Billy Budd
by Herman Melville
In the time before steamships, or then more
frequently than now, a stroller along the docks of any considerable seaport
would occasionally have his attention arrested by a group of bronzed marines,
man-of-war’s men or merchant sailors in holiday attire ashore on liberty. In
certain instances they would flank, or, like a bodyguard, quite surround some
superior figure of their own class, moving along with them like Aldebaran
amongst 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
offhand 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-humour. In jovial sallies
right and left, his white teeth flashing into view, 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, vapouring in the groggeries along the towpath. Invariably a
proficient in his perilous calling, he was also more or less of a mighty boxer
or wrestler. He was strength and beauty. Tales of his prowess were recited.
Ashore he was the champion, afloat the spokeman; on every suitable occasion
always foremost. Close-reefing topsails in a gale, there he was, astride the
weather yard-arm-end, foot in ‘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 ballooning 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 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 fleet towards 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, HMS Indomitable; which ship, as was not
unusual in those hurried days, had 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 Ratcliffe, pounced, even before the merchantman’s
crew formally was mustered on the quarter-deck for his deliberate inspection.
And him only he selected. 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 shorthanded, 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 colour, 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
cahill, 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 whensover possible with a fertilising 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, 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 bluffer 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 forbore with him, and reassured 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 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. 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. Aye, 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 lieutenant, 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 warship lying-to for me,’ pointing through the
cabin windows 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 time when his
hardtack is not sought for by sailors with such avidity as should be; a time
also when some shipmasters privily resent the borrowing from them of 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 warship. 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; though 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 philosophies 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 goodbye. Then making a salutation as to the
ship herself, ‘And goodbye 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, though
happily endowed with the gaiety 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 meaning 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 vicissitudes 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 foretop. 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 reverie, 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 acknowledged kith and kin; while for
Billy, as will shortly be seen, his entire family was practically invested in
himself.
II
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 ships’ 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. This 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 sea-going,
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 fictitious life, the abrupt transition from his former and
simpler sphere to the ampler and more knowing world of a great warship—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 high-born 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
favourable 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
of the halyards and tar-buckets; but, above all, something in the mobile
expression, and every chance attitude and movement, something suggestive of a
mother eminently favoured 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 you 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 silk-lined 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 raw 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 a certain degree of intelligence 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 St Bernard’s
breed.
Habitually being 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
incomparable with that manufacturable thing known as respectability. But are
sailor 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
restraint, 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
characterise anybody in the external uniform of civilisation, 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 flavour like that of berries,
while the man thoroughly civilised, 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 poet’s famous invocation, near
two thousand years ago, of the good rustic out of his latitude in the Rome of
the Caesars, still appropriately holds:
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 heartfeeling 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-interpreter, 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.
III
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 junction was effected. As
one of that fleet, the seventy-four participated in its movements, though at
times, on account of her superior sailing qualities, in the absence of frigates,
dispatched 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 manifestos and conquering and
proselytising armies of the French Directory.
To the 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
mastheads 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 bluejackets, to be numbered by thousands, ran up with hurrahs
the British colours 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 this 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 cannot 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
circumstances 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
a time pacified; yet at the Nore the unforeseen renewal of insurrection on a yet
larger scale, and emphasised 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 a 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, among 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 mutineer those battles, and especially Trafalgar, were a
plenary absolution, and a grand one; for that which goes to make up scenic naval
display is heroic magnificence in arms. Those battles, especially Trafalgar,
stand unmatched in human annals.
IV
The greatest sailor since the world began.
—Tennyson
In this matter of writing, resolve as one may
to keep to the main road, some bypaths have an enticement not readily to be
withstood. Beckoned by the genius of Nelson I am going to err into such a bypath.
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 firearm, 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 valour, though
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 a 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 battleships, 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 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, savoured 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 than
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 he 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 reckless declarer of his person in fight.
Personal prudence, even when dictated by quite
other than selfish considerations, is surely no special virtue in a military man;
while an excessive love of glory, exercising to the uttermost the honest
heartfelt 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, though in
the same ode he invokes Nelson as ‘the greatest sailor since the 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 truly 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, vitalises into acts.
V
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 in 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 terrorise 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.
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 Honourable Edward Fairfax Vero, to
give him 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 humour. 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 retreat 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 honourable 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 greater-deck, one hand holding
by the rigging, he would absently gaze off at the black sea. At the presentation
to him 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 sturdy qualities, was without any brilliant ones, was in this wise:
a favourite kinsman, Lord Denton, a free-handed fellow, had been the first to
meet and congratulate him upon his return to England from the 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 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.
VI
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 him
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 leading towards
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 towards 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, philosophise upon realities.
In this love of reading he found confirmation
of his own more reserved 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 felt would abide in him
essentially unmodified so long as his intelligent part remained unimpaired. In
view of the humbled 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,
Captain Vere disinterestedly opposed them not alone because they seemed to him
incapable of embodiment in lasting institutions, but at war with the world and
the peace 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 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 through 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 any point touching the stirring
personages and events of the time, he would cite some historical character or
incident of antiquity with the same easy air that he would cite from the moderns.
He seemed unmindful of the circumstance that to his bluff company such 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 in 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.
VII
The lieutenants and other commissioned
gentlemen forming Captain Vere’s staff it is not necessary here to
particularise, nor needs it to make 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. This 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 cutlass. But very long ago, owing to the advance in gunnery,
making hand-to-hand encounters less frequent, and giving to nitre and sulphur
the pre-eminence over steel, that function ceased; the master-at-arms of a great
warship 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 of 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 the strange
protuberant heaviness in its make that recalled the prints of the Revd Dr Titus
Oates, the historical 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, though 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 like a man of high quality, social and moral,
who for reasons of his own was keeping incognito. 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 naturalisation in early childhood. Among certain grizzled sea-gossips of
the gun-decks and forecastle went a rumour 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 rumour 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 unfavourable 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, and any
questionable fellow at large, and summarily ship him to the 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 harbouring 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 colour 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 cannot
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 warship 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 drafts called 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 these
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 greybeards, the thoughtful of
them, the genius of it presented an aspect like that of Camoens’ ‘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 portentous upstart from the revolutionary chaos, who seemed in
act of fulfilling judgment 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 one 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.
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-quidnuncs 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 seaports.
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 drudges, 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 through his understrappers of operating to the mysterious discomfort, if
nothing worse, of any of the sea-commonalty.
VIII
Life in the foretop 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 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
after-guardsman 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 in the liberated man’s face, as with
his woollen 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, Billy 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 from more active work, had been recently assigned
duty as mainmast-man in his watch, looking to the gear belayed at the rail round
about 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 anglicised in the service, of few words, many wrinkles and some honourable
scars. His wizened face, time-tinted and weather-stormed to the complexion of an
antique parchment, was here and there peppered blue by the chance explosion of a
gun-carriage 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 parts 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 pale 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 weasel 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 warship’s environment looked oddly incongruous in the
Handsome Sailor? But after slyly studying him at intervals, the old Merlin’s
equivocal merriment was modified by now. 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
mantraps 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, 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 humour, or what not, in the mastman; 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
recitals 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, Jemmy Legs’
(meaning the master-at-arms) ‘is down on you.’
‘Jemmy Legs!’ ejaculated Billy, his welkin
eyes expanding; ‘what for? Why, he calls me the sweet and pleasant young
fellow, they tell me.’
‘Does he so?’ grinned the grizzled one;
then said, ‘Aye, Baby lad, a sweet voice has Jemmy Legs.’
‘No, not always. But to me 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 lifelong to the will of superiors, all this
had developed in the Dansker the pithy guarded cynicism that was leading
characteristic.
IX
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 has 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 humorous, 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 Jemmy 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 pleasant master-at-arms was in any
peculiar way hostile to him. Meantime that functionary resuming his path must
have momentarily worm 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!’
X
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 Jemmy 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 bluejacket 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 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 that very harmlessness itself.
Now there can exist no irritating juxtaposition
of dissimilar personalities comparable to that which is possible aboard a great
warship 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, though among the few
something was whispered, ‘Yes, X is a nut not to be cracked by the tap of a
lady’s fan. You are aware that I am the adherent of no organised religion,
much less of any philosophy built into a system. Well, for all that, I think
that to try and get into X, enter his labyrinth, and get out again, without a
clue derived from some source other than what is known as knowledge of the
world, that were hardly possible, at least for me.’
‘Why,’ said I, ‘X, however singular a
study to some, is yet 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 dotage or 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, though
savouring of Calvinism, by no means involves Calvin’s dogma 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.
Civilisation, 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 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—never 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
signalises 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 soul’s recesses 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: towards 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 secretive and self-contained, so that when most
active it is to the average mind not distinguished from sanity, and for the
reason above suggested that whatever its aim may be, and the aim is never
disclosed, the method and the outward proceeding is always perfectly rational.
Now something such 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’.
Can it be this phenomenon, disowned or not
acknowledged, 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?
It is because they somewhat savour of holy writ in its phrase ‘mysteries of
iniquity’.
The point of the 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 accident of the mess, the resumed narrative must
be left to vindicate as it may its own credibility.
XI
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 favourable
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 towards 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 happened to go along with a nature that, as
Claggart magnetically felt, had in its sim-plicity 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 which made the dimple in his dyed cheek, suppled his joints and
danced in his yellow curls, made him pre-eminently 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
himself, though he could hide it readily enough; apprehending the good, but
powerless to be it; what recourse is left to a nature like Claggart’s,
surcharged with energy as such natures almost invariably are, but to recoil upon
itself, and, like the scorpion for which the Creator alone is responsible, act
out to the end its allotted part?
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 envy Claggart 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.
Now 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 ferment the ill blood by perverting to his chief certain
innocent frolics of the good-natured 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 in those days, zealous in his
function—and how the bluejackets shoot at him in private their raillery and
wit; the nickname by which he goes among them (Jemmy Legs) implying under the
form of merriment their cherished disrespect and dislike.
In view of the greediness of hate for
provocation, 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 any merely suspected injury, 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 some natures like Claggart’s. 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 ever pervert into even 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.
XII
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 hillside stretched under the
lee of the booms, a piled ridge of spare spars among which the ship’s largest
boat, the launch, was stowed. Alongside of three other slumberers from below, he
lay near one end of the booms which approached from the foremast; his station
aloft on duty as a foretopman being just over the deck station of the
forecastleman, 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 fore-chains,
Billy; there is something in the wind. Don’t speak. Quick. I will meet you
there;’ and who then 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 to negate 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 warship of that time, of dimensions
commensurate to the ample hull’s magnitude; a tarry balcony, in short,
overhanging the sea, and so secluded that one mariner of the Indomitable,
a nonconformist 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 starlight. 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
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 night light; ‘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—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—t—oss you back over the r—rail!’ There was no mistaking
this, and the mysterious emissary decamped, disappearing in the direction of the
mainmast 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 recognised by him, ‘Ah,
Beauty, is it you? Well, something must have been the matter, for you st—st—stuttered.’
‘Oh,’ 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-coloured 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 enquirers 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 marling-spike
or turn in a dead-eye, say.
XIII
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 (Billy’s)
eyes? Where could the fellow get guineas? Why, even buttons, spare buttons, are
not so plentiful at sea. The more he turned the matter over, the more he was
nonplussed, and made uneasy and discomforted. In his disgustful recoil from an
overture which though 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 trying 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 recognised 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 rattle-brain, 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.
Although 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 speculations into which he was led were so disturbingly alien to
him, that he did his best to smother them. It never entered his mind that here
was a matter which, from its extreme questionableness, it was his duty as a
loyal bluejacket 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 savour overmuch of the dirty work of a
tell-tale. 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, Jemmy Legs is down on you.’
‘And what,’ rejoined Billy in amazement,
‘has Jemmy 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. For it was his wont to relapse into grim
silence when interrogated in sceptical 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.
XIV
Long experience had very likely brought this
old man to that bitter prudence which never interferes in aught, and never gives
advice.
Yet, 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 childman. 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 simple-mindedness 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, though 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 us not a game with the sailor,
demanding the long head; no intricate game of chess where few moves are made in
straightforwardness, but 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 held 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
exercises 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 businessmen 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.
XV
But after the little matter at the mess Billy
Budd no more found himself in strange trouble at times about his hammock or his
clothes-bag, 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 colour nearest
approaching a deeper violet, the softest of shades.
Though 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 comparable 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.
So was it with him in yet another matter. Two
minor officers, the armourer and captain of the hold, with whom he had never
exchanged a word, his position on the ship not bringing him into contact with
them; these men now for the first time 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, though he well knew the fact that the armourer 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.
Our Handsome Sailor’s manly forwardness upon
occasion, and irresistible good-nature, indicating no mental superiority tending
to excite an invidious feeling, bred general popularity, and this good-will on
the part of most of his shipmates made him the less apt to concern himself about
such mute aspects towards him as those whereto allusion has just been made.
As to the afterguardsman, though 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, 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.
XVI
After the mysterious interview in the
fore-chains, the one so abruptly ended there by Billy, nothing especially
germane to the story occurred until the events now about to be narrated.
Elsewhere it has been said that owing to 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
seventy-four 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 employed 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 through 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
solitarily walking the weather-side of the quarter-deck, 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 open 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 time, 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 now so deferentially stood awaiting his notice, than a peculiar expression
came over his face. 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 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 trouble, 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 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 testifier’s manner in giving his testimony. However, he
refrained from interrupting him. And Claggart, continuing, concluded with this,
‘God forbid, your honour, that the Indomitable’s should be the
experience of the—’
‘Never mind that!’ here peremptorily broke
in the superior, his face altering with anger instantly, 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 jeopardised 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 event, for a petty officer unnecessarily to allude
to it 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 that 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 honours 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 super-sensitive 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 perjured witness in a capital case before a court-martial 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 honour.’
‘William Budd!’ repeated Captain Vere with
unfeigned astonishment; ‘and mean you the man that Lieutenant Ratcliffe 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 honour; 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 they will at a pinch say a good
word for him at all hazards. Did Lieutenant Ratcliffe happen to tell your honour
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? That sort of good-humoured
air even masks that at heart he resents his impressment. You have but noted his
fair cheek. A mantrap 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. Though in general not very demonstrative to his officers, he had
congratulated Lieutenant Ratcliffe upon his good fortune in lighting on such a
fine specimen of the genus homo, who in the nude might have passed for a
statue of young Adam before the Fall.
As to Billy’s adieu to the ship Rights-of-Man,
which the boarding lieutenant, in a deferential way, had indeed reported to him,
Captain Vere, more as a good story than aught else (having mistakenly understood
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 mizzen-top, 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 parenthesised here that since the mizzen-topmen have not to handle such
breadths of heavy canvas as the lower sails on the mainmast and foremast, 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, he weighed the
import of Claggart’s last suggestion conveyed in the phrase ‘a mantrap under
his ruddy-tipped daisies’, and the more he weighed it the less reliance he
felt in the informer’s good faith. Suddenly he turned upon him: ‘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 honour!’ 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 grey 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. Claggart—himself
for the time liberated from the other’s scrutiny—steadily regarded Captain
Vere 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 touchstone 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 gunroom 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 though
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 though the wind in the cordage
and the wash of the sea helped the more to put them beyond earshot; nevertheless,
the interviewer’s continuance already had attracted observation from some
topmen aloft, and other sailors in the waist or farther 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 honour.’
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.’
XVII
Now when the foretopman found himself closeted,
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 came 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
scrutinise 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
colour blurring into a muddy purple. Those lights of human intelligence, losing
human expression, gelidly protruded like the alien eyes of certain uncatalogued
creatures of the deep.
The first mesmeric glance was one of surprised
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 at the accuser, served to bring
out his lurking defect, and in this instance for the time intensified 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 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 the 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 full 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, |