"Just climb up, and when you get up here where I can reach
you I'll pull you over."
Bobby tried the experiment, but the line was oily, and in spite of his
best efforts he could climb only a little way, when he would slide back
again.
"I can't do it," he shouted up to Jimmy, after several vain efforts.
"The line is too greasy. I can't get a good hold."
"I don't know what to do!" said the distressed Jimmy. "I don't know what
to do!"
"If you can't pull me up, let me down," directed Bobby.
[Illustration: "Hurry, Jimmy. I can't hang here much longer. I'm getting
all numb"]
"That won't do any good," said Jimmy. "You'll only go into the water and
drown, for there's no place for you to stand."
"Well," Bobby insisted, "let me down nearer the water. I feel all the
time as though the line was going to break, and I'm so high up from it
that it makes me dizzy swinging around this way."
"Holler when you want me to stop," shouted Jimmy, rising and running
back.
But Jimmy found that after all he could let Bobby down only a very
little way when he came to the end of the line. So he fastened it again.
"That's as far as it will go!" he called, lying down on his face again
to look over the cliff at Bobby, who was now about twenty feet above the
water.
"Then go and get the boat and fetch it down," shouted Bobby. "Hurry,
Jimmy. I can't hang here much longer. I'm getting all numb."
That was a solution of the difficulty that had not occurred to Jimmy,
and without delay he ran away along the cliff top and down to the skiff,
which was lying a half mile above, and, undoing the painter, rowed with
all his might toward Bobby, until presently he drew up directly beneath
the swinging lad.
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