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I want that duck you've got-and the pig too. Voice Reading
We'll have pork-chops and roast duck for supper to-night. Voice Reading
And before I let you go home, you must make your friends send me a trunk-full of gold." Voice Reading
Poor Gub-Gub began to weep; and Dab-Dab made ready to fly to save her life. But the owl, Too-Too, whispered to the Doctor, Voice Reading
"Keep him talking, Doctor. Be pleasant to him. Our old ship is bound to sink soon-the rats said it would be at the bottom of the sea before to-morrow night-and the rats are never wrong. Be pleasant, till the ship sinks under him. Keep him talking." Voice Reading
"What, until to-morrow night!" said the Doctor. "Well, I'll do my best. . . . Let me see-What shall I talk about?" Voice Reading
"Oh, let them come on," said Jip. "We can fight the dirty rascals. There are only six of them. Let them come on. I'd love to tell that collie next door, when we get home, that I had bitten a real pirate. Let 'em come. We can fight them." Voice Reading
"But they have pistols and swords," said the Doctor. "No, that would never do. I must talk to him. . . . Look here, Ben Ali-" Voice Reading
But before the Doctor could say any more, the pirates began to sail the ship nearer, laughing with glee, and saying one to another, "Who shall be the first to catch the pig?" Voice Reading
Poor Gub-Gub was dreadfully frightened; and the pushmi-pullyu began to sharpen his horns for a fight by rubbing them on the mast of the ship; while Jip kept springing into the air and barking and calling Ben Ali bad names in dog-language. Voice Reading
But presently something seemed to go wrong with the pirates; they stopped laughing and cracking jokes; they looked puzzled; something was making them uneasy. Voice Reading
Then Ben Ali, staring down at his feet, suddenly bellowed out, Voice Reading
"Thunder and Lightning!-Men, the boat's leaking!" Voice Reading
And then the other pirates peered over the side and they saw that the boat was indeed getting lower and lower in the water. And one of them said to Ben Ali, Voice Reading
"But surely if this old boat were sinking we should see the rats leaving it." Voice Reading
And Jip shouted across from the other ship, Voice Reading
"You great duffers, there are no rats there to leave! They left two hours ago! 'Ha, ha,' to you, 'my fine friends!'" Voice Reading
But of course the men did not understand him. Voice Reading
Soon the front end of the ship began to go down and down, faster and faster-till the boat looked almost as though it were standing on its head; and the pirates had to cling to the rails and the masts and the ropes and anything to keep from sliding off. Voice Reading
Then the sea rushed roaring in and through all the windows and the doors. Voice Reading
And at last the ship plunged right down to the bottom of the sea, making a dreadful gurgling sound; and the six bad men were left bobbing about in the deep water of the bay. Voice Reading
Some of them started to swim for the shores of the island; while others came and tried to get on to the boat where the Doctor was. But Jip kept snapping at their noses, so they were afraid to climb up the side of the ship. Voice Reading
Then suddenly they all cried out in great fear, Voice Reading
"The sharks! The sharks are coming! Let us get on to the ship before they eat us! Help, help!-The sharks! The sharks!" Voice Reading
And now the Doctor could see, all over the bay, the backs of big fishes swimming swiftly through the water. Voice Reading

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