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I am the monarch of the sea, The ruler of the Queen's Navee, Whose praise Great Britain loudly chants; Cousin Hebe. And we are his Sisters and his Cousins and his Aunts; His Sisters and his Cousins and his Aunts! When at anchor here I ride, My bosom swells with pride, And I snap my fingers at the foeman's taunts— |
The chorus assures everybody that
So do his sisters and his cousins and his aunts.
In short, while we learn from Sir Joseph that he is a tremendous fellow, we also learn, from his sisters and his cousins and his aunts, that they are whatever he is. Among other things he tells precisely how he came to be so great, and gives what is presumably a recipe for similar greatness:
This was only a part of the recipe, but the rest of it was just as profound. After he is through exploiting himself, he bullies the Captain a little, and then his eye alights on Ralph Rackstraw.
"You are a remarkably fine fellow, my lad," he says to Ralph quite patronizingly.
"I am the very finest fellow in the navy," Ralph returns, honouring the spirit of the day by showing how entirely satisfied with himself he is.
"How does your Captain behave himself?" Sir Joseph asks.