If you don't want to be driven mad with yellow soap in your eye, young
man,' said Mr Tapley to the second urchin, who was by this time under
his hands at the basin, 'you'd better shut it.'
'Where does she join her husband?' asked Martin, yawning.
'Why, I'm very much afraid,' said Mr Tapley, in a low voice, 'that she
don't know. I hope she mayn't miss him. But she sent her last letter by
hand, and it don't seem to have been very clearly understood between 'em
without it, and if she don't see him a-waving his pocket-handkerchief on
the shore, like a pictur out of a song-book, my opinion is, she'll break
her heart.'
'Why, how, in Folly's name, does the woman come to be on board ship on
such a wild-goose venture!' cried Martin.
Mr Tapley glanced at him for a moment as he lay prostrate in his berth,
and then said, very quietly:
'Ah! How indeed! I can't think! He's been away from her for two year;
she's been very poor and lonely in her own country; and has always been
a-looking forward to meeting him. It's very strange she should be here.
Quite amazing! A little mad perhaps! There can't be no other way of
accounting for it.
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