Page:The Naval Officer (1829), vol. 2.djvu/10

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4
THE NAVAL OFFICER.

"That," said he, "would be just as much an infringement of my orders as letting you go by yourself. You cannot go on shore, Sir."

These last words he uttered in a very peremptory manner, and, quitting the deck, left me to my own reflections and my own resources.

Intercourse by letter between Eugenia and myself was perfectly easy; but that was not all I wanted. I had promised to meet her at nine o'clock in the evening. It was now sunset; the boats were all hoisted up; no shoreboat was near, and there was no mode of conveyance but à la nage, which Mr. Talbot himself had suggested only as proving its utter impracticability; but he did not know me half so well at that time as he did afterwards.

The ship lay two miles from the shore, the wind was from the south-west, and the tide moving to the eastward; so that, with wind