<h2><SPAN name="Chapter_IV"></SPAN>Chapter IV</h2>
<h3>In which there is a desperate combat.</h3>
<br/>
<p>Even at this period of the English history, it was the custom to
put a few soldiers on board of the vessels of war, and the
<i>Yungfrau</i> cutter had been supplied with a corporal and six
men, all of whom were belonging to the Dutch marine. To a person
who was so unpopular as Mr Vanslyperken, this little force was a
great protection, and both Corporal Van Spitter and his corps were
well treated by him. The corporal was his purser and purveyor, and
had a very good berth of it, for he could cheat as well as his
commandant. He was, moreover, his prime minister, and an obedient
executor of all his tyranny, for Corporal Van Spitter was without a
shadow of feeling--on the contrary, he had pleasure in
administering punishment; and if Vanslyperken had told him to blow
any man's brains out belonging to the vessel, Van Spitter would
have immediately obeyed the order without the change of a muscle in
his fat, florid countenance. The corporal was an enormous man,
tall, and so corpulent, that he weighed nearly twenty stone. Jansen
was the only one who could rival him; he was quite as tall as the
corporal, and as powerful, but he had not the extra weight of his
carcass.</p>
<p>About five minutes after the summons, the huge form of Corporal
Van Spitter was seen to emerge slowly from the hatchway, which
appeared barely wide enough to admit the egress of his broad
shoulders. He had a flat foraging cap on his head, which was as
large as a buffalo's, and his person was clothed in blue
pantaloons, tight at the ankle, rapidly increasing in width as they
ascended, until they diverged at the hips to an expanse which was
something between the sublime and the ridiculous. The upper part of
his body was cased in a blue jacket, with leaden buttons, stamped
with the rampant lion, with a little tail behind, which was shoved
up in the air by the protuberance of the parts. Having gained the
deck, he walked to Vanslyperken, and raised the back of his right
hand to his forehead.</p>
<p>"Corporal Van Spitter, get your cats up for punishment, and when
you are ready fetch up Smallbones."</p>
<p>Whereupon, without reply, Corporal Van Spitter put his left foot
behind the heel of his right, and by this manoeuvre turned his body
round like a capstern, so as to bring his face forward, and then
walked off in that direction. He soon re-appeared with all the
necessary implements of torture, laid them down on one of the lee
guns, and again departed to seek out his victim.</p>
<p>After a short time, a scuffle was heard below, but it was soon
over, and once more appeared the corporal with the spare, tall body
of Smallbones under his arm. He held him, grasped by the middle
part, about where Smallbones' stomach ought to have been, and the
head and heels of the poor wretch both hung down perpendicularly,
and knocked together as the corporal proceeded aft.</p>
<p>As soon as Van Spitter had arrived at the gun he laid down his
charge, who neither moved nor spoke. He appeared to have resigned
himself to the fate which awaited him, and made no resistance when
he was stripped by one of the marines, and stretched over the gun.
The men, who were on deck, said nothing; they looked at each other
expressively as the preparations were made. Flogging a lad like
Smallbones was too usual an occurrence to excite surprise, and to
show their disgust would have been dangerous. Smallbones' back was
now bared, and miserable was the spectacle; the shoulder-blades
protruded, so that you might put your hand sideways under the
scapula, and every bone of the vertebræ, and every process
was clearly defined through the skin of the poor skeleton. The
punishment commenced, and the lad received his three dozen without
a murmur, the measured sound of the lash only being broken in upon
by the baying of Snarleyyow, who occasionally would have flown at
the victim, had he not been kept off by one of the marines. During
the punishment, Mr Vanslyperken walked the deck, and turned and
turned again as before.</p>
<p>Smallbones was then cast loose by the corporal, who was twirling
up his cat, when Snarleyyow, whom the marine had not watched, ran
up to the lad, and inflicted a severe bite. Smallbones, who
appeared, at the moment, to be faint and lifeless--not having risen
from his knees after the marine had thrown his shirt over him,
roused by this new attack, appeared to spring into life and energy;
he jumped up, uttered a savage yell, and to the astonishment of
everybody, threw himself upon the dog as he retreated, and holding
him fast with his naked arms, met the animal with his own weapons,
attacking him with a frenzied resolution with his teeth. Everybody
started back at this unusual conflict, and no one interfered.</p>
<p>Long was the struggle, and such was the savage energy of the
lad, that he bit and held on with the tenacity of a bull-dog,
tearing the lips of the animal, his ears, and burying his face in
the dog's throat, as his teeth were firmly fixed on his windpipe.
The dog could not escape, for Smallbones held him like a vice. At
last, the dog appeared to have the advantage, for as they rolled
over and over, he caught the lad by the side of the neck; but
Smallbones recovered himself, and getting the foot of Snarleyyow
between his teeth, the dog threw up his head and howled for
succour. Mr Vanslyperken rushed to his assistance, and struck
Smallbones a heavy blow on the head with his speaking-trumpet,
which stunned him, and he let go his hold.</p>
<p>Short, who had come on deck, perceiving this, and that the dog
was about to resume the attack, saluted Snarleyyow with a kick on
his side, which threw him down the hatchway, which was about three
yards off from where the dog was at the time.</p>
<p>"How dare you strike my dog, Mr Short?" cried Vanslyperken.</p>
<p>Short did not condescend to answer, but went to Smallbones and
raised his head. The lad revived. He was terribly bitten about the
face and neck, and what with the wounds in front, and the lashing
from the cat, presented a melancholy spectacle.</p>
<p>Short called some of the men to take Smallbones below, in which
act they readily assisted; they washed him all over with salt
water, and the smarting from his various wounds brought him to his
senses. He was then put in his hammock.</p>
<p>Vanslyperken and the corporal looked at each other during the
time that Short was giving his directions--neither interfered. The
lieutenant was afraid, and the corporal waited for orders. So soon
as the men had carried the lad below, Corporal Van Spitter put his
hand up to his foraging cap, and with his cat and seizings under
his arm, went down below. As for Vanslyperken, his wrath was even
greater than before, and with hands thrust even further down in his
pockets than ever, and the speaking-trumpet now battered flat with
the blow which he had administered to Smallbones, he walked up and
down, muttering every two minutes, "I'll keel-haul the scoundrel,
by heavens! I'll teach him to bite my dog."</p>
<p>Snarleyyow did not re-appear on deck; he had received such
punishment as he did not expect. He licked the wounds where he
could get at them, and then remained in the cabin in a sort of
perturbed slumber, growling every minute as if he were fighting the
battle over again in his sleep.</p>
<hr style="width: 25%;">
<br/>
<div style="break-after:column;"></div><br />