"Good afternoon, Captain. Are you at liberty for a few minutes?" asked Neil.
"Yes. What then, Mr. Semple? I heard tell, from my friends, that you are in trouble."
"We have been fined because Mr. Bradley's son used our landing. It is a great injustice, for in this matter we were as innocent as yourself."
"That is not the truth, sir. If, like me, you had boarded in your house a few soldiers, then the care and the watch would have been their business, not yours. Those who don't act prudently must feel the chastisement of the government; but so! I will have nothing to do with the matter. It is a steady principle of mine never to interfere in other people's affairs."
"There is no necessity for interference. The case is settled. My father is fined two hundred pounds, a most outrageous wrong."
"Whoever is good and respectable is not fined by the government."
"In our case there was neither law nor justice. It was simple robbery."
"I know not what you mean. The government is the King, and I do not talk against either King or government. The Van Emerlies, who are always sneering at the King, have had to take twenty-seven per cent. out of the estate of a bankrupt cousin; and the Remsens, who are discontented and always full of complaints, have spoiled their business. God directs things so that contentment leads to wealth."
"I was speaking of neither the King nor his government, but of the Military Police Court."
"Oh! Well, then, I think all the stories I hear about its greediness and tyranny are downright lies."