[Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2) by Herman Melville]@TWC D-Link book
Mardi: and A Voyage Thither, Vol. I (of 2)

CHAPTER XX
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Noises And Portents I longed for day.

For however now inclined to believe that the brigantine was untenanted, I desired the light of the sun to place that fact beyond a misgiving.
Now, having observed, previous to boarding the vessel, that she lay rather low in the water, I thought proper to sound the well.

But there being no line-and-sinker at hand, I sent Jarl to hunt them up in the arm-chest on the quarter-deck, where doubtless they must be kept.

Meanwhile I searched for the "breaks," or pump-handles, which, as it turned out, could not have been very recently used; for they were found lashed up and down to the main-mast.
Suddenly Jarl came running toward me, whispering that all doubt was dispelled;--there were spirits on board, to a dead certainty.

He had overheard a supernatural sneeze.


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