Page:Dickens - A Child s History of England, 1900.djvu/677

This page has been proofread, but needs to be validated.
PERILS OF CERTAIN PRISONERS.
247

Mr. Commissioner Pordage and Mrs. Commissioner showed among the company on that occasion like the King and Queen of a much Greater Britain than Great Britain. Only two other circumstances in that jovial night made much separate impression on me. One was this. A man in our draft of marines, named Tom Packer, a wild, unsteady young fellow, but the son of a respectable ship-wright in Portsmouth Yard, and a good scholar who had been well brought up, comes to me after a spell of dancing, and takes me aside by the elbow, and says, swearing angrily:

"Gill Davis, I hope I may not be the death of Sergeant Drooce one day!"

Now I knew Drooce had always borne particularly hard on this man, and I knew this man to be of a very hot temper; so I said:

"Tut, nonsense! don't talk so to me! If there's a man in the corps who scorns the name of an assassin, that man and Tom Packer are one."

Tom wipes his head, being in a mortal sweat, and says he:


"I hope so, but I can't answer for myself when he lords it over me, as he has just now done, before a woman. I tell you what. Gill! Mark my word! It will go hard with Sergeant Drooce, if ever we are in an engagement together, and he has to look to me to save him. Let him say a prayer then, if he knows one, for it's all over with him, and he is on his death-bed. Mark my words!"

I did mark his words, and very soon afterward, too, as will shortly be taken down.

The other circumstances that I noticed at that ball, was, the gayety and attachment of Christian George King. The innocent spirits that Sambo pilot was in, and the impossibility he found himself under of showing all the little colony, but especially the ladies and children, how fond he was of them, how devoted to them, and how faithful to them for life and death, for present, future, and everlasting, made a great impression on me. If ever a man. Sambo or no Sambo, was trustful and trusted, to what may be called quite an infantine and sweetly beautiful extent, surely, I thought that morning when I did at last he down to rest, it was that Sambo pilot. Christian George King.