Having resumed our
garments, we now searched all our pockets with the utmost care, and 
laid their contents out on a flat stone before us; and, now that our minds 
were fully alive to our condition, it was with no little anxiety that we 
turned our several pockets inside out, in order that nothing might 
escape us. When all was collected together we found that our worldly 
goods consisted of the following articles:- 
First, A small penknife with a single blade broken off about the middle 
and very rusty, besides having two or three notches on its edge. 
(Peterkin said of this, with his usual pleasantry, that it would do for a 
saw as well as a knife, which was a great advantage.) Second, An old 
German-silver pencil-case without any lead in it. Third, A piece of 
whip-cord about six yards long. Fourth, A sailmaker's needle of a small 
size. Fifth, A ship's telescope, which I happened to have in my hand at 
the time the ship struck, and which I had clung to firmly all the time I 
was in the water. Indeed it was with difficulty that Jack got it out of my 
grasp when I was lying insensible on the shore. I cannot understand 
why I kept such a firm hold of this telescope. They say that a drowning 
man will clutch at a straw. Perhaps it may have been some such feeling 
in me, for I did not know that it was in my hand at the time we were 
wrecked. However, we felt some pleasure in having it with us now, 
although we did not see that it could be of much use to us, as the glass 
at the small end was broken to pieces. Our sixth article was a brass ring 
which Jack always wore on his little finger. I never understood why he 
wore it, for Jack was not vain of his appearance, and did not seem to 
care for ornaments of any kind. Peterkin said "it was in memory of the 
girl he left behind him!" But as he never spoke of this girl to either of 
us, I am inclined to think that Peterkin was either jesting or mistaken. 
In addition to these articles we had a little bit of tinder, and the clothes 
on our backs. These last were as follows:- 
Each of us had on a pair of stout canvass trousers, and a pair of sailors' 
thick shoes. Jack wore a red flannel shirt, a blue jacket, and a red 
Kilmarnock bonnet or night-cap, besides a pair of worsted socks, and a 
cotton pocket-handkerchief, with sixteen portraits of Lord Nelson 
printed on it, and a union Jack in the middle. Peterkin had on a striped 
flannel shirt, - which he wore outside his trousers, and belted round his
waist, after the manner of a tunic, - and a round black straw hat. He had 
no jacket, having thrown it off just before we were cast into the sea; but 
this was not of much consequence, as the climate of the island proved 
to be extremely mild; so much so, indeed, that Jack and I often 
preferred to go about without our jackets. Peterkin had also a pair of 
white cotton socks, and a blue handkerchief with white spots all over it. 
My own costume consisted of a blue flannel shirt, a blue jacket, a black 
cap, and a pair of worsted socks, besides the shoes and canvass trousers 
already mentioned. This was all we had, and besides these things we 
had nothing else; but, when we thought of the danger from which we 
had escaped, and how much worse off we might have been had the ship 
struck on the reef during the night, we felt very thankful that we were 
possessed of so much, although, I must confess, we sometimes wished 
that we had had a little more. 
While we were examining these things, and talking about them, Jack 
suddenly started and exclaimed - 
"The oar! we have forgotten the oar." 
"What good will that do us?" said Peterkin; "there's wood enough on 
the island to make a thousand oars." 
"Ay, lad," replied Jack, "but there's a bit of hoop iron at the end of it, 
and that may be of much use to us." 
"Very true," said I, "let us go fetch it;" and with that we all three rose 
and hastened down to the beach. I still felt a little weak from loss of 
blood, so that my companions soon began to leave me behind; but Jack 
perceived this, and, with his usual considerate good nature, turned back 
to help me. This was now the first time that I had looked well about me 
since landing, as the spot where I had been laid was covered with    
    
		
	
	
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