Page:Mrs Caudle's curtain lectures.djvu/169

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MRS. CAUDLE'S CURTAIN LECTURES.
133

him when I first began to turn, I don't know. Don't tell me I never complained to you; you might have seen I was ill. And when everybody was looking like a bad wax-candle, you could walk about, and make what you call your jokes upon the little buoy that was never sick at the Nore, and such unfeeling trash.

MR. CAUDLE ENJOYS HIS BRANDY-AND-WATER.

"Yes, Caudle; we've now been married many years, but if we were to live together for a thousand years to come—what are you clasping your hands at?—a thousand years to come, I say, I shall never forget your conduct this day. You could go to the other end of the ship