|                       PART THREE: My Shore Adventure
                       Chapter 15: The Man of the Island
 (continued)At that I once more stopped. "Who are you?" I asked. "Ben Gunn," he answered, and his voice sounded hoarse and
 awkward, like a rusty lock.  "I'm poor Ben Gunn, I am; and
 I haven't spoke with a Christian these three years." I could now see that he was a white man like myself and
 that his features were even pleasing.  His skin,
 wherever it was exposed, was burnt by the sun; even his
 lips were black, and his fair eyes looked quite
 startling in so dark a face.  Of all the beggar-men
 that I had seen or fancied, he was the chief for
 raggedness.  He was clothed with tatters of old ship's
 canvas and old sea-cloth, and this extraordinary
 patchwork was all held together by a system of the most
 various and incongruous fastenings, brass buttons, bits
 of stick, and loops of tarry gaskin.  About his waist
 he wore an old brass-buckled leather belt, which was
 the one thing solid in his whole accoutrement. "Three years!" I cried.  "Were you shipwrecked?" "Nay, mate," said he; "marooned." I had heard the word, and I knew it stood for a
 horrible kind of punishment common enough among the
 buccaneers, in which the offender is put ashore with a
 little powder and shot and left behind on some desolate
 and distant island. "Marooned three years agone," he continued, "and lived
 on goats since then, and berries, and oysters.  Wherever
 a man is, says I, a man can do for himself.  But, mate,
 my heart is sore for Christian diet.  You mightn't happen
 to have a piece of cheese about you, now?  No?  Well,
 many's the long night I've dreamed of cheese--toasted,
 mostly--and woke up again, and here I were." "If ever I can get aboard again," said I, "you shall
 have cheese by the stone." |