The World of Ice by R. M. (Robert Michael) Ballantyne
page 141 of 284 (49%)
page 141 of 284 (49%)
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Poker sprang forward, wagging the stump of his tail, and turned his
head to one side, as if to say, "Well, what's up? Any fun going?" "Here, take that, old boy; Dumps is sulky." Poker took it at once, and a single snap caused it to vanish. He, too, had finished supper, and evidently ate the morsel to please the Irishman. "Hand me the coffee, Meetuck," said Fred.--"The biscuit lies beside you, West; don't give in so soon, man." "Thank you, sir; I have about done." "Meetuck, ye haythen, try a bit o' the roast; do now, av it was only to plaze me." Meetuck shook his head quietly, and, cutting a _fifteenth_ lump off the mass of raw walrus that lay beside him, proceeded leisurely to devour it. "The dogs is nothin' to him," muttered O'Riley. "Isn't it a curious thing, now, to think that we're all _at sea_ a-eatin', and drinkin', and slaapin'--or goin' to slaap--jist as if we wor on the land, and the great ocean away down below us there, wid whales, and seals, and walruses, and mermaids, for what I know, a-swimmin' about jist under whare we sit, and maybe lookin' through the ice at us this very minute. Isn't it quare?" "It is odd," said Fred, laughing, "and not a very pleasant idea. |
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