On The Blockade by Oliver Optic
page 36 of 261 (13%)
page 36 of 261 (13%)
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professional qualifications rather than their motives for entering the
service. If a man desired to enter the army or the navy, the simple wish was regarded as a sufficient guaranty of his patriotism, especially in connection with his oath of allegiance. With the deaf mute's leaf in his hand Christy was thinking over this matter of the motives of officers. He was not satisfied in regard to either Lillyworth or Mulgrum, and besides the regular quota of officers and seamen permanently attached to the Bronx, there were eighteen seamen and petty officers berthed forward, who were really passengers, though they were doing duty. "Where did you say this man Mulgrum was born, Mr. Flint?" asked the captain, after he had mused for quite a time. "In Cherryfield, Maine," replied the first lieutenant; and he could not help feeling that the commander had not been silent so long for nothing. "You are a Maine man, Flint: were you ever in this town?" "I have been; I taught school there for six months; and it was the last place I filled before I went to sea." "I am glad to hear it, for it will save me from looking any further for the man I want just now. If this deaf mute was born and brought up in Cherryfield, he must know something about the place," added Christy as he touched a bell on his table, to which Dave instantly responded. "Do you know Mulgrum, Dave?" asked the captain. "No, sir; never heard of him before," replied the steward. |
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