"'My name, dear lad, is not Trevor.
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I was James Armitage in my younger days, and you can understand now the shock that it was to me a few weeks ago when your college friend addressed me in words which seemed to imply that he had surprised my secret.
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As Armitage it was that I entered a London banking-house, and as Armitage I was convicted of breaking my country's laws, and was sentenced to transportation.
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Do not think very harshly of me, laddie.
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It was a debt of honor, so called, which I had to pay, and I used money which was not my own to do it, in the certainty that I could replace it before there could be any possibility of its being missed.
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But the most dreadful ill-luck pursued me.
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The money which I had reckoned upon never came to hand, and a premature examination of accounts exposed my deficit.
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The case might have been dealt leniently with, but the laws were more harshly administered thirty years ago than now, and on my twenty-third birthday I found myself chained as a felon with thirty-seven other convicts in 'tween-decks of the bark Gloria Scott, bound for Australia.
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"'It was the year '55 when the Crimean war was at its height, and the old convict ships had been largely used as transports in the Black Sea.
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The government was compelled, therefore, to use smaller and less suitable vessels for sending out their prisoners.
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The Gloria Scott had been in the Chinese tea-trade, but she was an old-fashioned, heavy-bowed, broad-beamed craft, and the new clippers had cut her out.
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She was a five-hundred-ton boat; and besides her thirty-eight jail-birds, she carried twenty-six of a crew, eighteen soldiers, a captain, three mates, a doctor, a chaplain, and four warders.
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Nearly a hundred souls were in her, all told, when we set sail from Falmouth.
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"'The partitions between the cells of the convicts, instead of being of thick oak, as is usual in convict-ships, were quite thin and frail.
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The man next to me, upon the aft side, was one whom I had particularly noticed when we were led down the quay.
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He was a young man with a clear, hairless face, a long, thin nose, and rather nut-cracker jaws.
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He carried his head very jauntily in the air, had a swaggering style of walking, and was, above all else, remarkable for his extraordinary height.
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I don't think any of our heads would have come up to his shoulder, and I am sure that he could not have measured less than six and a half feet.
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It was strange among so many sad and weary faces to see one which was full of energy and resolution.
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The sight of it was to me like a fire in a snow-storm.
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I was glad, then, to find that he was my neighbor, and gladder still when, in the dead of the night, I heard a whisper close to my ear, and found that he had managed to cut an opening in the board which separated us.
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"'"Hullo, chummy!" said he, "what's your name, and what are you here for?"
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"'I answered him, and asked in turn who I was talking with.
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"'"I'm Jack Prendergast," said he, "and by God! You'll learn to bless my name before you've done with me."
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"'I remembered hearing of his case, for it was one which had made an immense sensation throughout the country some time before my own arrest.
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