“‘O’ course she will,’ ses the skipper, and he called me up and told me to clear a spare cabin out for her—we carried a passenger or two sometimes—and to fetch her chest up.
I s’pose you’ve got some clothes in it?’ he ses, anxious-like.
“‘Only these sort o’ things,’ ses Miss Mallow, bashfully.
“‘And send Dowsett to me,’ ses the skipper, turning to me agin.
“We ’ad to shove pore Bill up on deck a’most, and the way the skipper went on at ’im, you’d thought ’e was the greatest rascal unhung. He begged the young lady’s pardon over and over agin, and when ’e come back to us ’e was that upset that ’e didn’t know what ’e was saying, and begged an ordinary seaman’s pardon for treading on ’is toe.
“Then the skipper took Miss Mallow below to her new quarters, and to ’is great surprise caught the third officer, who was fond of female society, doing a step-dance in the saloon all on ’is own.
“That evening the skipper and the mate formed themselves into a committee to decide what was to be done. Everything the mate suggested the skipper wouldn’t have, and when the skipper thought of anythink, the mate said it was impossible. After the committee ’ad been sitting for three hours it began to abuse each other; leastaways, the skipper abused the mate, and the mate kep’ on saying if it wasn’t for discipline he knew somebody as would tell the skipper a thing or two it would do ’im good to hear.
“‘She must have a dress, I tell you, or a frock at any rate,’ ses the skipper, very mad.
“‘What’s the difference between a dress and a frock?’ ses the mate.
“‘There is a difference,’ ses the skipper.