Читать книгу Mutiny on the Bounty. Historical Novel онлайн
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The deck was washed, and Mills was picking up the several slices into which he had cut his share of the fish, when Mr. Samuel, the captain’s clerk, came strolling forward.
“A fine catch, my good man,” he remarked in his patronizing way. “I must have a slice, eh?”
In common with all of the Bounty’s people, Mills disliked Samuel heartily. The clerk drank neither rum nor wine, and it was suspected that he hoarded his ration of spirits for sale ashore.
“So you must have a slice,” growled the gunner’s mate. “Well, I must have a glass of grog, and a stiff one, too, if you are to eat shark to-day.”
“Come! Come! My good man,” said Samuel pettishly. “You’ve enough fish there for a dozen.”
“And you’ve enough grog stowed away for a thousand, by God!”
“It’s for the captain’s table I want it,” said Samuel.
“Then catch him a shark yourself. This is mine. He gets the best of the bread and the pick of the junk cask as it is.”
“You forget yourself, Mills! Come, give me a slice—that large one there—and I’ll say nothing.”