3226 lines
177 KiB
Plaintext
3226 lines
177 KiB
Plaintext
|
1889
|
||
|
|
||
|
BILLY BUDD
|
||
|
|
||
|
by Herman Melville
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 1
|
||
|
|
||
|
IN THE time before steamships, or then more frequently than now, a
|
||
|
stroller along the docks of any considerable sea-port would
|
||
|
occasionally have his attention arrested by a group of bronzed
|
||
|
mariners, man-of-war's men or merchant-sailors in holiday attire
|
||
|
ashore on liberty. In certain instances they would flank, or, like a
|
||
|
body-guard quite surround some superior figure of their own class,
|
||
|
moving along with them like Aldebaran among the lesser lights of his
|
||
|
constellation. That signal object was the "Handsome Sailor" of the
|
||
|
less prosaic time alike of the military and merchant navies. With no
|
||
|
perceptible trace of the vainglorious about him, rather with the
|
||
|
off-hand unaffectedness of natural regality, he seemed to accept the
|
||
|
spontaneous homage of his shipmates. A somewhat remarkable instance
|
||
|
recurs to me. In Liverpool, now half a century ago, I saw under the
|
||
|
shadow of the great dingy street-wall of Prince's Dock (an obstruction
|
||
|
long since removed) a common sailor, so intensely black that he must
|
||
|
needs have been a native African of the unadulterate blood of Ham. A
|
||
|
symmetric figure much above the average height. The two ends of a
|
||
|
gay silk handkerchief thrown loose about the neck danced upon the
|
||
|
displayed ebony of his chest; in his ears were big hoops of gold,
|
||
|
and a Scotch Highland bonnet with a tartan band set off his shapely
|
||
|
head.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was a hot noon in July; and his face, lustrous with
|
||
|
perspiration, beamed with barbaric good humor. In jovial sallies right
|
||
|
and left, his white teeth flashing into he rollicked along, the centre
|
||
|
of a company of his shipmates. These were made up of such an
|
||
|
assortment of tribes and complexions as would have well fitted them to
|
||
|
be marched up by Anacharsis Cloots before the bar of the first
|
||
|
French Assembly as Representatives of the Human Race. At each
|
||
|
spontaneous tribute rendered by the wayfarers to this black pagod of a
|
||
|
fellow- the tribute of a pause and stare, and less frequent an
|
||
|
exclamation,- the motley retinue showed that they took that sort of
|
||
|
pride in the evoker of it which the Assyrian priests doubtless
|
||
|
showed for their grand sculptured Bull when the faithful prostrated
|
||
|
themselves.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To return.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If in some cases a bit of a nautical Murat in setting forth his
|
||
|
person ashore, the Handsome Sailor of the period in question evinced
|
||
|
nothing of the dandified Billy-be-Damn, an amusing character all but
|
||
|
extinct now, but occasionally to be encountered, and in a form yet
|
||
|
more amusing than the original, at the tiller of the boats on the
|
||
|
tempestuous Erie Canal or, more likely, vaporing in the groggeries
|
||
|
along the tow-path. Invariably a proficient in his perilous calling,
|
||
|
he was also more or less of a mighty boxer or wrestler. It was
|
||
|
strength and beauty. Tales of his prowess were recited. Ashore he
|
||
|
was the champion; afloat the spokesman; on every suitable occasion
|
||
|
always foremost. Close-reefing top-sails in a gale, there he was,
|
||
|
astride the weather yard-arm-end, foot in the Flemish horse as
|
||
|
"stirrup," both hands tugging at the "earring" as at a bridle, in very
|
||
|
much the attitude of young Alexander curbing the fiery Bucephalus. A
|
||
|
superb figure, tossed up as by the horns of Taurus against the
|
||
|
thunderous sky, cheerily hallooing to the strenuous file along the
|
||
|
spar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The moral nature was seldom out of keeping with the physical make.
|
||
|
Indeed, except as toned by the former, the comeliness and power,
|
||
|
always attractive in masculine conjunction, hardly could have drawn
|
||
|
the sort of honest homage the Handsome Sailor in some examples
|
||
|
received from his less gifted associates.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such a cynosure, at least in aspect, and something such too in
|
||
|
nature, though with important variations made apparent as the story
|
||
|
proceeds, was welkin-eyed Billy Budd, or Baby Budd, as more familiarly
|
||
|
under circumstances hereafter to be given he at last came to be
|
||
|
called, aged twenty-one, a foretopman of the British fleet toward
|
||
|
the close of the last decade of the eighteenth century. It was not
|
||
|
very long prior to the time of the narration that follows that he
|
||
|
had entered the King's Service, having been impressed on the Narrow
|
||
|
Seas from a homeward-bound English merchantman into a seventy-four
|
||
|
outward-bound, H.M.S. Indomitable; which ship, as was not unusual in
|
||
|
those hurried days, having been obliged to put to sea short of her
|
||
|
proper complement of men. Plump upon Billy at first sight in the
|
||
|
gangway the boarding officer Lieutenant Ratcliff pounced, even
|
||
|
before the merchantman's crew was formally mustered on the
|
||
|
quarter-deck for his deliberate inspection. And him only he elected.
|
||
|
For whether it was because the other men when ranged before him showed
|
||
|
to ill advantage after Billy, or whether he had some scruples in
|
||
|
view of the merchantman being rather short-handed, however it might
|
||
|
be, the officer contented himself with his first spontaneous choice.
|
||
|
To the surprise of the ship's company, though much to the Lieutenant's
|
||
|
satisfaction, Billy made no demur. But, indeed, any demur would have
|
||
|
been as idle as the protest of a goldfinch popped into a cage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Noting this uncomplaining acquiescence, all but cheerful one might
|
||
|
say, the shipmates turned a surprised glance of silent reproach at the
|
||
|
sailor. The Shipmaster was one of those worthy mortals found in
|
||
|
every vocation, even the humbler ones- the sort of person whom
|
||
|
everybody agrees in calling "a respectable man." And- nor so strange
|
||
|
to report as it may appear to be- though a ploughman of the troubled
|
||
|
waters, life-long contending with the intractable elements, there
|
||
|
was nothing this honest soul at heart loved better than simple peace
|
||
|
and quiet. For the rest, he was fifty or thereabouts, a little
|
||
|
inclined to corpulence, a prepossessing face, unwhiskered, and of an
|
||
|
agreeable color- a rather full face, humanely intelligent in
|
||
|
expression. On a fair day with a fair wind and all going well, a
|
||
|
certain musical chime in his voice seemed to be the veritable
|
||
|
unobstructed outcome of the innermost man. He had much prudence,
|
||
|
much conscientiousness, and there were occasions when these virtues
|
||
|
were the cause of overmuch disquietude in him. On a passage, so long
|
||
|
as his craft was in any proximity to land, no sleep for Captain
|
||
|
Graveling. He took to heart those serious responsibilities not so
|
||
|
heavily borne by some shipmasters.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now while Billy Budd was down in the forecastle getting his kit
|
||
|
together, the Indomitable's Lieutenant, burly and bluff, nowise
|
||
|
disconcerted by Captain Graveling's omitting to proffer the
|
||
|
customary hospitalities on an occasion so unwelcome to him, an
|
||
|
omission simply caused by preoccupation of thought, unceremoniously
|
||
|
invited himself into the cabin, and also to a flask from the
|
||
|
spirit-locker, a receptacle which his experienced eye instantly
|
||
|
discovered. In fact he was one of those sea-dogs in whom all the
|
||
|
hardship and peril of naval life in the great prolonged wars of his
|
||
|
time never impaired the natural instinct for sensuous enjoyment. His
|
||
|
duty he always faithfully did; but duty is sometimes a dry obligation,
|
||
|
and he was for irrigating its aridity, whensoever possible, with a
|
||
|
fertilizing decoction of strong waters. For the cabin's proprietor
|
||
|
there was nothing left but to play the part of the enforced host
|
||
|
with whatever grace and alacrity were practicable. As necessary
|
||
|
adjuncts to the flask, he silently placed tumbler and water-jug before
|
||
|
the irrepressible guest. But excusing himself from partaking just
|
||
|
then, he dismally watched the unembarrassed officer deliberately
|
||
|
diluting his grog a little, then tossing it off in three swallows,
|
||
|
pushing the empty tumbler away, yet not so far as to be beyond easy
|
||
|
reach, at the same time settling himself in his seat and smacking
|
||
|
his lips with high satisfaction, looking straight at the host.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These proceedings over, the Master broke the silence; and there
|
||
|
lurked a rueful reproach in the tone of his voice: "Lieutenant, you
|
||
|
are going to take my best man from me, the jewel of 'em."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, I know," rejoined the other, immediately drawing back the
|
||
|
tumbler preliminary to a replenishing; "Yes, I know. Sorry."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Beg pardon, but you don't understand, Lieutenant. See here now.
|
||
|
Before I shipped that young fellow, my forecastle was a rat-pit of
|
||
|
quarrels. It was black times, I tell you, aboard the Rights here. I
|
||
|
was worried to that degree my pipe had no comfort for me. But Billy
|
||
|
came; and it was like a Catholic priest striking peace in an Irish
|
||
|
shindy. Not that he preached to them or said or did anything in
|
||
|
particular; but a virtue went out of him, sugaring the sour ones. They
|
||
|
took to him like hornets to treacle; all but the buffer of the gang,
|
||
|
the big shaggy chap with the fire-red whiskers. He indeed out of envy,
|
||
|
perhaps, of the newcomer, and thinking such a 'sweet and pleasant
|
||
|
fellow,' as he mockingly designated him to the others, could hardly
|
||
|
have the spirit of a game-cock, must needs bestir himself in trying to
|
||
|
get up an ugly row with him. Billy forebore with him and reasoned with
|
||
|
him in a pleasant way- he is something like myself, Lieutenant, to
|
||
|
whom aught like a quarrel is hateful- but nothing served. So, in the
|
||
|
second dog-watch one day the Red Whiskers in presence of the others,
|
||
|
under pretence of showing Billy just whence a sirloin steak was cut-
|
||
|
for the fellow had once been a butcher- insultingly gave him a dig
|
||
|
under the ribs. Quick as lightning Billy let fly his arm. I dare say
|
||
|
he never meant to do quite as much as he did, but anyhow he gave the
|
||
|
burly fool a terrible drubbing. It took about half a minute, I
|
||
|
should think. And, lord bless you, the lubber was astonished at the
|
||
|
celerity. And will you believe it, Lieutenant, the Red Whiskers now
|
||
|
really loves Billy- loves him, or is the biggest hypocrite that ever I
|
||
|
heard of. But they all love him. Some of 'em do his washing, darn
|
||
|
his old trousers for him; the carpenter is at odd times making a
|
||
|
pretty little chest of drawers for him. Anybody will do anything for
|
||
|
Billy Budd; and it's the happy family here. But now, Lieutenant, if
|
||
|
that young fellow goes- I know how it will be aboard the Rights. Not
|
||
|
again very soon shall I, coming up from dinner, lean over the
|
||
|
capstan smoking a quiet pipe- no, not very soon again, I think. Ay,
|
||
|
Lieutenant, you are going to take away the jewel of 'em; you are going
|
||
|
to take away my peacemaker!" And with that the good soul had really
|
||
|
some ado in checking a rising sob.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Well," said the officer who had listened with amused interest
|
||
|
to all this, and now waxing merry with his tipple; "Well, blessed
|
||
|
are the peacemakers, especially the fighting peacemakers! And such are
|
||
|
the seventy-four beauties some of which you see poking their noses out
|
||
|
of the port-holes of yonder war-ship lying-to for me," pointing
|
||
|
thro' the cabin window at the Indomitable. "But courage! don't look so
|
||
|
downhearted, man. Why, I pledge you in advance the royal
|
||
|
approbation. Rest assured that His Majesty will be delighted to know
|
||
|
that in a time when his hard tack is not sought for by sailors with
|
||
|
such avidity as should be; a time also when some shipmasters privily
|
||
|
resent the borrowing from them a tar or two for the service; His
|
||
|
Majesty, I say, will be delighted to learn that one shipmaster at
|
||
|
least cheerfully surrenders to the King, the flower of his flock, a
|
||
|
sailor who with equal loyalty makes no dissent.- But where's my
|
||
|
beauty? Ah," looking through the cabin's open door, "Here he comes;
|
||
|
and, by Jove- lugging along his chest- Apollo with his portmanteau!-
|
||
|
My man," stepping out to him, "you can't take that big box aboard a
|
||
|
war-ship. The boxes there are mostly shot-boxes. Put your duds in a
|
||
|
bag, lad. Boot and saddle for the cavalryman, bag and hammock for
|
||
|
the man-of-war's man."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The transfer from chest to bag was made. And, after seeing his man
|
||
|
into the cutter and then following him down, the Lieutenant pushed off
|
||
|
from the Rights-of-Man. That was the merchant-ship's name; tho' by her
|
||
|
master and crew abbreviated in sailor fashion into The Rights. The
|
||
|
hard-headed Dundee owner was a staunch admirer of Thomas Paine whose
|
||
|
book in rejoinder to Burke's arraignment of the French Revolution
|
||
|
had then been published for some time and had gone everywhere. In
|
||
|
christening his vessel after the title of Paine's volume, the man of
|
||
|
Dundee was something like his contemporary shipowner, Stephen Girard
|
||
|
of Philadelphia, whose sympathies, alike with his native land and
|
||
|
its liberal philosophers, he evinced by naming his ships after
|
||
|
Voltaire, Diderot, and so forth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But now, when the boat swept under the merchantman's stern, and
|
||
|
officer and oarsmen were noting- some bitterly and others with a
|
||
|
grin,- the name emblazoned there; just then it was that the new
|
||
|
recruit jumped up from the bow where the coxswain had directed him
|
||
|
to sit, and waving his hat to his silent shipmates sorrowfully looking
|
||
|
over at him from the taffrail, bade the lads a genial good-bye.
|
||
|
Then, making a salutation as to the ship herself, "And good-bye to you
|
||
|
too, old Rights-of-Man."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Down, Sir!" roared the Lieutenant, instantly assuming all the
|
||
|
rigour of his rank, though with difficulty repressing a smile.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To be sure, Billy's action was a terrible breach of naval decorum.
|
||
|
But in that decorum he had never been instructed; in consideration
|
||
|
of which the Lieutenant would hardly have been so energetic in reproof
|
||
|
but for the concluding farewell to the ship. This he rather took as
|
||
|
meant to convey a covert sally on the new recruit's part, a sly slur
|
||
|
at impressment in general, and that of himself in especial. And yet,
|
||
|
more likely, if satire it was in effect, it was hardly so by
|
||
|
intention, for Billy, tho' happily endowed with the gayety of high
|
||
|
health, youth, and a free heart, was yet by no means of a satirical
|
||
|
turn. The will to it and the sinister dexterity were alike wanting. To
|
||
|
deal in double meanings and insinuations of any sort was quite foreign
|
||
|
to his nature.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As to his enforced enlistment, that he seemed to take pretty
|
||
|
much as he was wont to take any vicissitude of weather. Like the
|
||
|
animals, though no philosopher, he was, without knowing it,
|
||
|
practically a fatalist. And, it may be, that he rather liked this
|
||
|
adventurous turn in his affairs, which promised an opening into
|
||
|
novel scenes and martial excitements.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Aboard the Indomitable our merchant-sailor was forthwith rated
|
||
|
as an able-seaman and assigned to the starboard watch of the fore-top.
|
||
|
He was soon at home in the service, not at all disliked for his
|
||
|
unpretentious good looks and a sort of genial happy-go-lucky air. No
|
||
|
merrier man in his mess: in marked contrast to certain other
|
||
|
individuals included like himself among the impressed portion of the
|
||
|
ship's company; for these when not actively employed were sometimes,
|
||
|
and more particularly in the last dog-watch when the drawing near of
|
||
|
twilight induced revery, apt to fall into a saddish mood which in some
|
||
|
partook of sullenness. But they were not so young as our foretopman,
|
||
|
and no few of them must have known a hearth of some sort; others may
|
||
|
have had wives and children left, too probably, in uncertain
|
||
|
circumstances, and hardly any but must have had acknowledged kith
|
||
|
and kin, while for Billy, as will shortly be seen, his entire family
|
||
|
was practically invested in himself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 2
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though our new-made foretopman was well received in the top and on
|
||
|
the gun decks, hardly here was he that cynosure he had previously been
|
||
|
among those minor ship's companies of the merchant marine, with
|
||
|
which companies only had he hitherto consorted.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He was young; and despite his all but fully developed frame, in
|
||
|
aspect looked even younger than he really was, owing to a lingering
|
||
|
adolescent expression in the as yet smooth face, all but feminine in
|
||
|
purity of natural complexion, but where, thanks to his seagoing, the
|
||
|
lily was quite suppressed and the rose had some ado visibly to flush
|
||
|
through the tan.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To one essentially such a novice in the complexities of factitious
|
||
|
life, the abrupt transition from his former and simpler sphere to
|
||
|
the ampler and more knowing world of a great war-ship; this might well
|
||
|
have abashed him had there been any conceit or vanity in his
|
||
|
composition. Among her miscellaneous multitude, the Indomitable
|
||
|
mustered several individuals who, however inferior in grade, were of
|
||
|
no common natural stamp, sailors more signally susceptive of that
|
||
|
air which continuous martial discipline and repeated presence in
|
||
|
battle can in some degree impart even to the average man. As the
|
||
|
Handsome Sailor, Billy Budd's position aboard the seventy-four was
|
||
|
something analogous to that of a rustic beauty transplanted from the
|
||
|
provinces and brought into competition with the highborn dames of
|
||
|
the court. But this change of circumstances he scarce noted. As little
|
||
|
did he observe that something about him provoked an ambiguous smile in
|
||
|
one or two harder faces among the blue-jackets. Nor less unaware was
|
||
|
he of the peculiar favorable effect his person and demeanour had
|
||
|
upon the more intelligent gentlemen of the quarter-deck. Nor could
|
||
|
this well have been otherwise. Cast in a mould peculiar to the
|
||
|
finest physical examples of those Englishmen in whom the Saxon
|
||
|
strain would seem not at all to partake of any Norman or other
|
||
|
admixture, he showed in face that humane look of reposeful good nature
|
||
|
which the Greek sculptor in some instances gave to his heroic strong
|
||
|
man, Hercules. But this again was subtly modified by another and
|
||
|
pervasive quality. The ear, small and shapely, the arch of the foot,
|
||
|
the curve in mouth and nostril, even the indurated hand dyed to the
|
||
|
orange-tawny of the toucan's bill, a hand telling alike of the
|
||
|
halyards and tar-bucket; but, above all, something in the mobile
|
||
|
expression, and every chance attitude and movement, something
|
||
|
suggestive of a mother eminently favored by Love and the Graces; all
|
||
|
this strangely indicated a lineage in direct contradiction to his lot.
|
||
|
The mysteriousness here became less mysterious through a
|
||
|
matter-of-fact elicited when Billy, at the capstan, was being formally
|
||
|
mustered into the service. Asked by the officer, a small brisk
|
||
|
little gentleman, as it chanced among other questions, his place of
|
||
|
birth, he replied, "Please, Sir, I don't know."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Don't know where you were born?- Who was your father?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"God knows, Sir."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Struck by the straightforward simplicity of these replies, the
|
||
|
officer next asked, "Do you know anything about your beginning?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, Sir. But I have heard that I was found in a pretty
|
||
|
silklined basket hanging one morning from the knocker of a good
|
||
|
man's door in Bristol."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Found say you? Well," throwing back his head and looking up and
|
||
|
down the new recruit; "Well, it turns out to have been a pretty good
|
||
|
find. Hope they'll find some more like you, my man; the fleet sadly
|
||
|
needs them."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, Billy Budd was a foundling, a presumable by-blow, and,
|
||
|
evidently, no ignoble one. Noble descent was as evident in him as in a
|
||
|
blood horse.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For the rest, with little or no sharpness of faculty or any
|
||
|
trace of the wisdom of the serpent, nor yet quite a dove, he possessed
|
||
|
that kind and degree of intelligence going along with the
|
||
|
unconventional rectitude of a sound human creature, one to whom not
|
||
|
yet has been proffered the questionable apple of knowledge. He was
|
||
|
illiterate; he could not read, but he could sing, and like the
|
||
|
illiterate nightingale was sometimes the composer of his own song.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of self-consciousness he seemed to have little or none, or about
|
||
|
as much as we may reasonably impute to a dog of Saint Bernard's breed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Habitually living with the elements and knowing little more of the
|
||
|
land than as a beach, or, rather, that portion of the terraqueous
|
||
|
globe providentially set apart for dance-houses, doxies and
|
||
|
tapsters, in short what sailors call a "fiddlers'-green," his simple
|
||
|
nature remained unsophisticated by those moral obliquities which are
|
||
|
not in every case incompatible with that manufacturable thing known as
|
||
|
respectability. But are sailors, frequenters of "fiddlers'-greens,"
|
||
|
without vices? No; but less often than with landsmen do their vices,
|
||
|
so called, partake of crookedness of heart, seeming less to proceed
|
||
|
from viciousness than exuberance of vitality after long constraint;
|
||
|
frank manifestations in accordance with natural law. By his original
|
||
|
constitution aided by the cooperating influences of his lot, Billy
|
||
|
in many respects was little more than a sort of upright barbarian,
|
||
|
much such perhaps as Adam presumably might have been ere the urbane
|
||
|
Serpent wriggled himself into his company.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And here be it submitted that apparently going to corroborate
|
||
|
the doctrine of man's fall, a doctrine now popularly ignored, it is
|
||
|
observable that where certain virtues pristine and unadulterate
|
||
|
peculiarly characterize anybody in the external uniform of
|
||
|
civilization, they will upon scrutiny seem not to be derived from
|
||
|
custom or convention, but rather to be out of keeping with these, as
|
||
|
if indeed exceptionally transmitted from a period prior to Cain's city
|
||
|
and citified man. The character marked by such qualities has to an
|
||
|
unvitiated taste an untampered-with flavor like that of berries, while
|
||
|
the man thoroughly civilized, even in a fair specimen of the breed,
|
||
|
has to the same moral palate a questionable smack as of a compounded
|
||
|
wine. To any stray inheritor of these primitive qualities found,
|
||
|
like Caspar Hauser, wandering dazed in any Christian capital of our
|
||
|
time, the good-natured poet's famous invocation, near two thousand
|
||
|
years ago, of the good rustic out of his latitude in the Rome of the
|
||
|
Cesars, still appropriately holds:-
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Honest and poor, faithful in word and thought,
|
||
|
|
||
|
What has thee, Fabian, to the city brought?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though our Handsome Sailor had as much of masculine beauty as
|
||
|
one can expect anywhere to see; nevertheless, like the beautiful woman
|
||
|
in one of Hawthorne's minor tales, there was just one thing amiss in
|
||
|
him. No visible blemish, indeed, as with the lady; no, but an
|
||
|
occasional liability to a vocal defect. Though in the hour of
|
||
|
elemental uproar or peril he was everything that a sailor should be,
|
||
|
yet under sudden provocation of strong heart-feeling, his voice
|
||
|
otherwise singularly musical, as if expressive of the harmony
|
||
|
within, was apt to develop an organic hesitancy, in fact, more or less
|
||
|
of a stutter or even worse. In this particular Billy was a striking
|
||
|
instance that the arch interferer, the envious marplot of Eden,
|
||
|
still has more or less to do with every human consignment to this
|
||
|
planet of earth. In every case, one way or another he is sure to
|
||
|
slip in his little card, as much as to remind us- I too have a hand
|
||
|
here.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The avowal of such an imperfection in the Handsome Sailor should
|
||
|
be evidence not alone that he is not presented as a conventional hero,
|
||
|
but also that the story in which he is the main figure is no romance.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 3
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the time of Billy Budd's arbitrary enlistment into the
|
||
|
Indomitable that ship was on her way to join the Mediterranean
|
||
|
fleet. No long time elapsed before the 'unction was effected. As one
|
||
|
of that fleet the seventy-four participated in its movements, tho'
|
||
|
at times, on account of her superior sailing qualities, in the absence
|
||
|
of frigates, despatched on separate duty as a scout and at times on
|
||
|
less temporary service. But with all this the story has little
|
||
|
concernment, restricted as it is to the inner life of one particular
|
||
|
ship and the career of an individual sailor.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was the summer of 1797. In the April of that year had
|
||
|
occurred the commotion at Spithead followed in May by a second and yet
|
||
|
more serious outbreak in the fleet at the Nore. The latter is known,
|
||
|
and without exaggeration in the epithet, as the Great Mutiny. It was
|
||
|
indeed a demonstration more menacing to England than the
|
||
|
contemporary manifestoes and conquering and proselyting armies of
|
||
|
the French Directory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To the British Empire the Nore Mutiny was what a strike in the
|
||
|
fire-brigade would be to London threatened by general arson. In a
|
||
|
crisis when the kingdom might well have anticipated the famous
|
||
|
signal that some years later published along the naval line of
|
||
|
battle what it was that upon occasion England expected of
|
||
|
Englishmen; that was the time when at the mast-heads of the
|
||
|
three-deckers and seventy-fours moored in her own roadstead- a
|
||
|
fleet, the right arm of a Power then all but the sole free
|
||
|
conservative one of the Old World- the blue-jackets, to be numbered by
|
||
|
thousands, ran up with huzzas the British colors with the union and
|
||
|
cross wiped out; by that cancellation transmuting the flag of
|
||
|
founded law and freedom defined, into the enemy's red meteor of
|
||
|
unbridled and unbounded revolt. Reasonable discontent growing out of
|
||
|
practical grievances in the fleet had been ignited into irrational
|
||
|
combustion, as by live cinders blown across the Channel from France in
|
||
|
flames.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The event converted into irony for a time those spirited strains
|
||
|
of Dibdin- as a song-writer no mean auxiliary to the English
|
||
|
Government at the European conjuncture- strains celebrating, among
|
||
|
other things, the patriotic devotion of the British tar:
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And as for my life, 'tis the King's!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such an episode in the Island's grand naval story her naval
|
||
|
historians naturally abridge; one of them (G.P.R. James) candidly
|
||
|
acknowledging that fain would he pass it over did not "impartiality
|
||
|
forbid fastidiousness." And yet his mention is less a narration than a
|
||
|
reference, having to do hardly at all with details. Nor are these
|
||
|
readily to be found in the libraries. Like some other events in
|
||
|
every age befalling states everywhere, including America, the Great
|
||
|
Mutiny was of such character that national pride along with views of
|
||
|
policy would fain shade it off into the historical background. Such
|
||
|
events can not be ignored, but there is a considerate way of
|
||
|
historically treating them. If a well-constituted individual
|
||
|
refrains from blazoning aught amiss or calamitous in his family, a
|
||
|
nation in the like circumstance may without reproach be equally
|
||
|
discreet.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though after parleyings between Government and the ringleaders,
|
||
|
and concessions by the former as to some glaring abuses, the first
|
||
|
uprising- that at Spithead- with difficulty was put down, or matters
|
||
|
for the time pacified; yet at the Nore the unforeseen renewal of
|
||
|
insurrection on a yet larger scale, and emphasized in the
|
||
|
conferences that ensued by demands deemed by the authorities not
|
||
|
only inadmissible but aggressively insolent, indicated- if the Red
|
||
|
Flag did not sufficiently do so- what was the spirit animating the
|
||
|
men. Final suppression, however, there was; but only made possible
|
||
|
perhaps by the unswerving loyalty of the marine corps and voluntary
|
||
|
resumption of loyalty among influential sections of the crews.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To some extent the Nore Mutiny may be regarded as analogous to the
|
||
|
distempering irruption of contagious fever in a frame constitutionally
|
||
|
sound, and which anon throws it off.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At all events, of these thousands of mutineers were some of the
|
||
|
tars who not so very long afterwards- whether wholly prompted
|
||
|
thereto by patriotism, or pugnacious instinct, or by both,- helped
|
||
|
to win a coronet for Nelson at the Nile, and the naval crown of crowns
|
||
|
for him at Trafalgar. To the mutineers those battles, and especially
|
||
|
Trafalgar, were a plenary absolution and a grand one: For all that
|
||
|
goes to make up scenic naval display, heroic magnificence in arms,
|
||
|
those battles, especially Trafalgar, stand unmatched in human annals.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 4
|
||
|
|
||
|
Concerning "The greatest sailor since our world began."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tennyson
|
||
|
|
||
|
In this matter of writing, resolve as one may to keep to the
|
||
|
main road, some by-paths have an enticement not readily to be
|
||
|
withstood. I am going to err into such a by-path. If the reader will
|
||
|
keep me company I shall be glad. At the least we can promise ourselves
|
||
|
that pleasure which is wickedly said to be in sinning, for a
|
||
|
literary sin the divergence will be.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Very likely it is no new remark that the inventions of our time
|
||
|
have at last brought about a change in sea-warfare in degree
|
||
|
corresponding to the revolution in all warfare effected by the
|
||
|
original introduction from China into Europe of gunpowder. The first
|
||
|
European fire-arm, a clumsy contrivance, was, as is well known,
|
||
|
scouted by no few of the knights as a base implement, good enough
|
||
|
peradventure for weavers too craven to stand up crossing steel with
|
||
|
steel in frank fight. But as ashore, knightly valor, tho' shorn of its
|
||
|
blazonry, did not cease with the knights, neither on the seas,
|
||
|
though nowadays in encounters there a certain kind of displayed
|
||
|
gallantry be fallen out of date as hardly applicable under changed
|
||
|
circumstances, did the nobler qualities of such naval magnates as
|
||
|
Don John of Austria, Doria, Van Tromp, Jean Bart, the long line of
|
||
|
British Admirals and the American Decaturs of 1812 become obsolete
|
||
|
with their wooden walls.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Nevertheless, to anybody who can hold the Present at its worth
|
||
|
without being inappreciative of the Past, it may be forgiven, if to
|
||
|
such an one the solitary old hulk at Portsmouth, Nelson's Victory,
|
||
|
seems to float there, not alone as the decaying monument of a fame
|
||
|
incorruptible, but also as a poetic reproach, softened by its
|
||
|
picturesqueness, to the Monitors and yet mightier hulls of the
|
||
|
European ironclads. And this not altogether because such craft are
|
||
|
unsightly, unavoidably lacking the symmetry and grand lines of the old
|
||
|
battle-ships, but equally for other reasons.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There are some, perhaps, who while not altogether inaccessible
|
||
|
to that poetic reproach just alluded to, may yet on behalf of the
|
||
|
new order, be disposed to parry it; and this to the extent of
|
||
|
iconoclasm, if need be. For example, prompted by the sight of the star
|
||
|
inserted in the Victory's quarter-deck designating the spot where
|
||
|
the Great Sailor fell, these martial utilitarians may suggest
|
||
|
considerations implying that Nelson's ornate publication of his person
|
||
|
in battle was not only unnecessary, but not military, nay, savored
|
||
|
of foolhardiness and vanity. They may add, too, that at Trafalgar it
|
||
|
was in effect nothing less than a challenge to death; and death
|
||
|
came; and that but for his bravado the victorious Admiral might
|
||
|
possibly have survived the battle; and so, instead of having his
|
||
|
sagacious dying injunctions overruled by his immediate successor in
|
||
|
command, he himself, when the contest was decided, might have
|
||
|
brought his shattered fleet to anchor, a proceeding which might have
|
||
|
averted the deplorable loss of life by shipwreck in the elemental
|
||
|
tempest that followed the martial one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Well, should we set aside the more disputable point whether for
|
||
|
various reasons it was possible to anchor the fleet, then plausibly
|
||
|
enough the Benthamites of war may urge the above.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the might-have-been is but boggy ground to build on. And,
|
||
|
certainly, in foresight as to the larger issue of an encounter, and
|
||
|
anxious preparations for it- buoying the deadly way and mapping it
|
||
|
out, as at Copenhagen- few commanders have been so painstakingly
|
||
|
circumspect as this same reckless declarer of his person in fight.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Personal prudence even when dictated by quite other than selfish
|
||
|
considerations surely is no special virtue in a military man; while an
|
||
|
excessive love of glory, impassioning a less burning impulse, the
|
||
|
honest sense of duty, is the first. If the name Wellington is not so
|
||
|
much of a trumpet to the blood as the simpler name Nelson, the
|
||
|
reason for this may perhaps be inferred from the above. Alfred in
|
||
|
his funeral ode on the victor of Waterloo ventures not to call him the
|
||
|
greatest soldier of all time, tho' in the same ode he invokes Nelson
|
||
|
as "the greatest sailor since our world began."
|
||
|
|
||
|
At Trafalgar, Nelson, on the brink of opening the fight, sat
|
||
|
down and wrote his last brief will and testament. If under the
|
||
|
presentiment of the most magnificent of all victories to be crowned by
|
||
|
his own glorious death, a sort of priestly motive led him to dress his
|
||
|
person in the jewelled vouchers of his own shining deeds; if thus to
|
||
|
have adorned himself for the altar and the sacrifice were indeed
|
||
|
vainglory, then affectation and fustian is each more heroic line in
|
||
|
the great epics and dramas, since in such lines the poet but
|
||
|
embodies in verse those exaltations of sentiment that a nature like
|
||
|
Nelson, the opportunity being given, vitalizes into acts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 5
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, the outbreak at the Nore was put down. But not every
|
||
|
grievance was redressed. If the contractors, for example, were no
|
||
|
longer permitted to ply some practices peculiar to their tribe
|
||
|
everywhere, such as providing shoddy cloth, rations not sound, or
|
||
|
false in the measure, not the less impressment, for one thing, went
|
||
|
on. By custom sanctioned for centuries, and judicially maintained by a
|
||
|
Lord Chancellor as late as Mansfield, that mode of manning the
|
||
|
fleet, a mode now fallen into a sort of abeyance but never formally
|
||
|
renounced, it was not practicable to give up in those years. Its
|
||
|
abrogation would have crippled the indispensable fleet, one wholly
|
||
|
under canvas, no steam-power, its innumerable sails and thousands of
|
||
|
cannon, everything in short, worked by muscle alone; a fleet the
|
||
|
more insatiate in demand for men, because then multiplying its ships
|
||
|
of all grades against contingencies present and to come of the
|
||
|
convulsed Continent.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Discontent foreran the Two Mutinies, and more or less it lurkingly
|
||
|
survived them. Hence it was not unreasonable to apprehend some
|
||
|
return of trouble, sporadic or general. One instance of such
|
||
|
apprehensions: In the same year with this story, Nelson, then
|
||
|
Vice-Admiral Sir Horatio, being with the fleet off the Spanish
|
||
|
coast, was directed by the Admiral in command to shift his pennant
|
||
|
from the Captain to the Theseus; and for this reason: that the
|
||
|
latter ship having newly arrived on the station from home where it had
|
||
|
taken part in the Great Mutiny, danger was apprehended from the temper
|
||
|
of the men; and it was thought that an officer like Nelson was the
|
||
|
one, not indeed to terrorize the crew into base subjection, but to win
|
||
|
them, by force of his mere presence, back to an allegiance if not as
|
||
|
enthusiastic as his own, yet as true. So it was that for a time on
|
||
|
more than one quarter-deck anxiety did exist. At sea precautionary
|
||
|
vigilance was strained against relapse. At short notice an
|
||
|
engagement might come on. When it did, the lieutenants assigned to
|
||
|
batteries felt it incumbent on them, in some instances, to stand
|
||
|
with drawn swords behind the men working the guns.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 6
|
||
|
|
||
|
But on board the seventy-four in which Billy now swung his
|
||
|
hammock, very little in the manner of the men and nothing obvious in
|
||
|
the demeanour of the officers would have suggested to an ordinary
|
||
|
observer that the Great Mutiny was a recent event. In their general
|
||
|
bearing and conduct the commissioned officers of a warship naturally
|
||
|
take their tone from the Commander, that is if he have that ascendancy
|
||
|
of character that ought to be his.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Captain the Honorable Edward Fairfax Vere, to give his full title,
|
||
|
was a bachelor of forty or thereabouts, a sailor of distinction even
|
||
|
in a time prolific of renowned seamen. Though allied to the higher
|
||
|
nobility, his advancement had not been altogether owing to
|
||
|
influences connected with that circumstance. He had seen much service,
|
||
|
been in various engagements, always acquitting himself as an officer
|
||
|
mindful of the welfare of his men, but never tolerating an
|
||
|
infraction of discipline; thoroughly versed in the science of his
|
||
|
profession, and intrepid to the verge of temerity, though never
|
||
|
injudiciously so. For his gallantry in the West Indian waters as
|
||
|
Flag-Lieutenant under Rodney in that Admiral's crowning victory over
|
||
|
De Grasse, he was made a Post-Captain.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ashore in the garb of a civilian, scarce anyone would have taken
|
||
|
him for a sailor, more especially that he never garnished
|
||
|
unprofessional talk with nautical terms, and grave in his bearing,
|
||
|
evinced little appreciation of mere humor. It was not out of keeping
|
||
|
with these traits that on a passage when nothing demanded his
|
||
|
paramount action, he was the most undemonstrative of men. Any landsman
|
||
|
observing this gentleman, not conspicuous by his stature and wearing
|
||
|
no pronounced insignia, emerging from his cabin to the open deck,
|
||
|
and noting the silent deference of the officers retiring to leeward,
|
||
|
might have taken him for the King's guest, a civilian aboard the
|
||
|
King's-ship, some highly honorable discreet envoy on his way to an
|
||
|
important post. But in fact this unobtrusiveness of demeanour may have
|
||
|
proceeded from a certain unaffected modesty of manhood sometimes
|
||
|
accompanying a resolute nature, a modesty evinced at all times not
|
||
|
calling for pronounced action, and which shown in any rank of life
|
||
|
suggests a virtue aristocratic in kind.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As with some others engaged in various departments of the
|
||
|
world's more heroic activities, Captain Vere, though practical
|
||
|
enough upon occasion, would at times betray a certain dreaminess of
|
||
|
mood. Standing alone on the weather-side of the quarter-deck, one hand
|
||
|
holding by the rigging, he would absently gaze off at the blank sea.
|
||
|
At the presentation to him then of some minor matter interrupting
|
||
|
the current of his thoughts he would show more or less irascibility;
|
||
|
but instantly he would control it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the navy he was popularly known by the appellation- Starry
|
||
|
Vere. How such a designation happened to fall upon one who, whatever
|
||
|
his sterling qualities, was without any brilliant ones was in this
|
||
|
wise: A favorite kinsman, Lord Denton, a free-hearted fellow, had been
|
||
|
the first to meet and congratulate him upon his return to England from
|
||
|
his West Indian cruise; and but the day previous turning over a copy
|
||
|
of Andrew Marvell's poems, had lighted, not for the first time
|
||
|
however, upon the lines entitled Appleton House, the name of one of
|
||
|
the seats of their common ancestor, a hero in the German wars of the
|
||
|
seventeenth century, in which poem occur the lines,
|
||
|
|
||
|
"This 'tis to have been from the first
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a domestic heaven nursed,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Under the discipline severe
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of Fairfax and the starry Vere."
|
||
|
|
||
|
And so, upon embracing his cousin fresh from Rodney's great victory
|
||
|
wherein he had played so gallant a part, brimming over with just
|
||
|
family pride in the sailor of their house, he exuberantly exclaimed,
|
||
|
"Give ye joy, Ed; give ye joy, my starry Vere!" This got currency, and
|
||
|
the novel prefix serving in familiar parlance readily to distinguish
|
||
|
the Indomitable's Captain from another Vere his senior, a distant
|
||
|
relative, an officer of like rank in the navy, it remained permanently
|
||
|
attached to the surname.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 7
|
||
|
|
||
|
In view of the part that the Commander of the Indomitable plays in
|
||
|
scenes shortly to follow, it may be well to fill out that sketch of
|
||
|
his outlined in the previous chapter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Aside from his qualities as a sea-officer, Captain Vere was an
|
||
|
exceptional character. Unlike no few of England's renowned sailors,
|
||
|
long and arduous service with signal devotion to it, had not
|
||
|
resulted in absorbing and salting the entire man. He had a marked
|
||
|
leaning toward everything intellectual. He loved books, never going to
|
||
|
sea without a newly replenished library, compact but of the best.
|
||
|
The isolated leisure, in some cases so wearisome, falling at intervals
|
||
|
to commanders even during a war-cruise, never was tedious to Captain
|
||
|
Vere. With nothing of that literary taste which less heeds the thing
|
||
|
conveyed than the vehicle, his bias was toward those books to which
|
||
|
every serious mind of superior order occupying any active post of
|
||
|
authority in the world naturally inclines; books treating of actual
|
||
|
men and events no matter of what era- history, biography and
|
||
|
unconventional writers, who, free from cant and convention, like
|
||
|
Montaigne, honestly and in the spirit of common sense philosophize
|
||
|
upon realities.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In this line of reading he found confirmation of his own more
|
||
|
reasoned thoughts- confirmation which he had vainly sought in social
|
||
|
converse, so that as touching most fundamental topics, there had got
|
||
|
to be established in him some positive convictions, which he
|
||
|
forefelt would abide in him essentially unmodified so long as his
|
||
|
intelligent part remained unimpaired. In view of the troubled period
|
||
|
in which his lot was cast this was well for him. His settled
|
||
|
convictions were as a dyke against those invading waters of novel
|
||
|
opinion, social, political and otherwise, which carried away as in a
|
||
|
torrent no few minds in those days, minds by nature not inferior to
|
||
|
his own. While other members of that aristocracy to which by birth
|
||
|
he belonged were incensed at the innovators mainly because their
|
||
|
theories were inimical to the privileged classes, not alone Captain
|
||
|
Vere disinterestedly opposed them because they seemed to him incapable
|
||
|
of embodiment in lasting institutions, but at war with the peace of
|
||
|
the world and the true welfare of mankind.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With minds less stored than his and less earnest, some officers of
|
||
|
his rank, with whom at times he would necessarily consort, found him
|
||
|
lacking in the companionable quality, a dry and bookish gentleman,
|
||
|
as they deemed. Upon any chance withdrawal from their company one
|
||
|
would be apt to say to another, something like this: "Vere is a
|
||
|
noble fellow, Starry Vere. Spite the gazettes, Sir Horatio" (meaning
|
||
|
him with the Lord title) "is at bottom scarce a better seaman or
|
||
|
fighter. But between you and me now, don't you think there is a
|
||
|
queer streak of the pedantic running thro' him? Yes, like the King's
|
||
|
yarn in a coil of navy-rope?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some apparent ground there was for this sort of confidential
|
||
|
criticism; since not only did the Captain's discourse never fall
|
||
|
into the jocosely familiar, but in illustrating of any point
|
||
|
touching the stirring personages and events of the time he would be as
|
||
|
apt to cite some historic character or incident of antiquity as that
|
||
|
he would cite from the moderns. He seemed unmindful of the
|
||
|
circumstance that to his bluff company such remote allusions,
|
||
|
however pertinent they might really be, were altogether alien to men
|
||
|
whose reading was mainly confined to the journals. But considerateness
|
||
|
in such matters is not easy to natures constituted like Captain
|
||
|
Vere's. Their honesty prescribes to them directness, sometimes
|
||
|
far-reaching like that of a migratory fowl that in its flight never
|
||
|
heeds when it crosses a frontier.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 8
|
||
|
|
||
|
The lieutenants and other commissioned gentlemen forming Captain
|
||
|
Vere's staff it is not necessary here to particularize, nor needs it
|
||
|
to make any mention of any of the warrant-officers. But among the
|
||
|
petty-officers was one who having much to do with the story, may as
|
||
|
well be forthwith introduced. His portrait I essay, but shall never
|
||
|
hit it. This was John Claggart, the Master-at-arms. But that sea-title
|
||
|
may to landsmen seem somewhat equivocal. Originally, doubtless, that
|
||
|
petty-officer's function was the instruction of the men in the use
|
||
|
of arms, sword or cutlas. But very long ago, owing to the advance in
|
||
|
gunnery making hand-to-hand encounters less frequent and giving to
|
||
|
nitre and sulphur the preeminence over steel, that function ceased;
|
||
|
the Master-at-arms of a great war-ship becoming a sort of Chief of
|
||
|
Police, charged among other matters with the duty of preserving
|
||
|
order on the populous lower gun decks.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Claggart was a man about five and thirty, somewhat spare and tall,
|
||
|
yet of no ill figure upon the whole. His hand was too small and
|
||
|
shapely to have been accustomed to hard toil. The face was a notable
|
||
|
one; the features all except the chin cleanly cut as those on a
|
||
|
Greek medallion; yet the chin, beardless as Tecumseh's, had
|
||
|
something of strange protuberant heaviness in its make that recalled
|
||
|
the prints of the Rev. Dr. Titus Oates, the historic deponent with the
|
||
|
clerical drawl in the time of Charles II and the fraud of the
|
||
|
alleged Popish Plot. It served Claggart in his office that his eye
|
||
|
could cast a tutoring glance. His brow was of the sort phrenologically
|
||
|
associated with more than average intellect; silken jet curls partly
|
||
|
clustering over it, making a foil to the pallor below, a pallor tinged
|
||
|
with a faint shade of amber akin to the hue of time-tinted marbles
|
||
|
of old. This complexion, singularly contrasting with the red or deeply
|
||
|
bronzed visages of the sailors, and in part the result of his official
|
||
|
seclusion from the sunlight, tho' it was not exactly displeasing,
|
||
|
nevertheless seemed to hint of something defective or abnormal in
|
||
|
the constitution and blood. But his general aspect and manner were
|
||
|
so suggestive of an education and career incongruous with his naval
|
||
|
function that when not actively engaged in it he looked a man of
|
||
|
high quality, social and moral, who for reasons of his own was keeping
|
||
|
incog. Nothing was known of his former life. It might be that he was
|
||
|
an Englishman; and yet there lurked a bit of accent in his speech
|
||
|
suggesting that possibly he was not such by birth, but through
|
||
|
naturalization in early childhood. Among certain grizzled
|
||
|
sea-gossips of the gun decks and forecastle went a rumor perdue that
|
||
|
the Master-at-arms was a chevalier who had volunteered into the King's
|
||
|
Navy by way of compounding for some mysterious swindle whereof he
|
||
|
had been arraigned at the King's Bench. The fact that nobody could
|
||
|
substantiate this report was, of course, nothing against its secret
|
||
|
currency. Such a rumor once started on the gun decks in reference to
|
||
|
almost anyone below the rank of a commissioned officer would, during
|
||
|
the period assigned to this narrative, have seemed not altogether
|
||
|
wanting in credibility to the tarry old wiseacres of a man-of-war
|
||
|
crew. And indeed a man of Claggart's accomplishments, without prior
|
||
|
nautical experience, entering the navy at mature life, as he did,
|
||
|
and necessarily allotted at the start to the lowest grade in it; a
|
||
|
man, too, who never made allusion to his previous life ashore; these
|
||
|
were circumstances which in the dearth of exact knowledge as to his
|
||
|
true antecedents opened to the invidious a vague field for unfavorable
|
||
|
surmise.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the sailors' dog-watch gossip concerning him derived a vague
|
||
|
plausibility from the fact that now for some period the British Navy
|
||
|
could so little afford to be squeamish in the matter of keeping up the
|
||
|
muster-rolls, that not only were press-gangs notoriously abroad both
|
||
|
afloat and ashore, but there was little or no secret about another
|
||
|
matter, namely that the London police were at liberty to capture any
|
||
|
able-bodied suspect, any questionable fellow at large and summarily
|
||
|
ship him to dockyard or fleet. Furthermore, even among voluntary
|
||
|
enlistments there were instances where the motive thereto partook
|
||
|
neither of patriotic impulse nor yet of a random desire to
|
||
|
experience a bit of sea-life and martial adventure. Insolvent
|
||
|
debtors of minor grade, together with the promiscuous lame ducks of
|
||
|
morality found in the Navy a convenient and secure refuge. Secure,
|
||
|
because once enlisted aboard a King's-ship, they were as much in
|
||
|
sanctuary, as the transgressor of the Middle Ages harboring himself
|
||
|
under the shadow of the altar. Such sanctioned irregularities, which
|
||
|
for obvious reasons the Government would hardly think to parade at the
|
||
|
time, and which consequently, and as affecting the least influential
|
||
|
class of mankind, have all but dropped into oblivion, lend color to
|
||
|
something for the truth whereof I do not vouch, and hence have some
|
||
|
scruple in stating; something I remember having seen in print,
|
||
|
though the book I can not recall; but the same thing was personally
|
||
|
communicated to me now more than forty years ago by an old pensioner
|
||
|
in a cocked hat with whom I had a most interesting talk on the terrace
|
||
|
at Greenwich, a Baltimore Negro, a Trafalgar man. It was to this
|
||
|
effect: In the case of a war-ship short of hands whose speedy
|
||
|
sailing was imperative, the deficient quota in lack of any other way
|
||
|
of making it good, would be eked out by draughts culled direct from
|
||
|
the jails. For reasons previously suggested it would not perhaps be
|
||
|
easy at the present day directly to prove or disprove the
|
||
|
allegation. But allowed as a verity, how significant would it be of
|
||
|
England's straits at the time, confronted by those wars which like a
|
||
|
flight of harpies rose shrieking from the din and dust of the fallen
|
||
|
Bastille. That era appears measurably clear to us who look back at it,
|
||
|
and but read of it. But to the grandfathers of us graybeards, the more
|
||
|
thoughtful of them, the genius of it presented an aspect like that
|
||
|
of Camouns' Spirit of the Cape, an eclipsing menace mysterious and
|
||
|
prodigious. Not America was exempt from apprehension. At the height of
|
||
|
Napoleon's unexampled conquests, there were Americans who had fought
|
||
|
at Bunker Hill who looked forward to the possibility that the Atlantic
|
||
|
might prove no barrier against the ultimate schemes of this French
|
||
|
upstart from the revolutionary chaos who seemed in act of fulfilling
|
||
|
judgement prefigured in the Apocalypse.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the less credence was to be given to the gun-deck talk
|
||
|
touching Claggart, seeing that no man holding his office in a
|
||
|
man-of-war can ever hope to be popular with the crew. Besides, in
|
||
|
derogatory comments upon anyone against whom they have a grudge, or
|
||
|
for any reason or no reason mislike, sailors are much like landsmen;
|
||
|
they are apt to exaggerate or romance it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
About as much was really known to the Indomitable's tars of the
|
||
|
Master-at-arms' career before entering the service as an astronomer
|
||
|
knows about a comet's travels prior to its first observable appearance
|
||
|
in the sky. The verdict of the sea quid-nuncs has been cited only by
|
||
|
way of showing what sort of moral impression the man made upon rude
|
||
|
uncultivated natures whose conceptions of human wickedness were
|
||
|
necessarily of the narrowest, limited to ideas of vulgar rascality,- a
|
||
|
thief among the swinging hammocks during a night-watch, or the man
|
||
|
brokers and land-sharks of the sea-ports.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was no gossip, however, but fact, that though, as before
|
||
|
hinted, Claggart upon his entrance into the navy was, as a novice,
|
||
|
assigned to the least honourable section of a man-of-war's crew,
|
||
|
embracing the drudgery, he did not long remain there.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The superior capacity he immediately evinced, his constitutional
|
||
|
sobriety, ingratiating deference to superiors, together with a
|
||
|
peculiar ferreting genius manifested on a singular occasion; all
|
||
|
this capped by a certain austere patriotism abruptly advanced him to
|
||
|
the position of Master-at-arms.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of this maritime Chief of Police the ship's-corporals, so
|
||
|
called, were the immediate subordinates, and compliant ones; and this,
|
||
|
as is to be noted in some business departments ashore, almost to a
|
||
|
degree inconsistent with entire moral volition. His place put
|
||
|
various converging wires of underground influence under the Chief's
|
||
|
control, capable when astutely worked thro' his understrappers, of
|
||
|
operating to the mysterious discomfort, if nothing worse, of any of
|
||
|
the sea-commonalty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 9
|
||
|
|
||
|
Life in the fore-top well agreed with Billy Budd. There, when
|
||
|
not actually engaged on the yards yet higher aloft, the topmen, who as
|
||
|
such had been picked out for youth and activity, constituted an aerial
|
||
|
club lounging at ease against the smaller stun'sails rolled up into
|
||
|
cushions, spinning yarns like the lazy gods, and frequently amused
|
||
|
with what was going on in the busy world of the decks below. No wonder
|
||
|
then that a young fellow of Billy's disposition was well content in
|
||
|
such society. Giving no cause of offence to anybody, he was always
|
||
|
alert at a call. So in the merchant service it had been with him.
|
||
|
But now such a punctiliousness in duty was shown that his topmates
|
||
|
would sometimes good-naturedly laugh at him for it. This heightened
|
||
|
alacrity had its cause, namely, the impression made upon him by the
|
||
|
first formal gangway-punishment he had ever witnessed, which befell
|
||
|
the day following his impressment. It had been incurred by a little
|
||
|
fellow, young, a novice, an afterguardsman absent from his assigned
|
||
|
post when the ship was being put about; a dereliction resulting in a
|
||
|
rather serious hitch to that manoeuvre, one demanding instantaneous
|
||
|
promptitude in letting go and making fast. When Billy saw the
|
||
|
culprit's naked back under the scourge gridironed with red welts,
|
||
|
and worse; when he marked the dire expression on the liberated man's
|
||
|
face as with his woolen shirt flung over him by the executioner he
|
||
|
rushed forward from the spot to bury himself in the crowd, Billy was
|
||
|
horrified. He resolved that never through remissness would he make
|
||
|
himself liable to such a visitation or do or omit aught that might
|
||
|
merit even verbal reproof. What then was his surprise and concern when
|
||
|
ultimately he found himself getting into petty trouble occasionally
|
||
|
about such matters as the stowage of his bag or something amiss in his
|
||
|
hammock, matters under the police oversight of the ship's-corporals of
|
||
|
the lower decks, and which brought down on him a vague threat from one
|
||
|
of them.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So heedful in all things as he was, how could this be? He could
|
||
|
not understand it, and it more than vexed him. When he spoke to his
|
||
|
young topmates about it they were either lightly incredulous or
|
||
|
found something comical in his unconcealed anxiety. "Is it your bag,
|
||
|
Billy?" said one. "Well, sew yourself up in it, bully boy, and then
|
||
|
you'll be sure to know if anybody meddles with it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now there was a veteran aboard who because his years began to
|
||
|
disqualify him for more active work had been recently assigned duty as
|
||
|
mainmastman in his watch, looking to the gear belayed at the rail
|
||
|
roundabout that great spar near the deck. At off-times the
|
||
|
Foretopman had picked up some acquaintance with him, and now in his
|
||
|
trouble it occurred to him that he might be the sort of person to go
|
||
|
to for wise counsel. He was an old Dansker long anglicized in the
|
||
|
service, of few words, many wrinkles and some honorable scars. His
|
||
|
wizened face, time-tinted and weather-stained to the complexion of
|
||
|
an antique parchment, was here and there peppered blue by the chance
|
||
|
explosion of a gun-cartridge in action. He was an Agamemnon-man;
|
||
|
some two years prior to the time of this story having served under
|
||
|
Nelson, when but Sir Horatio, in that ship immortal in naval memory,
|
||
|
and which, dismantled and in part broken up to her bare ribs, is
|
||
|
seen a grand skeleton in Haydon's etching. As one of a
|
||
|
boarding-party from the Agamemnon he had received a cut slantwise
|
||
|
along one temple and cheek, leaving a long scar like a streak of
|
||
|
dawn's light falling athwart the dark visage. It was on account of
|
||
|
that scar and the affair in which it was known that he had received
|
||
|
it, as well as from his blue-peppered complexion, that the Dansker
|
||
|
went among the Indomitable's crew by the name of
|
||
|
"Board-her-in-the-smoke."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now the first time that his small weazel-eyes happened to light on
|
||
|
Billy Budd, a certain grim internal merriment set all his ancient
|
||
|
wrinkles into antic play. Was it that his eccentric unsentimental
|
||
|
old sapience, primitive in its kind, saw or thought it saw something
|
||
|
which, in contrast with the war-ship's environment, looked oddly
|
||
|
incongruous in the Handsome Sailor? But after slyly studying him at
|
||
|
intervals, the old Merlin's equivocal merriment was modified; for
|
||
|
now when the twain would meet, it would start in his face a quizzing
|
||
|
sort of look, but it would be but momentary and sometimes replaced
|
||
|
by an expression of speculative query as to what might eventually
|
||
|
befall a nature like that, dropped into a world not without some
|
||
|
man-traps and against whose subtleties simple courage, lacking
|
||
|
experience and address and without any touch of defensive ugliness, is
|
||
|
of little avail; and where such innocence as man is capable of does
|
||
|
yet in a moral emergency not always sharpen the faculties or enlighten
|
||
|
the will.
|
||
|
|
||
|
However it was, the Dansker in his ascetic way rather took to
|
||
|
Billy. Nor was this only because of a certain philosophic interest
|
||
|
in such a character. There was another cause. While the old man's
|
||
|
eccentricities, sometimes bordering on the ursine, repelled the
|
||
|
juniors, Billy, undeterred thereby, revering him as a salt hero, would
|
||
|
make advances, never passing the old Agamemnon-man without a
|
||
|
salutation marked by that respect which is seldom lost on the aged
|
||
|
however crabbed at times or whatever their station in life.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was a vein of dry humor, or what not, in the mast-man;
|
||
|
and, whether in freak of patriarchal irony touching Billy's youth
|
||
|
and athletic frame, or for some other and more recondite reason,
|
||
|
from the first in addressing him he always substituted Baby for Billy.
|
||
|
The Dansker in fact being the originator of the name by which the
|
||
|
Foretopman eventually became known aboard ship.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Well then, in his mysterious little difficulty, going in quest
|
||
|
of the wrinkled one, Billy found him off duty in a dog-watch
|
||
|
ruminating by himself, seated on a shot-box of the upper gun deck, now
|
||
|
and then surveying with a somewhat cynical regard certain of the
|
||
|
more swaggering promenaders there. Billy recounted his trouble,
|
||
|
again wondering how it all happened. The salt seer attentively
|
||
|
listened, accompanying the Foretopman's recital with queer
|
||
|
twitchings of his wrinkles and problematical little sparkles of his
|
||
|
small ferret eyes. Making an end of his story, the Foretopman asked,
|
||
|
"And now, Dansker, do tell me what you think of it."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The old man, shoving up the front of his tarpaulin and
|
||
|
deliberately rubbing the long slant scar at the point where it entered
|
||
|
the thin hair, laconically said, "Baby Budd, Jimmy Legs" (meaning
|
||
|
the Master-at-arms) "is down on you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Jimmy Legs!" ejaculated Billy, his welkin eyes expanding; "what
|
||
|
for? Why he calls me the sweet and pleasant fellow, they tell me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Does he so?" grinned the grizzled one; then said, "Ay, Baby
|
||
|
Lad, a sweet voice has Jimmy Legs."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, not always. But to me he has. I seldom pass him but there
|
||
|
comes a pleasant word."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And that's because he's down upon you, Baby Budd."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such reiteration along with the manner of it, incomprehensible
|
||
|
to a novice, disturbed Billy almost as much as the mystery for which
|
||
|
he had sought explanation. Something less unpleasingly oracular he
|
||
|
tried to extract; but the old sea-Chiron, thinking perhaps that for
|
||
|
the nonce he had sufficiently instructed his young Achilles, pursed
|
||
|
his lips, gathered all his wrinkles together and would commit
|
||
|
himself to nothing further.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Years, and those experiences which befall certain shrewder men
|
||
|
subordinated life-long to the will of superiors, all this had
|
||
|
developed in the Dansker the pithy guarded cynicism that was his
|
||
|
leading characteristic.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 10
|
||
|
|
||
|
The next day an incident served to confirm Billy Budd in his
|
||
|
incredulity as to the Dansker's strange summing-up of the case
|
||
|
submitted. The ship at noon, going large before the wind, was
|
||
|
rolling on her course, and he, below at dinner and engaged in some
|
||
|
sportful talk with the members of his mess, chanced in a sudden
|
||
|
lurch to spill the entire contents of his soup-pan upon the new
|
||
|
scrubbed deck. Claggart, the Master-at-arms, official rattan in
|
||
|
hand, happened to be passing along the battery in a bay of which the
|
||
|
mess was lodged, and the greasy liquid streamed just across his
|
||
|
path. Stepping over it, he was proceeding on his way without
|
||
|
comment, since the matter was nothing to take notice of under the
|
||
|
circumstances, when he happened to observe who it was that had done
|
||
|
the spilling. His countenance changed. Pausing, he was about to
|
||
|
ejaculate something hasty at the sailor, but checked himself, and
|
||
|
pointing down to the streaming soup, playfully tapped him from
|
||
|
behind with his rattan, saying in a low musical voice peculiar to
|
||
|
him at times, "Handsomely done, my lad! And handsome is as handsome
|
||
|
did it too!" And with that passed on. Not noted by Billy, as not
|
||
|
coming within his view, was the involuntary smile, or rather
|
||
|
grimace, that accompanied Claggart's equivocal words. Aridly it drew
|
||
|
down the thin corners of his shapely mouth. But everybody taking his
|
||
|
remark as meant for humourous, and at which therefore as coming from a
|
||
|
superior they were bound to laugh "with counterfeited glee," acted
|
||
|
accordingly; and Billy tickled, it may be, by the allusion to his
|
||
|
being the handsome sailor, merrily joined in; then addressing his
|
||
|
messmates exclaimed, "There now, who says that Jimmy Legs is down on
|
||
|
me!" "And who said he was, Beauty?" demanded one Donald with some
|
||
|
surprise. Whereat the Foretopman looked a little foolish, recalling
|
||
|
that it was only one person, Board-her-in-the-smoke, who had suggested
|
||
|
what to him was the smoky idea that this Master-at-arms was in any
|
||
|
peculiar way hostile to him. Meantime that functionary, resuming his
|
||
|
path, must have momentarily worn some expression less guarded than
|
||
|
that of the bitter smile, and usurping the face from the heart, some
|
||
|
distorting expression perhaps; for a drummer-boy heedlessly frolicking
|
||
|
along from the opposite direction and chancing to come into light
|
||
|
collision with his person was strangely disconcerted by his aspect.
|
||
|
Nor was the impression lessened when the official, impulsively
|
||
|
giving him a sharp cut with the rattan, vehemently exclaimed, "Look
|
||
|
where you go!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 11
|
||
|
|
||
|
What was the matter with the Master-at-arms? And, be the matter
|
||
|
what it might, how could it have direct relation to Billy Budd with
|
||
|
whom, prior to the affair of the spilled soup, he had never come
|
||
|
into any special contact, official or otherwise? What indeed could the
|
||
|
trouble have to do with one so little inclined to give offence as
|
||
|
the merchant-ship's peacemaker, even him who in Claggart's own
|
||
|
phrase was "the sweet and pleasant young fellow"? Yes, why should
|
||
|
Jimmy Legs, to borrow the Dansker's expression, be down on the
|
||
|
Handsome Sailor? But, at heart and not for nothing, as the late chance
|
||
|
encounter may indicate to the discerning, down on him, secretly down
|
||
|
on him, he assuredly was.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now to invent something touching the more private career of
|
||
|
Claggart, something involving Billy Budd, of which something the
|
||
|
latter should be wholly ignorant, some romantic incident implying that
|
||
|
Claggart's knowledge of the young blue-jacket began at some period
|
||
|
anterior to catching sight of him on board the seventy-four-all
|
||
|
this, not so difficult to do, might avail in a way more or less
|
||
|
interesting to account for whatever of enigma may appear to lurk in
|
||
|
the case. But in fact there was nothing of the sort. And yet the
|
||
|
cause, necessarily to be assumed as the sole one assignable, is in its
|
||
|
very realism as much charged with that prime element of Radcliffian
|
||
|
romance, the mysterious, as any that the ingenuity of the author of
|
||
|
the Mysteries of Udolpho could devise. For what can more partake of
|
||
|
the mysterious than an antipathy spontaneous and profound, such as
|
||
|
is evoked in certain exceptional mortals by the mere aspect of some
|
||
|
other mortal, however harmless he may be, if not called forth by
|
||
|
this very harmlessness itself?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now there can exist no irritating juxtaposition of dissimilar
|
||
|
personalities comparable to that which is possible aboard a great
|
||
|
war-ship fully manned and at sea. There, every day among all ranks
|
||
|
almost every man comes into more or less of contact with almost
|
||
|
every other man. Wholly there to avoid even the sight of an
|
||
|
aggravating object one must needs give it Jonah's toss or jump
|
||
|
overboard himself. Imagine how all this might eventually operate on
|
||
|
some peculiar human creature the direct reverse of a saint?
|
||
|
|
||
|
But for the adequate comprehending of Claggart by a normal nature,
|
||
|
these hints are insufficient. To pass from a normal nature to him
|
||
|
one must cross "the deadly space between." And this is best done by
|
||
|
indirection.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Long ago an honest scholar my senior, said to me in reference to
|
||
|
one who like himself is now no more, a man so unimpeachably
|
||
|
respectable that against him nothing was ever openly said tho' among
|
||
|
cracked by the tap of a lady's fan. You are aware that I am the
|
||
|
adherent of no organized religion much less of any philosophy built
|
||
|
into a system. Well, for all that, I think that to try and get into
|
||
|
from some source other than what is known as knowledge of the world-
|
||
|
that were hardly possible, at least for me."
|
||
|
human, and knowledge of the world assuredly implies the knowledge of
|
||
|
human nature, and in most of its varieties."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Yes, but a superficial knowledge of it, serving ordinary
|
||
|
purposes. But for anything deeper, I am not certain whether to know
|
||
|
the world and to know human nature be not two distinct branches of
|
||
|
knowledge, which while they may coexist in the same heart, yet
|
||
|
either may exist with little or nothing of the other. Nay, in an
|
||
|
average man of the world, his constant rubbing with it blunts that
|
||
|
fine spiritual insight indispensable to the understanding of the
|
||
|
essential in certain exceptional characters, whether evil ones or
|
||
|
good. In a matter of some importance I have seen a girl wind an old
|
||
|
lawyer about her little finger. Nor was it the dotage of senile
|
||
|
love. Nothing of the sort. But he knew law better than he knew the
|
||
|
girl's heart. Coke and Blackstone hardly shed so much light into
|
||
|
obscure spiritual places as the Hebrew prophets. And who were they?
|
||
|
Mostly recluses."
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the time my inexperience was such that I did not quite see
|
||
|
the drift of all this. It may be that I see it now. And, indeed, if
|
||
|
that lexicon which is based on Holy Writ were any longer popular,
|
||
|
one might with less difficulty define and denominate certain
|
||
|
phenomenal men. As it is, one must turn to some authority not liable
|
||
|
to the charge of being tinctured with the Biblical element.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a list of definitions included in the authentic translation
|
||
|
of Plato, a list attributed to him, occurs this: "Natural Depravity: a
|
||
|
depravity according to nature." A definition which tho' savoring of
|
||
|
Calvinism, by no means involves Calvin's dogmas as to total mankind.
|
||
|
Evidently its intent makes it applicable but to individuals. Not
|
||
|
many are the examples of this depravity which the gallows and jail
|
||
|
supply. At any rate for notable instances, since these have no
|
||
|
vulgar alloy of the brute in them, but invariably are dominated by
|
||
|
intellectuality, one must go elsewhere. Civilization, especially if of
|
||
|
the austerer sort, is auspicious to it. It folds itself in the
|
||
|
mantle of respectability. It has its certain negative virtues
|
||
|
serving as silent auxiliaries. It never allows wine to get within
|
||
|
its guard. It is not going too far to say that it is without vices
|
||
|
or small sins. There is a phenomenal pride in it that excludes them
|
||
|
from anything mercenary or avaricious. In short the depravity here
|
||
|
meant partakes nothing of the sordid or sensual. It is serious, but
|
||
|
free from acerbity. Though no flatterer of mankind it never speaks ill
|
||
|
of it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the thing which in eminent instances signalizes so exceptional
|
||
|
a nature is this: though the man's even temper and discreet bearing
|
||
|
would seem to intimate a mind peculiarly subject to the law of reason,
|
||
|
not the less in his heart he would seem to riot in complete
|
||
|
exemption from that law, having apparently little to do with reason
|
||
|
further than to employ it as an ambidexter implement for effecting the
|
||
|
irrational. That is to say: Toward the accomplishment of an aim
|
||
|
which in wantonness of malignity would seem to partake of the
|
||
|
insane, he will direct a cool judgement sagacious and sound.
|
||
|
|
||
|
These men are true madmen, and of the most dangerous sort, for
|
||
|
their lunacy is not continuous but occasional, evoked by some
|
||
|
special object; it is probably secretive, which is as much to say it
|
||
|
is self-contained, so that when moreover, most active, it is to the
|
||
|
average mind not distinguishable from sanity, and for the reason above
|
||
|
suggested that whatever its aims may be- and the aim is never
|
||
|
declared- the method and the outward proceeding are always perfectly
|
||
|
rational.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now something such an one was Claggart, in whom was the mania of
|
||
|
an evil nature, not engendered by vicious training or corrupting books
|
||
|
or licentious living, but born with him and innate, in short "a
|
||
|
depravity according to nature."
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 12
|
||
|
|
||
|
Lawyers, Experts, Clergy
|
||
|
|
||
|
AN EPISODE
|
||
|
|
||
|
By the way, can it be the phenomenon, disowned or at least
|
||
|
concealed, that in some criminal cases puzzles the courts? For this
|
||
|
cause have our juries at times not only to endure the prolonged
|
||
|
contentions of lawyers with their fees, but also the yet more
|
||
|
perplexing strife of the medical experts with theirs?- But why leave
|
||
|
it to them? Why not subpoena as well the clerical proficients? Their
|
||
|
vocation bringing them into peculiar contact with so many human
|
||
|
beings, and sometimes in their least guarded hour, in interviews
|
||
|
very much more confidential than those of physician and patient;
|
||
|
this would seem to qualify them to know something about those
|
||
|
intricacies involved in the question of moral responsibility;
|
||
|
whether in a given case, say, the crime proceeded from mania in the
|
||
|
brain or rabies of the heart. As to any differences among themselves
|
||
|
these clerical proficients might develop on the stand, these could
|
||
|
hardly be greater than the direct contradictions exchanged between the
|
||
|
remunerated medical experts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Dark sayings are these, some will say. But why? Is it because they
|
||
|
somewhat savor of Holy Writ in its phrase "mysteries of iniquity"?
|
||
|
If they do, such savor was far from being intended, for little will it
|
||
|
commend these pages to many a reader of to-day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The point of the present story turning on the hidden nature of the
|
||
|
Master-at-arms has necessitated this chapter. With an added hint or
|
||
|
two in connection with the incident at the mess, the resumed narrative
|
||
|
must be left to vindicate, as it may, its own credibility.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 13
|
||
|
|
||
|
Pale ire, envy and despair
|
||
|
|
||
|
That Claggart's figure was not amiss, and his face, save the chin,
|
||
|
well moulded, has already been said. Of these favorable points he
|
||
|
seemed not insensible, for he was not only neat but careful in his
|
||
|
dress. But the form of Billy Budd was heroic; and if his face was
|
||
|
without the intellectual look of the pallid Claggart's, not the less
|
||
|
was it lit, like his, from within, though from a different source. The
|
||
|
bonfire in his heart made luminous the rose-tan in his cheek.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In view of the marked contrast between the persons of the twain,
|
||
|
it is more than probable that when the Master-at-arms in the scene
|
||
|
last given applied to the sailor the proverb Handsome is as handsome
|
||
|
does, he there let escape an ironic inkling, not caught by the young
|
||
|
sailors who heard it, as to what it was that had first moved him
|
||
|
against Billy, namely, his significant personal beauty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now envy and antipathy, passions irreconcilable in reason,
|
||
|
nevertheless in fact may spring conjoined like Chang and Eng in one
|
||
|
birth. Is Envy then such a monster? Well, though many an arraigned
|
||
|
mortal has in hopes of mitigated penalty pleaded guilty to horrible
|
||
|
actions, did ever anybody seriously confess to envy? Something there
|
||
|
is in it universally felt to be more shameful than even felonious
|
||
|
crime. And not only does everybody disown it, but the better sort
|
||
|
are inclined to incredulity when it is in earnest imputed to an
|
||
|
intelligent man. But since its lodgement is in the heart not the
|
||
|
brain, no degree of intellect supplies a guarantee against it. But
|
||
|
Claggart's was no vulgar form of the passion. Nor, as directed
|
||
|
toward Billy Budd, did it partake of that streak of apprehensive
|
||
|
jealousy that marred Saul's visage perturbedly brooding on the
|
||
|
comely young David. Claggart's envy struck deeper. If askance he
|
||
|
eyed the good looks, cheery health and frank enjoyment of young life
|
||
|
in Billy Budd, it was because these went along with a nature that,
|
||
|
as Claggart magnetically felt, had in its simplicity never willed
|
||
|
malice or experienced the reactionary bite of that serpent. To him,
|
||
|
the spirit lodged within Billy, and looking out from his welkin eyes
|
||
|
as from windows, that ineffability it was which made the dimple in his
|
||
|
dyed cheek, suppled his joints, and dancing in his yellow curls made
|
||
|
him preeminently the Handsome Sailor. One person excepted, the
|
||
|
Master-at-arms was perhaps the only man in the ship intellectually
|
||
|
capable of adequately appreciating the moral phenomenon presented in
|
||
|
Billy Budd. And the insight but intensified his passion, which
|
||
|
assuming various secret forms within him, at times assumed that of
|
||
|
cynic disdain- disdain of innocence. To be nothing more than innocent!
|
||
|
Yet in an aesthetic way he saw the charm of it, the courageous
|
||
|
free-and-easy temper of it, and fain would have shared it, but he
|
||
|
despaired of it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With no power to annul the elemental evil in him, tho' readily
|
||
|
enough he could hide it; apprehending the good, but powerless to be
|
||
|
it; a nature like Claggart's surcharged with energy as such natures
|
||
|
almost invariably are, what recourse is left to it but to recoil
|
||
|
upon itself and like the scorpion for which the Creator alone is
|
||
|
responsible, act out to the end the part allotted it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 14
|
||
|
|
||
|
Passion, and passion in its profoundest, is not a thing
|
||
|
demanding a palatial stage whereon to play its part. Down among the
|
||
|
groundlings, among the beggars and rakers of the garbage, profound
|
||
|
passion is enacted. And the circumstances that provoke it, however
|
||
|
trivial or mean, are no measure of its power. In the present
|
||
|
instance the stage is a scrubbed gun deck, and one of the external
|
||
|
provocations a man-of-war's-man's spilled soup.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now when the Master-at-arms noticed whence came that greasy
|
||
|
fluid streaming before his feet, he must have taken it- to some extent
|
||
|
wilfully, perhaps- not for the mere accident it assuredly was, but for
|
||
|
the sly escape of a spontaneous feeling on Billy's part more or less
|
||
|
answering to the antipathy on his own. In effect a foolish
|
||
|
demonstration he must have thought, and very harmless, like the futile
|
||
|
kick of a heifer, which yet were the heifer a shod stallion, would not
|
||
|
be so harmless. Even so was it that into the gall of Claggart's envy
|
||
|
he infused the vitriol of his contempt. But the incident confirmed
|
||
|
to him certain tell-tale reports purveyed to his ear by Squeak, one of
|
||
|
his more cunning Corporals, a grizzled little man, so nicknamed by the
|
||
|
sailors on account of his squeaky voice, and sharp visage ferreting
|
||
|
about the dark corners of the lower decks after interlopers,
|
||
|
satirically suggesting to them the idea of a rat in a cellar.
|
||
|
|
||
|
From his Chief's employing him as an implicit tool in laying
|
||
|
little traps for the worriment of the Foretopman- for it was from
|
||
|
the Master-at-arms that the petty persecutions heretofore adverted
|
||
|
to had proceeded- the Corporal having naturally enough concluded
|
||
|
that his master could have no love for the sailor, made it his
|
||
|
business, faithful understrapper that he was, to foment the ill
|
||
|
blood by perverting to his Chief certain innocent frolics of the
|
||
|
goodnatured Foretopman, besides inventing for his mouth sundry
|
||
|
contumelious epithets he claimed to have overheard him let fall. The
|
||
|
Master-at-arms never suspected the veracity of these reports, more
|
||
|
especially as to the epithets, for he well knew how secretly unpopular
|
||
|
may become a master-at-arms, at least a master-at-arms of those days
|
||
|
zealous in his function, and how the blue-jackets shoot at him in
|
||
|
private their raillery and wit; the nickname by which he goes among
|
||
|
them (Jimmy Legs) implying under the form of merriment their cherished
|
||
|
disrespect and dislike.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But in view of the greediness of hate for patrolmen, it hardly
|
||
|
needed a purveyor to feed Claggart's passion. An uncommon prudence
|
||
|
is habitual with the subtler depravity, for it has everything to hide.
|
||
|
And in case of an injury but suspected, its secretiveness
|
||
|
voluntarily cuts it off from enlightenment or disillusion; and, not
|
||
|
unreluctantly, action is taken upon surmise as upon certainty. And the
|
||
|
retaliation is apt to be in monstrous disproportion to the supposed
|
||
|
offence; for when in anybody was revenge in its exactions aught else
|
||
|
but an inordinate usurer? But how with Claggart's conscience? For
|
||
|
though consciences are unlike as foreheads, every intelligence, not
|
||
|
excluding the Scriptural devils who "believe and tremble," has one.
|
||
|
But Claggart's conscience being but the lawyer to his will, made ogres
|
||
|
of trifles, probably arguing that the motive imputed to Billy in
|
||
|
spilling the soup just when he did, together with the epithets
|
||
|
alleged, these, if nothing more, made a strong case against him;
|
||
|
nay, justified animosity into a sort of retributive righteousness. The
|
||
|
Pharisee is the Guy Fawkes prowling in the hid chambers underlying the
|
||
|
Claggarts. And they can really form no conception of an unreciprocated
|
||
|
malice. Probably, the Master-at-arms' clandestine persecution of Billy
|
||
|
was started to try the temper of the man; but it had not developed any
|
||
|
quality in him that enmity could make official use of or even
|
||
|
pervert into plausible self-justification; so that the occurrence at
|
||
|
the mess, petty if it were, was a welcome one to that peculiar
|
||
|
conscience assigned to be the private mentor of Claggart. And, for the
|
||
|
rest, not improbably it put him upon new experiments.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 15
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not many days after the last incident narrated, something befell
|
||
|
Billy Budd that more gravelled him than aught that had previously
|
||
|
occurred.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was a warm night for the latitude; and the Foretopman, whose
|
||
|
watch at the time was properly below, was dozing on the uppermost deck
|
||
|
whither he had ascended from his hot hammock, one of hundreds
|
||
|
suspended so closely wedged together over a lower gun deck that
|
||
|
there was little or no swing to them. He lay as in the shadow of a
|
||
|
hill-side, stretched under the lee of the booms, a piled ridge of
|
||
|
spare spars amidships between fore-mast and mainmast and among which
|
||
|
the ship's largest boat, the launch, was stowed. Alongside of three
|
||
|
other slumberers from below, he lay near that end of the booms which
|
||
|
approaches the fore-mast; his station aloft on duty as a foretopman
|
||
|
being just over the deckstation of the forecastlemen, entitling him
|
||
|
according to usage to make himself more or less at home in that
|
||
|
neighbourhood.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently he was stirred into semi-consciousness by somebody,
|
||
|
who must have previously sounded the sleep of the others, touching his
|
||
|
shoulder, and then as the Foretopman raised his head, breathing into
|
||
|
his ear in a quick whisper, "Slip into the lee forechains, Billy;
|
||
|
there is something in the wind. Don't speak. Quick, I will meet you
|
||
|
there"; and disappeared.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now Billy like sundry other essentially good-natured ones had some
|
||
|
of the weaknesses inseparable from essential good-nature; and among
|
||
|
these was a reluctance, almost an incapacity of plumply saying no to
|
||
|
an abrupt proposition not obviously absurd, on the face of it, nor
|
||
|
obviously unfriendly, nor iniquitous. And being of warm blood he had
|
||
|
not the phlegm tacitly to negative any proposition by unresponsive
|
||
|
inaction. Like his sense of fear, his apprehension as to aught outside
|
||
|
of the honest and natural was seldom very quick. Besides, upon the
|
||
|
present occasion, the drowse from his sleep still hung upon him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
However it was, he mechanically rose, and sleepily wondering
|
||
|
what could be in the wind, betook himself to the designated place, a
|
||
|
narrow platform, one of six, outside of the high bulwarks and screened
|
||
|
by the great dead-eyes and multiple columned lanyards of the shrouds
|
||
|
and back-stays; and, in a great war-ship of that time, of dimensions
|
||
|
commensurate with the hull's magnitude; a tarry balcony, in short,
|
||
|
overhanging the sea, and so secluded that one mariner of the
|
||
|
Indomitable, a non-conformist old tar of a serious turn, made it
|
||
|
even in daytime his private oratory.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In this retired nook the stranger soon joined Billy Budd. There
|
||
|
was no moon as yet; a haze obscured the star-light. He could not
|
||
|
distinctly see the stranger's face. Yet from something in the
|
||
|
outline and carriage, Billy took him to be, and correctly, one of
|
||
|
the afterguard.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hist! Billy," said the man in the same quick cautionary whisper
|
||
|
as before; "You were impressed, weren't you? Well, so was I"; and he
|
||
|
paused, as to mark the effect. But Billy, not knowing exactly what
|
||
|
to make of this, said nothing. Then the other: "We are not the only
|
||
|
impressed ones, Billy. There's a gang of us.- Couldn't you- help- at a
|
||
|
pinch?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"What do you mean?" demanded Billy, here thoroughly shaking off
|
||
|
his drowse.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hist, hist!" the hurried whisper now growing husky, "see here";
|
||
|
and the man held up two small objects faintly twinkling in the
|
||
|
nightlight; "see, they are yours, Billy, if you'll only-"
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Billy broke in, and in his resentful eagerness to deliver
|
||
|
himself his vocal infirmity somewhat intruded: "D-D-Damme, I don't
|
||
|
know what you are d-d-driving at, or what you mean, but you had better
|
||
|
g-g-go where you belong!" For the moment the fellow, as confounded,
|
||
|
did not stir; and Billy springing to his feet, said, "If you d-don't
|
||
|
start I'll t-t-toss you back over the r-rail!" There was no
|
||
|
mistaking this and the mysterious emissary decamped disappearing in
|
||
|
the direction of the main-mast in the shadow of the booms.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Hallo, what's the matter?" here came growling from a
|
||
|
forecastleman awakened from his deck-doze by Billy's raised voice. And
|
||
|
as the Foretopman reappeared and was recognized by him; "Ah, Beauty,
|
||
|
is it you? Well, something must have been the matter for you
|
||
|
st-st-stuttered."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"O," rejoined Billy, now mastering the impediment; "I found an
|
||
|
afterguardsman in our part of the ship here and I bid him be off where
|
||
|
he belongs."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And is that all you did about it, Foretopman?" gruffly demanded
|
||
|
another, an irascible old fellow of brick-colored visage and hair, and
|
||
|
who was known to his associate forecastlemen as Red Pepper; "Such
|
||
|
sneaks I should like to marry to the gunner's daughter!" by that
|
||
|
expression meaning that he would like to subject them to
|
||
|
disciplinary castigation over a gun.
|
||
|
|
||
|
However, Billy's rendering of the matter satisfactorily
|
||
|
accounted to these inquirers for the brief commotion, since of all the
|
||
|
sections of a ship's company, the forecastlemen, veterans for the most
|
||
|
part and bigoted in their sea-prejudices, are the most jealous in
|
||
|
resenting territorial encroachments, especially on the part of any
|
||
|
of the afterguard, of whom they have but a sorry opinion, chiefly
|
||
|
landsmen, never going aloft except to reef or furl the mainsail and in
|
||
|
no wise competent to handle a marlinspike or turn in a dead-eye, say.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 16
|
||
|
|
||
|
This incident sorely puzzled Billy Budd. It was an entirely new
|
||
|
experience; the first time in his life that he had ever been
|
||
|
personally approached in underhand intriguing fashion. Prior to this
|
||
|
encounter he had known nothing of the afterguardsman, the two men
|
||
|
being stationed wide apart, one forward and aloft during his watch,
|
||
|
the other on deck and aft.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What could it mean? And could they really be guineas, those two
|
||
|
glittering objects the interloper had held up to his eyes? Where could
|
||
|
the fellow get guineas? Why even spare buttons are not so plentiful at
|
||
|
sea. The more he turned the matter over, the more he was
|
||
|
non-plussed, and made uneasy and discomforted. In his disgustful
|
||
|
recoil from an overture which tho' he but ill comprehended he
|
||
|
instinctively knew must involve evil of some sort, Billy Budd was like
|
||
|
a young horse fresh from the pasture suddenly inhaling a vile whiff
|
||
|
from some chemical factory, and by repeated snortings tries to get
|
||
|
it out of his nostrils and lungs. This frame of mind barred all desire
|
||
|
of holding further parley with the fellow, even were it but for the
|
||
|
purpose of gaining some enlightenment as to his design in
|
||
|
approaching him. And yet he was not without natural curiosity to see
|
||
|
how such a visitor in the dark would look in broad day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
He espied him the following afternoon, in his first dog-watch,
|
||
|
below, one of the smokers on that forward part of the upper gun deck
|
||
|
allotted to the pipe. He recognized him by his general cut and
|
||
|
build, more than by his round freckled face and glassy eyes of pale
|
||
|
blue, veiled with lashes all but white. And yet Billy was a bit
|
||
|
uncertain whether indeed it were he- yonder chap about his own age
|
||
|
chatting and laughing in free-hearted way, leaning against a gun; a
|
||
|
genial young fellow enough to look at, and something of a rattlebrain,
|
||
|
to all appearance. Rather chubby too for a sailor, even an
|
||
|
afterguardsman. In short the last man in the world, one would think,
|
||
|
to be overburthened with thoughts, especially those perilous
|
||
|
thoughts that must needs belong to a conspirator in any serious
|
||
|
project, or even to the underling of such a conspirator.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Altho' Billy was not aware of it, the fellow, with a sidelong
|
||
|
watchful glance had perceived Billy first, and then noting that
|
||
|
Billy was looking at him, thereupon nodded a familiar sort of friendly
|
||
|
recognition as to an old acquaintance, without interrupting the talk
|
||
|
he was engaged in with the group of smokers. A day or two
|
||
|
afterwards, chancing in the evening promenade on a gun deck to pass
|
||
|
Billy, he offered a flying word of good-fellowship, as it were,
|
||
|
which by its unexpectedness, and equivocalness under the circumstances
|
||
|
so embarrassed Billy that he knew not how to respond to it, and let it
|
||
|
go unnoticed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Billy was now left more at a loss than before. The ineffectual
|
||
|
speculation into which he was led was so disturbingly alien to him,
|
||
|
that he did his best to smother it. It never entered his mind that
|
||
|
here was a matter which from its extreme questionableness, it was
|
||
|
his duty as a loyal blue-jacket to report in the proper quarter.
|
||
|
And, probably, had such a step been suggested to him, he would have
|
||
|
been deterred from taking it by the thought, one of
|
||
|
novice-magnanimity, that it would savor overmuch of the dirty work
|
||
|
of a telltale. He kept the thing to himself. Yet upon one occasion, he
|
||
|
could not forbear a little disburthening himself to the old Dansker,
|
||
|
tempted thereto perhaps by the influence of a balmy night when the
|
||
|
ship lay becalmed; the twain, silent for the most part, sitting
|
||
|
together on deck, their heads propped against the bulwarks. But it was
|
||
|
only a partial and anonymous account that Billy gave, the unfounded
|
||
|
scruples above referred to preventing full disclosure to anybody. Upon
|
||
|
hearing Billy's version, the sage Dansker seemed to divine more than
|
||
|
he was told; and after a little meditation during which his wrinkles
|
||
|
were pursed as into a point, quite effacing for the time that quizzing
|
||
|
expression his face sometimes wore,"Didn't I say so, Baby Budd?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Say what?" demanded Billy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Why, Jimmy Legs is down on you."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"And what," rejoined Billy in amazement, "has Jimmy Legs to do
|
||
|
with that cracked afterguardsman?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ho, it was an afterguardsman then. A cat's-paw, a cat's-paw!"
|
||
|
And with that exclamation, which, whether it had reference to a
|
||
|
light puff of air just then coming over the calm sea, or subtler
|
||
|
relation to the afterguardsman there is no telling, the old Merlin
|
||
|
gave a twisting wrench with his black teeth at his plug of tobacco,
|
||
|
vouchsafing no reply to Billy's impetuous question, tho' now repeated,
|
||
|
for it was his wont to relapse into grim silence when interrogated
|
||
|
in skeptical sort as to any of his sententious oracles, not always
|
||
|
very clear ones, rather partaking of that obscurity which invests most
|
||
|
Delphic deliverances from any quarter.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Long experience had very likely brought this old man to that
|
||
|
bitter prudence which never interferes in aught and never gives
|
||
|
advice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 17
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, despite the Dansker's pithy insistence as to the
|
||
|
Master-at-arms being at the bottom of these strange experiences of
|
||
|
Billy on board the Indomitable, the young sailor was ready to
|
||
|
ascribe them to almost anybody but the man who, to use Billy's own
|
||
|
expression, "always had a pleasant word for him." This is to be
|
||
|
wondered at. Yet not so much to be wondered at. In certain matters,
|
||
|
some sailors even in mature life remain unsophisticated enough. But
|
||
|
a young seafarer of the disposition of our athletic Foretopman, is
|
||
|
much of a child-man. And yet a child's utter innocence is but its
|
||
|
blank ignorance, and the innocence more or less wanes as
|
||
|
intelligence waxes. But in Billy Budd intelligence, such as it was,
|
||
|
had advanced, while yet his simplemindedness remained for the most
|
||
|
part unaffected. Experience is a teacher indeed; yet did Billy's years
|
||
|
make his experience small. Besides, he had none of that intuitive
|
||
|
knowledge of the bad which in natures not good or incompletely so
|
||
|
foreruns experience, and therefore may pertain, as in some instances
|
||
|
it too clearly does pertain, even to youth.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And what could Billy know of man except of man as a mere sailor?
|
||
|
And the old-fashioned sailor, the veritable man-before-the-mast, the
|
||
|
sailor from boyhood up, he, tho' indeed of the same species as a
|
||
|
landsman, is in some respects singularly distinct from him. The sailor
|
||
|
is frankness, the landsman is finesse. Life is not a game with the
|
||
|
sailor, demanding the long head; no intricate game of chess where
|
||
|
few moves are made in straightforwardness, and ends are attained by
|
||
|
indirection; an oblique, tedious, barren game hardly worth that poor
|
||
|
candle burnt out in playing it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Yes, as a class, sailors are in character a juvenile race. Even
|
||
|
their deviations are marked by juvenility. And this more especially
|
||
|
holding true with the sailors of Billy's time. Then, too, certain
|
||
|
things which apply to all sailors, do more pointedly operate, here and
|
||
|
there, upon the junior one. Every sailor, too, is accustomed to obey
|
||
|
orders without debating them; his life afloat is externally ruled
|
||
|
for him; he is not brought into that promiscuous commerce with mankind
|
||
|
where unobstructed free agency on equal terms- equal superficially, at
|
||
|
least- soon teaches one that unless upon occasion he exercise a
|
||
|
distrust keen in proportion to the fairness of the appearance, some
|
||
|
foul turn may be served him. A ruled undemonstrative distrustfulness
|
||
|
is so habitual, not with business-men so much, as with men who know
|
||
|
their kind in less shallow relations than business, namely, certain
|
||
|
men-of-the-world, that they come at last to employ it all but
|
||
|
unconsciously; and some of them would very likely feel real surprise
|
||
|
at being charged with it as one of their general characteristics.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 18
|
||
|
|
||
|
But after the little matter at the mess Billy Budd no more found
|
||
|
himself in strange trouble at times about his hammock or his
|
||
|
clothesbag or what not. While, as to that smile that occasionally
|
||
|
sunned him, and the pleasant passing word, these were if not more
|
||
|
frequent, yet if anything, more pronounced than before.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But for all that, there were certain other demonstrations now.
|
||
|
When Claggart's unobserved glance happened to light on belted Billy
|
||
|
rolling along the upper gun deck in the leisure of the second
|
||
|
dog-watch, exchanging passing broadsides of fun with other young
|
||
|
promenaders in the crowd; that glance would follow the cheerful
|
||
|
sea-Hyperion with a settled meditative and melancholy expression,
|
||
|
his eyes strangely suffused with incipient feverish tears. Then
|
||
|
would Claggart look like the man of sorrows. Yes, and sometimes the
|
||
|
melancholy expression would have in it a touch of soft yearning, as if
|
||
|
Claggart could even have loved Billy but for fate and ban. But this
|
||
|
was an evanescence, and quickly repented of, as it were, by an
|
||
|
immitigable look, pinching and shrivelling the visage into the
|
||
|
momentary semblance of a wrinkled walnut. But sometimes catching sight
|
||
|
in advance of the Foretopman coming in his direction, he would, upon
|
||
|
their nearing, step aside a little to let him pass, dwelling upon
|
||
|
Billy for the moment with the glittering dental satire of a Guise. But
|
||
|
upon any abrupt unforeseen encounter a red light would flash forth
|
||
|
from his eye like a spark from an anvil in a dusk smithy. That quick
|
||
|
fierce light was a strange one, darted from orbs which in repose
|
||
|
were of a color nearest approaching a deeper violet, the softest of
|
||
|
shades.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Tho' some of these caprices of the pit could not but be observed
|
||
|
by their object, yet were they beyond the construing of such a nature.
|
||
|
And the thews of Billy were hardly compatible with that sort of
|
||
|
sensitive spiritual organisation which in some cases instinctively
|
||
|
conveys to ignorant innocence an admonition of the proximity of the
|
||
|
malign. He thought the Master-at-arms acted in a manner rather queer
|
||
|
at times. That was all. But the occasional frank air and pleasant word
|
||
|
went for what they purported to be, the young sailor never having
|
||
|
heard as yet of the "too fair-spoken man."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Had the Foretopman been conscious of having done or said
|
||
|
anything to provoke the ill will of the official, it would have been
|
||
|
different with him, and his sight might have been purged if not
|
||
|
sharpened. As it was, innocence was his blinder.
|
||
|
|
||
|
So was it with him in yet another matter. Two minor officers-
|
||
|
the Armorer and Captain of the Hold, with whom he had never
|
||
|
exchanged a word, his position in the ship not bringing him into
|
||
|
contact with them; these men now for the first began to cast upon
|
||
|
Billy when they chanced to encounter him, that peculiar glance which
|
||
|
evidences that the man from whom it comes has been some way tampered
|
||
|
with and to the prejudice of him upon whom the glance lights. Never
|
||
|
did it occur to Billy as a thing to be noted or a thing suspicious,
|
||
|
tho' he well knew the fact, that the Armorer and Captain of the
|
||
|
Hold, with the ship's-yeoman, apothecary, and others of that grade,
|
||
|
were by naval usage, messmates of the Master-at-arms, men with ears
|
||
|
convenient to his confidential tongue.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the general popularity that our Handsome Sailor's manly
|
||
|
forwardness bred upon occasion, and his irresistible good-nature,
|
||
|
indicating no mental superiority tending to excite an invidious
|
||
|
feeling, this good will on the part of most of his shipmates made
|
||
|
him the less to concern himself about such mute aspects toward him
|
||
|
as those whereto allusion has just been made, aspects he could not
|
||
|
fathom as to infer their whole import.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As to the afterguardsman, tho' Billy for reasons already given
|
||
|
necessarily saw little of him, yet when the two did happen to meet,
|
||
|
invariably came the fellow's off-hand cheerful recognition,
|
||
|
sometimes accompanied by a passing pleasant word or two. Whatever that
|
||
|
equivocal young person's original design may really have been, or
|
||
|
the design of which he might have been the deputy, certain it was from
|
||
|
his manner upon these occasions, that he had wholly dropped it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was as if his precocity of crookedness (and every vulgar
|
||
|
villain is precocious) had for once deceived him, and the man he had
|
||
|
sought to entrap as a simpleton had, through his very simplicity,
|
||
|
ignominiously baffled him.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But shrewd ones may opine that it was hardly possible for Billy to
|
||
|
refrain from going up to the afterguardsman and bluntly demanding to
|
||
|
know his purpose in the initial interview, so abruptly closed in the
|
||
|
fore-chains. Shrewd ones may also think it but natural in Billy to set
|
||
|
about sounding some of the other impressed men of the ship in order to
|
||
|
discover what basis, if any, there was for the emissary's obscure
|
||
|
suggestions as to plotting disaffection aboard. Yes, the shrewd may so
|
||
|
think. But something more, or rather, something else than mere
|
||
|
shrewdness is perhaps needful for the due understanding of such a
|
||
|
character as Billy Budd's.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As to Claggart, the monomania in the man- if that indeed it
|
||
|
were- as involuntarily disclosed by starts in the manifestations
|
||
|
detailed, yet in general covered over by his self-contained and
|
||
|
rational demeanour; this, like a subterranean fire was eating its
|
||
|
way deeper and deeper in him. Something decisive must come of it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 19
|
||
|
|
||
|
After the mysterious interview in the fore-chains- the one so
|
||
|
abruptly ended there by Billy- nothing especially german to the
|
||
|
story occurred until the events now about to be narrated.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Elsewhere it has been said that in the lack of frigates (of course
|
||
|
better sailers than line-of-battle ships) in the English squadron up
|
||
|
the Straits at that period, the Indomitable was occasionally
|
||
|
employed not only as an available substitute for a scout, but at times
|
||
|
on detached service of more important kind. This was not alone because
|
||
|
of her sailing qualities, not common in a ship of her rate, but
|
||
|
quite as much, probably, that the character of her commander, it was
|
||
|
thought, specially adapted him for any duty where under unforeseen
|
||
|
difficulties a prompt initiative might have to be taken in some matter
|
||
|
demanding knowledge and ability in addition to those qualities implied
|
||
|
in good seamanship. It was on an expedition of the latter sort, a
|
||
|
somewhat distant one, and when the Indomitable was almost at her
|
||
|
furthest remove from the fleet, that in the latter part of an
|
||
|
afternoon-watch she unexpectedly came in sight of a ship of the enemy.
|
||
|
It proved to be a frigate. The latter perceiving thro' the glass
|
||
|
that the weight of men and metal would be heavily against her,
|
||
|
invoking her light heels, crowded sail to get away. After a chase
|
||
|
urged almost against hope and lasting until about the middle of the
|
||
|
first dog-watch, she signally succeeded in effecting her escape.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not long after the pursuit had been given up, and ere the
|
||
|
excitement incident thereto had altogether waned away, the
|
||
|
Master-at-arms, ascending from his cavernous sphere, made his
|
||
|
appearance cap in hand by the main-mast, respectfully waiting the
|
||
|
notice of Captain Vere then solitary walking the weather-side of the
|
||
|
quarterdeck, doubtless somewhat chafed at the failure of the
|
||
|
pursuit. The spot where Claggart stood was the place allotted to men
|
||
|
of lesser grades seeking some more particular interview either with
|
||
|
the officer-of-the-deck or the Captain himself. But from the latter it
|
||
|
was not often that a sailor or petty-officer of those days would
|
||
|
seek a hearing; only some exceptional cause, would, according to
|
||
|
established custom, have warranted that.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Presently, just as the Commander absorbed in his reflections was
|
||
|
on the point of turning aft in his promenade, he became sensible of
|
||
|
Claggart's presence, and saw the doffed cap held in deferential
|
||
|
expectancy. Here be it said that Captain Vere's personal knowledge
|
||
|
of this petty-officer had only begun at the time of the ship's last
|
||
|
sailing from home, Claggart then for the first, in transfer from a
|
||
|
ship detained for repairs, supplying on board the Indomitable the
|
||
|
place of a previous master-at-arms disabled and ashore.
|
||
|
|
||
|
No sooner did the Commander observe who it was that
|
||
|
deferentially stood awaiting his notice, than a peculiar expression
|
||
|
came over him. It was not unlike that which uncontrollably will flit
|
||
|
across the countenance of one at unawares encountering a person who,
|
||
|
though known to him indeed, has hardly been long enough known for
|
||
|
thorough knowledge, but something in whose aspect nevertheless now for
|
||
|
the first provokes a vaguely repellent distaste. But coming to a
|
||
|
stand, and resuming much of his wonted official manner, save that a
|
||
|
sort of impatience lurked in the intonation of the opening word, he
|
||
|
said, "Well? what is it, Master-at-arms?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the air of a subordinate grieved at the necessity of being
|
||
|
a messenger of ill tidings, and while conscientiously determined to be
|
||
|
frank, yet equally resolved upon shunning overstatement, Claggart,
|
||
|
at this invitation or rather summons to disburthen, spoke up. What
|
||
|
he said, conveyed in the language of no uneducated man, was to the
|
||
|
effect following, if not altogether in these words, namely, that
|
||
|
during the chase and preparations for the possible encounter he had
|
||
|
seen enough to convince him that at least one sailor aboard was a
|
||
|
dangerous character in a ship mustering some who not only had taken
|
||
|
a guilty part in the late serious troubles, but others also who,
|
||
|
like the man in question, had entered His Majesty's service under
|
||
|
another form than enlistment.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At this point Captain Vere with some impatience interrupted him:
|
||
|
"Be direct, man; say impressed men."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Claggart made a gesture of subservience, and proceeded.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Quite lately he (Claggart) had begun to suspect that on the gun
|
||
|
decks some sort of movement prompted by the sailor in question was
|
||
|
covertly going on, but he had not thought himself warranted in
|
||
|
reporting the suspicion so long as it remained indistinct. But from
|
||
|
what he had that afternoon observed in the man referred to, the
|
||
|
suspicion of something clandestine going on had advanced to a point
|
||
|
less removed from certainty. He deeply felt, he added, the serious
|
||
|
responsibility assumed in making a report involving such possible
|
||
|
consequences to the individual mainly concerned, besides tending to
|
||
|
augment those natural anxieties which every naval commander must
|
||
|
feel in view of extraordinary outbreaks so recent as those which, he
|
||
|
sorrowfully said it, it needed not to name.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now at the first broaching of the matter Captain Vere, taken by
|
||
|
surprise, could not wholly dissemble his disquietude. But as
|
||
|
Claggart went on, the former's aspect changed into restiveness under
|
||
|
something in the witness' manner in giving his testimony. However,
|
||
|
he refrained from interrupting him. And Claggart, continuing,
|
||
|
concluded with this: "God forbid, Your Honor, that the Indomitable's
|
||
|
should be the experience of the-"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Never mind that!" here peremptorily broke in the superior, his
|
||
|
face altering with anger, instinctively divining the ship that the
|
||
|
other was about to name, one in which the Nore Mutiny had assumed a
|
||
|
singularly tragical character that for a time jeopardized the life
|
||
|
of its commander. Under the circumstances he was indignant at the
|
||
|
purposed allusion. When the commissioned officers themselves were on
|
||
|
all occasions very heedful how they referred to the recent events, for
|
||
|
a petty-officer unnecessarily to allude to them in the presence of his
|
||
|
Captain, this struck him as a most immodest presumption. Besides, to
|
||
|
his quick sense of self-respect, it even looked under the
|
||
|
circumstances something like an attempt to alarm him. Nor at first was
|
||
|
he without some surprise that one who so far as he had hitherto come
|
||
|
under his notice had shown considerable tact in his function should in
|
||
|
this particular evince such lack of it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But these thoughts and kindred dubious ones flitting across his
|
||
|
mind were suddenly replaced by an intuitional surmise which, though as
|
||
|
yet obscure in form, served practically to affect his reception of the
|
||
|
ill tidings. Certain it is, that long versed in everything
|
||
|
pertaining to the complicated gun-deck life, which like every other
|
||
|
form of life, has its secret mines and dubious side, the side
|
||
|
popularly disclaimed, Captain Vere did not permit himself to be unduly
|
||
|
disturbed by the general tenor of his subordinate's report.
|
||
|
Furthermore, if in view of recent events prompt action should be taken
|
||
|
at the first palpable sign of recurring insubordination, for all that,
|
||
|
not judicious would it be, he thought, to keep the idea of lingering
|
||
|
disaffection alive by undue forwardness in crediting an informer, even
|
||
|
if his own subordinate, and charged among other things with police
|
||
|
surveillance of the crew. This feeling would not perhaps have so
|
||
|
prevailed with him were it not that upon a prior occasion the
|
||
|
patriotic zeal officially evinced by Claggart had somewhat irritated
|
||
|
him as appearing rather supersensible and strained. Furthermore,
|
||
|
something even in the official's self-possessed and somewhat
|
||
|
ostentatious manner in making his specifications strangely reminded
|
||
|
him of a bandsman, a perjurous witness in a capital case before a
|
||
|
courtmartial ashore of which when a lieutenant, he, Captain Vere,
|
||
|
had been a member.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now the peremptory check given to Claggart in the matter of the
|
||
|
arrested allusion was quickly followed up by this: "You say that there
|
||
|
is at least one dangerous man aboard. Name him."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"William Budd. A foretopman, Your Honor-"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"William Budd," repeated Captain Vere with unfeigned astonishment;
|
||
|
"and mean you the man that Lieutenant Ratcliff took from the
|
||
|
merchantman not very long ago- the young fellow who seems to be so
|
||
|
popular with the men- Billy, the 'Handsome Sailor,' as they call him?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The same, Your Honor; but for all his youth and good looks, a
|
||
|
deep one. Not for nothing does he insinuate himself into the good will
|
||
|
of his shipmates, since at the least all hands will at a pinch say a
|
||
|
good word for him at all hazards. Did Lieutenant Ratcliff happen to
|
||
|
tell Your Honor of that adroit fling of Budd's, jumping up in the
|
||
|
cutter's bow under the merchantman's stern when he was being taken
|
||
|
off? It is even masqued by that sort of good-humoured air that at
|
||
|
heart he resents his impressment. You have but noted his fair cheek. A
|
||
|
man-trap may be under his ruddy-tipped daisies."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now the Handsome Sailor, as a signal figure among the crew, had
|
||
|
naturally enough attracted the Captain's attention from the first.
|
||
|
Tho' in general not very demonstrative to his officers, he had
|
||
|
congratulated Lieutenant Ratcliff upon his good fortune in lighting on
|
||
|
such a fine specimen of the genus homo, who in the nude might have
|
||
|
posed for a statue of young Adam before the Fall.
|
||
|
|
||
|
As to Billy's adieu to the ship Rights-of-Man, which the
|
||
|
boarding lieutenant had indeed reported to him, but in a deferential
|
||
|
way more as a good story than aught else, Captain Vere, tho'
|
||
|
mistakenly understanding it as a satiric sally, had but thought so
|
||
|
much the better of the impressed man for it; as a military sailor,
|
||
|
admiring the spirit that could take an arbitrary enlistment so merrily
|
||
|
and sensibly. The Foretopman's conduct, too, so far as it had fallen
|
||
|
under the Captain's notice, had confirmed the first happy augury,
|
||
|
while the new recruit's qualities as a sailor-man seemed to be such
|
||
|
that he had thought of recommending him to the executive officer for
|
||
|
promotion to a place that would more frequently bring him under his
|
||
|
own observation, namely, the captaincy of the mizzentop, replacing
|
||
|
there in the starboard watch a man not so young whom partly for that
|
||
|
reason he deemed less fitted for the post. Be it parenthesized here
|
||
|
that since the mizzentopmen having not to handle such breadths of
|
||
|
heavy canvas as the lower sails on the main-mast and fore-mast, a
|
||
|
young man if of the right stuff not only seems best adapted to duty
|
||
|
there, but in fact is generally selected for the captaincy of that
|
||
|
top, and the company under him are light hands and often but
|
||
|
striplings. In sum, Captain Vere had from the beginning deemed Billy
|
||
|
Budd to be what in the naval parlance of the time was called a "King's
|
||
|
bargain," that is to say, for His Britannic Majesty's Navy a capital
|
||
|
investment at small outlay or none at all.
|
||
|
|
||
|
After a brief pause during which the reminiscences above mentioned
|
||
|
passed vividly through his mind and he weighed the import of
|
||
|
Claggart's last suggestion conveyed in the phrase "man-trap under
|
||
|
his daisies," and the more he weighed it the less reliance he felt
|
||
|
in the informer's good faith, suddenly he turned upon him and in a low
|
||
|
voice: "Do you come to me, Master-at-arms, with so foggy a tale? As to
|
||
|
Budd, cite me an act or spoken word of his confirmatory of what you in
|
||
|
general charge against him. Stay," drawing nearer to him, "heed what
|
||
|
you speak. Just now, and in a case like this, there is a
|
||
|
yard-arm-end for the false-witness."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ah, Your Honor!" sighed Claggart, mildly shaking his shapely head
|
||
|
as in sad deprecation of such unmerited severity of tone. Then,
|
||
|
bridling- erecting himself as in virtuous self-assertion, he
|
||
|
circumstantially alleged certain words and acts, which collectively,
|
||
|
if credited, led to presumptions mortally inculpating Budd. And for
|
||
|
some of these averments, he added, substantiating proof was not far.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With gray eyes impatient and distrustful essaying to fathom to the
|
||
|
bottom Claggart's calm violet ones, Captain Vere again heard him
|
||
|
out; then for the moment stood ruminating. The mood he evinced,
|
||
|
Claggart- himself for the time liberated from the other's scrutiny-
|
||
|
steadily regarded with a look difficult to render,- a look curious
|
||
|
of the operation of his tactics, a look such as might have been that
|
||
|
of the spokesman of the envious children of Jacob deceptively imposing
|
||
|
upon the troubled patriarch the blood-dyed coat of young Joseph.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though something exceptional in the moral quality of Captain
|
||
|
Vere made him, in earnest encounter with a fellow-man, a veritable
|
||
|
touch-stone of that man's essential nature, yet now as to Claggart and
|
||
|
what was really going on in him, his feeling partook less of
|
||
|
intuitional conviction than of strong suspicion clogged by strange
|
||
|
dubieties. The perplexity he evinced proceeded less from aught
|
||
|
touching the man informed against- as Claggart doubtless opined-
|
||
|
than from considerations how best to act in regard to the informer. At
|
||
|
first indeed he was naturally for summoning that substantiation of his
|
||
|
allegations which Claggart said was at hand. But such a proceeding
|
||
|
would result in the matter at once getting abroad, which in the
|
||
|
present stage of it, he thought, might undesirably affect the ship's
|
||
|
company. If Claggart was a false witness,- that closed the affair. And
|
||
|
therefore before trying the accusation, he would first practically
|
||
|
test the accuser; and he thought this could be done in a quiet
|
||
|
undemonstrative way.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The measure he determined upon involved a shifting of the scene, a
|
||
|
transfer to a place less exposed to observation than the broad
|
||
|
quarter-deck. For although the few gun-room officers there at the time
|
||
|
had, in due observance of naval etiquette, withdrawn to leeward the
|
||
|
moment Captain Vere had begun his promenade on the deck's
|
||
|
weather-side; and tho' during the colloquy with Claggart they of
|
||
|
course ventured not to diminish the distance; and though throughout
|
||
|
the interview Captain Vere's voice was far from high, and Claggart's
|
||
|
silvery and low; and the wind in the cordage and the wash of the sea
|
||
|
helped the more to put them beyond earshot; nevertheless, the
|
||
|
interview's continuance already had attracted observation from some
|
||
|
topmen aloft and other sailors in the waist or further forward.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Having determined upon his measures, Captain Vere forthwith took
|
||
|
action. Abruptly turning to Claggart he asked, "Master-at-arms, is
|
||
|
it now Budd's watch aloft?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"No, Your Honor." Whereupon, "Mr. Wilkes!" summoning the nearest
|
||
|
midshipman, "tell Albert to come to me." Albert was the Captain's
|
||
|
hammock-boy, a sort of sea-valet in whose discretion and fidelity
|
||
|
his master had much confidence. The lad appeared. "You know Budd the
|
||
|
Foretopman?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I do, Sir."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go find him. It is his watch off. Manage to tell him out of
|
||
|
earshot that he is wanted aft. Contrive it that he speaks to nobody.
|
||
|
Keep him in talk yourself. And not till you get well aft here, not
|
||
|
till then let him know that the place where he is wanted is my
|
||
|
cabin. You understand. Go.- Master-at-arms, show yourself on the decks
|
||
|
below, and when you think it time for Albert to be coming with his
|
||
|
man, stand by quietly to follow the sailor in."
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 20
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now when the Foretopman found himself closeted there, as it
|
||
|
were, in the cabin with the Captain and Claggart, he was surprised
|
||
|
enough. But it was a surprise unaccompanied by apprehension or
|
||
|
distrust. To an immature nature essentially honest and humane,
|
||
|
forewarning intimations of subtler danger from one's kind come tardily
|
||
|
if at all. The only thing that took shape in the young sailor's mind
|
||
|
was this: Yes, the Captain, I have always thought, looks kindly upon
|
||
|
me. Wonder if he's going to make me his coxswain. I should like
|
||
|
that. And maybe now he is going to ask the Master-at-arms about me.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Shut the door there, sentry," said the Commander; "stand without,
|
||
|
and let nobody come in.- Now, Master-at-arms, tell this man to his
|
||
|
face what you told of him to me"; and stood prepared to scrutinize the
|
||
|
mutually confronting visages.
|
||
|
|
||
|
With the measured step and calm collected air of an
|
||
|
asylum-physician approaching in the public hall some patient beginning
|
||
|
to show indications of a coming paroxysm, Claggart deliberately
|
||
|
advanced within short range of Billy, and mesmerically looking him
|
||
|
in the eye, briefly recapitulated the accusation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not at first did Billy take it in. When he did, the rose-tan of
|
||
|
his cheek looked struck as by white leprosy. He stood like one impaled
|
||
|
and gagged. Meanwhile the accuser's eyes removing not as yet from
|
||
|
the blue dilated ones, underwent a phenomenal change, their wonted
|
||
|
rich violet color blurring into a muddy purple. Those lights of
|
||
|
human intelligence losing human expression, gelidly protruding like
|
||
|
the alien eyes of certain uncatalogued creatures of the deep. The
|
||
|
first mesmeric glance was one of serpent fascination; the last was
|
||
|
as the hungry lurch of the torpedo-fish.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Speak, man!" said Captain Vere to the transfixed one, struck by
|
||
|
his aspect even more than by Claggart's, "Speak! defend yourself."
|
||
|
Which appeal caused but a strange dumb gesturing and gurgling in
|
||
|
Billy; amazement at such an accusation so suddenly sprung on
|
||
|
inexperienced nonage; this, and, it may be, horror of the accuser,
|
||
|
serving to bring out his lurking defect and in this instance for the
|
||
|
time intensifying it into a convulsed tongue-tie; while the intent
|
||
|
head and entire form straining forward in an agony of ineffectual
|
||
|
eagerness to obey the injunction to speak and defend himself, gave
|
||
|
an expression to the face like that of a condemned Vestal priestess in
|
||
|
the moment of being buried alive, and in the first struggle against
|
||
|
suffocation.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Though at the time Captain Vere was quite ignorant of Billy's
|
||
|
liability to vocal impediment, he now immediately divined it, since
|
||
|
vividly Billy's aspect recalled to him that of a bright young
|
||
|
schoolmate of his whom he had once seen struck by much the same
|
||
|
startling impotence in the act of eagerly rising in the class to be
|
||
|
foremost in response to a testing question put to it by the master.
|
||
|
Going close up to the young sailor, and laying a soothing hand on
|
||
|
his shoulder, he said, "There is no hurry, my boy. Take your time,
|
||
|
take your time." Contrary to the effect intended, these words so
|
||
|
fatherly in tone, doubtless touching Billy's heart to the quick,
|
||
|
prompted yet more violent efforts at utterance- efforts soon ending
|
||
|
for the time in confirming the paralysis, and bringing to his face
|
||
|
an expression which was as a crucifixion to behold. The next
|
||
|
instant, quick as the flame from a discharged cannon at night, his
|
||
|
right arm shot out, and Claggart dropped to the deck. Whether
|
||
|
intentionally or but owing to the young athlete's superior height, the
|
||
|
blow had taken effect fully upon the forehead, so shapely and
|
||
|
intellectual-looking a feature in the Master-at-arms; so that the body
|
||
|
fell over lengthwise, like a heavy plank tilted from erectness. A gasp
|
||
|
or two, and he lay motionless.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Fated boy," breathed Captain Vere in tone so low as to be
|
||
|
almost a whisper, "what have you done! But here, help me."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The twain raised the felled one from the loins up into a sitting
|
||
|
position. The spare form flexibly acquiesced, but inertly. It was like
|
||
|
handling a dead snake. They lowered it back. Regaining erectness
|
||
|
Captain Vere with one hand covering his face stood to all appearance
|
||
|
as impassive as the object at his feet. Was he absorbed in taking in
|
||
|
all the bearings of the event and what was best not only now at once
|
||
|
to be done, but also in the sequel? Slowly he uncovered his face;
|
||
|
and the effect was as if the moon emerging from eclipse should
|
||
|
reappear with quite another aspect than that which had gone into
|
||
|
hiding. The father in him, manifested towards Billy thus far in the
|
||
|
scene, was replaced by the military disciplinarian. In his official
|
||
|
tone he bade the Foretopman retire to a state-room aft (pointing it
|
||
|
out), and there remain till thence summoned. This order Billy in
|
||
|
silence mechanically obeyed. Then going to the cabin-door where it
|
||
|
opened on the quarter-deck, Captain Vere said to the sentry without,
|
||
|
"Tell somebody to send Albert here." When the lad appeared his
|
||
|
master so contrived it that he should not catch sight of the prone
|
||
|
one. "Albert," he said to him, "tell the Surgeon I wish to see him.
|
||
|
You need not come back till called." When the Surgeon entered- a
|
||
|
self-poised character of that grave sense and experience that hardly
|
||
|
anything could take him aback,- Captain Vere advanced to meet him,
|
||
|
thus unconsciously intercepting his view of Claggart, and interrupting
|
||
|
the other's wonted ceremonious salutation, said, "Nay, tell me how
|
||
|
it is with yonder man," directing his attention to the prostrate one.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Surgeon looked, and for all his self-command, somewhat started
|
||
|
at the abrupt revelation. On Claggart's always pallid complexion,
|
||
|
thick black blood was now oozing from nostril and ear. To the
|
||
|
gazer's professional eye it was unmistakably no living man that he
|
||
|
saw.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Is it so then?" said Captain Vere intently watching him. "I
|
||
|
thought it. But verify it." Whereupon the customary tests confirmed
|
||
|
the Surgeon's first glance, who now looking up in unfeigned concern,
|
||
|
cast a look of intense inquisitiveness upon his superior. But
|
||
|
Captain Vere, with one hand to his brow, was standing motionless.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Suddenly, catching the Surgeon's arm convulsively, he exclaimed,
|
||
|
pointing down to the body- "It is the divine judgement on Ananias!
|
||
|
Look!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Disturbed by the excited manner he had never before observed in
|
||
|
the Indomitable's Captain, and as yet wholly ignorant of the affair,
|
||
|
the prudent Surgeon nevertheless held his peace, only again looking an
|
||
|
earnest interrogation as to what it was that had resulted in such a
|
||
|
tragedy.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Captain Vere was now again motionless standing absorbed in
|
||
|
thought. But again starting, he vehemently exclaimed- "Struck dead
|
||
|
by an angel of God! Yet the angel must hang!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
At these passionate interjections, mere incoherences to the
|
||
|
listener as yet unapprised of the antecedents, the Surgeon was
|
||
|
profoundly discomposed. But now as recollecting himself, Captain
|
||
|
Vere in less passionate tone briefly related the circumstances leading
|
||
|
up to the event.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But come; we must despatch," he added. "me to remove him"
|
||
|
(meaning the body) "to yonder compartment," designating one opposite
|
||
|
that where the Foretopman remained immured. Anew disturbed by a
|
||
|
request that as implying a desire for secrecy, seemed unaccountably
|
||
|
strange to him, there was nothing for the subordinate to do but
|
||
|
comply.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Go now," said Captain Vere with something of his wonted manner-
|
||
|
"Go now. I shall presently call a drum-head court. Tell the
|
||
|
lieutenants what has happened, and tell Mr. Mordant," meaning the
|
||
|
Captain of Marines, "and charge them to keep the matter to
|
||
|
themselves."
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 21
|
||
|
|
||
|
Full of disquietude and misgiving the Surgeon left the cabin.
|
||
|
Was Captain Vere suddenly affected in his mind, or was it but a
|
||
|
transient excitement, brought about by so strange and extraordinary
|
||
|
a happening? As to the drum-head court, it struck the Surgeon as
|
||
|
impolitic, if nothing more. The thing to do, he thought, was to
|
||
|
place Billy Budd in confinement and in a way dictated by usage, and
|
||
|
postpone further action in so extraordinary a case to such time as
|
||
|
they should rejoin the squadron, and then refer it to the Admiral.
|
||
|
He recalled the unwonted agitation of Captain Vere and his excited
|
||
|
exclamations so at variance with his normal manner. Was he unhinged?
|
||
|
But assuming that he is, it is not so susceptible of proof. What
|
||
|
then can he do? No more trying situation is conceivable than that of
|
||
|
an officer subordinate under a Captain whom he suspects to be, not mad
|
||
|
indeed, but yet not quite unaffected in his intellect. To argue his
|
||
|
order to him would be insolence. To resist him would be mutiny.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In obedience to Captain Vere he communicated what had happened
|
||
|
to the lieutenants and Captain of Marines; saying nothing as to the
|
||
|
Captain's state. They fully shared his own surprise and concern.
|
||
|
Like him too they seemed to think that such a matter should be
|
||
|
referred to the Admiral.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 22
|
||
|
|
||
|
Who in the rainbow can draw the line where the violet tint ends
|
||
|
and the orange tint begins? Distinctly we see the difference of the
|
||
|
colors, but where exactly does the one first blendingly enter into the
|
||
|
other? So with sanity and insanity. In pronounced cases there is no
|
||
|
question about them. But in some supposed cases, in various degrees
|
||
|
supposedly less pronounced, to draw the exact line of demarkation
|
||
|
few will undertake tho' for a fee some professional experts will.
|
||
|
There is nothing namable but that some men will undertake to do it for
|
||
|
pay.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Whether Captain Vere, as the Surgeon professionally and
|
||
|
privately surmised, was really the sudden victim of any degree of
|
||
|
aberration, one must determine for himself by such light as this
|
||
|
narrative may afford.
|
||
|
|
||
|
That the unhappy event which has been narrated could not have
|
||
|
happened at a worse juncture was but too true. For it was close on the
|
||
|
heel of the suppressed insurrections, an aftertime very critical to
|
||
|
naval authority, demanding from every English sea-commander two
|
||
|
qualities not readily interfusable- prudence and rigour. Moreover
|
||
|
there was something crucial in the case.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the jugglery of circumstances preceding and attending the event
|
||
|
on board the Indomitable, and in the light of that martial code
|
||
|
whereby it was formally to be judged, innocence and guilt
|
||
|
personified in Claggart and Budd in effect changed places. In a
|
||
|
legal view the apparent victim of the tragedy was he who had sought to
|
||
|
victimize a man blameless; and the indisputable deed of the latter,
|
||
|
navally regarded, constituted the most heinous of military crimes. Yet
|
||
|
more. The essential right and wrong involved in the matter, the
|
||
|
clearer that might be, so much the worse for the responsibility of a
|
||
|
loyal sea-commander inasmuch as he was not authorized to determine the
|
||
|
matter on that primitive basis.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Small wonder then that the Indomitable's Captain, though in
|
||
|
general a man of rapid decision, felt that circumspectness not less
|
||
|
than promptitude was necessary. Until he could decide upon his course,
|
||
|
and in each detail; and not only so, but until the concluding
|
||
|
measure was upon the point of being enacted, he deemed it advisable,
|
||
|
in view of all the circumstances, to guard as much as possible against
|
||
|
publicity. Here he may or may not have erred. Certain it is,
|
||
|
however, that subsequently in the confidential talk of more than one
|
||
|
or two gun-rooms and cabins he was not a little criticized by some
|
||
|
officers, a fact imputed by his friends and vehemently by his
|
||
|
cousin, Jack Denton, to professional jealousy of Starry Vere. Some
|
||
|
imaginative ground for invidious comment there was. The maintenance of
|
||
|
secrecy in the matter, the confining all knowledge of it for a time to
|
||
|
the place where the homicide occurred, the quarter-deck cabin; in
|
||
|
these particulars lurked some resemblance to the policy adopted in
|
||
|
those tragedies of the palace which have occurred more than once in
|
||
|
the capital founded by Peter the Barbarian.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The case indeed was such that fain would the Indomitable's Captain
|
||
|
have deferred taking any action whatever respecting it further than to
|
||
|
keep the Foretopman a close prisoner till the ship rejoined the
|
||
|
squadron, and then submitting the matter to the judgement of his
|
||
|
Admiral.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But a true military officer is in one particular like a true monk.
|
||
|
Not with more of self-abnegation will the latter keep his vows of
|
||
|
monastic obedience than the former his vows of allegiance to martial
|
||
|
duty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Feeling that unless quick action was taken on it, the deed of
|
||
|
the Foretopman, so soon as it should be known on the gun decks,
|
||
|
would tend to awaken any slumbering embers of the Nore among the crew,
|
||
|
a sense of the urgency of the case overruled in Captain Vere every
|
||
|
other consideration. But tho' a conscientious disciplinarian, he was
|
||
|
no lover of authority for mere authority's sake. Very far was he
|
||
|
from embracing opportunities for monopolizing to himself the perils of
|
||
|
moral responsibility, none at least that could properly be referred to
|
||
|
an official superior, or shared with him by his official equals or
|
||
|
even subordinates. So thinking, he was glad it would not be at
|
||
|
variance with usage to turn the matter over to a summary court of
|
||
|
his own officers, reserving to himself as the one on whom the ultimate
|
||
|
accountability would rest, the right of maintaining a supervision of
|
||
|
it, or formally or informally interposing at need. Accordingly a
|
||
|
drum-head court was summarily convened, he electing the individuals
|
||
|
composing it, the First Lieutenant, the Captain of Marines, and the
|
||
|
Sailing Master.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In associating an officer of marines with the sea-lieutenants in a
|
||
|
case having to do with a sailor, the Commander perhaps deviated from
|
||
|
general custom. He was prompted thereto by the circumstance that he
|
||
|
took that soldier to be a judicious person, thoughtful, and not
|
||
|
altogether incapable of grappling with a difficult case
|
||
|
unprecedented in his prior experience. Yet even as to him he was not
|
||
|
without some latent misgiving, for withal he was an extremely
|
||
|
goodnatured man, an enjoyer of his dinner, a sound sleeper, and
|
||
|
inclined to obesity, a man who tho' he would always maintain his
|
||
|
manhood in battle might not prove altogether reliable in a moral
|
||
|
dilemma involving aught of the tragic. As to the First Lieutenant
|
||
|
and the Sailing Master, Captain Vere could not but be aware that
|
||
|
though honest natures, of approved gallantry upon occasion, their
|
||
|
intelligence was mostly confined to the matter of active seamanship
|
||
|
and the fighting demands of their profession. The court was held in
|
||
|
the same cabin where the unfortunate affair had taken place. This
|
||
|
cabin, the Commander's, embraced the entire area under the poopdeck.
|
||
|
Aft, and on either side, was a small state-room; the one room
|
||
|
temporarily a jail and the other a dead-house, and a yet smaller
|
||
|
compartment leaving a space between, expanding forward into a goodly
|
||
|
oblong of length coinciding with the ship's beam. A skylight of
|
||
|
moderate dimension was overhead and at each end of the oblong space
|
||
|
were two sashed port-hole windows easily convertible back into
|
||
|
embrasures for short carronades.
|
||
|
|
||
|
All being quickly in readiness, Billy Budd was arraigned,
|
||
|
Captain Vere necessarily appearing as the sole witness in the case,
|
||
|
and as such, temporarily sinking his rank, though singularly
|
||
|
maintaining it in a matter apparently trivial, namely, that he
|
||
|
testified from the ship's weather-side, with that object having caused
|
||
|
the court to sit on the lee-side. Concisely he narrated all that had
|
||
|
led up to the catastrophe, omitting nothing in Claggart's accusation
|
||
|
and deposing as to the manner in which the prisoner had received it.
|
||
|
At this testimony the three officers glanced with no little surprise
|
||
|
at Billy Budd, the last man they would have suspected either of the
|
||
|
mutinous design alleged by Claggart or the undeniable deed he
|
||
|
himself had done.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The First Lieutenant, taking judicial primacy and turning toward
|
||
|
the prisoner, said, "Captain Vere has spoken. Is it or is it not as
|
||
|
Captain Vere says?" In response came syllables not so much impeded
|
||
|
in the utterance as might have been anticipated. They were these:
|
||
|
"Captain Vere tells the truth. It is just as Captain Vere says, but it
|
||
|
is not as the Master-at-arms said. I have eaten the King's bread and I
|
||
|
am true to the King."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"I believe you, my man," said the witness, his voice indicating
|
||
|
a suppressed emotion not otherwise betrayed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"God will bless you for that, Your Honor!" not without
|
||
|
stammering said Billy, and all but broke down. But immediately was
|
||
|
recalled to self-control by another question, to which with the same
|
||
|
emotional difficulty of utterance he said, "No, there was no malice
|
||
|
between us. I never bore malice against the Master-at-arms. I am sorry
|
||
|
that he is dead. I did not mean to kill him. Could I have used my
|
||
|
tongue I would not have struck him. But he foully lied to my face
|
||
|
and in presence of my Captain, and I had to say something, and I could
|
||
|
only say it with a blow, God help me!"
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the impulsive above-board manner of the frank one, the court
|
||
|
saw confirmed all that was implied in words that just previously had
|
||
|
perplexed them, coming as they did from the testifier to the tragedy
|
||
|
and promptly following Billy's impassioned disclaimer of mutinous
|
||
|
intent- Captain Vere's words, "I believe you, my man."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Next it was asked of him whether he knew of or suspected aught
|
||
|
savoring of incipient trouble (meaning mutiny, tho' the explicit
|
||
|
term was avoided) going on in any section of the ship's company.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The reply lingered. This was naturally imputed by the court to the
|
||
|
same vocal embarrassment which had retarded or obstructed previous
|
||
|
answers. But in main it was otherwise here; the question immediately
|
||
|
recalling to Billy's mind the interview with the afterguardsman in the
|
||
|
fore-chains. But an innate repugnance to playing a part at all
|
||
|
approaching that of an informer against one's own shipmates- the
|
||
|
same erring sense of uninstructed honor which had stood in the way
|
||
|
of his reporting the matter at the time though as a loyal
|
||
|
man-of-war-man it was incumbent on him, and failure so to do if
|
||
|
charged against him and proven, would have subjected him to the
|
||
|
heaviest of penalties; this, with the blind feeling now his, that
|
||
|
nothing really was being hatched, prevailed with him. When the
|
||
|
answer came it was a negative.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"One question more," said the officer of marines now first
|
||
|
speaking and with a troubled earnestness. "You tell us that what the
|
||
|
Master-at-arms said against you was a lie. Now why should he have so
|
||
|
lied, so maliciously lied, since you declare there was no malice
|
||
|
between you?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
At that question unintentionally touching on a spiritual sphere
|
||
|
wholly obscure to Billy's thoughts, he was nonplussed, evincing a
|
||
|
confusion indeed that some observers, such as can readily be imagined,
|
||
|
would have construed into involuntary evidence of hidden guilt.
|
||
|
Nevertheless he strove some way to answer, but all at once
|
||
|
relinquished the vain endeavor, at the same time turning an
|
||
|
appealing glance towards Captain Vere as deeming him his best helper
|
||
|
and friend. Captain Vere who had been seated for a time rose to his
|
||
|
feet, addressing the interrogator. "The question you put to him
|
||
|
comes naturally enough. But how can he rightly answer it? or anybody
|
||
|
else? unless indeed it be he who lies within there," designating the
|
||
|
compartment where lay the corpse. "But the prone one there will not
|
||
|
rise to our summons. In effect, tho', as it seems to me, the point you
|
||
|
make is hardly material. Quite aside from any conceivable motive
|
||
|
actuating the Master-at-arms, and irrespective of the provocation to
|
||
|
the blow, a martial court must needs in the present case confine its
|
||
|
attention to the blow's consequence, which consequence justly is to be
|
||
|
deemed not otherwise than as the striker's deed."
|
||
|
|
||
|
This utterance, the full significance of which it was not at all
|
||
|
likely that Billy took in, nevertheless caused him to turn a wistful
|
||
|
interrogative look toward the speaker, a look in its dumb
|
||
|
expressiveness not unlike that which a dog of generous breed might
|
||
|
turn upon his master seeking in his face some elucidation of a
|
||
|
previous gesture ambiguous to the canine intelligence. Nor was the
|
||
|
same utterance without marked effect upon the three officers, more
|
||
|
especially the soldier. Couched in it seemed to them a meaning
|
||
|
unanticipated, involving a prejudgement on the speaker's part. It
|
||
|
served to augment a mental disturbance previously evident enough.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The soldier once more spoke; in a tone of suggestive dubiety
|
||
|
addressing at once his associates and Captain Vere: "Nobody is
|
||
|
present- none of the ship's company, I mean- who might shed lateral
|
||
|
light, if any is to be had, upon what remains mysterious in this
|
||
|
matter."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"That is thoughtfully put," said Captain Vere; "I see your
|
||
|
drift. Ay, there is a mystery; but, to use a Scriptural phrase, it
|
||
|
is 'a mystery of iniquity,' a matter for psychologic theologians to
|
||
|
discuss. But what has a military court to do with it? Not to add
|
||
|
that for us any possible investigation of it is cut off by the lasting
|
||
|
tongue-tie of- him- in yonder," again designating the mortuary
|
||
|
stateroom. "The prisoner's deed,- with that alone we have to do."
|
||
|
|
||
|
To this, and particularly the closing reiteration, the marine
|
||
|
soldier knowing not how aptly to reply, sadly abstained from saying
|
||
|
aught. The First Lieutenant who at the outset had not unnaturally
|
||
|
assumed primacy in the court, now overrulingly instructed by a
|
||
|
glance from Captain Vere, a glance more effective than words,
|
||
|
resumed that primacy. Turning to the prisoner, "Budd," he said, and
|
||
|
scarce in equable tones, "Budd, if you have aught further to say for
|
||
|
yourself, say it now."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon this the young sailor turned another quick glance toward
|
||
|
Captain Vere; then, as taking a hint from that aspect, a hint
|
||
|
confirming his own instinct that silence was now best, replied to
|
||
|
the Lieutenant, "I have said all, Sir."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The marine- the same who had been the sentinel without the
|
||
|
cabin-door at the time that the Foretopman followed by the
|
||
|
Master-at-arms, entered it- he, standing by the sailor throughout
|
||
|
these judicial proceedings, was now directed to take him back to the
|
||
|
after compartment originally assigned to the prisoner and his
|
||
|
custodian. As the twain disappeared from view, the three officers as
|
||
|
partially liberated from some inward constraint associated with
|
||
|
Billy's mere presence, simultaneously stirred in their seats. They
|
||
|
exchanged looks of troubled indecision, yet feeling that decide they
|
||
|
must and without long delay. As for Captain Vere, he for the time
|
||
|
stood unconsciously with his back toward them, apparently in one of
|
||
|
his absent fits, gazing out from a sashed port-hole to windward upon
|
||
|
the monotonous blank of the twilight sea. But the court's silence
|
||
|
continuing, broken only at moments by brief consultations in low
|
||
|
earnest tones, this seemed to arm him and energize him. Turning, he
|
||
|
to-and-fro paced the cabin athwart; in the returning ascent to
|
||
|
windward, climbing the slant deck in the ship's lee roll; without
|
||
|
knowing it symbolizing thus in his action a mind resolute to
|
||
|
surmount difficulties even if against primitive instincts strong as
|
||
|
the wind and the sea. Presently he came to a stand before the three.
|
||
|
After scanning their faces he stood less as mustering his thoughts for
|
||
|
expression, than as one inly deliberating how best to put them to
|
||
|
well-meaning men not intellectually mature, men with whom it was
|
||
|
necessary to demonstrate certain principles that were axioms to
|
||
|
himself. Similar impatience as to talking is perhaps one reason that
|
||
|
deters some minds from addressing any popular assemblies.
|
||
|
|
||
|
When speak he did, something both in the substance of what he said
|
||
|
and his manner of saying it, showed the influence of unshared
|
||
|
studies modifying and tempering the practical training of an active
|
||
|
career. This, along with his phraseology, now and then was
|
||
|
suggestive of the grounds whereon rested that imputation of a
|
||
|
certain pedantry socially alleged against him by certain naval men
|
||
|
of wholly practical cast, captains who nevertheless would frankly
|
||
|
concede that His Majesty's Navy mustered no more efficient officer
|
||
|
of their grade than Starry Vere.
|
||
|
|
||
|
What he said was to this effect: "Hitherto I have been but the
|
||
|
witness, little more; and I should hardly think now to take another
|
||
|
tone, that of your coadjutor, for the time, did I not perceive in
|
||
|
you,- at the crisis too- a troubled hesitancy, proceeding, I doubt
|
||
|
not, from the clash of military duty with moral scruple- scruple
|
||
|
vitalized by compassion. For the compassion, how can I otherwise
|
||
|
than share it? But, mindful of paramount obligations I strive
|
||
|
against scruples that may tend to enervate decision. Not, gentlemen,
|
||
|
that I hide from myself that the case is an exceptional one.
|
||
|
Speculatively regarded, it well might be referred to a jury of
|
||
|
casuists. But for us here acting not as casuists or moralists, it is a
|
||
|
case practical, and under martial law practically to be dealt with.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But your scruples: do they move as in a dusk? Challenge them.
|
||
|
Make them advance and declare themselves. Come now: do they import
|
||
|
something like this? If, mindless of palliating circumstances, we
|
||
|
are bound to regard the death of the Master-at-arms as the
|
||
|
prisoner's deed, then does that deed constitute a capital crime
|
||
|
whereof the penalty is a mortal one? But in natural justice is nothing
|
||
|
but the prisoner's overt act to be considered? How can we adjudge to
|
||
|
summary and shameful death a fellow-creature innocent before God,
|
||
|
and whom we feel to be so?- Does that state it aright? You sign sad
|
||
|
assent. Well, I too feel that, the full force of that. It is Nature.
|
||
|
But do these buttons that we wear attest that our allegiance is to
|
||
|
Nature? No, to the King. Though the ocean, which is inviolate Nature
|
||
|
primeval, tho' this be the element where we move and have our being as
|
||
|
sailors, yet as the King's officers lies our duty in a sphere
|
||
|
correspondingly natural? So little is that true, that in receiving our
|
||
|
commissions we in the most important regards ceased to be natural
|
||
|
free-agents. When war is declared are we the commissioned fighters
|
||
|
previously consulted? We fight at command. If our judgements approve
|
||
|
the war, that is but coincidence. So in other particulars. So now. For
|
||
|
suppose condemnation to follow these present proceedings. Would it
|
||
|
be so much we ourselves that would condemn as it would be martial
|
||
|
law operating through us? For that law and the rigour of it, we are
|
||
|
not responsible. Our avowed responsibility is in this: That however
|
||
|
pitilessly that law may operate, we nevertheless adhere to it and
|
||
|
administer it.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But the exceptional in the matter moves the hearts within you.
|
||
|
Even so too is mine moved. But let not warm hearts betray heads that
|
||
|
should be cool. Ashore in a criminal case will an upright judge
|
||
|
allow himself off the bench to be waylaid by some tender kinswoman
|
||
|
of the accused seeking to touch him with her tearful plea? Well the
|
||
|
heart here denotes the feminine in man is as that piteous woman, and
|
||
|
hard tho' it be, she must here be ruled out."
|
||
|
|
||
|
He paused, earnestly studying them for a moment; then resumed.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But something in your aspect seems to urge that it is not
|
||
|
solely the heart that moves in you, but also the conscience, the
|
||
|
private conscience. But tell me whether or not, occupying the position
|
||
|
we do, private conscience should not yield to that imperial one
|
||
|
formulated in the code under which alone we officially proceed?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
Here the three men moved in their seats, less convinced than
|
||
|
agitated by the course of an argument troubling but the more the
|
||
|
spontaneous conflict within.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Perceiving which, the speaker paused for a moment; then abruptly
|
||
|
changing his tone, went on.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"To steady us a bit, let us recur to the facts.- In war-time at
|
||
|
sea a man-of-war's-man strikes his superior in grade, and the blow
|
||
|
kills. Apart from its effect, the blow itself is, according to the
|
||
|
Articles of War, a capital crime. Furthermore-"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Ay, Sir," emotionally broke in the officer of marines, "in one
|
||
|
sense it was. But surely Budd purposed neither mutiny nor homicide."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Surely not, my good man. And before a court less arbitrary and
|
||
|
more merciful than a martial one, that plea would largely extenuate.
|
||
|
At the Last Assizes it shall acquit. But how here? We proceed under
|
||
|
the law of the Mutiny Act. In feature no child can resemble his father
|
||
|
more than that Act resembles in spirit the thing from which it
|
||
|
derives- War. In His Majesty's service- in this ship indeed- there are
|
||
|
Englishmen forced to fight for the King against their will. Against
|
||
|
their conscience, for aught we know. Tho' as their fellow-creatures
|
||
|
some of us may appreciate their position, yet as navy officers, what
|
||
|
reck we of it? Still less recks the enemy. Our impressed men he
|
||
|
would fain cut down in the same swath with our volunteers. As
|
||
|
regards the enemy's naval conscripts, some of whom may even share
|
||
|
our own abhorrence of the regicidal French Directory, it is the same
|
||
|
on our side. War looks but to the frontage, the appearance. And the
|
||
|
Mutiny Act, War's child, takes after the father. Budd's intent or
|
||
|
non-intent is nothing to the purpose.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But while, put to it by these anxieties in you which I can not
|
||
|
but respect, I only repeat myself- while thus strangely we prolong
|
||
|
proceedings that should be summary- the enemy may be sighted and an
|
||
|
engagement result. We must do; and one of two things must we do-
|
||
|
condemn or let go."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Can we not convict and yet mitigate the penalty?" asked the
|
||
|
junior Lieutenant here speaking, and falteringly, for the first.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Lieutenant, were that clearly lawful for us under the
|
||
|
circumstances, consider the consequences of such clemency. The people"
|
||
|
(meaning the ship's company) "have native-sense; most of them are
|
||
|
familiar with our naval usage and tradition; and how would they take
|
||
|
it? Even could you explain to them- which our official position
|
||
|
forbids- they, long moulded by arbitrary discipline have not that kind
|
||
|
of intelligent responsiveness that might qualify them to comprehend
|
||
|
and discriminate. No, to the people the Foretopman's deed, however
|
||
|
it be worded in the announcement, will be plain homicide committed
|
||
|
in a flagrant act of mutiny. What penalty for that should follow, they
|
||
|
know. But it does not follow. Why? they will ruminate. You know what
|
||
|
sailors are. Will they not revert to the recent outbreak at the
|
||
|
Nore? Ay. They know the well-founded alarm- the panic it struck
|
||
|
throughout England. Your clement sentence they would account
|
||
|
pusillanimous. They would think that we flinch, that we are afraid
|
||
|
of them- afraid of practising a lawful rigour singularly demanded at
|
||
|
this juncture lest it should provoke new troubles. What shame to us
|
||
|
such a conjecture on their part, and how deadly to discipline. You see
|
||
|
then, whither, prompted by duty and the law, I steadfastly drive.
|
||
|
But I beseech you, my friends, do not take me amiss. I feel as you
|
||
|
do for this unfortunate boy. But did he know our hearts, I take him to
|
||
|
be of that generous nature that he would feel even for us on whom in
|
||
|
this military necessity so heavy a compulsion is laid."
|
||
|
|
||
|
With that, crossing the deck he resumed his place by the sashed
|
||
|
port-hole, tacitly leaving the three to come to a decision. On the
|
||
|
cabin's opposite side the troubled court sat silent. Loyal lieges,
|
||
|
plain and practical, though at bottom they dissented from some
|
||
|
points Captain Vere had put to them, they were without the faculty,
|
||
|
hardly had the inclination, to gainsay one whom they felt to be an
|
||
|
earnest man, one too not less their superior in mind than in naval
|
||
|
rank. But it is not improbable that even such of his words as were not
|
||
|
without influence over them, less came home to them than his closing
|
||
|
appeal to their instinct as sea-officers in the forethought he threw
|
||
|
out as to the practical consequences to discipline, considering the
|
||
|
unconfirmed tone of the fleet at the time, should a man-of-war's-man's
|
||
|
violent killing at sea of a superior in grade be allowed to pass for
|
||
|
aught else than a capital crime demanding prompt infliction of the
|
||
|
penalty.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not unlikely they were brought to something more or less akin to
|
||
|
that harassed frame of mind which in the year 1842 actuated the
|
||
|
Commander of the U.S. brig-of-war Somers to resolve, under the
|
||
|
so-called Articles of War, Articles modelled upon the English Mutiny
|
||
|
Act, to resolve upon the execution at sea of a midshipman and two
|
||
|
petty-officers as mutineers designing the seizure of the brig. Which
|
||
|
resolution was carried out though in a time of peace and within not
|
||
|
many days' of home. An act vindicated by a naval court of inquiry
|
||
|
subsequently convened ashore. History, and here cited without comment.
|
||
|
True, the circumstances on board the Somers were different from
|
||
|
those on board the Indomitable. But the urgency felt, well-warranted
|
||
|
or otherwise, was much the same.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Says a writer whom few know, "Forty years after a battle it is
|
||
|
easy for a non-combatant to reason about how it ought to have been
|
||
|
fought. It is another thing personally and under fire to direct the
|
||
|
fighting while involved in the obscuring smoke of it. Much so with
|
||
|
respect to other emergencies involving considerations both practical
|
||
|
and moral, and when it is imperative promptly to act. The greater
|
||
|
the fog the more it imperils the steamer, and speed is put on tho'
|
||
|
at the hazard of running somebody down. Little ween the snug
|
||
|
card-players in the cabin of the responsibilities of the sleepless man
|
||
|
on the bridge."
|
||
|
|
||
|
In brief, Billy Budd was formally convicted and sentenced to be
|
||
|
hung at the yard-arm in the early morning watch, it being now night.
|
||
|
Otherwise, as is customary in such cases, the sentence would forthwith
|
||
|
have been carried out. In war-time on the field or in the fleet, a
|
||
|
mortal punishment decreed by a drum-head court- on the field sometimes
|
||
|
decreed by but a nod from the General- follows without delay on the
|
||
|
heel of conviction without appeal.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 23
|
||
|
|
||
|
It was Captain Vere himself who of his own motion communicated the
|
||
|
finding of the court to the prisoner; for that purpose going to the
|
||
|
compartment where he was in custody and bidding the marine there to
|
||
|
withdraw for the time.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Beyond the communication of the sentence what took place at this
|
||
|
interview was never known. But in view of the character of the twain
|
||
|
briefly closeted in that state-room, each radically sharing in the
|
||
|
rarer qualities of our nature- so rare indeed as to be all but
|
||
|
incredible to average minds however much cultivated- some
|
||
|
conjectures may be ventured.
|
||
|
|
||
|
It would have been in consonance with the spirit of Captain Vere
|
||
|
should he on this occasion have concealed nothing from the condemned
|
||
|
one- should he indeed have frankly disclosed to him the part he
|
||
|
himself had played in bringing about the decision, at the same time
|
||
|
revealing his actuating motives. On Billy's side it is not
|
||
|
improbable that such a confession would have been received in much the
|
||
|
same spirit that prompted it. Not without a sort of joy indeed he
|
||
|
might have appreciated the brave opinion of him implied in his
|
||
|
Captain's making such a confidant of him. Nor, as to the sentence
|
||
|
itself could he have been insensible that it was imparted to him as to
|
||
|
one not afraid to die. Even more may have been. Captain Vere in the
|
||
|
end may have developed the passion sometimes latent under an
|
||
|
exterior stoical or indifferent. He was old enough to have been
|
||
|
Billy's father. The austere devotee of military duty, letting
|
||
|
himself melt back into what remains primeval in our formalized
|
||
|
humanity, may in the end have caught Billy to his heart even as
|
||
|
Abraham may have caught young Isaac on the brink of resolutely
|
||
|
offering him up in obedience to the exacting behest. But there is no
|
||
|
telling the sacrament, seldom if in any case revealed to the gadding
|
||
|
world, wherever under circumstances at all akin to those here
|
||
|
attempted to be set forth, two of great Nature's nobler order embrace.
|
||
|
There is privacy at the time, inviolable to the survivor, and holy
|
||
|
oblivion, the sequel to each diviner magnanimity, providentially
|
||
|
covers all at last.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The first to encounter Captain Vere in act of leaving the
|
||
|
compartment was the senior Lieutenant. The face he beheld, for the
|
||
|
moment one expressive of the agony of the strong, was to that officer,
|
||
|
tho' a man of fifty, a startling revelation. That the condemned one
|
||
|
suffered less than he who mainly had effected the condemnation was
|
||
|
apparently indicated by the former's exclamation in the scene soon
|
||
|
perforce to be touched upon.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 24
|
||
|
|
||
|
Of a series of incidents within a brief term rapidly following
|
||
|
each other, the adequate narration may take up a term less brief,
|
||
|
especially if explanation or comment here and there seem requisite
|
||
|
to the better understanding of such incidents. Between the entrance
|
||
|
into the cabin of him who never left it alive, and him who when he did
|
||
|
leave it left it as one condemned to die; between this and the
|
||
|
closeted interview just given, less than an hour and a half had
|
||
|
elapsed. It was an interval long enough however to awaken speculations
|
||
|
among no few of the ship's company as to what it was that could be
|
||
|
detaining in the cabin the Master-at-arms and the sailor; for a
|
||
|
rumor that both of them had been seen to enter it and neither of
|
||
|
them had been seen to emerge, this rumor had got abroad upon the gun
|
||
|
decks and in the tops; the people of a great war-ship being in one
|
||
|
respect like villagers taking microscopic note of every outward
|
||
|
movement or non-movement going on. When therefore in weather not at
|
||
|
all tempestuous all hands were called in the second dog-watch, a
|
||
|
summons under such circumstances not usual in those hours, the crew
|
||
|
were not wholly unprepared for some announcement extraordinary, one
|
||
|
having connection too with the continued absence of the two men from
|
||
|
their wonted haunts.
|
||
|
|
||
|
There was a moderate sea at the time; and the moon, newly risen
|
||
|
and near to being at its full, silvered the white spar-deck wherever
|
||
|
not blotted by the clear-cut shadows horizontally thrown of fixtures
|
||
|
and moving men. On either side of the quarter-deck, the marine guard
|
||
|
under arms was drawn up; and Captain Vere standing in his place
|
||
|
surrounded by all the ward-room officers, addressed his men. In so
|
||
|
doing his manner showed neither more nor less than that properly
|
||
|
pertaining to his supreme position aboard his own ship. In clear terms
|
||
|
and concise he told them what had taken place in the cabin; that the
|
||
|
Master-at-arms was dead; that he who had killed him had been already
|
||
|
tried by a summary court and condemned to death; and that the
|
||
|
execution would take place in the early morning watch. The word mutiny
|
||
|
was not named in what he said. He refrained too from making the
|
||
|
occasion an opportunity for any preachment as to the maintenance of
|
||
|
discipline, thinking perhaps that under existing circumstances in
|
||
|
the navy the consequence of violating discipline should be made to
|
||
|
speak for itself.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Their Captain's announcement was listened to by the throng of
|
||
|
standing sailors in a dumbness like that of a seated congregation of
|
||
|
believers in hell listening to the clergyman's announcement of his
|
||
|
Calvinistic text.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the close, however, a confused murmur went up. It began to wax.
|
||
|
All but instantly, then, at a sign, it was pierced and suppressed by
|
||
|
shrill whistles of the Boatswain and his Mates piping down one watch.
|
||
|
|
||
|
To be prepared for burial Claggart's body was delivered to certain
|
||
|
petty-officers of his mess. And here, not to clog the sequel with
|
||
|
lateral matters, it may be added that at a suitable hour, the
|
||
|
Master-at-arms was committed to the sea with every funeral honor
|
||
|
properly belonging to his naval grade.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In this proceeding as in every public one growing out of the
|
||
|
tragedy, strict adherence to usage was observed. Nor in any point
|
||
|
could it have been at all deviated from, either with respect to
|
||
|
Claggart or Billy Budd, without begetting undesirable speculations
|
||
|
in the ship's company, sailors, and more particularly
|
||
|
men-of-war's-men, being of all men the greatest sticklers for usage.
|
||
|
|
||
|
For similar cause, all communication between Captain Vere and
|
||
|
the condemned one ended with the closeted interview already given, the
|
||
|
latter being now surrendered to the ordinary routine preliminary to
|
||
|
the end. This transfer under guard from the Captain's quarters was
|
||
|
effected without unusual precautions- at least no visible ones.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If possible, not to let the men so much as surmise that their
|
||
|
officers anticipate aught amiss from them is the tacit rule in a
|
||
|
military ship. And the more that some sort of trouble should really be
|
||
|
apprehended the more do the officers keep that apprehension to
|
||
|
themselves; tho' not the less unostentatious vigilance may be
|
||
|
augmented.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the present instance the sentry placed over the prisoner had
|
||
|
strict orders to let no one have communication with him but the
|
||
|
Chaplain. And certain unobtrusive measures were taken absolutely to
|
||
|
insure this point.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 25
|
||
|
|
||
|
In a seventy-four of the old order the deck known as the upper gun
|
||
|
deck was the one covered over by the spar-deck which last though not
|
||
|
without its armament was for the most part exposed to the weather.
|
||
|
In general it was at all hours free from hammocks; those of the crew
|
||
|
swinging on the lower gun deck, and berth-deck, the latter being not
|
||
|
only a dormitory but also the place for the stowing of the sailors'
|
||
|
bags, and on both sides lined with the large chests or movable
|
||
|
pantries of the many messes of the men.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the starboard side of the Indomitable's upper gun deck,
|
||
|
behold Billy Budd under sentry, lying prone in irons, in one of the
|
||
|
bays formed by the regular spacing of the guns comprising the
|
||
|
batteries on either side. All these pieces were of the heavier calibre
|
||
|
of that period. Mounted on lumbering wooden carriages they were
|
||
|
hampered with cumbersome harness of breechen and strong side-tackles
|
||
|
for running them out. Guns and carriages, together with the long
|
||
|
rammers and shorter lintstocks lodged in loops overhead- all these, as
|
||
|
customary, were painted black; and the heavy hempen breechens,
|
||
|
tarred to the same tint, wore the like livery of the undertakers. In
|
||
|
contrast with the funereal hue of these surroundings the prone
|
||
|
sailor's exterior apparel, white jumper and white duck trousers,
|
||
|
each more or less soiled, dimly glimmered in the obscure light of
|
||
|
the bay like a patch of discolored snow in early April lingering at
|
||
|
some upland cave's black mouth. In effect he is already in his
|
||
|
shroud or the garments that shall serve him in lieu of one. Over
|
||
|
him, but scarce illuminating him, two battle-lanterns swing from two
|
||
|
massive beams of the deck above. Fed with the oil supplied by the
|
||
|
war-contractors (whose gains, honest or otherwise, are in every land
|
||
|
an anticipated portion of the harvest of death), with flickering
|
||
|
splashes of dirty yellow light they pollute the pale moonshine all but
|
||
|
ineffectually struggling in obstructed flecks thro' the open ports
|
||
|
from which the tompioned cannon protrude. Other lanterns at
|
||
|
intervals serve but to bring out somewhat the obscurer bays which,
|
||
|
like small confessionals or side-chapels in a cathedral, branch from
|
||
|
the long dim-vistaed broad aisle between the two batteries of that
|
||
|
covered tier.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Such was the deck where now lay the Handsome Sailor. Through the
|
||
|
rose-tan of his complexion, no pallor could have shown. It would
|
||
|
have taken days of sequestration from the winds and the sun to have
|
||
|
brought about the effacement of that. But the skeleton in the
|
||
|
cheekbone at the point of its angle was just beginning delicately to
|
||
|
be defined under the warm-tinted skin. In fervid hearts
|
||
|
self-contained, some brief experiences devour our human tissue as
|
||
|
secret fire in a ship's hold consumes cotton in the bale.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But now lying between the two guns, as nipped in the vice of fate,
|
||
|
Billy's agony, mainly proceeding from a generous young heart's
|
||
|
virgin experience of the diabolical incarnate and effective in some
|
||
|
men- the tension of that agony was over now. It survived not the
|
||
|
something healing in the closeted interview with Captain Vere. Without
|
||
|
movement, he lay as in a trance. That adolescent expression previously
|
||
|
noted as his, taking on something akin to the look of a slumbering
|
||
|
child in the cradle when the warm hearth-glow of the still chamber
|
||
|
at night plays on the dimples that at whiles mysteriously form in
|
||
|
the cheek, silently coming and going there. For now and then in the
|
||
|
gyved one's trance a serene happy light born of some wandering
|
||
|
reminiscence or dream would diffuse itself over his face, and then
|
||
|
wane away only anew to return.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The Chaplain coming to see him and finding him thus, and
|
||
|
perceiving no sign that he was conscious of his presence,
|
||
|
attentively regarded him for a space, then slipping aside, withdrew
|
||
|
for the time, peradventure feeling that even he the minister of
|
||
|
Christ, tho' receiving his stipend from Mars, had no consolation to
|
||
|
proffer which could result in a peace transcending that which he
|
||
|
beheld. But in the small hours he came again. And the prisoner, now
|
||
|
awake to his surroundings, noticed his approach, and civilly, all
|
||
|
but cheerfully, welcomed him. But it was to little purpose that in the
|
||
|
interview following the good man sought to bring Billy Budd to some
|
||
|
godly understanding that he must die, and at dawn. True, Billy himself
|
||
|
freely referred to his death as a thing close at hand; but it was
|
||
|
something in the way that children will refer to death in general, who
|
||
|
yet among their other sports will play a funeral with hearse and
|
||
|
mourners.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not that like children Billy was incapable of conceiving what
|
||
|
death really is. No, but he was wholly without irrational fear of
|
||
|
it, a fear more prevalent in highly civilized communities than those
|
||
|
so-called barbarous ones which in all respects stand nearer to
|
||
|
unadulterate Nature. And, as elsewhere said, a barbarian Billy
|
||
|
radically was; as much so, for all the costume, as his countrymen
|
||
|
the British captives, living trophies, made to march in the Roman
|
||
|
triumph of Germanicus. Quite as much so as those later barbarians,
|
||
|
young men probably, and picked specimens among the earlier British
|
||
|
converts to Christianity, at least nominally such, and taken to Rome
|
||
|
(as to-day converts from lesser isles of the sea may be taken to
|
||
|
London), of whom the Pope of that time, admiring the strangeness of
|
||
|
their personal beauty so unlike the Italian stamp, their clear ruddy
|
||
|
complexion and curled flaxen locks, exclaimed, "Angles-" (meaning
|
||
|
English the modern derivative) "Angles do you call them? And is it
|
||
|
because they look so like angels?" Had it been later in time one would
|
||
|
think that the Pope had in mind Fra Angelico's seraphs some of whom,
|
||
|
plucking apples in gardens of the Hesperides, have the faint
|
||
|
rose-bud complexion of the more beautiful English girls.
|
||
|
|
||
|
If in vain the good Chaplain sought to impress the young barbarian
|
||
|
with ideas of death akin to those conveyed in the skull, dial, and
|
||
|
cross-bones on old tombstones; equally futile to all appearance were
|
||
|
his efforts to bring home to him the thought of salvation and a
|
||
|
Saviour. Billy listened, but less out of awe or reverence perhaps than
|
||
|
from a certain natural politeness; doubtless at bottom regarding all
|
||
|
that in much the same way that most mariners of his class take any
|
||
|
discourse abstract or out of the common tone of the work-a-day
|
||
|
world. And this sailor-way of taking clerical discourse is not
|
||
|
wholly unlike the way in which the pioneer of Christianity full of
|
||
|
transcendent miracles was received long ago on tropic isles by any
|
||
|
superior savage so called- a Tahitian say of Captain Cook's time or
|
||
|
shortly after that time. Out of natural courtesy he received, but
|
||
|
did not appropriate. It was like a gift placed in the palm of an
|
||
|
outreached hand upon which the fingers do not close.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But the Indomitable's Chaplain was a discreet man possessing the
|
||
|
good sense of a good heart. So he insisted not in his vocation here.
|
||
|
At the instance of Captain Vere, a lieutenant had apprised him of
|
||
|
pretty much everything as to Billy; and since he felt that innocence
|
||
|
was even a better thing than religion wherewith to go to Judgement, he
|
||
|
reluctantly withdrew; but in his emotion not without first
|
||
|
performing an act strange enough in an Englishman, and under the
|
||
|
circumstances yet more so in any regular priest. Stooping over, he
|
||
|
kissed on the fair cheek his fellow-man, a felon in martial law, one
|
||
|
who though on the confines of death he felt he could never convert
|
||
|
to a dogma; nor for all that did he fear for his future.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Marvel not that having been made acquainted with the young
|
||
|
sailor's essential innocence (an irruption of heretic thought hard
|
||
|
to suppress) the worthy man lifted not a finger to avert the doom of
|
||
|
such a martyr to martial discipline. So to do would not only have been
|
||
|
as idle as invoking the desert, but would also have been an
|
||
|
audacious transgression of the bounds of his function, one as
|
||
|
exactly prescribed to him by military law as that of the boatswain
|
||
|
or any other naval officer. Bluntly put, a chaplain is the minister of
|
||
|
the Prince of Peace serving in the host of the God of War- Mars. As
|
||
|
such, he is as incongruous as a musket would be on the altar at
|
||
|
Christmas. Why then is he there? Because he indirectly subserves the
|
||
|
purpose attested by the cannon; because too he lends the sanction of
|
||
|
the religion of the meek to that which practically is the abrogation
|
||
|
of everything but brute Force.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 26
|
||
|
|
||
|
The night, so luminous on the spar-deck, but otherwise on the
|
||
|
cavernous ones below, levels so like the tiered galleries in a
|
||
|
coal-mine- the luminous night passed away. But, like the prophet in
|
||
|
the chariot disappearing in heaven and dropping his mantle to
|
||
|
Elisha, the withdrawing night transferred its pale robe to the
|
||
|
breaking day. A meek shy light appeared in the East, where stretched a
|
||
|
diaphanous fleece of white furrowed vapor. That light slowly waxed.
|
||
|
Suddenly eight bells was struck aft, responded to by one louder
|
||
|
metallic stroke from forward. It was four o'clock in the morning.
|
||
|
Instantly the silver whistles were heard summoning all hands to
|
||
|
witness punishment. Up through the great hatchways rimmed with racks
|
||
|
of heavy shot, the watch below came pouring, overspreading with the
|
||
|
watch already on deck the space between the main-mast and fore-mast
|
||
|
including that occupied by the capacious launch and the black booms
|
||
|
tiered on either side of it, boat and booms making a summit of
|
||
|
observation for the powder-boys and younger tars. A different group
|
||
|
comprising one watch of topmen leaned over the rail of that
|
||
|
sea-balcony, no small one in a seventy-four, looking down on the crowd
|
||
|
below. Man or boy, none spake but in whisper, and few spake at all.
|
||
|
Captain Vere- as before, the central figure among the assembled
|
||
|
commissioned officers- stood nigh the break of the poop-deck facing
|
||
|
forward. Just below him on the quarter-deck the marines in full
|
||
|
equipment were drawn up much as at the scene of the promulgated
|
||
|
sentence.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At sea in the old time, the execution by halter of a military
|
||
|
sailor was generally from the fore-yard. In the present instance,
|
||
|
for special reasons the main-yard was assigned. Under an arm of that
|
||
|
lee-yard the prisoner was presently brought up, the Chaplain attending
|
||
|
him. It was noted at the time and remarked upon afterwards, that in
|
||
|
this final scene the good man evinced little or nothing of the
|
||
|
perfunctory. Brief speech indeed he had with the condemned one, but
|
||
|
the genuine Gospel was less on his tongue than in his aspect and
|
||
|
manner towards him. The final preparations personal to the latter
|
||
|
being speedily brought to an end by two boatswain's mates, the
|
||
|
consummation impended. Billy stood facing aft. At the penultimate
|
||
|
moment, his words, his only ones, words wholly unobstructed in the
|
||
|
utterance were these- "God bless Captain Vere!" Syllables so
|
||
|
unanticipated coming from one with the ignominious hemp about his
|
||
|
neck- a conventional felon's benediction directed aft towards the
|
||
|
quarters of honor; syllables too delivered in the clear melody of a
|
||
|
singing-bird on the point of launching from the twig, had a phenomenal
|
||
|
effect, not unenhanced by the rare personal beauty of the young sailor
|
||
|
spiritualized now thro' late experiences so poignantly profound.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Without volition as it were, as if indeed the ship's populace were
|
||
|
but the vehicles of some vocal current electric, with one voice from
|
||
|
alow and aloft came a resonant sympathetic echo- "God bless Captain
|
||
|
Vere!" And yet at that instant Billy alone must have been in their
|
||
|
hearts, even as he was in their eyes.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At the pronounced words and the spontaneous echo that voluminously
|
||
|
rebounded them, Captain Vere, either thro' stoic self-control or a
|
||
|
sort of momentary paralysis induced by emotional shock, stood
|
||
|
erectly rigid as a musket in the ship-armorer's rack.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The hull deliberately recovering from the periodic roll to leeward
|
||
|
was just regaining an even keel, when the last signal, a
|
||
|
preconcerted dumb one, was given. At the same moment it chanced that
|
||
|
the vapory fleece hanging low in the East, was shot thro' with a
|
||
|
soft glory as of the fleece of the Lamb of God seen in mystical
|
||
|
vision, and simultaneously therewith, watched by the wedged mass of
|
||
|
upturned faces, Billy ascended; and, ascending, took the full rose
|
||
|
of the dawn.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the pinioned figure, arrived at the yard-end, to the wonder
|
||
|
of all no motion was apparent, none save that created by the ship's
|
||
|
motion, in moderate weather so majestic in a great ship ponderously
|
||
|
cannoned.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 27
|
||
|
|
||
|
A Digression
|
||
|
|
||
|
When some days afterward in reference to the singularity just
|
||
|
mentioned, the Purser, a rather ruddy rotund person more accurate as
|
||
|
an accountant than profound as a philosopher, said at mess to the
|
||
|
Surgeon, "What testimony to the force lodged in will-power," the
|
||
|
latter- saturnine, spare and tall, one in whom a discreet causticity
|
||
|
went along with a manner less genial than polite, replied, "Your
|
||
|
pardon, Mr. Purser. In a hanging scientifically conducted- and under
|
||
|
special orders I myself directed how Budd's was to be effected- any
|
||
|
movement following the completed suspension and originating in the
|
||
|
body suspended, such movement indicates mechanical spasm in the
|
||
|
muscular system. Hence the absence of that is no more attributable
|
||
|
to will-power as you call it than to horse-power- begging your
|
||
|
pardon."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But this muscular spasm you speak of, is not that in a degree
|
||
|
more or less invariable in these cases?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Assuredly so, Mr. Purser."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"How then, my good sir, do you account for its absence in this
|
||
|
instance?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Mr. Purser, it is clear that your sense of the singularity in
|
||
|
this matter equals not mine. You account for it by what you call
|
||
|
will-power, a term not yet included in the lexicon of science. For
|
||
|
me I do not, with my present knowledge, pretend to account for it at
|
||
|
all. Even should we assume the hypothesis that at the first touch of
|
||
|
the halyards the action of Budd's heart, intensified by
|
||
|
extraordinary emotion at its climax, abruptly stopt- much like a watch
|
||
|
when in carelessly winding it up you strain at the finish, thus
|
||
|
snapping the chain- even under that hypothesis, how account for the
|
||
|
phenomenon that followed?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"You admit then that the absence of spasmodic movement was
|
||
|
phenomenal."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"It was phenomenal, Mr. Purser, in the sense that it was an
|
||
|
appearance the cause of which is not immediately to be assigned."
|
||
|
|
||
|
"But tell me, my dear Sir," pertinaciously continued the other,
|
||
|
"was the man's death effected by the halter, or was it a species of
|
||
|
euthanasia?"
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Euthanasia, Mr. Purser, is something like your will-power: I
|
||
|
doubt its authenticity as a scientific term- begging your pardon
|
||
|
again. It is at once imaginative and metaphysical,- in short, Greek.
|
||
|
But," abruptly changing his tone, "there is a case in the sick-bay
|
||
|
that I do not care to leave to my assistants. Beg your pardon, but
|
||
|
excuse me." And rising from the mess he formally withdrew.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 28
|
||
|
|
||
|
The silence at the moment of execution and for a moment or two
|
||
|
continuing thereafter, a silence but emphasized by the regular wash of
|
||
|
the sea against the hull or the flutter of a sail caused by the
|
||
|
helmsman's eyes being tempted astray, this emphasized silence was
|
||
|
gradually disturbed by a sound not easily to be verbally rendered.
|
||
|
Whoever has heard the freshet-wave of a torrent suddenly swelled by
|
||
|
pouring showers in tropical mountains, showers not shared by the
|
||
|
plain; whoever has heard the first muffled murmur of its sloping
|
||
|
advance through precipitous woods, may form some conception of the
|
||
|
sound now heard. The seeming remoteness of its source was because of
|
||
|
its murmurous indistinctness since it came from close-by, even from
|
||
|
the men massed on the ship's open deck. Being inarticulate, it was
|
||
|
dubious in significance further than it seemed to indicate some
|
||
|
capricious revulsion of thought or feeling such as mobs ashore are
|
||
|
liable to, in the present instance possibly implying a sullen
|
||
|
revocation on the men's part of their involuntary echoing of Billy's
|
||
|
benediction. But ere the murmur had time to wax into clamour it was
|
||
|
met by a strategic command, the more telling that it came with
|
||
|
abrupt unexpectedness.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"Pipe down the starboard watch, Boatswain, and see that they go."
|
||
|
|
||
|
Shrill as the shriek of the sea-hawk the whistles of the Boatswain
|
||
|
and his Mates pierced that ominous low sound, dissipating it; and
|
||
|
yielding to the mechanism of discipline, the throng was thinned by one
|
||
|
half. For the remainder most of them were set to temporary employments
|
||
|
connected with trimming the yards and so forth, business readily to be
|
||
|
got up to serve occasion by any officer-of-the-deck.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Now each proceeding that follows a mortal sentence pronounced at
|
||
|
sea by a drum-head court is characterised by promptitude not
|
||
|
perceptibly merging into hurry, tho' bordering that. The hammock,
|
||
|
the one which had been Billy's bed when alive, having already been
|
||
|
ballasted with shot and otherwise prepared to serve for his canvas
|
||
|
coffin, the last offices of the sea-undertakers, the Sail-Maker's
|
||
|
Mates, were now speedily completed. When everything was in readiness a
|
||
|
second call for all hands made necessary by the strategic movement
|
||
|
before mentioned was sounded and now to witness burial.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The details of this closing formality it needs not to give. But
|
||
|
when the tilted plank let slide its freight into the sea, a second
|
||
|
strange human murmur was heard, blended now with another
|
||
|
inarticulate sound proceeding from certain larger sea-fowl, whose
|
||
|
attention having been attracted by the peculiar commotion in the water
|
||
|
resulting from the heavy sloped dive of the shotted hammock into the
|
||
|
sea, flew screaming to the spot. So near the hull did they come,
|
||
|
that the stridor or bony creak of their gaunt double-jointed pinions
|
||
|
was audible. As the ship under light airs passed on, leaving the
|
||
|
burial-spot astern, they still kept circling it low down with the
|
||
|
moving shadow of their outstretched wings and the croaked requiem of
|
||
|
their cries.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Upon sailors as superstitious as those of the age preceding
|
||
|
ours, men-of-war's-men too who had just beheld the prodigy of repose
|
||
|
in the form suspended in air and now foundering in the deeps; to
|
||
|
such mariners the action of the sea-fowl, tho' dictated by mere animal
|
||
|
greed for prey, was big with no prosaic significance. An uncertain
|
||
|
movement began among them, in which some encroachment was made. It was
|
||
|
tolerated but for a moment. For suddenly the drum beat to quarters,
|
||
|
which familiar sound happening at least twice every day, had upon
|
||
|
the present occasion a signal peremptoriness in it. True martial
|
||
|
discipline long continued superinduces in average man a sort of
|
||
|
impulse of docility whose operation at the official sound of command
|
||
|
much resembles in its promptitude the effect of an instinct.
|
||
|
|
||
|
The drum-beat dissolved the multitude, distributing most of them
|
||
|
along the batteries of the two covered gun decks. There, as wont,
|
||
|
the guns' crews stood by their respective cannon erect and silent.
|
||
|
In due course the First Officer, sword under arm and standing in his
|
||
|
place on the quarter-deck, formally received the successive reports of
|
||
|
the sworded Lieutenants commanding the sections of batteries below;
|
||
|
the last of which reports being made, the summed report he delivered
|
||
|
with the customary salute to the Commander. All this occupied time,
|
||
|
which in the present case, was the object of beating to quarters at an
|
||
|
hour prior to the customary one. That such variance from usage was
|
||
|
authorized by an officer like Captain Vere, a martinet as some
|
||
|
deemed him, was evidence of the necessity for unusual action implied
|
||
|
in what he deemed to be temporarily the mood of his men. "With
|
||
|
mankind," he would say, "forms, measured forms are everything; and
|
||
|
that is the import couched in the story of Orpheus with his lyre
|
||
|
spell-binding the wild denizens of the wood." And this he once applied
|
||
|
to the disruption of forms going on across the Channel and the
|
||
|
consequences thereof.
|
||
|
|
||
|
At this unwonted muster at quarters, all proceeded as at the
|
||
|
regular hour. The band on the quarter-deck played a sacred air.
|
||
|
After which the Chaplain went thro' the customary morning service.
|
||
|
That done, the drum beat the retreat, and toned by music and religious
|
||
|
rites subserving the discipline and purpose of war, the men in their
|
||
|
wonted orderly manner, dispersed to the places allotted them when
|
||
|
not at the guns.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And now it was full day. The fleece of low-hanging vapor had
|
||
|
vanished, licked up by the sun that late had so glorified it. And
|
||
|
the circumambient air in the clearness of its serenity was like smooth
|
||
|
marble in the polished block not yet removed from the
|
||
|
marble-dealer's yard.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 29
|
||
|
|
||
|
The symmetry of form attainable in pure fiction can not so readily
|
||
|
be achieved in a narration essentially having less to do with fable
|
||
|
than with fact. Truth uncompromisingly told will always have its
|
||
|
ragged edges; hence the conclusion of such a narration is apt to be
|
||
|
less finished than an architectural finial.
|
||
|
|
||
|
How it fared with the Handsome Sailor during the year of the Great
|
||
|
Mutiny has been faithfully given. But tho' properly the story ends
|
||
|
with his life, something in way of sequel will not be amiss. Three
|
||
|
brief chapters will suffice.
|
||
|
|
||
|
In the general re-christening under the Directory of the craft
|
||
|
originally forming the navy of the French monarchy, the St. Louis
|
||
|
line-of-battle ship was named the Atheiste. Such a name, like some
|
||
|
other substituted ones in the Revolutionary fleet, while proclaiming
|
||
|
the infidel audacity of the ruling power was yet, tho' not so intended
|
||
|
to be, the aptest name, if one consider it, ever given to a
|
||
|
war-ship; far more so indeed than the Devastation, the Erebus (the
|
||
|
Hell) and similar names bestowed upon fighting-ships.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On the return-passage to the English fleet from the detached
|
||
|
cruise during which occurred the events already recorded, the
|
||
|
Indomitable fell in with the Atheiste. An engagement ensued; during
|
||
|
which Captain Vere, in the act of putting his ship alongside the enemy
|
||
|
with a view of throwing his boarders across her bulwarks, was hit by a
|
||
|
musket-ball from a port-hole of the enemy's main cabin. More than
|
||
|
disabled he dropped to the deck and was carried below to the same
|
||
|
cock-pit where some of his men already lay. The senior Lieutenant took
|
||
|
command. Under him the enemy was finally captured and though much
|
||
|
crippled was by rare good fortune successfully taken into Gibraltar,
|
||
|
an English port not very distant from the scene of the fight. There,
|
||
|
Captain Vere with the rest of the wounded was put ashore. He
|
||
|
lingered for some days, but the end came. Unhappily he was cut off too
|
||
|
early for the Nile and Trafalgar. The spirit that spite its
|
||
|
philosophic austerity may yet have indulged in the most secret of
|
||
|
all passions, ambition, never attained to the fulness of fame.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Not long before death, while lying under the influence of that
|
||
|
magical drug which soothing the physical frame mysteriously operates
|
||
|
on the subtler element in man, he was heard to murmur words
|
||
|
inexplicable to his attendant- "Billy Budd, Billy Budd." That these
|
||
|
were not the accents of remorse, would seem clear from what the
|
||
|
attendant said to the Indomitable's senior officer of marines who,
|
||
|
as the most reluctant to condemn of the members of the drum-head
|
||
|
court, too well knew, tho' here he kept the knowledge to himself,
|
||
|
who Billy Budd was.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 30
|
||
|
|
||
|
Some few weeks after the execution, among other matters under
|
||
|
the head of News from the Mediterranean, there appeared in a naval
|
||
|
chronicle of the time, an authorized weekly publication, an account of
|
||
|
the affair. It was doubtless for the most part written in good
|
||
|
faith, tho' the medium, partly rumor, through which the facts must
|
||
|
have reached the writer, served to deflect and in part falsify them.
|
||
|
The account was as follows:-
|
||
|
|
||
|
"On the tenth of the last month a deplorable occurrence took place
|
||
|
on board H.M.S. Indomitable. John Claggart, the ship's Master-at-arms,
|
||
|
discovering that some sort of plot was incipient among an inferior
|
||
|
section of the ship's company, and that the ringleader was one William
|
||
|
Budd; he, Claggart, in the act of arraigning the man before the
|
||
|
Captain was vindictively stabbed to the heart by the suddenly drawn
|
||
|
sheath-knife of Budd.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The deed and the implement employed, sufficiently suggest that
|
||
|
tho' mustered into the service under an English name the assassin
|
||
|
was no Englishman, but one of those aliens adopting English
|
||
|
cognomens whom the present extraordinary necessities of the Service
|
||
|
have caused to be admitted into it in considerable numbers.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The enormity of the crime and the extreme depravity of the
|
||
|
criminal, appear the greater in view of the character of the victim, a
|
||
|
middle-aged man respectable and discreet, belonging to that official
|
||
|
grade, the petty-officers, upon whom, as none know better than the
|
||
|
commissioned gentlemen, the efficiency of His Majesty's Navy so
|
||
|
largely depends. His function was a responsible one, at once onerous &
|
||
|
thankless, and his fidelity in it the greater because of his strong
|
||
|
patriotic impulse. In this instance as in so many other instances in
|
||
|
these days, the character of this unfortunate man signally refutes, if
|
||
|
refutation were needed, that peevish saying attributed to the late Dr.
|
||
|
Johnson, that patriotism is the last refuge of a scoundrel.
|
||
|
|
||
|
"The criminal paid the penalty of his crime. The promptitude of
|
||
|
the punishment has proved salutary. Nothing amiss is now apprehended
|
||
|
aboard H.M.S. Indomitable."
|
||
|
|
||
|
The above, appearing in a publication now long ago superannuated
|
||
|
and forgotten, is all that hitherto has stood in human record to
|
||
|
attest what manner of men respectively were John Claggart and Billy Budd.
|
||
|
|
||
|
CHAPTER 31
|
||
|
|
||
|
Everything is for a term remarkable in navies. Any tangible object
|
||
|
associated with some striking incident of the service is converted
|
||
|
into a monument. The spar from which the Foretopman was suspended, was
|
||
|
for some few years kept trace of by the blue-jackets. Their
|
||
|
knowledge followed it from ship to dock-yard and again from
|
||
|
dock-yard to ship, still pursuing it even when at last reduced to a
|
||
|
mere dock-yard boom. To them a chip of it was as a piece of the Cross.
|
||
|
Ignorant tho' they were of the secret facts of the tragedy, and not
|
||
|
thinking but that the penalty was somehow unavoidably inflicted from
|
||
|
the naval point of view, for all that they instinctively felt that
|
||
|
Billy was a sort of man as incapable of mutiny as of wilfull murder.
|
||
|
They recalled the fresh young image of the Handsome Sailor, that
|
||
|
face never deformed by a sneer or subtler vile freak of the heart
|
||
|
within. Their impression of him was doubtless deepened by the fact
|
||
|
that he was gone, and in a measure mysteriously gone. At the time,
|
||
|
on the gun decks of the Indomitable, the general estimate of his
|
||
|
nature and its unconscious simplicity eventually found rude
|
||
|
utterance from another foretopman, one of his own watch, gifted, as
|
||
|
some sailors are, with an artless poetic temperament; the tarry
|
||
|
hands made some lines which after circulating among the shipboard crew
|
||
|
for a while, finally got rudely printed at Portsmouth as a ballad. The
|
||
|
title given to it was the sailor's.
|
||
|
|
||
|
BILLY IN THE DARBIES
|
||
|
|
||
|
Good of the Chaplain to enter Lone Bay
|
||
|
|
||
|
And down on his marrow-bones here and pray
|
||
|
|
||
|
For the likes just o' me, Billy Budd.- But look:
|
||
|
|
||
|
Through the port comes the moon-shine astray!
|
||
|
|
||
|
It tips the guard's cutlas and silvers this nook;
|
||
|
|
||
|
But 'twill die in the dawning of Billy's last day.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A jewel-block they'll make of me to-morrow,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Pendant pearl from the yard-arm-end
|
||
|
|
||
|
Like the ear-drop I gave to Bristol Molly-
|
||
|
|
||
|
O, 'tis me, not the sentence they'll suspend.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Ay, Ay, Ay, all is up; and I must up to
|
||
|
|
||
|
Early in the morning, aloft from alow.
|
||
|
|
||
|
On an empty stomach, now, never it would do.
|
||
|
|
||
|
They'll give me a nibble- bit o' biscuit ere I go.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Sure, a messmate will reach me the last parting cup;
|
||
|
|
||
|
But, turning heads away from the hoist and the belay,
|
||
|
|
||
|
Heaven knows who will have the running of me up!
|
||
|
|
||
|
No pipe to those halyards.- But aren't it all sham?
|
||
|
|
||
|
A blur's in my eyes; it is dreaming that I am.
|
||
|
|
||
|
A hatchet to my hawser? all adrift to go?
|
||
|
|
||
|
The drum roll to grog, and Billy never know?
|
||
|
|
||
|
But Donald he has promised to stand by the plank;
|
||
|
|
||
|
So I'll shake a friendly hand ere I sink.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But- no! It is dead then I'll be, come to think.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I remember Taff the Welshman when he sank.
|
||
|
|
||
|
And his cheek it was like the budding pink.
|
||
|
|
||
|
But me they'll lash me in hammock, drop me deep.
|
||
|
|
||
|
Fathoms down, fathoms down, how I'll dream fast asleep.
|
||
|
|
||
|
I feel it stealing now. Sentry, are you there?
|
||
|
|
||
|
Just ease this darbies at the wrist, and roll me over fair,
|
||
|
|
||
|
I am sleepy, and the oozy weeds about me twist.
|
||
|
|
||
|
THE END
|
||
|
.
|