ain't," said Mrs. Gimpson, answering for herself. "Why didn't you
write when you got to Sydney?"
"Didn't know where to write to," replied Mr. Boxer, staring. "I didn't
know where Mary had gone to."
"You might ha' wrote here," said Mrs. Gimpson.
"Didn't think of it at the time," said Mr. Boxer. "One thing is, I was
very busy at Sydney, looking for a ship. However, I'm 'ere now."
"I always felt you'd turn up some day," said Mrs. Gimpson. "I felt
certain of it in my own mind. Mary made sure you was dead, but I said
'no, I knew better.'"
There was something in Mrs. Gimpson's manner of saying this that
impressed her listeners unfavourably. The impression was deepened when,
after a short, dry laugh _a propos_ of nothing, she sniffed again--three
times.
"Well, you turned out to be right," said Mr. Boxer, shortly.
"I gin'rally am," was the reply; "there's very few people can take me
in."
She sniffed again.
"Were the natives kind to you?" inquired Mrs. Boxer, hastily, as she
turned to her husband.
"Very kind," said the latter. "Ah! you ought to have seen that island.
Beautiful yellow sands and palm-trees; cocoa-nuts to be 'ad for the
picking, and nothing to do all day but lay about in the sun and swim in
the sea."
"Any public-'ouses there?" inquired Mrs. Gimpson.
"Cert'nly not," said her son-in-law. "This was an island--one o' the
little islands in the South Pacific Ocean."
"What did you say the name o' the schooner was?" inquired Mrs. Gimpson.
"_Pearl,_" replied Mr. Boxer, with the air of a resentful witness under
cross-examination.
"And what was the name o' the captin?" said Mrs. Gimpson.
"Thomas--Henery--Walter--Smith," sai
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