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    Chapter 19 - Page 2

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    canoe, of which they had kept two or three
    alongside of the schooner for the purpose. Jones, who was a sworn friend
    of the unfortunate chief, went as negotiator. Care was taken to land at
    the right place, under cover of the Abraham's guns, and in six hours
    Mark had the real gratification of taking Ooroony, good, honest, upright
    Ooroony, by the hand, on the quarter-deck of his own vessel. Much as the
    chief had suffered and lost, within the last two years, a gleam of
    returning happiness shone on him when he placed his foot on the deck of
    the schooner. His reception by the governor was honourable and even
    touching. Mark thanked him for his kindness to his wife, to his sister,
    to Heaton, and to his friend Bob. In point of fact, without this
    kindness, he, Woolston, might then have been a solitary hermit, without
    the means of getting access to any of his fellow-creatures, and doomed
    to remain in that condition all his days. The obligation was now frankly
    admitted, and Ooroony shed tears of joy when he thus found that his
    good deeds were remembered and appreciated.

    It has long been a question with moralists, whether or not, good and
    evil bring their rewards and punishments in this state of being. While
    it might be dangerous to infer the affirmative of this mooted point, as
    it would be cutting off the future and its consequences from those whose
    real hopes and fears ought to be mainly concentrated in the life that is
    to come, it would seem to be presuming to suppose that principles like
    these ever can be nugatory in the control even of our daily concerns.

    If it be true that God "visits the sins of the fathers upon the children
    even to the third and fourth generations of them that hate him," and
    that the seed of the righteous man is never seen begging his bread,
    there is much reason to believe that a portion of our transgressions is
    to meet with its punishment here on earth. We think nothing can be more
    apparent than the fact that, in the light of mere worldly expediency, an
    upright and high-principled course leads to more happiness than one that
    is the reverse; and if "honesty is the best policy," after all the
    shifts and expedients of cupidity, so does virtue lead most unerringly
    to happiness here, as it opens up the way to happiness hereafter.


    All the men of the Abraham had heard of Ooroony, and of his benevolent
    qualities. It was his goodness, indeed, that had been the cause of his
    downfall; for had he punished Waally as he deserved to be, when the
    power was in his hands, that turbulent chief, who commenced life as his
    lawful tributary, would never have gained a point where he was so near
    becoming his master. Every man on board now pressed around the good old
    chief, who heard on all sides of
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