Page:The Naval Officer (1829), vol. 1.djvu/36

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32
THE NAVAL OFFICER.

self-importance. One consideration, I own, mortified me—this was that the natives did not appear to admire me half so much as I admired myself. It never occurred to me then, that middies were as plentiful at Plymouth Dock as black boys at Port Royal, though, perhaps, not of so much value to their masters. I will not shock the delicacy of my fair readers by repeating all the vulgar alliterations with which my noviciate was greeted, as | passed in review before the ladies of North -Corner, who met me in Fore-street. Unsophisticated as I then was, in many points, and certainly in this, I thought them extremely ill-bred. Fortunately for me, the prayers of a certain description of people never prevail, otherwise I should have been immediately consigned to a place, from which, I fear, all the masses of France and Italy would not have extricated me.

I escaped from these Syrens without being bound to the mast, like Ulysses; but, like him, I had nearly fallen a victim to a modern Poly-