[Dick Sand by Jules Verne]@TWC D-Link bookDick Sand CHAPTER IX 6/15
"A captain of fifteen years ?" "A captain of fifteen years!" replied the novice, advancing toward the cook. The latter drew back. "Do not forget it," then said Mrs.Weldon.
"There is but one captain here--Captain Sand, and it is well for all to remember that he will know how to make himself obeyed." Negoro bowed, murmuring in an ironical tone a few words that they could not understand, and he returned to his post. We see, Dick's resolution was taken. Meanwhile the schooner, under the action of the breeze, which commenced to freshen, had already passed beyond the vast shoal of crustaceans. Dick Sand examined the condition of the sails; then his eyes were cast on the deck.
He had then this sentiment, that, if a frightful responsibility fell upon him in the future, it was for him to have the strength to accept it.
He dared to look at the survivors of the "Pilgrim," whose eyes were now fixed on him.
And, reading in their faces that he could count on them, he said to them in two words, that they could in their turn count on him. Dick Sand had, in all sincerity, examined his conscience. If he was capable of taking in or setting the sails of the schooner, according to circumstances, by employing the arms of Tom and his companions, he evidently did not yet possess all the knowledge necessary to determine his position by calculation. In four or five years more, Dick Sand would know thoroughly that beautiful and difficult sailor's craft.
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