Then a difficulty arose. What was to be done with the prisoner? He
was like a raving maniac. If they allowed him his liberty, he was
sure to kill one or more of them. If they bound him he would get
loose in some way--probably through the mate--and after what had
occurred, it would be safer to turn loose a Bengal tiger on deck then
the infuriated captain. There was but one way out of the trouble,
and they all knew it. They looked at one another; nothing was
wanting but the word, and it soon came. Secker had sailed from the
Cove of Cork, and being an Irishman, he was by nature eloquent, first
in speech, and first in action. He reflected afterwards, when he had
leisure to do so.
"Short work is the best," he said, "over he goes; lift the devil."
Each man seized an arm or leg, and Blogg was carried round
the mast to the lee side. The men worked together from training and
habit. They swung the body athwart the deck like a pendulum, and with
a "one! two! three!" it cleared the bulwark, and the devil went
head foremost into the deep sea. The cook, looking on from behind
the mast, gave a deep sigh of relief.
Thus it was that a great breach of the peace was committed on the
Pacific Ocean; and it was done, too, on a beautiful summer's evening,
when the sun was low, a gentle breeze barely filled the sails, and
everybody should have been happy and comfortable.
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