now drawing near to the China Seas, I should have thought—"
"Oh, that 's easily explained," interrupted Robin. "This is his mother's birthday, it seems, a day that has always been kept with much rejoicing, he tells me, by his family, and it has brought back home and home-life with unusual force to him. With all his rough off-handedness, Slagg is a tender-hearted, affectionate fellow. Somehow he has taken it into his head that this voyage will be disastrous, and that he will never see his mother again. I had great difficulty in showing him the unreasonableness of such a belief."
"No doubt you had. It is unreasonable beliefs that people usually hold with greatest tenacity," replied Sam; with a touch of sarcasm. "But tell me, have he and Stumps never once quarrelled since leaving England?"
"Never."
"I 'm amazed—they are so unlike in every way."
"You would not be surprised if you knew them as I do," returned Robin. "Ever since Slagg gave him that thrashing on board the Great Eastern in 1865, Stumps has been a changed man. It saved him from himself, and he has taken such a liking to Slagg that nothing will part them. It was that made me plead so hard for Stumps to be taken