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Updated: May 10, 2025
Sure I heered the long sailor say, that come from the Aystern Injees, that the ingineers there can a'most live under wather; and goes down looking for diamonds, and has a sledge-hammer in their hand, brakin' the diamonds when they're too big to take them up whole, all as one as men brakin' stones an the road."
What do I know about your twin ingineers? Wan of thim makes trouble enough for me! Now take yourself away, and don't step on the tail of this ship or we'll go down to glory together! unless we go to another terminal and find oursilves in hell, and us all covered wid snow. Think how divilish conspicuous you'd be feelin' "
Orton, but we had intirely too many cases of the bends even when we were wurkin' at low pressure, in the rock, before we sthruck this sand. There's somethin' wrong, sir, or ye wouldn't be here yerself like this. The bends don't sthrike the ingineers, them as don't do the hard work, sir, and is careful, as ye know not often." "It's this way, Craig," resumed Orton.
Old man, an' niggers," cried Jarwin, warming up, "to my mind, the highest thing that a man can dewot his-self to is, the follerin' out an' fallin' in with the truth. Just s'pose that chemists, an' ingineers, an' doctors was to foller lies! W'y, wot would come of it? Confoosion wus confounded.
"L'em me see: the cap'n and de mate is two, two ingineers, two firemen; dat makes six; and den she hab two deck-hands." "But that makes only eight in all," replied Christy. "Are you sure that is all?" "Dead shoar dat's all, Massa Ossifer."
Them fellers ain't showin' their hands any, but for all we know their ingineers may come in any day, and start in to doin' things." "They've got to make arrangements first," replied Dan Anderson. "That's all right; and so ought we to make arrangements. We seen this place first. Now, Dan " and he extended a gnarled and hairy hand "you've always done like you said you would.
"We hain't got nothin' yet, an' that young feller said he was goin' to pay us." "We orter got pay afore we done anythin', that's the trouble," growled Jenkins. "He was a sneak. Arter promisin' to pay us for makin' trouble, he run away an' left us." "Mebby if we tell the ingineers who he is they'll pay us," suggested one of the men. "We gotter get something out o' this."
"A feller down there to Sky Top," he went on, arousing only the most indolent interest, "one of them spy-glass ingineers tenderfoot, with his six-shooter belt buckled so tight he couldn't get his feet to the ground he says to me I might as well trade my old grays for a nice new checkerboard, or a deck of author cards, for I won't have nothing to do but just amuse myself when the railroad cars gets here."
Orton, but we had entirely too many cases of the bends even when we were wurkin' at low pressure, in the rock, before we sthruck this sand. There's somethin' wrong, sir, or ye wouldn't be here yerself like this. The bends don't sthrike the ingineers, them as don't do the hard work, sir, and is careful, as ye know not often." "It's this way, Craig," resumed Orton.
"Did you want to see me?" he asked, seeing Jenkins and Calthorpe. "Yes, I guess so," stammered Jenkins. "You're at the head of the ingineers, ain't ye?" "I am with them," Percival replied. "You are one of the men who tried to stop us, aren't you? You are Jenkins, I believe?" "Yes, that's me. What I wanted to say is this.
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