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The Book of the Bush - Containing Many Truthful Sketches Of The Early Colonial - Life Of Squatters, Whalers, Convicts, Diggers, And Others - Who Left Their Native Land And Never Returned by George Dunderdale
page 60 of 391 (15%)

The stranger sat still, said he was not a fighting man, and did not
want to quarrel with anybody.

Jack grew more ferocious than ever, and aimed a blow at the peaceful
man to persuade him to come on. He came on suddenly. The two men
were soon writhing together on the guard deck, and I was pleased to
observe the desperado was undermost. The Englishman was full of
fear, and was fighting for his life. He was doing it with great
earnestness. He was grasping the throat of his enemy tightly with
both hands, and pressing his thumbs on the wind-pipe. We could see
he was going to win in his own simple way, without any recourse to
science, and he would have done so very soon had he not been
interrupted. But as Jack was growing black in the face, the other
Englishmen began to pull at their mate, and tried to unlock his grip
on Jack's throat. It was not easy to do so. He held on to his man
to the very last, crying out: "Leave me alone till I do for him.
Man alive, don't you know the villain wants to murder me?"

The desperado lay for a while gulping and gasping on his bed of
glory, unable to rise. I observed patches of bloody skin hanging
loose on both sides of his neck when he staggered along the deck
towards the starboard sponson.

There was peace for a quarter of an hour. Then Jack's voice was
heard again. He had lost prestige, and was coming to recover it with
a bowie knife. He said:

"Where's that Britisher? I am going to cut his liver out."

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