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me to look for, if not insects?"

      "Insects! Faith, I must agree with you; but it is not at sea that you will enrich your collection."

      "And why not, sir? It is not impossible to find on board some specimen of——"

      "Cousin Benedict," said Mrs. Weldon, "do you then slander Captain Hull? His ship is so well kept, that you will return empty-handed from your hunt."

      Captain Hull began to laugh.

      "Mrs. Weldon exaggerates," replied he. "However, Mr. Benedict, I believe you will lose your time rummaging in our cabins."

      "Ah! I know it well," cried Cousin Benedict, shrugging his shoulders.

       "I have had a good search——"

      "But, in the 'Pilgrim's' hold," continued Captain Hull, "perhaps you will find some cockroaches—subjects of little interest, however."

      "Of little interest, those nocturnal orthopters which have incurred the maledictions of Virgil and Horace!" retorted Cousin Benedict, standing up straight. "Of little interest, those near relations of the 'periplaneta orientalis' and of the American kakerlac, which inhabit——"

      "Which infest!" said Captain Hull.

      "Which reign on board!" retorted Cousin Benedict, fiercely.

      "Amiable sovereignty!"

      "Ah! you are not an entomologist, sir?"

      Never at my own expense."

      "Now, Cousin Benedict," said Mrs. Weldon, smiling, "do not wish us to be devoured for love of science."

      "I wish, nothing, Cousin Weldon," replied, the fiery entomologist, "except to be able to add to my collection some rare subject which might do it honor."

      "Are you not satisfied, then, with the conquests that you have made in

       New Zealand?"

      "Yes, truly, Cousin Weldon. I have been rather fortunate in conquering one of those new staphylins which till now had only been found some hundreds of miles further, in New Caledonia."

      At that moment Dingo, who was playing with Jack, approached Cousin

       Benedict, gamboling.

      "Go away! go away!" said the latter, pushing off the animal.

      "To love cockroaches and detest dogs!" cried Captain Hull. "Oh! Mr.

       Benedict!"

      "A good dog, notwithstanding," said little Jack, taking Dingo's great head in his small hands.

      "Yes. I do not say no," replied Cousin Benedict. "But what do you want? This devil of an animal has not realized the hopes I conceived on meeting it."

      "Ah! my goodness!" cried Mrs. Weldon, "did you, then, hope to be able to classify it in the order of the dipters or the hymenopters?"

      "No," replied Cousin Benedict, seriously. "But is it not true that this Dingo, though it be of the New Zealand race, was picked up on the western coast of Africa?"

      "Nothing is more true," replied Mrs. Weldon, "and Tom had often heard the captain of the 'Waldeck' say so."

      "Well, I had thought—I had hoped—that this dog would have brought away some specimens of hemipteras peculiar to the African fauna."

      "Merciful heavens!" cried Mrs. Weldon.

      "And that perhaps," added Cousin Benedict, "some penetrating or irritating flea—of a new species——"

      "Do you understand, Dingo?" said Captain Hull. "Do you understand, my dog? You have failed in all your duties!"

      "But I have examined it well," added the entomologist, with an accent of deep regret. "I have not been able to find a single insect."

      "Which you would have immediately and mercilessly put to death, I hope!" cried Captain Hull.

      "Sir," replied Cousin Benedict, dryly, "learn that Sir John Franklin made a scruple of killing the smallest insect, be it a mosquito, whose attacks are otherwise formidable as those of a flea; and meanwhile you will not hesitate to allow, that Sir John Franklin was a seaman who was as good as the next."

      "Surely," said Captain Hull, bowing.

      "And one day, after being frightfully devoured by a dipter, he blew and sent it away, saying to it, without even using thou or thee: 'Go! the world is large enough for you and for me!'"

      "Ah!" ejaculated Captain Hull.

      "Yes, sir."

      "Well, Mr. Benedict," retorted Captain Hull, "another had said that long before Sir John Franklin."

      "Another?"

      "Yes; and that other was Uncle Toby."

      "An entomologist?" asked Cousin Benedict, quickly.

      "No! Sterne's Uncle Toby, and that worthy uncle pronounced precisely the same words, while setting free a mosquito that annoyed him, but which he thought himself at liberty to thee and thou: 'Go, poor devil,' he said to it, 'the world is large enough to contain us, thee and me!'"

      "An honest man, that Uncle Toby!" replied Cousin Benedict. "Is he dead?"

      "I believe so, indeed," retorted Captain Hull, gravely, "as he has never existed!"

      And each began to laugh, looking at Cousin Benedict.

      Thus, then, in these conversations, and many others, which invariably bore on some point of entomological science, whenever Cousin Benedict took part, passed away long hours of this navigation against contrary winds. The sea always fine, but winds which obliged the schooner to tack often. The "Pilgrim" made very little headway toward the east—the breeze was so feeble; and they longed to reach those parts where the prevailing winds would be more favorable.

      It must be stated here that Cousin Benedict had endeavored to initiate the young novice into the mysteries of entomology. But Dick Sand had shown himself rather refractory to these advances. For want of better company the savant had fallen back on the negroes, who comprehended nothing about it. Tom, Acteon, Bat, and Austin had even finished by deserting the class, and the professor found himself reduced to Hercules alone, who seemed to him to have some natural disposition to distinguish a parasite from a thysanuran.

      So the gigantic black lived in the world of coleopteras, carnivorous insects, hunters, gunners, ditchers, cicindelles, carabes, sylphides, moles, cockchafers, horn-beetles, tenebrions, mites, lady-birds, studying all Cousin Benedict's collection, not but the latter trembled on seeing his frail specimens in Hercules' great hands, which were hard and strong as a vise. But the colossal pupil listened so quietly to the professor's lessons that it was worth risking something to give them.

      While Cousin Benedict worked in that manner, Mrs. Weldon did not leave little Jack entirely unoccupied; She taught him to read and to write. As to arithmetic, it was his friend Dick Sand who inculcated the first elements.

      At the age of five, one is still only a little child, and is perhaps better instructed by practical games than by theoretical lessons necessarily a little arduous.

      Jack learned to read, not in a primer, but by means of movable letters, printed in red on cubes of wood. He amused himself by arranging the blocks so as to form words. Sometimes Mrs. Weldon took these cubes and composed a word; then she disarranged them, and it was for Jack to replace them in the order required.

      The little boy liked this manner of learning to read very much. Each day he passed some hours, sometimes in the cabin, sometimes on the deck, in arranging and disarranging the letters of his alphabet.

      Now, one day this led to an incident so extraordinary, so unexpected, that it is necessary to relate with some detail.

      It was on the morning of February 9th, Jack, half-lying on the deck, was amusing himself forming a word which old Tom was to put together again, after the letters had been

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