serve as a common sailor for the rest of this trip. Will you do it?"
"Yes, but it's pretty hard on me," whined Shepley.
"The second condition is, that you promise to appear against Van Blott, whenever called upon to do so."
"Yes, I'll do that."
"Then go forward and take Billy Dill's place in the forcastle."
"Where is Dill to go?"
"I have made him second mate and Sanders first mate."
"Oh!" murmured Paul Shepley, and said no more. It cut him deeply to take up quarters in the forecastle, where the men treated him any way but kindly, yet he was glad to get off so cheaply.
The next day was an anxious one for Dave, who was on the constant lookout for land. Toward nightfall a speck was seen in the distance, and in the morning, when he came on deck, the country youth saw before him Sobago in all of its tropical beauty, with its cozy harbor, its long stretch of white sand, and its waving palms. In the harbor were ships of several nationalities, and also numerous native canoes, and the scene was an animated one.
The boys had no difficulty in getting ashore, but once on the streets of Nanpi, they scarcely knew