Page:Ballantyne--The Battery and the Boiler.djvu/67

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THE BATTERY AND THE BOILER.
51

CHAPTER VI.

TELLS OF OUR HERO'S VISIT TO THE GREAT CABLE.


Robin Wright returned home with a bounding heart. Since his electrical appointment he had become, figuratively speaking, an indiarubber ball—a sort of human "squash." His heart bounded; his feet bounded; if his head had fallen off it also would have bounded, no doubt.

On arriving he found his father's elder brother—a retired sea-captain of the merchant service—on a visit to the family.

There was not a more favourite uncle in the kingdom than uncle Rik—thus had his name of Richard been abbreviated by the Wright family. Uncle Rik was an old bachelor, and as bald as a baby—more so than many babies. He was good-humoured and liberal-hearted, but a settled unbeliever in the world's progress. He idolised the "good old times," and quite pleasantly scorned the "present."

"So, so, Robin," he said, grasping our hero by