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    Chapter 16 - Page 2

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    another Hercules; and neither you nor I am a kitten.
    I consider you as a match, in a serious scuffle, for the best four among
    them chaps."

    This was not said in the least boastingly, though certainly the estimate
    of comparative force made by my mate was enormously out of the way. It was
    true, that we four were unusually powerful and athletic men; but it was
    also true, that six of the French might very well be placed in the same
    category. I was not subject to the vulgar prejudice of national
    superiority, I hope; one of the strongest of all the weaknesses of our
    very weak nature. I have never yet been in a country, of which the people
    did not fancy themselves, in all particulars, the salt of the earth;
    though there are very different degrees in the modes of bragging on such
    subjects. In the present instance, Marble had not the least idea of
    bragging, however; for he really believed we four, in an open onslaught,
    fire-arms out of the question, might have managed those seventeen
    Frenchmen. I think, myself, we might have got along with twice our number,
    taking a fair average of the privateer's men, and reducing the struggle to
    the arms of nature; but I should have hesitated a long time in making an
    open attack on even them.

    Still, I began to regard my chances of escaping, should we be sent into a
    French port by the privateer, as far less certain than they had appeared
    at first. Marble had so much to say of the anarchists in France, as he had
    known them in the worst period of the revolution, and so many stories to
    tell of ships seized and of merchants ruined, that my confidence in the
    right was shaken. Bonaparte was then in the height of his consular
    power,--on the point of becoming Emperor, indeed,--and he had commenced
    this new war with a virulence and disregard of acknowledged rights, in the
    detention of all the English then resident in France, that served to
    excite additional distrust. Whatever may be said of the comprehensiveness
    and vastness of the genius of Napoleon, as a soldier and statesman, I
    presume few upright and enlightened men can now be found to eulogize his
    respect for public law. At any rate, I began to have lively misgivings on

    the subject; and the consultation between my mate and myself terminated in
    our coming to a resolution to serve the French prize-crew substantially as
    we had served the English prize-crew, if possible; varying the mode only
    to suit the new condition of things. This last precaution was necessary,
    as, in the fulness of my confidence, I had made Mons. Gallois acquainted
    with all the circumstances of throwing the fender overboard, and the
    manner in which we had got possession of the ship. It was not to be
    expected, therefore, that particular artifice could be made to
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