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"
Oh
,
it
's
all
right
!
"
I
said
.
"
We
'll
be
through
the
next
lock
before
seven
,
and
then
there
is
only
one
more
;
"
and
I
settled
down
and
pulled
steadily
away
.
We
passed
the
bridge
,
and
soon
after
that
I
asked
if
she
saw
the
lock
.
She
said
no
,
she
did
not
see
any
lock
;
and
I
said
,
"
Oh
!
"
and
pulled
on
.
Another
five
minutes
went
by
,
and
then
I
asked
her
to
look
again
.
"
No
,
"
she
said
;
"
I
ca
n't
see
any
signs
of
a
lock
.
"
"
You
--
you
are
sure
you
know
a
lock
,
when
you
do
see
one
?
"
I
asked
hesitatingly
,
not
wishing
to
offend
her
.
The
question
did
offend
her
,
however
,
and
she
suggested
that
I
had
better
look
for
myself
;
so
I
laid
down
the
sculls
,
and
took
a
view
.
The
river
stretched
out
straight
before
us
in
the
twilight
for
about
a
mile
;
not
a
ghost
of
a
lock
was
to
be
seen
.
"
You
do
n't
think
we
have
lost
our
way
,
do
you
?
"
asked
my
companion
.
I
did
not
see
how
that
was
possible
;
though
,
as
I
suggested
,
we
might
have
somehow
got
into
the
weir
stream
,
and
be
making
for
the
falls
.
This
idea
did
not
comfort
her
in
the
least
,
and
she
began
to
cry
.
She
said
we
should
both
be
drowned
,
and
that
it
was
a
judgment
on
her
for
coming
out
with
me
.
It
seemed
an
excessive
punishment
,
I
thought
;
but
my
cousin
thought
not
,
and
hoped
it
would
all
soon
be
over
.
I
tried
to
reassure
her
,
and
to
make
light
of
the
whole
affair
.
I
said
that
the
fact
evidently
was
that
I
was
not
rowing
as
fast
as
I
fancied
I
was
,
but
that
we
should
soon
reach
the
lock
now
;
and
I
pulled
on
for
another
mile
.