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London River by H. M. (Henry Major) Tomlinson
page 58 of 140 (41%)
Purdy raised his eyes in a grave and momentary survey, made to shake
hands with Hanson, but hesitated, and did so only because Hanson put out
his own great fist with decision. Purdy did not speak, except to say to
Hanson: "We're signing-on tomorrow. I'll meet you at the shipping office
then." He seemed to forget the pair of them, paused, and went to a far
vacant corner of the bar. The barmaid, as he got there, returned, and
stopped to say something to him.

"Well, I'm damned," muttered Macandrew. "Look here, Jessie," he cried,
"here's all us young men been waiting for nearly twenty minutes, and you
take no notice of us, but as soon as a captain looks across the counter,
there you are. But how did you know he was a captain? That's what I'd
like to know. He's only wearing a bowler hat."


2

The _Medea_ had been ordered unexpectedly to Barry for loading, to take
the place of an unready sister-ship; and Macandrew, of whom I have had
much experience, would be active, critical of what a dog must put up with
in life, and altogether unfit for intimate, amiable, and reminiscent
conversation. Yet I wanted to see him again before he left, and went
past the Board of Trade Office hoping for signs of the _Medea_, for I had
heard she was assembling a crew that morning. But the marine-store
shops, with their tarpaulin suits hanging outside open-armed and
oscillating, looked across to the men lounging against the
shipping-office railings, and the idlers stared across at the tarpaulins.
It did not appear to be a place where anything was destined to happen.
It merely looked like rain.

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