<p><SPAN name="link2HCH0039" id="link2HCH0039"></SPAN></p>
<h2> CHAPTER X. WHAT BECAME OF THE MUTINEERS OF THE "OSPREY" </h2>
<p>At the bottom of the long luxuriant garden-ground was a rustic seat
abutting upon the low wall that topped the lane. The branches of the
English trees (planted long ago) hung above it, and between their rustling
boughs one could see the reach of the silver river. Sitting with her face
to the bay and her back to the house, Sylvia opened the manuscript she had
carried off from Meekin, and began to read. It was written in a firm,
large hand, and headed—</p>
<p>"A NARRATIVE OF THE SUFFERINGS AND ADVENTURES OF CERTAIN OF THE TEN
CONVICTS WHO SEIZED THE BRIG OSPREY, AT MACQUARIE HARBOUR, IN VAN DIEMEN'S
LAND, RELATED BY ONE OF THE SAID CONVICTS WHILE LYING UNDER SENTENCE FOR
THIS OFFENCE IN THE GAOL AT HOBART TOWN."</p>
<p>Sylvia, having read this grandiloquent sentence, paused for a moment. The
story of the mutiny, which had been the chief event of her childhood, lay
before her, and it seemed to her that, were it related truly, she would
comprehend something strange and terrible, which had been for many years a
shadow upon her memory. Longing, and yet fearing, to proceed, she held the
paper, half unfolded, in her hand, as, in her childhood, she had held ajar
the door of some dark room, into which she longed and yet feared to enter.
Her timidity lasted but an instant.</p>
<hr />
<p>"When orders arrived from head-quarters to break up the penal settlement
of Macquarie Harbour, the Commandant (Major Vickers, —th Regiment)
and most of the prisoners embarked on board a colonial vessel, and set
sail for Hobart Town, leaving behind them a brig that had been built at
Macquarie Harbour, to be brought round after them, and placing Captain
Maurice Frere in command. Left aboard her was Mr. Bates, who had acted as
pilot at the settlement, also four soldiers, and ten prisoners, as a crew
to work the vessel. The Commandant's wife and child were also aboard."</p>
<hr />
<p>"How strangely it reads," thought the girl.</p>
<hr />
<p>"On the 12th of January, 1834, we set sail, and in the afternoon anchored
safely outside the Gates; but a breeze setting in from the north-west
caused a swell on the Bar, and Mr. Bates ran back to Wellington Bay. We
remained there all next day; and in the afternoon Captain Frere took two
soldiers and a boat, and went a-fishing. There were then only Mr. Bates
and the other two soldiers aboard, and it was proposed by William Cheshire
to seize the vessel. I was at first unwilling, thinking that loss of life
might ensue; but Cheshire and the others, knowing that I was acquainted
with navigation—having in happier days lived much on the sea—threatened
me if I refused to join. A song was started in the folksle, and one of the
soldiers, coming to listen to it, was seized, and Lyon and Riley then made
prisoner of the sentry. Forced thus into a project with which I had at
first but little sympathy, I felt my heart leap at the prospect of
freedom, and would have sacrificed all to obtain it. Maddened by the
desperate hopes that inspired me, I from that moment assumed the command
of my wretched companions; and honestly think that, however culpable I may
have been in the eyes of the law, I prevented them from the display of a
violence to which their savage life had unhappily made them but too
accustomed."</p>
<hr />
<p>"Poor fellow," said Sylvia, beguiled by Master Rex's specious paragraphs,
"I think he was not to blame."</p>
<hr />
<p>"Mr. Bates was below in the cabin, and on being summoned by Cheshire to
surrender, with great courage attempted a defence. Barker fired at him
through the skylight, but fearful of the lives of the Commandant's wife
and child, I struck up his musket, and the ball passed through the
mouldings of the stern windows. At the same time, the soldiers whom we had
bound in the folksle forced up the hatch and came on deck. Cheshire shot
the first one, and struck the other with his clubbed musket. The wounded
man lost his footing, and the brig lurching with the rising tide, he fell
into the sea. This was—by the blessing of God—the only life
lost in the whole affair.</p>
<p>"Mr. Bates, seeing now that we had possession of the deck, surrendered,
upon promise that the Commandant's wife and child should be put ashore in
safety. I directed him to take such matters as he needed, and prepared to
lower the jolly-boat. As she swung off the davits, Captain Frere came
alongside in the whale-boat, and gallantly endeavoured to board us, but
the boat drifted past the vessel. I was now determined to be free—indeed,
the minds of all on board were made up to carry through the business—and
hailing the whale-boat, swore to fire into her unless she surrendered.
Captain Frere refused, and was for boarding us again, but the two soldiers
joined with us, and prevented his intention. Having now got the prisoners
into the jolly-boat, we transferred Captain Frere into her, and being
ourselves in the whale-boat, compelled Captain Frere and Mr. Bates to row
ashore. We then took the jolly-boat in tow, and returned to the brig, a
strict watch being kept for fear that they should rescue the vessel from
us.</p>
<p>"At break of day every man was upon deck, and a consultation took place
concerning the parting of the provisions. Cheshire was for leaving them to
starve, but Lesly, Shiers, and I held out for an equal division. After a
long and violent controversy, Humanity gained the day, and the provisions
were put into the whale-boat, and taken ashore. Upon the receipt of the
provisions, Mr. Bates thus expressed himself: 'Men, I did not for one
moment expect such kind treatment from you, regarding the provisions you
have now brought ashore for us, out of so little which there was on board.
When I consider your present undertaking, without a competent navigator,
and in a leaky vessel, your situation seems most perilous; therefore I
hope God will prove kind to you, and preserve you from the manifold
dangers you may have to encounter on the stormy ocean.' Mrs. Vickers also
was pleased to say that I had behaved kindly to her, that she wished me
well, and that when she returned to Hobart Town she would speak in my
favour. They then cheered us on our departure, wishing we might be
prosperous on account of our humanity in sharing the provisions with them.</p>
<p>"Having had breakfast, we commenced throwing overboard the light cargo
which was in the hold, which employed us until dinnertime. After dinner we
ran out a small kedge-anchor with about one hundred fathoms of line, and
having weighed anchor, and the tide being slack, we hauled on the
kedge-line, and succeeded in this manner by kedging along, and we came to
two islands, called the Cap and Bonnet. The whole of us then commenced
heaving the brig short, sending the whale-boat to take her in tow, after
we had tripped the anchor. By this means we got her safe across the Bar.
Scarcely was this done when a light breeze sprang up from the south-west,
and firing a musket to apprize the party we had left of our safety, we
made sail and put out to sea."</p>
<p>Having read thus far, Sylvia paused in an agony of recollection. She
remembered the firing of the musket, and that her mother had wept over
her. But beyond this all was uncertainty. Memories slipped across her mind
like shadows—she caught at them, and they were gone. Yet the reading
of this strange story made her nerves thrill. Despite the hypocritical
grandiloquence and affected piety of the narrative, it was easy to see
that, save some warping of facts to make for himself a better case, and to
extol the courage of the gaolers who had him at their mercy, the narrator
had not attempted to better his tale by the invention of perils. The
history of the desperate project that had been planned and carried out
five years before was related with grim simplicity which (because it at
once bears the stamp of truth, and forces the imagination of the reader to
supply the omitted details of horror), is more effective to inspire
sympathy than elaborate description. The very barrenness of the narration
was hideously suggestive, and the girl felt her heart beat quicker as her
poetic intellect rushed to complete the terrible picture sketched by the
convict. She saw it all—the blue sea, the burning sun, the slowly
moving ship, the wretched company on the shore; she heard—Was that a
rustling in the bushes below her? A bird! How nervous she was growing!</p>
<p>"Being thus fairly rid—as we thought—of our prison life, we
cheerfully held consultation as to our future course. It was my intention
to get among the islands in the South Seas, and scuttling the brig, to
pass ourselves off among the natives as shipwrecked seamen, trusting to
God's mercy that some homeward bound vessel might at length rescue us.
With this view, I made James Lesly first mate, he being an experienced
mariner, and prepared myself, with what few instruments we had, to take
our departure from Birches Rock. Having hauled the whale-boat alongside,
we stove her, together with the jolly-boat, and cast her adrift. This
done, I parted the landsmen with the seamen, and, steering east
south-east, at eight p.m. we set our first watch. In little more than an
hour after this came on a heavy gale from the south-west. I, and others of
the landsmen, were violently sea-sick, and Lesly had some difficulty in
handling the brig, as the boisterous weather called for two men at the
helm. In the morning, getting upon deck with difficulty, I found that the
wind had abated, but upon sounding the well discovered much water in the
hold. Lesly rigged the pumps, but the starboard one only could be made to
work. From that time there were but two businesses aboard—from the
pump to the helm. The gale lasted two days and a night, the brig running
under close-reefed topsails, we being afraid to shorten sail lest we might
be overtaken by some pursuing vessel, so strong was the terror of our
prison upon us.</p>
<p>"On the 16th, at noon, I again forced myself on deck, and taking a
meridian observation, altered the course of the brig to east and by south,
wishing to run to the southward of New Zealand, out of the usual track of
shipping; and having a notion that, should our provisions hold out, we
might make the South American coast, and fall into Christian hands. This
done, I was compelled to retire below, and for a week lay in my berth as
one at the last gasp. At times I repented my resolution, Fair urging me to
bestir myself, as the men were not satisfied with our course. On the 21st
a mutiny occurred, led by Lyons, who asserted we were heading into the
Pacific, and must infallibly perish. This disaffected man, though ignorant
of navigation, insisted upon steering to the south, believing that we had
run to the northward of the Friendly Islands, and was for running the ship
ashore and beseeching the protection of the natives. Lesly in vain
protested that a southward course would bring us into icefields. Barker,
who had served on board a whaler, strove to convince the mutineers that
the temperature of such latitudes was too warm for such an error to escape
us. After much noise, Lyons rushed to the helm, and Russen, drawing one of
the pistols taken from Mr. Bates, shot him dead, upon which the others
returned to their duty. This dreadful deed was, I fear, necessary to the
safety of the brig; and had it occurred on board a vessel manned by
free-men, would have been applauded as a stern but needful measure.</p>
<p>"Forced by these tumults upon deck, I made a short speech to the crew, and
convinced them that I was competent to perform what I had promised to do,
though at the time my heart inwardly failed me, and I longed for some sign
of land. Supported at each arm by Lesly and Barker, I took an observation,
and altered our course to north by east, the brig running eleven knots an
hour under single-reefed topsails, and the pumps hard at work. So we ran
until the 31st of January, when a white squall took us, and nearly proved
fatal to all aboard.</p>
<p>"Lesly now committed a great error, for, upon the brig righting (she was
thrown upon her beam ends, and her spanker boom carried away), he
commanded to furl the fore-top sail, strike top-gallant yards, furl the
main course, and take a reef in the maintopsail, leaving her to scud under
single-reefed maintopsail and fore-sail. This caused the vessel to leak to
that degree that I despaired of reaching land in her, and prayed to the
Almighty to send us speedy assistance. For nine days and nights the storm
continued, the men being utterly exhausted. One of the two soldiers whom
we had employed to fish the two pieces of the spanker boom, with some
quartering that we had, was washed overboard and drowned. Our provision
was now nearly done, but the gale abating on the ninth day, we hastened to
put provisions on the launch. The sea was heavy, and we were compelled to
put a purchase on the fore and main yards, with preventers to windward, to
ease the launch in going over the side. We got her fairly afloat at last,
the others battening down the hatches in the brig. Having dressed
ourselves in the clothes of Captain Frere and the pilot, we left the brig
at sundown, lying with her channel plates nearly under water.</p>
<p>"The wind freshening during the night, our launch, which might, indeed, be
termed a long-boat, having been fitted with mast, bowsprit, and main boom,
began to be very uneasy, shipping two seas one after the other. The plan
we could devise was to sit, four of us about, in the stern sheets, with
our backs to the sea, to prevent the water pooping us. This itself was
enough to exhaust the strongest men. The day, however, made us some amends
for the dreadful night. Land was not more than ten miles from us;
approaching as nearly as we could with safety, we hauled our wind, and ran
along in, trusting to find some harbour. At half-past two we sighted a bay
of very curious appearance, having two large rocks at the entrance,
resembling pyramids. Shiers, Russen, and Fair landed, in hopes of
discovering fresh water, of which we stood much in need. Before long they
returned, stating that they had found an Indian hut, inside of which were
some rude earthenware vessels. Fearful of surprise, we lay off the shore
all that night, and putting into the bay very early in the morning, killed
a seal. This was the first fresh meat I had tasted for four years. It
seemed strange to eat it under such circumstances. We cooked the flippers,
heart, and liver for breakfast, giving some to a cat which we had taken
with us out of the brig, for I would not, willingly, allow even that
animal to perish. After breakfast, we got under weigh; and we had scarcely
been out half an hour when we had a fresh breeze, which carried us along
at the rate of seven knots an hour, running from bay to bay to find
inhabitants. Steering along the shore, as the sun went down, we suddenly
heard the bellowing of a bullock, and James Barker, whom, from his violent
conduct, I thought incapable of such sentiment, burst into tears.</p>
<p>"In about two hours we perceived great fires on the beach and let go
anchor in nineteen fathoms of water. We lay awake all that night. In the
morning, we rowed further inshore, and moored the boat to some seaweed. As
soon as the inhabitants caught sight of us, they came down to the beach. I
distributed needles and thread among the Indians, and on my saying
'Valdivia,' a woman instantly pointed towards a tongue of land to the
southward, holding up three fingers, and crying 'leaghos'! which I
conjectured to be three leagues; the distance we afterwards found it to
be.</p>
<p>"About three o'clock in the afternoon, we weathered the point pointed out
by the woman, and perceived a flagstaff and a twelve-gun battery under our
lee. I now divided among the men the sum of six pounds ten shillings that
I had found in Captain Frere's cabin, and made another and more equal
distribution of the clothing. There were also two watches, one of which I
gave to Lesly, and kept the other for myself. It was resolved among us to
say that we were part crew of the brig Julia, bound for China and wrecked
in the South Seas. Upon landing at the battery, we were heartily
entertained, though we did not understand one word of what they said. Next
morning it was agreed that Lesly, Barker, Shiers, and Russen should pay
for a canoe to convey them to the town, which was nine miles up the river;
and on the morning of the 6th March they took their departure. On the 9th
March, a boat, commanded by a lieutenant, came down with orders that the
rest of us should be conveyed to town; and we accordingly launched the
boat under convoy of the soldiers, and reached the town the same evening,
in some trepidation. I feared lest the Spaniards had obtained a clue as to
our real character, and was not deceived—the surviving soldier
having betrayed us. This fellow was thus doubly a traitor—first, in
deserting his officer, and then in betraying his comrades.</p>
<p>"We were immediately escorted to prison, where we found our four
companions. Some of them were for brazening out the story of shipwreck,
but knowing how confused must necessarily be our accounts, were we
examined separately, I persuaded them that open confession would be our
best chance of safety. On the 14th we were taken before the Intendente or
Governor, who informed us that we were free, on condition that we chose to
live within the limits of the town. At this intelligence I felt my heart
grow light, and only begged in the name of my companions that we might not
be given up to the British Government; 'rather than which,' said I, 'I
would beg to be shot dead in the palace square.' The Governor regarded us
with tears in his eyes, and spoke as follows: 'My poor men, do not think
that I would take that advantage over you. Do not make an attempt to
escape, and I will be your friend, and should a vessel come tomorrow to
demand you, you shall find I will be as good as my word. All I have to
impress upon you is, to beware of intemperance, which is very prevalent in
this country, and when you find it convenient, to pay Government the money
that was allowed you for subsistence while in prison.'</p>
<p>"The following day we all procured employment in launching a vessel of
three hundred tons burden, and my men showed themselves so active that the
owner said he would rather have us than thirty of his own countrymen;
which saying pleased the Governor, who was there with almost the whole of
the inhabitants and a whole band of music, this vessel having been nearly
three years on the stocks. After she was launched, the seamen amongst us
helped to fit her out, being paid fifteen dollars a month, with provisions
on board. As for myself, I speedily obtained employment in the
shipbuilder's yard, and subsisted by honest industry, almost forgetting,
in the unwonted pleasures of freedom, the sad reverse of fortune which had
befallen me. To think that I, who had mingled among gentlemen and
scholars, should be thankful to labour in a shipwright's yard by day, and
sleep on a bundle of hides by night! But this is personal matter, and need
not be obtruded.</p>
<p>"In the same yard with me worked the soldier who had betrayed us, and I
could not but regard it as a special judgment of Heaven when he one day
fell from a great height and was taken up for dead, dying in much torment
in a few hours. The days thus passed on in comparative happiness until the
20th of May, 1836, when the old Governor took his departure, regretted by
all the inhabitants of Valdivia, and the Achilles, a one-and-twenty-gun
brig of war, arrived with the new Governor. One of the first acts of this
gentleman was to sell our boat, which was moored at the back of
Government-house. This proceeding looked to my mind indicative of
ill-will; and, fearful lest the Governor should deliver us again into
bondage, I resolved to make my escape from the place. Having communicated
my plans to Barker, Lesly, Riley, Shiers, and Russen, I offered the
Governor to get built for him a handsome whale-boat, making the iron work
myself. The Governor consented, and in a little more than a fortnight we
had completed a four-oared whale-boat, capable of weathering either sea or
storm. We fitted her with sails and provisions in the Governor's name, and
on the 4th of July, being a Saturday night, we took our departure from
Valdivia, dropping down the river shortly after sunset. Whether the
Governor, disgusted at the trick we had played him, decided not to pursue
us, or whether—as I rather think—our absence was not
discovered until the Monday morning, when we were beyond reach of capture,
I know not, but we got out to sea without hazard, and, taking accurate
bearings, ran for the Friendly Islands, as had been agreed upon amongst
us.</p>
<p>"But it now seemed that the good fortune which had hitherto attended us
had deserted us, for after crawling for four days in sultry weather, there
fell a dead calm, and we lay like a log upon the sea for forty-eight
hours. For three days we remained in the midst of the ocean, exposed to
the burning rays of the sun, in a boat without water or provisions. On the
fourth day, just as we had resolved to draw lots to determine who should
die for the sustenance of the others, we were picked up by an opium
clipper returning to Canton. The captain, an American, was most kind to
us, and on our arrival at Canton, a subscription was got up for us by the
British merchants of that city, and a free passage to England obtained for
us. Russen, however, getting in drink, made statements which brought
suspicion upon us. I had imposed upon the Consul with a fictitious story
of a wreck, but had stated that my name was Wilson, forgetting that the
sextant which had been preserved in the boat had Captain Bates's name
engraved upon it. These circumstances together caused sufficient doubts in
the Consul's mind to cause him to give directions that, on our arrival in
London, we were to be brought before the Thames Police Court. There being
no evidence against us, we should have escaped, had not a Dr. Pine, who
had been surgeon on board the Malabar transport, being in the Court,
recognized me and swore to my identity. We were remanded, and, to complete
the chain of evidence, Mr. Capon, the Hobart Town gaoler, was, strangely
enough, in London at the time, and identified us all. Our story was then
made public, and Barker and Lesly, turning Queen's evidence against
Russen, he was convicted of the murder of Lyons, and executed. We were
then placed on board the Leviathan hulk, and remained there until shipped
in the Lady Jane, which was chartered, with convicts, for Van Diemen's
Land, in order to be tried in the colony, where the offence was committed,
for piratically seizing the brig Osprey, and arrived here on the 15th
December, 1838."</p>
<hr />
<p>Coming, breathless, to the conclusion of this wonderful relation, Sylvia
suffered her hand to fall into her lap, and sat meditative. The history of
this desperate struggle for liberty was to her full of vague horror. She
had never before realized among what manner of men she had lived. The
sullen creatures who worked in the chain-gangs, or pulled in the boats—their
faces brutalized into a uniform blankness—must be very different men
from John Rex and his companions. Her imagination pictured the voyage in
the leaky brig, the South American slavery, the midnight escape, the
desperate rowing, the long, slow agony of starvation, and the
heart-sickness that must have followed upon recapture and imprisonment.
Surely the punishment of "penal servitude" must have been made very
terrible for men to dare such hideous perils to escape from it. Surely
John Rex, the convict, who, alone, and prostrated by sickness, quelled a
mutiny and navigated a vessel through a storm-ravaged ocean, must possess
qualities which could be put to better use than stone-quarrying. Was the
opinion of Maurice Frere the correct one after all, and were these convict
monsters gifted with unnatural powers of endurance, only to be subdued and
tamed by unnatural and inhuman punishments of lash and chain? Her fancies
growing amid the fast gathering gloom, she shuddered as she guessed to
what extremities of evil might such men proceed did an opportunity ever
come to them to retaliate upon their gaolers. Perhaps beneath each mask of
servility and sullen fear that was the ordinary prison face, lay hid a
courage and a despair as mighty as that which sustained those ten poor
wanderers over the Pacific Ocean. Maurice had told her that these people
had their secret signs, their secret language. She had just seen a
specimen of the skill with which this very Rex—still bent upon
escape—could send a hidden message to his friends beneath the eyes
of his gaolers. What if the whole island was but one smouldering volcano
of revolt and murder—the whole convict population but one incarnated
conspiracy, bound together by crime and suffering! Terrible to think of—yet
not impossible.</p>
<p>Oh, how strangely must the world have been civilized, that this most
lovely corner of it must needs be set apart as a place of banishment for
the monsters that civilization had brought forth and bred! She cast her
eyes around, and all beauty seemed blotted out from the scene before her.
The graceful foliage melting into indistinctness in the gathering
twilight, appeared to her horrible and treacherous. The river seemed to
flow sluggishly, as though thickened with blood and tears. The shadow of
the trees seemed to hold lurking shapes of cruelty and danger. Even the
whispering breeze bore with it sighs, and threats, and mutterings of
revenge. Oppressed by a terror of loneliness, she hastily caught up the
manuscript, and turned to seek the house, when, as if summoned from the
earth by the power of her own fears, a ragged figure barred her passage.</p>
<p>To the excited girl this apparition seemed the embodiment of the unknown
evil she had dreaded. She recognized the yellow clothing, and marked the
eager hands outstretched to seize her. Instantly upon her flashed the
story that three days since had set the prison-town agog. The desperado of
Port Arthur, the escaped mutineer and murderer, was before her, with
unchained arms, free to wreak his will of her.</p>
<p>"Sylvia! It is you! Oh, at last! I have escaped, and come to ask—What?
Do you not know me?"</p>
<p>Pressing both hands to her bosom, she stepped back a pace, speechless with
terror.</p>
<p>"I am Rufus Dawes," he said, looking in her face for the grateful smile of
recognition that did not come—"Rufus Dawes."</p>
<p>The party at the house had finished their wine, and, sitting on the broad
verandah, were listening to some gentle dullness of the clergyman, when
there broke upon their ears a cry.</p>
<p>"What's that?" said Vickers.</p>
<p>Frere sprang up, and looked down the garden. He saw two figures that
seemed to struggle together. One glance was enough, and, with a shout, he
leapt the flower-beds, and made straight at the escaped prisoner.</p>
<p>Rufus Dawes saw him coming, but, secure in the protection of the girl who
owed to him so much, he advanced a step nearer, and loosing his respectful
clasp of her hand, caught her dress.</p>
<p>"Oh, help, Maurice, help!" cried Sylvia again.</p>
<p>Into the face of Rufus Dawes came an expression of horror-stricken
bewilderment. For three days the unhappy man had contrived to keep life
and freedom, in order to get speech with the one being who, he thought,
cherished for him some affection. Having made an unparalleled escape from
the midst of his warders, he had crept to the place where lived the idol
of his dreams, braving recapture, that he might hear from her two words of
justice and gratitude. Not only did she refuse to listen to him, and
shrink from him as from one accursed, but, at the sound of his name, she
summoned his deadliest foe to capture him. Such monstrous ingratitude was
almost beyond belief. She, too,—the child he had nursed and fed, the
child for whom he had given up his hard-earned chance of freedom and
fortune, the child of whom he had dreamed, the child whose image he had
worshipped—she, too, against him! Then there was no justice, no
Heaven, no God! He loosed his hold of her dress, and, regardless of the
approaching footsteps, stood speechless, shaking from head to foot. In
another instant Frere and McNab flung themselves upon him, and he was
borne to the ground. Though weakened by starvation, he shook them off with
scarce an effort, and, despite the servants who came hurrying from the
alarmed house, might even then have turned and made good his escape. But
he seemed unable to fly. His chest heaved convulsively, great drops of
sweat beaded his white face, and from his eyes tears seemed about to
break. For an instant his features worked convulsively, as if he would
fain invoke upon the girl, weeping on her father's shoulder, some hideous
curse. But no words came—only thrusting his hand into his breast,
with a supreme gesture of horror and aversion, he flung something from
him. Then a profound sigh escaped him, and he held out his hands to be
bound.</p>
<p>There was something so pitiable about this silent grief that, as they led
him away, the little group instinctively averted their faces, lest they
should seem to triumph over him.</p>
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