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Updated: June 3, 2025
I would tell myself and Josiah, for that matter I've known wimmen to fall right out of their chairs and break themselves all up more or less, and fall often back steps and suller stairs and such. But 'tennyrate I felt real riz up as I looked off on the heavin' billers, and Faith sez to me, "Why should I fear since I sailed with God."
The line and keg were rapidly hauled on board the smack once more, and Bill was standing aft by the taffrail watching for a favourable moment at which to make another cast, when Bob exclaimed excitedly "'Vast heavin', father; 'taint no use tryin' that dodge any more we're too far to leeward. Cast off the line and take a turn with it round my waist; I'm goin' to try to swim it.
She leaves off, squeezin' one hand in the other until the ends of the fingers went white, her chest heavin', her eyes stary. Larry watches her without a word. "Tell me," says she after a bit, "why you ran away that time and left me to to make such a mess of things. Why?" "For the same reason that I'm going away again now," says he.
I never feel the land heavin' an' pitchin' under me, an' it gives me more of a safe an' home feelin'." "Watch, everybody, for a landing place," said Henry, "and Paul, you steer." The green shore began to rise, showing a long unbroken wall of forest, but the dusk was coming too, and all of them were anxious to make land.
Now and then certain ejaculations reached me, and I could make out the words "Heave!" "Avast heavin'!" and once the "Yo-heave-ho!" chanted by a chorus of the crew. "Why, they are actually at work loading the vessel in the night-time!" This, however, did not greatly surprise me. Perhaps they wished to take advantage of a tide or a fair wind, and were hurrying to complete the stowage of the ship.
"Why, sir," turning to Barry, "the night we sailed he drugged the Custom House officer and flung him into the dinghy. Then when you was for'ard heavin' up anchor the Greek and two of the native chaps took him ashore, and chucked him down on the wharf." "The scoundrel!" exclaimed Barry, thinking of the letter he had written to Rose Maynard that night. "But how do you know this?"
Now, just let me talk to Cap'n Shad a minute." He swung about and faced the Captain and in his eye was triumph great and complete. "Cap'n Shad Gould," crowed Isaiah, "a good many times in the last four or five year you've called me a fool for heavin' out hints that somethin' about like this was liable to happen. Well? WELL? What have you got to say NOW? Who's the fool NOW? Hey? Who is?"
Yes, and let alone my own self and all that's laid onto me, I must keep an eye on Captain Shad and Zoeth and see that they do what's been laid onto THEM. I swan to man! I'm a hard-workin', painstakin' feller of my age, but I ain't as young as I used to be, and I'm human and not a walkin' steam-engyne. I'll do the best I can, but but first thing you know I'll be drove into heavin' up my job.
"Sae, as I sat an' saw the breakers roolin' in an' breakin' an' heavin' the outer ice, I saw mony flecks pass under the lee of the Governor's Island, an' then I grew mad like, an' swore an' cursed at my ill luck. "'Ay, my lad, but you're right; an' turnin', I saw an ould man wi' dark eyes an' a coat of black furs stannin' beside me.
"For the luv of heavin, Willyum, did that brute do that to you?" cried Mrs. Moriarity. William tried to explain, but she never heard him. "It's good f'r him Moriarity wasn't here or he'd a bruk his neck," she went on excitedly. "Come on in," she ordered, "all ov yez; come on, Willyum." And William went.
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