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    Chapter 81

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    HOW THEY BURY A MAN-OF-WAR'S-MAN AT SEA.

    Quarters over in the morning, the boatswain and his four mates
    stood round the main hatchway, and after giving the usual
    whistle, made the customary announcement--"_All hands bury the
    dead, ahoy!_"

    In a man-of-war, every thing, even to a man's funeral and burial,
    proceeds with the unrelenting promptitude of the martial code.
    And whether it is _all hands bury the dead!_ or _all hands splice
    the main-brace_, the order is given in the same hoarse tones.

    Both officers and men assembled in the lee waist, and through
    that bareheaded crowd the mess-mates of Shenly brought his body
    to the same gangway where it had thrice winced under the scourge.
    But there is something in death that ennobles even a pauper's
    corpse; and the Captain himself stood bareheaded before the
    remains of a man whom, with his hat on, he had sentenced to the
    ignominious gratings when alive.

    "_I am the resurrection and the life!_" solemnly began the
    Chaplain, in full canonicals, the prayer-book in his hand.

    "Damn you! off those booms!" roared a boatswain's mate to a crowd
    of top-men, who had elevated themselves to gain a better view of
    the scene.

    "_We commit this body to the deep!_" At the word, Shenly's mess-
    mates tilted the board, and the dead sailor sank in the sea.

    "Look aloft," whispered Jack Chase. "See that bird! it is the
    spirit of Shenly."

    Gazing upward, all beheld a snow-white, solitary fowl, which--
    whence coming no one could tell--had been hovering over the
    main-mast during the service, and was now sailing far up into the
    depths of the sky.
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