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    Chapter 4 - Page 2

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    this general tendency to
    bully and intimidate, the wary patron had, however, made a silent
    exception in favor of the Italian, who has introduced himself to the
    reader by the ill-omened name of Il Maledetto, or the accursed. This
    formidable personage had enjoyed a perfect immunity from the effects of
    Baptiste's tyranny, which he had been able to establish by a very simple
    and quiet process. Instead of cowering at the fierce glance, or recoiling
    at the rude remonstrances of the churlish patron, he had chosen his time,
    when the latter was in one of his hottest ebullitions of anger, and when
    maledictions and menaces flowed out of his mouth in torrents, coolly to
    place himself on the very spot that the other had proscribed, where he
    maintained his ground with a quietness and composure which it might have
    been difficult to say was more to be imputed to extreme ignorance, or to
    immeasurable contempt. At least so reasoned the spectators; some thinking
    that the stranger meant to bring affairs to a speedy issue by braving the
    patron's fury, and others charitably inferring that he knew no better. But
    thus did not Baptiste reason himself. He saw by the calm eye and resolute
    demeanor of his passenger that he himself, his pretended professional
    difficulties, his captiousness, and his threats, were alike despised; and
    he shrank from collision with such a spirit, precisely on the principle
    that the intimidated among the rest of the travellers shrunk from a
    contest with his own. From this moment Il Maledetto, or, as he was called
    by Baptiste him self, who it would appear had some knowledge of his
    person, Maso, became as completely the master of his own movements, as if
    he had been one of the more honored in the stern of the bark, or even her
    patron. He did not abuse his advantage, however, rarely quitting the
    indicated station near his own effects, where he had been mainly content
    to repose in listless indolence, like the others, dozing away the minutes.

    But the scene was now altogether changed. The instant the wrangling,
    discontented, and unhappy, because disappointed, patron, confessed his
    inability to reach his port before the coming of the expected
    night-breeze, and threw himself on a bale, to conceal his dissatisfaction

    in sleep, head arose after head from among the pile of freight, and body
    after body followed the nobler member, until the whole mass was alive with
    human beings. The invigorating coolness, the tranquil hour, the prospect
    of a safe if not a speedy arrival, and the relief from excessive
    weariness, produced a sudden and agreeable re-action in the feelings of
    all. Even the Baron de Willading and his friends, who had shared in none
    of the especial privations just named, joined in the general exhibition of
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