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Poor Jack by Frederick Marryat
page 120 of 502 (23%)
had so jammed the doors of the cabin that they could not be opened."

"What became of the lieutenant of the watch and the carpenter?"

"The lieutenant of the watch was drowned--and so indeed was the
carpenter. His body was taken up, I believe, by the same boat which
picked up Lieutenant Durham[3]. When I went on board of the 'Victory,' I
saw the carpenter's body before the galley fire--some women were
attempting to recover him, but he was quite dead. There was a strong
westerly breeze, although the day was fine; and the wind made the water
so rough that there was great danger of the boats getting entangled in
the rigging and spars, when they came to take the men off, or more would
have been saved."

[Footnote 3: Afterward Admiral Sir Philip Durham.]

"How many do you think were lost altogether?" inquired Anderson.

"We had our whole complement on board, eight hundred and sixty-five men;
and there were more than three hundred women on board, besides a great
many Jews with slops and watches; as there always are, you know, when a
ship is paid and the men have any money to be swindled out of. I don't
exactly know how many men were saved, but there was only one woman,
which was the one I dragged out of the port. There was a great fat old
bumboat woman, whom the sailors used to call the 'Royal George'--she was
picked up floating, for she was too fat to sink; but she had been
floating the wrong way uppermost, and she was dead. There was a poor
little child saved rather strangely. He was picked up by a gentleman who
was in a wherry, holding on to the wool of a sheep which had escaped and
was swimming. His father and mother were drowned, and the boy did not
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