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+<div style='text-align:center; font-size:1.2em; font-weight:bold;'>The Project Gutenberg eBook of Redburn: His First Voyage, by Herman Melville</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin:1em 0'>
+This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere in the United States and
+most other parts of the world at no cost and with almost no restrictions
+whatsoever. You may copy it, give it away or re-use it under the terms
+of the Project Gutenberg License included with this eBook or online
+at <a href="https://www.gutenberg.org">www.gutenberg.org</a>. If you
+are not located in the United States, you will have to check the laws of the
+country where you are located before using this eBook.
+</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Title: Redburn: His First Voyage</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-top:1em; margin-bottom:1em; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Author: Herman Melville</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Release Date: June 17, 2003 [eBook #8118]<br />
+[Most recently updated: March 25, 2021]</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Language: English</div>
+<div style='display:block;margin:1em 0'>Character set encoding: UTF-8</div>
+<div style='display:block; margin-left:2em; text-indent:-2em'>Produced by: Project Gutenberg volunteers and Blackmask Online</div>
+<div style='margin-top:2em;margin-bottom:4em'>*** START OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REDBURN: HIS FIRST VOYAGE ***</div>
+
+<h1>Redburn:<br/>
+His First Voyage</h1>
+
+<h2 class="no-break">by Herman Melville</h2>
+
+<p class="center">
+Being the Sailor Boy<br/>
+Confessions and Reminiscences<br/>
+Of the Son-Of-A-Gentleman<br/>
+In the Merchant Navy
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<h2>Contents</h2>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap01">CHAPTER I. HOW WELLINGBOROUGH REDBURN&rsquo;S TASTE FOR THE SEA WAS BORN AND BRED IN HIM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap02">CHAPTER II. REDBURN&rsquo;S DEPARTURE FROM HOME</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap03">CHAPTER III. HE ARRIVES IN TOWN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap04">CHAPTER IV. HOW HE DISPOSED OF HIS FOWLING-PIECE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap05">CHAPTER V. HE PURCHASES HIS SEA-WARDROBE, AND ON A DISMAL RAINY DAY PICKS UP HIS BOARD AND LODGING ALONG THE WHARVES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap06">CHAPTER VI. HE IS INITIATED IN THE BUSINESS OF CLEANING OUT THE PIG-PEN, AND SLUSHING DOWN THE TOP-MAST</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap07">CHAPTER VII. HE GETS TO SEA AND FEELS VERY BAD</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap08">CHAPTER VIII. HE IS PUT INTO THE LARBOARD WATCH; GETS SEA-SICK; AND RELATES SOME OTHER OF HIS EXPERIENCES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap09">CHAPTER IX. THE SAILORS BECOMING A LITTLE SOCIAL, REDBURN CONVERSES WITH THEM</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap10">CHAPTER X. HE IS VERY MUCH FRIGHTENED; THE SAILORS ABUSE HIM; AND HE BECOMES MISERABLE AND FORLORN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap11">CHAPTER XI. HE HELPS WASH THE DECKS, AND THEN GOES TO BREAKFAST</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap12">CHAPTER XII. HE GIVES SOME ACCOUNT OF ONE OF HIS SHIPMATES CALLED JACKSON</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap13">CHAPTER XIII. HE HAS A FINE DAY AT SEA, BEGINS TO LIKE IT; BUT CHANGES HIS MIND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap14">CHAPTER XIV. HE CONTEMPLATES MAKING A SOCIAL CALL ON THE CAPTAIN IN HIS CABIN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap15">CHAPTER XV. THE MELANCHOLY STATE OF HIS WARDROBE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap16">CHAPTER XVI. AT DEAD OF NIGHT HE IS SENT UP TO LOOSE THE MAIN-SKYSAIL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap17">CHAPTER XVII. THE COOK AND STEWARD</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap18">CHAPTER XVIII. HE ENDEAVORS TO IMPROVE HIS MIND; AND TELLS OF ONE BLUNT AND HIS DREAM BOOK</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap19">CHAPTER XIX. A NARROW ESCAPE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap20">CHAPTER XX. IN A FOG HE IS SET TO WORK AS A BELL-TOLLER, AND BEHOLDS A HERD OF OCEAN-ELEPHANTS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap21">CHAPTER XXI. A WHALEMAN AND A MAN-OF-WAR&rsquo;S-MAN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap22">CHAPTER XXII. THE HIGHLANDER PASSES A WRECK</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap23">CHAPTER XXIII. AN UNACCOUNTABLE CABIN-PASSENGER, AND A MYSTERIOUS YOUNG LADY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap24">CHAPTER XXIV. HE BEGINS TO HOP ABOUT IN THE RIGGING LIKE A SAINT JAGO&rsquo;s MONKEY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap25">CHAPTER XXV. QUARTER-DECK FURNITURE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap26">CHAPTER XXVI. A SAILOR A JACK OF ALL TRADES</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap27">CHAPTER XXVII. HE GETS A PEEP AT IRELAND, AND AT LAST ARRIVES AT LIVERPOOL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap28">CHAPTER XXVIII. HE GOES TO SUPPER AT THE SIGN OF THE BALTIMORE CLIPPER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap29">CHAPTER XXIX. REDBURN DEFERENTIALLY DISCOURSES CONCERNING THE PROSPECTS OF SAILORS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap30">CHAPTER XXX. REDBURN GROWS INTOLERABLY FLAT AND STUPID OVER SOME OUTLANDISH OLD GUIDE-BOOKS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap31">CHAPTER XXXI. WITH HIS PROSY OLD GUIDE-BOOK, HE TAKES A PROSY STROLL THROUGH THE TOWN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap32">CHAPTER XXXII. THE DOCKS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap33">CHAPTER XXXIII. THE SALT-DROGHERS, AND GERMAN EMIGRANT SHIPS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap34">CHAPTER XXXIV. THE IRRAWADDY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap35">CHAPTER XXXV. GALLIOTS, COAST-OF-GUINEA-MAN, AND FLOATING CHAPEL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap36">CHAPTER XXXVI. THE OLD CHURCH OF ST. NICHOLAS, AND THE DEAD-HOUSE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap37">CHAPTER XXXVII. WHAT REDBURN SAW IN LAUNCELOTT&rsquo;S-HEY</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap38">CHAPTER XXXVIII. THE DOCK-WALL BEGGARS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap39">CHAPTER XXXIX. THE BOOBLE-ALLEYS OF THE TOWN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap40">CHAPTER XL. PLACARDS, BRASS-JEWELERS, TRUCK-HORSES, AND STEAMERS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap41">CHAPTER XLI. REDBURN ROVES ABOUT HTHER AND THITHER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap42">CHAPTER XLII. HIS ADVENTURE WITH THE CROSS OLD GENTLEMAN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap43">CHAPTER XLIII. HE TAKES A DELIGHTFUL RAMBLE INTO THE COUNTRY; AND MAKES THE ACQUAINTANCE OF THREE ADORABLE CHARMERS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap44">CHAPTER XLIV. REDBURN INTRODUCES MASTER HARRY BOLTON TO THE FAVORABLE CONSIDERATION OF THE READER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap45">CHAPTER XLV. HARRY BOLTON KIDNAPS REDBURN, AND CARRIES HIM OFF TO LONDON</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap46">CHAPTER XLVI. A MYSTERIOUS NIGHT IN LONDON</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap47">CHAPTER XLVII. HOMEWARD BOUND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap48">CHAPTER XLVIII. A LIVING CORPSE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap49">CHAPTER XLIX. CARLO</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap50">CHAPTER L. HARRY BOLTON AT SEA</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap51">CHAPTER LI. THE EMIGRANTS</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap52">CHAPTER LII. THE EMIGRANTS&rsquo; KITCHEN</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap53">CHAPTER LIII. THE HORATII AND CURIATII</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap54">CHAPTER LIV. SOME SUPERIOR OLD NAIL-ROD AND PIG-TAIL</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap55">CHAPTER LV. DRAWING NIGH TO THE LAST SCENE IN JACKSON&rsquo;S CAREER</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap56">CHAPTER LVI. UNDER THE LEE OF THE LONG-BOAT, REDBURN AND HARRY HOLD CONFIDENTIAL COMMUNION</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap57">CHAPTER LVII. ALMOST A FAMINE</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap58">CHAPTER LVIII. THOUGH THE HIGHLANDER PUTS INTO NO HARBOR AS YET; SHE HERE AND THERE LEAVES MANY OF HER PASSENGERS BEHIND</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap59">CHAPTER LIX. THE LAST END OF JACKSON</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap60">CHAPTER LX. HOME AT LAST</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap61">CHAPTER LXI. REDBURN AND HARRY, ARM IN ARM, IN HARBOR</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td> <a href="#chap62">CHAPTER LXII. THE LAST THAT WAS EVER HEARD OF HARRY BOLTON</a></td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap01"></a>CHAPTER I.<br/>
+HOW WELLINGBOROUGH REDBURN&rsquo;S TASTE FOR THE SEA WAS BORN AND BRED IN HIM</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wellingborough, as you are going to sea, suppose you take this
+shooting-jacket of mine along; it&rsquo;s just the thing&mdash;take it, it will
+<i>save</i> the expense of another. You see, it&rsquo;s quite warm; fine long
+skirts, stout horn buttons, and plenty of pockets.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Out of the goodness and simplicity of his heart, thus spoke my elder brother to
+me, upon the <i>eve</i> of my departure for the seaport.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And, Wellingborough,&rdquo; he added, &ldquo;since we are both short of
+money, and you want an outfit, and I <i>Have</i> none to <i>give,</i> you may
+as well take my fowling-piece along, and sell it in New York for what you can
+get.&mdash;Nay, take it; it&rsquo;s of no use to me now; I can&rsquo;t find it
+in powder any more.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was then but a boy. Some time previous my mother had removed from New York to
+a pleasant village on the Hudson River, where we lived in a small house, in a
+quiet way. Sad disappointments in several plans which I had sketched for my
+future life; the necessity of doing something for myself, united to a naturally
+roving disposition, had now conspired within me, to send me to sea as a sailor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For months previous I had been poring over old New York papers, delightedly
+perusing the long columns of ship advertisements, all of which possessed a
+strange, romantic charm to me. Over and over again I devoured such
+announcements as the following:
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+FOR BREMEN.
+<br/>
+<i>The coppered and copper-fastened brig Leda, having nearly completed her
+cargo, will sail for the above port on Tuesday the twentieth of May.<br/>
+For freight or passage apply on board at Coenties Slip.<br/>
+</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To my young inland imagination every word in an advertisement like this,
+suggested volumes of thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A <i>brig!</i> The very word summoned up the idea of a black, sea-worn craft,
+with high, cozy bulwarks, and rakish masts and yards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Coppered and copper-fastened!</i>
+That fairly smelt of the salt water! How different such vessels must be from
+the wooden, one-masted, green-and-white-painted sloops, that glided up and down
+the river before our house on the bank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Nearly completed her cargo!</i>
+How momentous the announcement; suggesting ideas, too, of musty bales, and
+cases of silks and satins, and filling me with contempt for the vile deck-loads
+of hay and lumber, with which my river experience was familiar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Will sail on Tuesday the 20th of May-and</i>
+the newspaper bore date the fifth of the month! Fifteen whole days beforehand;
+think of that; what an important voyage it must be, that the time of sailing
+was fixed upon so long beforehand; the river sloops were not used to make such
+prospective announcements.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>For freight or passage apply on board!</i>
+Think of going on board a coppered and copper-fastened brig, and taking passage
+for Bremen! And who could be going to Bremen? No one but foreigners, doubtless;
+men of dark complexions and jet-black whiskers, who talked French.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Coenties Slip.</i>
+Plenty more brigs and any quantity of ships must be lying there. Coenties Slip
+must be somewhere near ranges of grim-looking warehouses, with rusty iron doors
+and shutters, and tiled roofs; and old anchors and chain-cable piled on the
+walk. Old-fashioned coffeehouses, also, much abound in that neighborhood, with
+sunburnt sea-captains going in and out, smoking cigars, and talking about
+Havanna, London, and Calcutta.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All these my imaginations were wonderfully assisted by certain shadowy
+reminiscences of wharves, and warehouses, and shipping, with which a residence
+in a seaport during early childhood had supplied me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Particularly, I remembered standing with my father on the wharf when a large
+ship was getting under way, and rounding the head of the pier. I remembered the
+<i>yo heave ho!</i> of the sailors, as they just showed their woolen caps above
+the high bulwarks. I remembered how I thought of their crossing the great
+ocean; and that that very ship, and those very sailors, so near to me then,
+would after a time be actually in Europe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Added to these reminiscences my father, now dead, had several times crossed the
+Atlantic on business affairs, for he had been an importer in Broad-street. And
+of winter evenings in New York, by the well-remembered sea-coal fire in old
+Greenwich-street, he used to tell my brother and me of the monstrous waves at
+sea, mountain high; of the masts bending like twigs; and all about Havre, and
+Liverpool, and about going up into the ball of St. Paul&rsquo;s in London.
+Indeed, during my early life, most of my thoughts of the sea were connected
+with the land; but with fine old lands, full of mossy cathedrals and churches,
+and long, narrow, crooked streets without sidewalks, and lined with strange
+houses. And especially I tried hard to think how such places must look of rainy
+days and Saturday afternoons; and whether indeed they did have rainy days and
+Saturdays there, just as we did here; and whether the boys went to school
+there, and studied geography, and wore their shirt collars turned over, and
+tied with a black ribbon; and whether their papas allowed them to wear boots,
+instead of shoes, which I so much disliked, for boots looked so manly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I grew older my thoughts took a larger flight, and I frequently fell into
+long reveries about distant voyages and travels, and thought how fine it would
+be, to be able to talk about remote and barbarous countries; with what
+reverence and wonder people would regard me, if I had just returned from the
+coast of Africa or New Zealand; how dark and romantic my sunburnt cheeks would
+look; how I would bring home with me foreign clothes of a rich fabric and
+princely make, and wear them up and down the streets, and how grocers&rsquo;
+boys would turn back their heads to look at me, as I went by. For I very well
+remembered staring at a man myself, who was pointed out to me by my aunt one
+Sunday in Church, as the person who had been in Stony Arabia, and passed
+through strange adventures there, all of which with my own eyes I had read in
+the book which he wrote, an arid-looking book in a pale yellow cover.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;See what big eyes he has,&rdquo; whispered my aunt, &ldquo;they got so
+big, because when he was almost dead with famishing in the desert, he all at
+once caught sight of a date tree, with the ripe fruit hanging on it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this, I stared at him till I thought his eyes were really of an uncommon
+size, and stuck out from his head like those of a lobster. I am sure my own
+eyes must have magnified as I stared. When church was out, I wanted my aunt to
+take me along and follow the traveler home. But she said the constables would
+take us up, if we did; and so I never saw this wonderful Arabian traveler
+again. But he long haunted me; and several times I dreamt of him, and thought
+his great eyes were grown still larger and rounder; and once I had a vision of
+the date tree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In course of time, my thoughts became more and more prone to dwell upon foreign
+things; and in a thousand ways I sought to gratify my tastes. We had several
+pieces of furniture in the house, which had been brought from Europe. These I
+examined again and again, wondering where the wood grew; whether the workmen
+who made them still survived, and what they could be doing with themselves now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then we had several oil-paintings and rare old engravings of my father&rsquo;s,
+which he himself had bought in Paris, hanging up in the dining-room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two of these were sea-pieces. One represented a fat-looking, smoky
+fishing-boat, with three whiskerandoes in red caps, and their browsers legs
+rolled up, hauling in a seine. There was high French-like land in one corner,
+and a tumble-down gray lighthouse surmounting it. The waves were toasted brown,
+and the whole picture looked mellow and old. I used to think a piece of it
+might taste good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other represented three old-fashioned French men-of-war with high castles,
+like pagodas, on the bow and stern, such as you see in Froissart; and snug
+little turrets on top of the mast, full of little men, with something
+undefinable in their hands. All three were sailing through a bright-blue sea,
+blue as Sicily skies; and they were leaning over on their sides at a fearful
+angle; and they must have been going very fast, for the white spray was about
+the bows like a snow-storm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, we had two large green French portfolios of colored prints, more than I
+could lift at that age. Every Saturday my brothers and sisters used to get them
+out of the corner where they were kept, and spreading them on the floor, gaze
+at them with never-failing delight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were of all sorts. Some were pictures of Versailles, its masquerades, its
+drawing-rooms, its fountains, and courts, and gardens, with long lines of thick
+foliage cut into fantastic doors and windows, and towers and pinnacles. Others
+were rural scenes, full of fine skies, pensive cows standing up to the knees in
+water, and shepherd-boys and cottages in the distance, half concealed in
+vineyards and vines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And others were pictures of natural history, representing rhinoceroses and
+elephants and spotted tigers; and above all there was a picture of a great
+whale, as big as a ship, stuck full of harpoons, and three boats sailing after
+it as fast as they could fly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, too, we had a large library-case, that stood in the hall; an old brown
+library-case, tall as a small house; it had a sort of basement, with large
+doors, and a lock and key; and higher up, there were glass doors, through which
+might be seen long rows of old books, that had been printed in Paris, and
+London, and Leipsic. There was a fine library edition of the Spectator, in six
+large volumes with gilded backs; and many a time I gazed at the word
+<i>&ldquo;London&rdquo;</i> on the title-page. And there was a copy of
+D&rsquo;Alembert in French, and I wondered what a great man I would be, if by
+foreign travel I should ever be able to read straight along without stopping,
+out of that book, which now was a riddle to every one in the house but my
+father, whom I so much liked to hear talk French, as he sometimes did to a
+servant we had.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That servant, too, I used to gaze at with wonder; for in answer to my
+incredulous cross-questions, he had over and over again assured me, that he had
+really been born in Paris. But this I never entirely believed; for it seemed so
+hard to comprehend, how a man who had been born in a foreign country, could be
+dwelling with me in our house in America.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As years passed on, this continual dwelling upon foreign associations, bred in
+me a vague prophetic thought, that I was fated, one day or other, to be a great
+voyager; and that just as my father used to entertain strange gentlemen over
+their wine after dinner, I would hereafter be telling my own adventures to an
+eager auditory. And I have no doubt that this presentiment had something to do
+with bringing about my subsequent rovings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But that which perhaps more than any thing else, converted my vague dreamings
+and longings into a definite purpose of seeking my fortune on the sea, was an
+old-fashioned glass ship, about eighteen inches long, and of French
+manufacture, which my father, some thirty years before, had brought home from
+Hamburg as a present to a great-uncle of mine: Senator Wellingborough, who had
+died a member of Congress in the days of the old Constitution, and after whom I
+had the honor of being named. Upon the decease of the Senator, the ship was
+returned to the donor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was kept in a square glass case, which was regularly dusted by one of my
+sisters every morning, and stood on a little claw-footed Dutch tea-table in one
+corner of the sitting-room. This ship, after being the admiration of my
+father&rsquo;s visitors in the capital, became the wonder and delight of all
+the people of the village where we now resided, many of whom used to call upon
+my mother, for no other purpose than to see the ship. And well did it repay the
+long and curious examinations which they were accustomed to give it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the first place, every bit of it was glass, and that was a great wonder of
+itself; because the masts, yards, and ropes were made to resemble exactly the
+corresponding parts of a real vessel that could go to sea. She carried two
+tiers of black guns all along her two decks; and often I used to try to peep in
+at the portholes, to see what else was inside; but the holes were so small, and
+it looked so very dark indoors, that I could discover little or nothing;
+though, when I was very little, I made no doubt, that if I could but once pry
+open the hull, and break the glass all to pieces, I would infallibly light upon
+something wonderful, perhaps some gold guineas, of which I have always been in
+want, ever since I could remember. And often I used to feel a sort of insane
+desire to be the death of the glass ship, case, and all, in order to come at
+the plunder; and one day, throwing out some hint of the kind to my sisters,
+they ran to my mother in a great clamor; and after that, the ship was placed on
+the mantel-piece for a time, beyond my reach, and until I should recover my
+reason.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I do not know how to account for this temporary madness of mine, unless it was,
+that I had been reading in a story-book about Captain Kidd&rsquo;s ship, that
+lay somewhere at the bottom of the Hudson near the Highlands, full of gold as
+it could be; and that a company of men were trying to dive down and get the
+treasure out of the hold, which no one had ever thought of doing before, though
+there she had lain for almost a hundred years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not to speak of the tall masts, and yards, and rigging of this famous ship,
+among whose mazes of spun-glass I used to rove in imagination, till I grew
+dizzy at the main-truck, I will only make mention of the people on board of
+her. They, too, were all of glass, as beautiful little glass sailors as any
+body ever saw, with hats and shoes on, just like living men, and curious blue
+jackets with a sort of ruffle round the bottom. Four or five of these sailors
+were very nimble little chaps, and were mounting up the rigging with very long
+strides; but for all that, they never gained a single inch in the year, as I
+can take my oath.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another sailor was sitting astride of the spanker-boom, with his arms over his
+head, but I never could find out what that was for; a second was in the
+fore-top, with a coil of glass rigging over his shoulder; the cook, with a
+glass ax, was splitting wood near the fore-hatch; the steward, in a glass
+apron, was hurrying toward the cabin with a plate of glass pudding; and a glass
+dog, with a red mouth, was barking at him; while the captain in a glass cap was
+smoking a glass cigar on the quarterdeck. He was leaning against the bulwark,
+with one hand to his head; perhaps he was unwell, for he looked very glassy out
+of the eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The name of this curious ship was <i>La Reine,</i> or The Queen, which was
+painted on her stern where any one might read it, among a crowd of glass
+dolphins and sea-horses carved there in a sort of semicircle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And this Queen rode undisputed mistress of a green glassy sea, some of whose
+waves were breaking over her bow in a wild way, I can tell you, and I used to
+be giving her up for lost and foundered every moment, till I grew older, and
+perceived that she was not in the slightest danger in the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A good deal of dust, and fuzzy stuff like down, had in the course of many years
+worked through the joints of the case, in which the ship was kept, so as to
+cover all the sea with a light dash of white, which if any thing improved the
+general effect, for it looked like the foam and froth raised by the terrible
+gale the good Queen was battling against.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So much for <i>La Reine.</i> We have her yet in the house, but many of her
+glass spars and ropes are now sadly shattered and broken,&mdash;but I will not
+have her mended; and her figurehead, a gallant warrior in a cocked-hat, lies
+pitching headforemost down into the trough of a calamitous sea under the
+bows&mdash;but I will not have him put on his legs again, till I get on my own;
+for between him and me there is a secret sympathy; and my sisters tell me, even
+yet, that he fell from his perch the very day I left home to go to sea on this
+<i>my first voyage.</i>
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap02"></a>CHAPTER II.<br/>
+REDBURN&rsquo;S DEPARTURE FROM HOME</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was with a heavy heart and full eyes, that my poor mother parted with me;
+perhaps she thought me an erring and a willful boy, and perhaps I was; but if I
+was, it had been a hardhearted world, and hard times that had made me so. I had
+learned to think much and bitterly before my time; all my young mounting dreams
+of glory had left me; and at that early age, I was as unambitious as a man of
+sixty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, I will go to sea; cut my kind uncles and aunts, and sympathizing patrons,
+and leave no heavy hearts but those in my own home, and take none along but the
+one which aches in my bosom. Cold, bitter cold as December, and bleak as its
+blasts, seemed the world then to me; there is no misanthrope like a boy
+disappointed; and such was I, with the warmth of me flogged out by adversity.
+But these thoughts are bitter enough even now, for they have not yet gone quite
+away; and they must be uncongenial enough to the reader; so no more of that,
+and let me go on with my story.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, I will write you, dear mother, as soon as I can,&rdquo; murmured I,
+as she charged me for the hundredth time, not fail to inform her of my safe
+arrival in New York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And now Mary, Martha, and Jane, kiss me all round, dear sisters, and
+then I am off. I&rsquo;ll be back in four months&mdash;it will be autumn then,
+and we&rsquo;ll go into the woods after nuts, an I&rsquo;ll tell you all about
+Europe. Good-by! good-by!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I broke loose from their arms, and not daring to look behind, ran away as
+fast as I could, till I got to the corner where my brother was waiting. He
+accompanied me part of the way to the place, where the steamboat was to leave
+for New York; instilling into me much sage advice above his age, for he was but
+eight years my senior, and warning me again and again to take care of myself;
+and I solemnly promised I would; for what cast-away will not promise to take of
+care himself, when he sees that unless he himself does, no one else will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We walked on in silence till I saw that his strength was giving out,&mdash;he
+was in ill health then,&mdash;and with a mute grasp of the hand, and a loud
+thump at the heart, we parted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was early on a raw, cold, damp morning toward the end of spring, and the
+world was before me; stretching away a long muddy road, lined with comfortable
+houses, whose inmates were taking their sunrise naps, heedless of the wayfarer
+passing. The cold drops of drizzle trickled down my leather cap, and mingled
+with a few hot tears on my cheeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had the whole road to myself, for no one was yet stirring, and I walked on,
+with a slouching, dogged gait. The gray shooting-jacket was on my back, and
+from the end of my brother&rsquo;s rifle hung a small bundle of my clothes. My
+fingers worked moodily at the stock and trigger, and I thought that this indeed
+was the way to begin life, with a gun in your hand!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Talk not of the bitterness of middle-age and after life; a boy can feel all
+that, and much more, when upon his young soul the mildew has fallen; and the
+fruit, which with others is only blasted after ripeness, with him is nipped in
+the first blossom and bud. And never again can such blights be made good; they
+strike in too deep, and leave such a scar that the air of Paradise might not
+erase it. And it is a hard and cruel thing thus in early youth to taste
+beforehand the pangs which should be reserved for the stout time of manhood,
+when the gristle has become bone, and we stand up and fight out our lives, as a
+thing tried before and foreseen; for then we are veterans used to sieges and
+battles, and not green recruits, recoiling at the first shock of the encounter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last gaining the boat we pushed off, and away we steamed down the Hudson.
+There were few passengers on board, the day was so unpleasant; and they were
+mostly congregated in the after cabin round the stoves. After breakfast, some
+of them went to reading: others took a nap on the settees; and others sat in
+silent circles, speculating, no doubt, as to who each other might be.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were certainly a cheerless set, and to me they all looked stony-eyed and
+heartless. I could not help it, I almost hated them; and to avoid them, went on
+deck, but a storm of sleet drove me below. At last I bethought me, that I had
+not procured a ticket, and going to the captain&rsquo;s office to pay my
+passage and get one, was horror-struck to find, that the price of passage had
+been suddenly raised that day, owing to the other boats not running; so that I
+had not enough money to pay for my fare. I had supposed it would be but a
+dollar, and only a dollar did I have, whereas it was two. What was to be done?
+The boat was off, and there was no backing out; so I determined to say nothing
+to any body, and grimly wait until called upon for my fare.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The long weary day wore on till afternoon; one incessant storm raged on deck;
+but after dinner the few passengers, waked up with their roast-beef and mutton,
+became a little more sociable. Not with me, for the scent and savor of poverty
+was upon me, and they all cast toward me their evil eyes and cold suspicious
+glances, as I sat apart, though among them. I felt that desperation and
+recklessness of poverty which only a pauper knows. There was a mighty patch
+upon one leg of my trowsers, neatly sewed on, for it had been executed by my
+mother, but still very obvious and incontrovertible to the eye. This patch I
+had hitherto studiously endeavored to hide with the ample skirts of my
+shooting-jacket; but now I stretched out my leg boldly, and thrust the patch
+under their noses, and looked at them so, that they soon looked away, boy
+though I was. Perhaps the gun that I clenched frightened them into respect; or
+there might have been something ugly in my eye; or my teeth were white, and my
+jaws were set. For several hours, I sat gazing at a jovial party seated round a
+mahogany table, with some crackers and cheese, and wine and cigars. Their faces
+were flushed with the good dinner they had eaten; and mine felt pale and wan
+with a long fast. If I had presumed to offer to make one of their party; if I
+had told them of my circumstances, and solicited something to refresh me, I
+very well knew from the peculiar hollow ring of their laughter, they would have
+had the waiters put me out of the cabin, for a beggar, who had no business to
+be warming himself at their stove. And for that insult, though only a conceit,
+I sat and gazed at them, putting up no petitions for their prosperity. My whole
+soul was soured within me, and when at last the captain&rsquo;s clerk, a
+slender young man, dressed in the height of fashion, with a gold watch chain
+and broach, came round collecting the tickets, I buttoned up my coat to the
+throat, clutched my gun, put on my leather cap, and pulling it well down, stood
+up like a sentry before him. He held out his hand, deeming any remark
+superfluous, as his object in pausing before me must be obvious. But I stood
+motionless and silent, and in a moment he saw how it was with me. I ought to
+have spoken and told him the case, in plain, civil terms, and offered my
+dollar, and then waited the event. But I felt too wicked for that. He did not
+wait a great while, but spoke first himself; and in a gruff voice, very unlike
+his urbane accents when accosting the wine and cigar party, demanded my ticket.
+I replied that I had none. He then demanded the money; and upon my answering
+that I had not enough, in a loud angry voice that attracted all eyes, he
+ordered me out of the cabin into the storm. The devil in me then mounted up
+from my soul, and spread over my frame, till it tingled at my finger ends; and
+I muttered out my resolution to stay where I was, in such a manner, that the
+ticket man faltered back. &ldquo;There&rsquo;s a dollar for you,&rdquo; I
+added, offering it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want two,&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take that or nothing,&rdquo; I answered; &ldquo;it is all I have.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thought he would strike me. But, accepting the money, he contented himself
+with saying something about sportsmen going on shooting expeditions, without
+having money to pay their expenses; and hinted that such chaps might better lay
+aside their fowling-pieces, and assume the buck and saw. He then passed on, and
+left every eye fastened upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I stood their gazing some time, but at last could stand it no more. I pushed my
+seat right up before the most insolent gazer, a short fat man, with a plethora
+of cravat round his neck, and fixing my gaze on his, gave him more gazes than
+he sent. This somewhat embarrassed him, and he looked round for some one to
+take hold of me; but no one coming, he pretended to be very busy counting the
+gilded wooden beams overhead. I then turned to the next gazer, and clicking my
+gun-lock, deliberately presented the piece at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this, he overset his seat in his eagerness to get beyond my range, for I
+had him point blank, full in the left eye; and several persons starting to
+their feet, exclaimed that I must be crazy. So I was at that time; for
+otherwise I know not how to account for my demoniac feelings, of which I was
+afterward heartily ashamed, as I ought to have been, indeed; and much more than
+that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then turned on my heel, and shouldering my fowling-piece and bundle, marched
+on deck, and walked there through the dreary storm, till I was wet through, and
+the boat touched the wharf at New York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such is boyhood.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap03"></a>CHAPTER III.<br/>
+HE ARRIVES IN TOWN</h2>
+
+<p>
+From the boat&rsquo;s bow, I jumped ashore, before she was secured, and
+following my brother&rsquo;s directions, proceeded across the town toward St.
+John&rsquo;s Park, to the house of a college friend of his, for whom I had a
+letter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a long walk; and I stepped in at a sort of grocery to get a drink of
+water, where some six or eight rough looking fellows were playing dominoes upon
+the counter, seated upon cheese boxes. They winked, and asked what sort of
+sport I had had gunning on such a rainy day, but I only gulped down my water
+and stalked off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dripping like a seal, I at last grounded arms at the doorway of my
+brother&rsquo;s friend, rang the bell and inquired for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you want?&rdquo; said the servant, eying me as if I were a
+housebreaker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want to see your lord and master; show me into the parlor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this my host himself happened to make his appearance, and seeing who I
+was, opened his hand and heart to me at once, and drew me to his fireside; he
+had received a letter from my brother, and had expected me that day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The family were at tea; the fragrant herb filled the room with its aroma; the
+brown toast was odoriferous; and everything pleasant and charming. After a
+temporary warming, I was shown to a room, where I changed my wet dress, and
+returning to the table, found that the interval had been well improved by my
+hostess; a meal for a traveler was spread and I laid into it sturdily. Every
+mouthful pushed the devil that had been tormenting me all day farther and
+farther out of me, till at last I entirely ejected him with three successive
+bowls of Bohea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Magic of kind words, and kind deeds, and good tea! That night I went to bed
+thinking the world pretty tolerable, after all; and I could hardly believe that
+I had really acted that morning as I had, for I was naturally of an easy and
+forbearing disposition; though when such a disposition is temporarily roused,
+it is perhaps worse than a cannibal&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next day, my brother&rsquo;s friend, whom I choose to call Mr. Jones,
+accompanied me down to the docks among the shipping, in order to get me a
+place. After a good deal of searching we lighted upon a ship for Liverpool, and
+found the captain in the cabin; which was a very handsome one, lined with
+mahogany and maple; and the steward, an elegant looking mulatto in a gorgeous
+turban, was setting out on a sort of sideboard some dinner service which looked
+like silver, but it was only Britannia ware highly polished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as I clapped my eye on the captain, I thought myself he was just the
+captain to suit me. He was a fine looking man, about forty, splendidly dressed,
+with very black whiskers, and very white teeth, and what I took to be a free,
+frank look out of a large hazel eye. I liked him amazingly. He was promenading
+up and down the cabin, humming some brisk air to himself when we entered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good morning, sir,&rdquo; said my friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good morning, good morning, sir,&rdquo; said the captain.
+&ldquo;Steward, chairs for the gentlemen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! never mind, sir,&rdquo; said Mr. Jones, rather taken aback by his
+extreme civility. &ldquo;I merely called to see whether you want a fine young
+lad to go to sea with you. Here he is; he has long wanted to be a sailor; and
+his friends have at last concluded to let him go for one voyage, and see how he
+likes it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! indeed!&rdquo; said the captain, blandly, and looking where I stood.
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a fine fellow; I like him. So you want to be a sailor, my
+boy, do you?&rdquo; added he, affectionately patting my head. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s
+a hard life, though; a hard life.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But when I looked round at his comfortable, and almost luxurious cabin, and
+then at his handsome care-free face, I thought he was only trying to frighten
+me, and I answered, &ldquo;Well, sir, I am ready to try it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I hope he&rsquo;s a country lad, sir,&rdquo; said the captain to my
+friend, &ldquo;these city boys are sometimes hard cases.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! yes, he&rsquo;s from the country,&rdquo; was the reply, &ldquo;and
+of a highly respectable family; his great-uncle died a Senator.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But his great-uncle don&rsquo;t want to go to sea too?&rdquo; said the
+captain, looking funny.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! no, oh, no!&mdash; Ha! ha!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ha! ha!&rdquo; echoed the captain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A fine funny gentleman, thought I, not much fancying, however, his levity
+concerning my great-uncle, he&rsquo;ll be cracking his jokes the whole voyage;
+and so I afterward said to one of the riggers on board; but he bade me look
+out, that he did not crack my head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, my lad,&rdquo; said the captain, &ldquo;I suppose you know we
+haven&rsquo;t any pastures and cows on board; you can&rsquo;t get any milk at
+sea, you know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! I know all about that, sir; my father has crossed the ocean, if I
+haven&rsquo;t.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; cried my friend, &ldquo;his father, a gentleman of one of
+the first families in America, crossed the Atlantic several times on important
+business.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Embassador extraordinary?&rdquo; said the captain, looking funny again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! no, he was a wealthy merchant.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! indeed;&rdquo; said the captain, looking grave and bland again,
+&ldquo;then this fine lad is the son of a gentleman?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Certainly,&rdquo; said my friend, &ldquo;and he&rsquo;s only going to
+sea for the humor of it; they want to send him on his travels with a tutor, but
+he <i>will</i> go to sea as a sailor.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fact was, that my young friend (for he was only about twenty-five) was not
+a very wise man; and this was a huge fib, which out of the kindness of his
+heart, he told in my behalf, for the purpose of creating a profound respect for
+me in the eyes of my future lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon being apprized, that I had willfully forborne taking the grand tour with a
+tutor, in order to put my hand in a tar-bucket, the handsome captain looked ten
+times more funny than ever; and said that <i>he</i> himself would be my tutor,
+and take me on my travels, and pay for the privilege.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said my friend, &ldquo;that reminds me of business. Pray,
+captain, how much do you generally pay a handsome young fellow like
+this?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said the captain, looking grave and profound, &ldquo;we are
+not so particular about beauty, and we never give more than three dollars to a
+green lad like Wellingborough here, that&rsquo;s your name, my boy?
+Wellingborough Redburn!&mdash;Upon my soul, a fine sounding name.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, captain,&rdquo; said Mr. Jones, quickly interrupting him,
+&ldquo;that won&rsquo;t pay for his clothing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you know his highly respectable and wealthy relations will doubtless
+see to all that,&rdquo; replied the captain, with his funny look again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! yes, I forgot that,&rdquo; said Mr. Jones, looking rather foolish.
+&ldquo;His friends will of course see to that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; said the captain smiling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Of course,&rdquo; repeated Mr. Jones, looking ruefully at the patch on
+my pantaloons, which just then I endeavored to hide with the skirt of my
+shooting-jacket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You are quite a sportsman I see,&rdquo; said the captain, eying the
+great buttons on my coat, upon each of which was a carved fox.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this my benevolent friend thought that here was a grand opportunity to
+befriend me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, he&rsquo;s quite a sportsman,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;he&rsquo;s got
+a very valuable fowling-piece at home, perhaps you would like to purchase it,
+captain, to shoot gulls with at sea? It&rsquo;s cheap.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! no, he had better leave it with his relations,&rdquo; said the
+captain, &ldquo;so that he can go hunting again when he returns from
+England.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, perhaps that <i>would</i> be better, after all,&rdquo; said my
+friend, pretending to fall into a profound musing, involving all sides of the
+matter in hand. &ldquo;Well, then, captain, you can only give the boy three
+dollars a month, you say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only three dollars a month,&rdquo; said the captain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I believe,&rdquo; said my friend, &ldquo;that you generally give
+something in advance, do you not?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, that is sometimes the custom at the shipping offices,&rdquo; said
+the captain, with a bow, &ldquo;but in this case, as the boy has rich
+relations, there will be no need of that, you know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And thus, by his ill-advised, but well-meaning hints concerning the
+respectability of my paternity, and the immense wealth of my relations, did
+this really honest-hearted but foolish friend of mine, prevent me from getting
+three dollars in advance, which I greatly needed. However, I said nothing,
+though I thought the more; and particularly, how that it would have been much
+better for me, to have gone on board alone, accosted the captain on my own
+account, and told him the plain truth. Poor people make a very poor business of
+it when they try to seem rich.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The arrangement being concluded, we bade the captain good morning; and as we
+were about leaving the cabin, he smiled again, and said, &ldquo;Well, Redburn,
+my boy, you won&rsquo;t get home-sick before you sail, because that will make
+you very sea-sick when you get to sea.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And with that he smiled very pleasantly, and bowed two or three times, and told
+the steward to open the cabin-door, which the steward did with a peculiar sort
+of grin on his face, and a slanting glance at my shooting-jacket. And so we
+left.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap04"></a>CHAPTER IV.<br/>
+HOW HE DISPOSED OF HIS FOWLING-PIECE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Next day I went alone to the shipping office to sign the articles, and there I
+met a great crowd of sailors, who as soon as they found what I was after, began
+to tip the wink all round, and I overheard a fellow in a great flapping
+sou&rsquo;wester cap say to another old tar in a shaggy monkey-jacket,
+&ldquo;Twig his coat, d&rsquo;ye see the buttons, that chap ain&rsquo;t going
+to sea in a merchantman, he&rsquo;s going to shoot whales. I say,
+maty&mdash;look here&mdash;how d&rsquo;ye sell them big buttons by the
+pound?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Give us one for a saucer, will ye?&rdquo; said another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Let the youngster alone,&rdquo; said a third. &ldquo;Come here, my
+little boy, has your ma put up some sweetmeats for ye to take to sea?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They are all witty dogs, thought I to myself, trying to make the best of the
+matter, for I saw it would not do to resent what they said; they can&rsquo;t
+mean any harm, though they are certainly very impudent; so I tried to laugh off
+their banter, but as soon as ever I could, I put down my name and beat a
+retreat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the morrow, the ship was advertised to sail. So the rest of that day I spent
+in preparations. After in vain trying to sell my fowling-piece for a fair price
+to chance customers, I was walking up Chatham-street with it, when a
+curly-headed little man with a dark oily face, and a hooked nose, like the
+pictures of Judas Iscariot, called to me from a strange-looking shop, with
+three gilded balls hanging over it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a peculiar accent, as if he had been over-eating himself with
+Indian-pudding or some other plushy compound, this curly-headed little man very
+civilly invited me into his shop; and making a polite bow, and bidding me many
+unnecessary good mornings, and remarking upon the fine weather, begged me to
+let him look at my fowling-piece. I handed it to him in an instant, glad of the
+chance of disposing of it, and told him that was just what I wanted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah!&rdquo; said he, with his Indian-pudding accent again, which I will
+not try to mimic, and abating his look of eagerness, &ldquo;I thought it was a
+better article, it&rsquo;s very old.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not,&rdquo; said I, starting in surprise, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s not been
+used more than three times; what will you give for it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t <i>buy</i> any thing here,&rdquo; said he, suddenly
+looking very indifferent, &ldquo;this is a place where people <i>pawn</i>
+things.&rdquo; <i>Pawn</i> being a word I had never heard before, I asked him
+what it meant; when he replied, that when people wanted any money, they came to
+him with their fowling-pieces, and got one third its value, and then left the
+fowling-piece there, until they were able to pay back the money.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What a benevolent little old man, this must be, thought I, and how very
+obliging.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And pray,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;how much will you let me have for my
+gun, by way of a pawn?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, I suppose it&rsquo;s worth six dollars, and seeing you&rsquo;re a
+boy, I&rsquo;ll let you have three dollars upon it&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; exclaimed I, seizing the fowling-piece, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s
+worth five times that, I&rsquo;ll go somewhere else.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good morning, then,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;I hope you&rsquo;ll do
+better,&rdquo; and he bowed me out as if he expected to see me again pretty
+soon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had not gone very far when I came across three more balls hanging over a
+shop. In I went, and saw a long counter, with a sort of picket-fence, running
+all along from end to end, and three little holes, with three little old men
+standing inside of them, like prisoners looking out of a jail. Back of the
+counter were all sorts of things, piled up and labeled. Hats, and caps, and
+coats, and guns, and swords, and canes, and chests, and planes, and books, and
+writing-desks, and every thing else. And in a glass case were lots of watches,
+and seals, chains, and rings, and breastpins, and all kinds of trinkets. At one
+of the little holes, earnestly talking with one of the hook-nosed men, was a
+thin woman in a faded silk gown and shawl, holding a pale little girl by the
+hand. As I drew near, she spoke lower in a whisper; and the man shook his head,
+and looked cross and rude; and then some more words were exchanged over a
+miniature, and some money was passed through the hole, and the woman and child
+shrank out of the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I won&rsquo;t sell my gun to that man, thought I; and I passed on to the next
+hole; and while waiting there to be served, an elderly man in a high-waisted
+surtout, thrust a silver snuff-box through; and a young man in a calico shirt
+and a shiny coat with a velvet collar presented a silver watch; and a sheepish
+boy in a cloak took out a frying-pan; and another little boy had a Bible; and
+all these things were thrust through to the hook-nosed man, who seemed ready to
+hook any thing that came along; so I had no doubt he would gladly hook my gun,
+for the long picketed counter seemed like a great seine, that caught every
+variety of fish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last I saw a chance, and crowded in for the hole; and in order to be
+beforehand with a big man who just then came in, I pushed my gun violently
+through the hole; upon which the hook-nosed man cried out, thinking I was going
+to shoot him. But at last he took the gun, turned it end for end, clicked the
+trigger three times, and then said, &ldquo;one dollar.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What about one dollar?&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s all I&rsquo;ll give,&rdquo; he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, what do you want?&rdquo; and he turned to the next person. This
+was a young man in a seedy red cravat and a pimply face, that looked as if it
+was going to seed likewise, who, with a mysterious tapping of his vest-pocket
+and other hints, made a great show of having something confidential to
+communicate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the hook-nosed man spoke out very loud, and said, &ldquo;None of that; take
+it out. Got a stolen watch? We don&rsquo;t deal in them things here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this the young man flushed all over, and looked round to see who had heard
+the pawnbroker; then he took something very small out of his pocket, and
+keeping it hidden under his palm, pushed it into the hole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where did you get this ring?&rdquo; said the pawnbroker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want to pawn it,&rdquo; whispered the other, blushing all over again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s your name?&rdquo; said the pawnbroker, speaking very loud.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;How much will you give?&rdquo; whispered the other in reply, leaning
+over, and looking as if he wanted to hush up the pawnbroker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last the sum was agreed upon, when the man behind the counter took a little
+ticket, and tying the ring to it began to write on the ticket; all at once he
+asked the young man where he lived, a question which embarrassed him very much;
+but at last he stammered out a certain number in Broadway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s the City Hotel: you don&rsquo;t live there,&rdquo; said the
+man, cruelly glancing at the shabby coat before him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! well,&rdquo; stammered the other blushing scarlet, &ldquo;I thought
+this was only a sort of form to go through; I don&rsquo;t like to tell where I
+do live, for I ain&rsquo;t in the habit of going to pawnbrokers.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You stole that ring, you know you did,&rdquo; roared out the hook-nosed
+man, incensed at this slur upon his calling, and now seemingly bent on damaging
+the young man&rsquo;s character for life. &ldquo;I&rsquo;m a good mind to call
+a constable; we don&rsquo;t take stolen goods here, I tell you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All eyes were now fixed suspiciously upon this martyrized young man; who looked
+ready to drop into the earth; and a poor woman in a night-cap, with some
+baby-clothes in her hand, looked fearfully at the pawnbroker, as if dreading to
+encounter such a terrible pattern of integrity. At last the young man sunk off
+with his money, and looking out of the window, I saw him go round the corner so
+sharply that he knocked his elbow against the wall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I waited a little longer, and saw several more served; and having remarked that
+the hook-nosed men invariably fixed their own price upon every thing, and if
+that was refused told the person to be off with himself; I concluded that it
+would be of no use to try and get more from them than they had offered;
+especially when I saw that they had a great many fowling-pieces hanging up, and
+did not have particular occasion for mine; and more than that, they must be
+very well off and rich, to treat people so cavalierly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My best plan then seemed to be to go right back to the curly-headed pawnbroker,
+and take up with my first offer. But when I went back, the curly-headed man was
+very busy about something else, and kept me waiting a long time; at last I got
+a chance and told him I would take the three dollars he had offered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ought to have taken it when you could get it,&rdquo; he replied.
+&ldquo;I won&rsquo;t give but two dollars and a half for it now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In vain I expostulated; he was not to be moved, so I pocketed the money and
+departed.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap05"></a>CHAPTER V.<br/>
+HE PURCHASES HIS SEA-WARDROBE, AND ON A DISMAL RAINY DAY PICKS UP HIS BOARD
+AND LODGING ALONG THE WHARVES</h2>
+
+<p>
+The first thing I now did was to buy a little stationery, and keep my promise
+to my mother, by writing her; and I also wrote to my brother informing him of
+the voyage I purposed making, and indulging in some romantic and misanthropic
+views of life, such as many boys in my circumstances, are accustomed to do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rest of the two dollars and a half I laid out that very morning in buying a
+red woolen shirt near Catharine Market, a tarpaulin hat, which I got at an
+out-door stand near Peck Slip, a belt and jackknife, and two or three trifles.
+After these purchases, I had only one penny left, so I walked out to the end of
+the pier, and threw the penny into the water. The reason why I did this, was
+because I somehow felt almost desperate again, and didn&rsquo;t care what
+became of me. But if the penny had been a dollar, I would have kept it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I went home to dinner at Mr. Jones&rsquo;, and they welcomed me very kindly,
+and Mrs. Jones kept my plate full all the time during dinner, so that I had no
+chance to empty it. She seemed to see that I felt bad, and thought plenty of
+pudding might help me. At any rate, I never felt so bad yet but I could eat a
+good dinner. And once, years afterward, when I expected to be killed every day,
+I remember my appetite was very keen, and I said to myself, &ldquo;Eat away,
+Wellingborough, while you can, for this may be the last supper you will
+have.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After dinner I went into my room, locked the door carefully, and hung a towel
+over the knob, so that no one could peep through the keyhole, and then went to
+trying on my red woolen shirt before the glass, to see what sort of a looking
+sailor I was going to make. As soon as I got into the shirt I began to feel
+sort of warm and red about the face, which I found was owing to the reflection
+of the dyed wool upon my skin. After that, I took a pair of scissors and went
+to cutting my hair, which was very long. I thought every little would help, in
+making me a light hand to run aloft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next morning I bade my kind host and hostess good-by, and left the house with
+my bundle, feeling somewhat misanthropical and desperate again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before I reached the ship, it began to rain hard; and as soon as I arrived at
+the wharf, it was plain that there would be no getting to sea that day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was a great disappointment to me, for I did not want to return to Mr.
+Jones&rsquo; again after bidding them good-by; it would be so awkward. So I
+concluded to go on board ship for the present.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I reached the deck, I saw no one but a large man in a large dripping
+pea-jacket, who was calking down the main-hatches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What do you want, Pillgarlic?&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I&rsquo;ve shipped to sail in this ship,&rdquo; I replied, assuming a
+little dignity, to chastise his familiarity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What for? a tailor?&rdquo; said he, looking at my shooting jacket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I answered that I was going as a &ldquo;boy;&rdquo; for so I was technically
+put down on the articles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;have you got your traps aboard?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told him I didn&rsquo;t know there were any rats in the ship, and
+hadn&rsquo;t brought any &ldquo;trap.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this he laughed out with a great guffaw, and said there must be hay-seed in
+my hair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This made me mad; but thinking he must be one of the sailors who was going in
+the ship, I thought it wouldn&rsquo;t be wise to make an enemy of him, so only
+asked him where the men slept in the vessel, for I wanted to put my clothes
+away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s</i> your clothes?&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here in my bundle,&rdquo; said I, holding it up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well if that&rsquo;s all you&rsquo;ve got,&rdquo; he cried,
+&ldquo;you&rsquo;d better chuck it overboard. But go forward, go forward to the
+forecastle; that&rsquo;s the place you&rsquo;ll live in aboard here.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And with that he directed me to a sort of hole in the deck in the bow of the
+ship; but looking down, and seeing how dark it was, I asked him for a light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Strike your eyes together and make one,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;we
+don&rsquo;t have any lights here.&rdquo; So I groped my way down into the
+forecastle, which smelt so bad of old ropes and tar, that it almost made me
+sick. After waiting patiently, I began to see a little; and looking round, at
+last perceived I was in a smoky looking place, with twelve wooden boxes stuck
+round the sides. In some of these boxes were large chests, which I at once
+supposed to belong to the sailors, who must have taken that method of
+appropriating their &ldquo;Trunks,&rdquo; as I afterward found these boxes were
+called. And so it turned out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After examining them for a while, I selected an empty one, and put my bundle
+right in the middle of it, so that there might be no mistake about my claim to
+the place, particularly as the bundle was so small.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This done, I was glad to get on deck; and learning to a certainty that the ship
+would not sail till the next day, I resolved to go ashore, and walk about till
+dark, and then return and sleep out the night in the forecastle. So I walked
+about all over, till I was weary, and went into a mean liquor shop to rest; for
+having my tarpaulin on, and not looking very gentlemanly, I was afraid to go
+into any better place, for fear of being driven out. Here I sat till I began to
+feel very hungry; and seeing some doughnuts on the counter, I began to think
+what a fool I had been, to throw away my last penny; for the doughnuts were but
+a penny apiece, and they looked very plump, and fat, and round. I never saw
+doughnuts look so enticing before; especially when a negro came in, and ate one
+before my eyes. At last I thought I would fill up a little by drinking a glass
+of water; having read somewhere that this was a good plan to follow in a case
+like the present. I did not feel thirsty, but only hungry; so had much ado to
+get down the water; for it tasted warm; and the tumbler had an ugly flavor; the
+negro had been drinking some spirits out of it just before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I marched off again, every once in a while stopping to take in some more water,
+and being very careful not to step into the same shop twice, till night came
+on, and I found myself soaked through, for it had been raining more or less all
+day. As I went to the ship, I could not help thinking how lonesome it would be,
+to spend the whole night in that damp and dark forecastle, without light or
+fire, and nothing to lie on but the bare boards of my bunk. However, to drown
+all such thoughts, I gulped down another glass of water, though I was wet
+enough outside and in by this time; and trying to put on a bold look, as if I
+had just been eating a hearty meal, I stepped aboard the ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man in the big pea-jacket was not to be seen; but on going forward I
+unexpectedly found a young lad there, about my own age; and as soon as he
+opened his mouth I knew he was not an American. He talked such a curious
+language though, half English and half gibberish, that I knew not what to make
+of him; and was a little astonished, when he told me he was an English boy,
+from Lancashire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seemed, he had come over from Liverpool in this very ship on her last
+voyage, as a steerage passenger; but finding that he would have to work very
+hard to get along in America, and getting home-sick into the bargain, he had
+arranged with the captain to work his passage back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was glad to have some company, and tried to get him conversing; but found he
+was the most stupid and ignorant boy I had ever met with. I asked him something
+about the river Thames; when he said that he hadn&rsquo;t traveled any in
+America and didn&rsquo;t know any thing about the rivers here. And when I told
+him the river Thames was in England, he showed no surprise or shame at his
+ignorance, but only looked ten times more stupid than before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last we went below into the forecastle, and both getting into the same bunk,
+stretched ourselves out on the planks, and I tried my best to get asleep. But
+though my companion soon began to snore very loud, for me, I could not forget
+myself, owing to the horrid smell of the place, my being so wet, cold, and
+hungry, and besides all that, I felt damp and clammy about the heart. I lay
+turning over and over, listening to the Lancashire boy&rsquo;s snoring, till at
+last I felt so, that I had to go on deck; and there I walked till morning,
+which I thought would never come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as I thought the groceries on the wharf would be open I left the ship
+and went to make my breakfast of another glass of water. But this made me very
+qualmish; and soon I felt sick as death; my head was dizzy; and I went
+staggering along the walk, almost blind. At last I dropt on a heap of
+chain-cable, and shutting my eyes hard, did my best to rally myself, in which I
+succeeded, at last, enough to get up and walk off. Then I thought that I had
+done wrong in not returning to my friend&rsquo;s house the day before; and
+would have walked there now, as it was, only it was at least three miles up
+town; too far for me to walk in such a state, and I had no sixpence to ride in
+an omnibus.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap06"></a>CHAPTER VI.<br/>
+HE IS INITIATED IN THE BUSINESS OF CLEANING OUT THE PIG-PEN, AND SLUSHING DOWN
+THE TOP-MAST</h2>
+
+<p>
+By the time I got back to the ship, every thing was in an uproar. The
+pea-jacket man was there, ordering about a good many men in the rigging, and
+people were bringing off chickens, and pigs, and beef, and vegetables from the
+shore. Soon after, another man, in a striped calico shirt, a short blue jacket
+and beaver hat, made his appearance, and went to ordering about the man in the
+big pea-jacket; and at last the captain came up the side, and began to order
+about both of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These two men turned out to be the first and second mates of the ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thinking to make friends with the second mate, I took out an old tortoise-shell
+snuff-box of my father&rsquo;s, in which I had put a piece of Cavendish
+tobacco, to look sailor-like, and offered the box to him very politely. He
+stared at me a moment, and then exclaimed, &ldquo;Do you think we take snuff
+aboard here, youngster? no, no, no time for snuff-taking at sea; don&rsquo;t
+let the &lsquo;old man&rsquo; see that snuff-box; take my advice and pitch it
+overboard as quick as you can.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I told him it was not snuff, but tobacco; when he said, he had plenty of
+tobacco of his own, and never carried any such nonsense about him as a
+tobacco-box. With that, he went off about his business, and left me feeling
+foolish enough. But I had reason to be glad he had acted thus, for if he had
+not, I think I should have offered my box to the chief mate, who in that case,
+from what I afterward learned of him, would have knocked me down, or done
+something else equally uncivil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I was standing looking round me, the chief mate approached in a great hurry
+about something, and seeing me in his way, cried out, &ldquo;Ashore with you,
+you young loafer! There&rsquo;s no stealings here; sail away, I tell you, with
+that shooting-jacket!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this I retreated, saying that I was going out in the ship as a sailor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A sailor!&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;a barber&rsquo;s clerk, you mean;
+<i>you</i> going out in the ship? what, in that jacket? Hang me, I hope the old
+man hasn&rsquo;t been shipping any more greenhorns like you&mdash;he&rsquo;ll
+make a shipwreck of it if he has. But this is the way nowadays; to save a few
+dollars in seamen&rsquo;s wages, they think nothing of shipping a parcel of
+farmers and clodhoppers and baby-boys. What&rsquo;s your name,
+Pillgarlic?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Redburn,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A pretty handle to a man, that; scorch you to take hold of it;
+haven&rsquo;t you got any other?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wellingborough,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Worse yet. Who had the baptizing of ye? Why didn&rsquo;t they call you
+Jack, or Jill, or something short and handy. But I&rsquo;ll baptize you over
+again. D&rsquo;ye hear, sir, henceforth your name is <i>Buttons.</i> And now do
+you go, Buttons, and clean out that pig-pen in the long-boat; it has not been
+cleaned out since last voyage. And bear a hand about it, d&rsquo;ye hear;
+there&rsquo;s them pigs there waiting to be put in; come, be off about it,
+now.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Was this then the beginning of my sea-career? set to cleaning out a pig-pen,
+the very first thing?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I thought it best to say nothing; I had bound myself to obey orders, and it
+was too late to retreat. So I only asked for a shovel, or spade, or something
+else to work with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We don&rsquo;t dig gardens here,&rdquo; was the reply; &ldquo;dig it out
+with your teeth!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After looking round, I found a stick and went to scraping out the pen, which
+was awkward work enough, for another boat called the &ldquo;jolly-boat,&rdquo;
+was capsized right over the longboat, which brought them almost close together.
+These two boats were in the middle of the deck. I managed to crawl inside of
+the long-boat; and after barking my shins against the seats, and bumping my
+head a good many times, I got along to the stern, where the pig-pen was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While I was hard at work a drunken sailor peeped in, and cried out to his
+comrades, &ldquo;Look here, my lads, what sort of a pig do you call this?
+Hallo! inside there! what are you &rsquo;bout there? trying to stow yourself
+away to steal a passage to Liverpool? Out of that! out of that, I say.&rdquo;
+But just then the mate came along and ordered this drunken rascal ashore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pig-pen being cleaned out, I was set to work picking up some shavings,
+which lay about the deck; for there had been carpenters at work on board. The
+mate ordered me to throw these shavings into the long-boat at a particular
+place between two of the seats. But as I found it hard work to push the
+shavings through in that place, and as it looked wet there, I thought it would
+be better for the shavings as well as myself, to thrust them where there was a
+larger opening and a dry spot. While I was thus employed, the mate observing
+me, exclaimed with an oath, &ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t I tell you to put those
+shavings somewhere else? Do what I tell you, now, Buttons, or mind your
+eye!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stifling my indignation at his rudeness, which by this time I found was my only
+plan, I replied that that was not so good a place for the shavings as that
+which I myself had selected, and asked him to tell me <i>why</i> he wanted me
+to put them in the place he designated. Upon this, he flew into a terrible
+rage, and without explanation reiterated his order like a clap of thunder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was my first lesson in the discipline of the sea, and I never forgot it.
+From that time I learned that sea-officers never gave reasons for any thing
+they order to be done. It is enough that they command it, so that the motto is,
+<i>&ldquo;Obey orders, though you break owners.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I now began to feel very faint and sick <i>again,</i> and longed for the ship
+to be leaving the dock; for then I made no doubt we would soon be having
+something to eat. But as yet, I saw none of the sailors on board, and as for
+the men at work in the rigging, I found out that they were
+<i>&ldquo;riggers,&rdquo;</i> that is, men living ashore, who worked by the day
+in getting ships ready for sea; and this I found out to my cost, for yielding
+to the kind blandishment of one of these <i>riggers, I</i> had swapped away my
+jackknife with him for a much poorer one of his own, thinking to secure a
+sailor friend for the voyage. At last I watched my chance, and while
+people&rsquo;s backs were turned, I seized a carrot from several bunches lying
+on deck, and clapping it under the skirts of my shooting-jacket, went forward
+to eat it; for I had often eaten raw carrots, which taste something like
+chestnuts. This carrot refreshed me a good deal, though at the expense of a
+little pain in my stomach. Hardly had I disposed of it, when I heard the chief
+mate&rsquo;s voice crying out for &ldquo;Buttons.&rdquo; I ran after him, and
+received an order to go aloft and &ldquo;slush down the main-top mast.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was all Greek to me, and after receiving the order, I stood staring about
+me, wondering what it was that was to be done. But the mate had turned on his
+heel, and made no explanations. At length I followed after him, and asked what
+I must do.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Didn&rsquo;t I tell you to slush down the main-top mast?&rdquo; he
+shouted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You did,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;but I don&rsquo;t know what that
+means.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Green as grass! a regular cabbage-head!&rdquo; he exclaimed to himself.
+&ldquo;A fine time I&rsquo;ll have with such a greenhorn aboard. Look you,
+youngster. Look up to that long pole there&mdash;d&rsquo;ye see it? that piece
+of a tree there, you timber-head&mdash;well&mdash;take this bucket here, and go
+up the rigging&mdash;that rope-ladder there&mdash;do you understand?&mdash;and
+dab this slush all over the mast, and look out for your head if one drop falls
+on deck. Be off now, Buttons.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eventful hour had arrived; for the first time in my life I was to ascend a
+ship&rsquo;s mast. Had I been well and hearty, perhaps I should have felt a
+little shaky at the thought; but as I was then, weak and faint, the bare
+thought appalled me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there was no hanging back; it would look like cowardice, and I could not
+bring myself to confess that I was suffering for want of food; so rallying
+again, I took up the bucket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a heavy bucket, with strong iron hoops, and might have held perhaps two
+gallons. But it was only half full now of a sort of thick lobbered gravy, which
+I afterward learned was boiled out of the salt beef used by the sailors. Upon
+getting into the rigging, I found it was no easy job to carry this heavy bucket
+up with me. The rope handle of it was so slippery with grease, that although I
+twisted it several times about my wrist, it would be still twirling round and
+round, and slipping off. Spite of this, however, I managed to mount as far as
+the &ldquo;top,&rdquo; the clumsy bucket half the time straddling and swinging
+about between my legs, and in momentary danger of capsizing. Arrived at the
+&ldquo;top,&rdquo; I came to a dead halt, and looked up. How to surmount that
+overhanging impediment completely posed me for the time. But at last, with much
+straining, I contrived to place my bucket in the &ldquo;top;&rdquo; and then,
+trusting to Providence, swung myself up after it. The rest of the road was
+comparatively easy; though whenever I incautiously looked down toward the deck,
+my head spun round so from weakness, that I was obliged to shut my eyes to
+recover myself. I do not remember much more. I only recollect my safe return to
+the deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a short time the bustle of the ship increased; the trunks of cabin
+passengers arrived, and the chests and boxes of the steerage passengers,
+besides baskets of wine and fruit for the captain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last we cast loose, and swinging out into the stream, came to anchor, and
+hoisted the signal for sailing. Every thing, it seemed, was on board but the
+crew; who in a few hours after, came off, one by one, in Whitehall boats, their
+chests in the bow, and themselves lying back in the stem like lords; and
+showing very plainly the complacency they felt in keeping the whole ship
+waiting for their lordships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, ay,&rdquo; muttered the chief mate, as they rolled out of then-boats
+and swaggered on deck, &ldquo;it&rsquo;s your turn now, but it will be mine
+before long. Yaw about while you may, my hearties, I&rsquo;ll do the yawing
+after the anchor&rsquo;s up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Several of the sailors were very drunk, and one of them was lifted on board
+insensible by his landlord, who carried him down below and dumped him into a
+bunk. And two other sailors, as soon as they made their appearance, immediately
+went below to sleep off the fumes of their drink.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, all the crew being on board, word was passed to go to dinner fore and
+aft, an order that made my heart jump with delight, for now my long fast would
+be broken. But though the sailors, surfeited with eating and drinking ashore,
+did not then touch the salt beef and potatoes which the black cook handed down
+into the forecastle; and though this left the whole allowance to me; to my
+surprise, I found that I could eat little or nothing; for now I only felt
+deadly faint, but not hungry.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap07"></a>CHAPTER VII.<br/>
+HE GETS TO SEA AND FEELS VERY BAD</h2>
+
+<p>
+Every thing at last being in readiness, the pilot came on board, and all hands
+were called to up anchor. While I worked at my bar, I could not help observing
+how haggard the men looked, and how much they suffered from this violent
+exercise, after the terrific dissipation in which they had been indulging
+ashore. But I soon learnt that sailors breathe nothing about such things, but
+strive their best to appear all alive and hearty, though it comes very hard for
+many of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The anchor being secured, a steam tug-boat with a strong name, the Hercules,
+took hold of us; and away we went past the long line of shipping, and wharves,
+and warehouses; and rounded the green south point of the island where the
+Battery is, and passed Governor&rsquo;s Island, and pointed right out for the
+Narrows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My heart was like lead, and I felt bad enough, Heaven knows; but then, there
+was plenty of work to be done, which kept my thoughts from becoming too much
+for me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I tried to think all the time, that I was going to England, and that,
+before many months, I should have actually been there and home again, telling
+my adventures to my brothers and sisters; and with what delight they would
+listen, and how they would look up to me then, and reverence my sayings; and
+how that even my elder brother would be forced to treat me with great
+consideration, as having crossed the Atlantic Ocean, which he had never done,
+and there was no probability he ever would.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With such thoughts as these I endeavored to shake off my heavy-heartedness; but
+it would not do at all; for this was only the first day of the voyage, and many
+weeks, nay, several whole months must elapse before the voyage was ended; and
+who could tell what might happen to me; for when I looked up at the high, giddy
+masts, and thought how often I must be going up and down them, I thought sure
+enough that some luckless day or other, I would certainly fall overboard and be
+drowned. And then, I thought of lying down at the bottom of the sea, stark
+alone, with the great waves rolling over me, and no one in the wide world
+knowing that I was there. And I thought how much better and sweeter it must be,
+to be buried under the pleasant hedge that bounded the sunny south side of our
+village grave-yard, where every Sunday I had used to walk after church in the
+afternoon; and I almost wished I was there now; yes, dead and buried in that
+churchyard. All the time my eyes were filled with tears, and I kept holding my
+breath, to choke down the sobs, for indeed I could not help feeling as I did,
+and no doubt any boy in the world would have felt just as I did then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the steamer carried us further and further down the bay, and we passed ships
+lying at anchor, with men gazing at us and waving their hats; and small boats
+with ladies in them waving their handkerchiefs; and passed the green shore of
+Staten Island, and caught sight of so many beautiful cottages all overrun with
+vines, and planted on the beautiful fresh mossy hill-sides; oh! then I would
+have given any thing if instead of sailing <i>out of</i> the bay, we were only
+coming <i>into</i> it; if we had crossed the ocean and returned, gone over and
+come back; and my heart leaped up in me like something alive when I thought of
+really entering that bay at the end of the voyage. But that was so far distant,
+that it seemed it could never be. No, never, never more would I see New York
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And what shocked me more than any thing else, was to hear some of the sailors,
+while they were at work coiling away the hawsers, talking about the
+boarding-houses they were going to, when they came back; and how that some
+friends of theirs had promised to be on the wharf when the ship returned, to
+take them and their chests right up to Franklin-square where they lived; and
+how that they would have a good dinner ready, and plenty of cigars and spirits
+out on the balcony. I say this kind of talking shocked me, for they did not
+seem to consider, as I did, that before any thing like that could happen, we
+must cross the great Atlantic Ocean, cross over from America to Europe and back
+again, many thousand miles of foaming ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that time I did not know what to make of these sailors; but this much I
+thought, that when they were boys, they could never have gone to the Sunday
+School; for they swore so, it made my ears tingle, and used words that I never
+could hear without a dreadful loathing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And are these the men, I thought to myself, that I must live with so long?
+these the men I am to eat with, and sleep with all the time? And besides, I now
+began to see, that they were not going to be very kind to me; but I will tell
+all about that when the proper time comes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now you must not think, that because all these things were passing through my
+mind, that I had nothing to do but sit still and think; no, no, I was hard at
+work: for as long as the steamer had hold of us, we were very busy coiling away
+ropes and cables, and putting the decks in order; which were littered all over
+with odds and ends of things that had to be put away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last we got as far as the Narrows, which every body knows is the entrance to
+New York Harbor from sea; and it may well be called the Narrows, for when you
+go in or out, it seems like going in or out of a doorway; and when you go out
+of these Narrows on a long voyage like this of mine, it seems like going out
+into the broad highway, where not a soul is to be seen. For far away and away,
+stretches the great Atlantic Ocean; and all you can see beyond it where the sky
+comes down to the water. It looks lonely and desolate enough, and I could
+hardly believe, as I gazed around me, that there could be any land beyond, or
+any place like Europe or England or Liverpool in the great wide world. It
+seemed too strange, and wonderful, and altogether incredible, that there could
+really be cities and towns and villages and green fields and hedges and
+farm-yards and orchards, away over that wide blank of sea, and away beyond the
+place where the sky came down to the water. And to think of steering right out
+among those waves, and leaving the bright land behind, and the dark night
+coming on, too, seemed wild and foolhardy; and I looked with a sort of fear at
+the sailors standing by me, who could be so thoughtless at such a time. But
+then I remembered, how many times my own father had said he had crossed the
+ocean; and I had never dreamed of such a thing as doubting him; for I always
+thought him a marvelous being, infinitely purer and greater than I was, who
+could not by any possibility do wrong, or say an untruth. Yet now, how could I
+credit it, that he, my own father, whom I so well remembered; had ever sailed
+out of these Narrows, and sailed right through the sky and water line, and gone
+to England, and France, Liverpool, and Marseilles. It was too wonderful to
+believe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, on the right hand side of the Narrows as you go out, the land is quite
+high; and on the top of a fine cliff is a great castle or fort, all in ruins,
+and with the trees growing round it. It was built by Governor Tompkins in the
+time of the last war with England, but was never used, I believe, and so they
+left it to decay. I had visited the place once when we lived in New York, as
+long ago almost as I could remember, with my father, and an uncle of mine, an
+old sea-captain, with white hair, who used to sail to a place called Archangel
+in Russia, and who used to tell me that he was with Captain Langsdorff, when
+Captain Langsdorff crossed over by land from the sea of Okotsk in Asia to St.
+Petersburgh, drawn by large dogs in a sled. I mention this of my uncle, because
+he was the very first sea-captain I had ever seen, and his white hair and fine
+handsome florid face made so strong an impression upon me, that I have never
+forgotten him, though I only saw him during this one visit of his to New York,
+for he was lost in the White Sea some years after.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I meant to speak about the fort. It was a beautiful place, as I remembered
+it, and very wonderful and romantic, too, as it appeared to me, when I went
+there with my uncle. On the side away from the water was a green grove of
+trees, very thick and shady; and through this grove, in a sort of twilight you
+came to an arch in the wall of the fort, dark as night; and going in, you
+groped about in long vaults, twisting and turning on every side, till at last
+you caught a peep of green grass and sunlight, and all at once came out in an
+open space in the middle of the castle. And there you would see cows quietly
+grazing, or ruminating under the shade of young trees, and perhaps a calf
+frisking about, and trying to catch its own tail; and sheep clambering among
+the mossy ruins, and cropping the little tufts of grass sprouting out of the
+sides of the embrasures for cannon. And once I saw a black goat with a long
+beard, and crumpled horns, standing with his forefeet lifted high up on the
+topmost parapet, and looking to sea, as if he were watching for a ship that was
+bringing over his cousin. I can see him even now, and though I have changed
+since then, the black goat looks just the same as ever; and so I suppose he
+would, if I live to be as old as Methusaleh, and have as great a memory as he
+must have had. Yes, the fort was a beautiful, quiet, charming spot. I should
+like to build a little cottage in the middle of it, and live there all my life.
+It was noon-day when I was there, in the month of June, and there was little
+wind to stir the trees, and every thing looked as if it was waiting for
+something, and the sky overhead was blue as my mother&rsquo;s eye, and I was so
+glad and happy then. But I must not think of those delightful days, before my
+father became a bankrupt, and died, and we removed from the city; for when I
+think of those days, something rises up in my throat and almost strangles me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, as we sailed through the Narrows, I caught sight of that beautiful fort on
+the cliff, and could not help contrasting my situation now, with what it was
+when with my father and uncle I went there so long ago. Then I never thought of
+working for my living, and never knew that there were hard hearts in the world;
+and knew so little of money, that when I bought a stick of candy, and laid down
+a sixpence, I thought the confectioner returned five cents, only that I might
+have money to buy something else, and not because the pennies were my change,
+and therefore mine by good rights. How different my idea of money now!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then I was a schoolboy, and thought of going to college in time; and had vague
+thoughts of becoming a great orator like Patrick Henry, whose speeches I used
+to speak on the stage; but now, I was a poor friendless boy, far away from my
+home, and voluntarily in the way of becoming a miserable sailor for life. And
+what made it more bitter to me, was to think of how well off were my cousins,
+who were happy and rich, and lived at home with my uncles and aunts, with no
+thought of going to sea for a living. I tried to think that it was all a dream,
+that I was not where I was, not on board of a ship, but that I was at home
+again in the city, with my father alive, and my mother bright and happy as she
+used to be. But it would not do. I was indeed where I was, and here was the
+ship, and there was the fort. So, after casting a last look at some boys who
+were standing on the parapet, gazing off to sea, I turned away heavily, and
+resolved not to look at the land any more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About sunset we got fairly &ldquo;outside,&rdquo; and well may it so be called;
+for I felt thrust out of the world. Then the breeze began to blow, and the
+sails were loosed, and hoisted; and after a while, the steamboat left us, and
+for the first time I felt the ship roll, a strange feeling enough, as if it
+were a great barrel in the water. Shortly after, I observed a swift little
+schooner running across our bows, and re-crossing again and again; and while I
+was wondering what she could be, she suddenly lowered her sails, and two men
+took hold of a little boat on her deck, and launched it overboard as if it had
+been a chip. Then I noticed that our pilot, a red-faced man in a rough blue
+coat, who to my astonishment had all this time been giving orders instead of
+the captain, began to button up his coat to the throat, like a prudent person
+about leaving a house at night in a lonely square, to go home; and he left the
+giving orders to the chief mate, and stood apart talking with the captain, and
+put his hand into his pocket, and gave him some newspapers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in a few minutes, when we had stopped our headway, and allowed the little
+boat to come alongside, he shook hands with the captain and officers and bade
+them good-by, without saying a syllable of farewell to me and the sailors; and
+so he went laughing over the side, and got into the boat, and they pulled him
+off to the schooner, and then the schooner made sail and glided under our
+stern, her men standing up and waving their hats, and cheering; and that was
+the last we saw of America.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap08"></a>CHAPTER VIII.<br/>
+HE IS PUT INTO THE LARBOARD WATCH; GETS SEA-SICK; AND RELATES SOME OTHER OF HIS
+EXPERIENCES</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was now getting dark, when all at once the sailors were ordered on the
+quarter-deck, and of course I went along with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What is to come now, thought I; but I soon found out. It seemed we were going
+to be divided into watches. The chief mate began by selecting a stout
+good-looking sailor for his watch; and then the second mate&rsquo;s turn came
+to choose, and he also chose a stout good-looking sailor. But it was not
+me;&mdash; no; and <i>I</i> noticed, as they went on choosing, one after the
+other in regular rotation, that both of the mates never so much as looked at
+me, but kept going round among the rest, peering into their faces, for it was
+dusk, and telling them not to hide themselves away so in their jackets. But the
+sailors, especially the stout good-looking ones, seemed to make a point of
+lounging as much out of the way as possible, and slouching their hats over
+their eyes; and although it may only be a fancy of mine, <i>I</i> certainly
+thought that they affected a sort of lordly indifference as to whose watch they
+were going to be in; and did not think it worth while to look any way anxious
+about the matter. And the very men who, a few minutes before, had showed the
+most alacrity and promptitude in jumping into the rigging and running aloft at
+the word of command, now lounged against the bulwarks and most lazily; as if
+they were quite sure, that by this time the officers must know who the best men
+were, and they valued themselves well enough to be willing to put the officers
+to the trouble of searching them out; for if they were worth having, they were
+worth seeking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last they were all chosen but me; and it was the chief mate&rsquo;s next
+turn to choose; though there could be little choosing in my case, since
+<i>I</i> was a thirteener, and must, whether or no, go over to the next column,
+like the odd figure you carry along when you do a sum in addition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, Buttons,&rdquo; said the chief mate, &ldquo;I thought I&rsquo;d
+got rid of you. And as it is, Mr. Rigs,&rdquo; he added, speaking to the second
+mate, &ldquo;I guess you had better take him into your watch;&mdash;there,
+I&rsquo;ll let you have him, and then you&rsquo;ll be one stronger than
+me.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I thank you,&rdquo; said Mr. Rigs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You had better,&rdquo; said the chief mate&mdash;&ldquo;see, he&rsquo;s
+not a bad looking chap&mdash;he&rsquo;s a little green, to be sure, but you
+were so once yourself, you know, Rigs.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I thank you,&rdquo; said the second mate again. &ldquo;Take him
+yourself&mdash;he&rsquo;s yours by good rights&mdash;I don&rsquo;t want
+him.&rdquo; And so they put me in the chief mate&rsquo;s division, that is the
+larboard watch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While this scene was going on, I felt shabby enough; there I stood, just like a
+silly sheep, over whom two butchers are bargaining. Nothing that had yet
+happened so forcibly reminded me of where I was, and what I had come to. I was
+very glad when they sent us forward again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we were going forward, the second mate called one of the sailors by
+name:-&ldquo;You, Bill?&rdquo; and Bill answered, &ldquo;Sir?&rdquo; just as if
+the second mate was a born gentleman. It surprised me not a little, to see a
+man in such a shabby, shaggy old jacket addressed so respectfully; but I had
+been quite as much surprised when I heard the chief mate call him <i>Mr.</i>
+Rigs during the scene on the quarter-deck; as if this <i>Mr. Rigs</i> was a
+great merchant living in a marble house in Lafayette Place. But I was not very
+long in finding out, that at sea all officers are <i>Misters,</i> and would
+take it for an insult if any seaman presumed to omit calling them so. And it is
+also one of their rights and privileges to be called <i>sir</i> when
+addressed&mdash;Yes, <i>sir; No, sir; Ay, ay, sir;</i> and they are as
+particular about being sirred as so many knights and baronets; though their
+titles are not hereditary, as is the case with the Sir Johns and Sir Joshuas in
+England. But so far as the second mate is concerned, his tides are the only
+dignities he enjoys; for, upon the whole, he leads a puppyish life indeed. He
+is not deemed company at any time for the captain, though the chief mate
+occasionally is, at least deck-company, though not in the cabin; and besides
+this, the second mate has to breakfast, lunch, dine, and sup off the leavings
+of the cabin table, and even the steward, who is accountable to nobody but the
+captain, sometimes treats him cavalierly; and he has to run aloft when topsails
+are reefed; and put his hand a good way down into the tar-bucket; and keep the
+key of the boatswain&rsquo;s locker, and fetch and carry balls of marline and
+seizing-stuff for the sailors when at work in the rigging; besides doing many
+other things, which a true-born baronet of any spirit would rather die and give
+up his title than stand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having been divided into watches we were sent to supper; but I could not eat
+any thing except a little biscuit, though I should have liked to have some good
+tea; but as I had no pot to get it in, and was rather nervous about asking the
+rough sailors to let me drink out of theirs; I was obliged to go without a sip.
+I thought of going to the black cook and begging a tin cup; but he looked so
+cross and ugly then, that the sight of him almost frightened the idea out of
+me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When supper was over, for they never talk about going to <i>tea</i> aboard of a
+ship, the watch to which I belonged was called on deck; and we were told it was
+for us to stand the first night watch, that is, from eight o&rsquo;clock till
+midnight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I now began to feel unsettled and ill at ease about the stomach, as if matters
+were all topsy-turvy there; and felt strange and giddy about the head; and so I
+made no doubt that this was the beginning of that dreadful thing, the
+sea-sickness. Feeling worse and worse, I told one of the sailors how it was
+with me, and begged him to make my excuses very civilly to the chief mate, for
+I thought I would go below and spend the night in my bunk. But he only laughed
+at me, and said something about my mother not being aware of my being out;
+which enraged me not a little, that a man whom I had heard swear so terribly,
+should dare to take such a holy name into his mouth. It seemed a sort of
+blasphemy, and it seemed like dragging out the best and most cherished secrets
+of my soul, for at that time the name of mother was the center of all my
+heart&rsquo;s finest feelings, which ere that, I had learned to keep secret,
+deep down in my being.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I did not outwardly resent the sailor&rsquo;s words, for that would have
+only made the matter worse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now this man was a Greenlander by birth, with a very white skin where the sun
+had not burnt it, and handsome blue eyes placed wide apart in his head, and a
+broad good-humored face, and plenty of curly flaxen hair. He was not very tall,
+but exceedingly stout-built, though active; and his back was as broad as a
+shield, and it was a great way between his shoulders. He seemed to be a sort of
+lady&rsquo;s sailor, for in his broken English he was always talking about the
+nice ladies of his acquaintance in Stockholm and Copenhagen and a place he
+called the Hook, which at first I fancied must be the place where lived the
+hook-nosed men that caught fowling-pieces and every other article that came
+along. He was dressed very tastefully, too, as if he knew he was a good-looking
+fellow. He had on a new blue woolen Havre frock, with a new silk handkerchief
+round his neck, passed through one of the vertebral bones of a shark, highly
+polished and carved. His trowsers were of clear white duck, and he sported a
+handsome pair of pumps, and a tarpaulin hat bright as a looking-glass, with a
+long black ribbon streaming behind, and getting entangled every now and then in
+the rigging; and he had gold anchors in his ears, and a silver ring on one of
+his fingers, which was very much worn and bent from pulling ropes and other
+work on board ship. I thought he might better have left his jewelry at home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a long time before I could believe that this man was really from
+Greenland, though he looked strange enough to me, then, to have come from the
+moon; and he was full of stories about that distant country; how they passed
+the winters there; and how bitter cold it was; and how he used to go to bed and
+sleep twelve hours, and get up again and run about, and go to bed again, and
+get up again&mdash;there was no telling how many times, and all in one night;
+for in the winter time in his country, he said, the nights were so many weeks
+long, that a Greenland baby was sometimes three months old, before it could
+properly be said to be a day old.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had seen mention made of such things before, in books of voyages; but that
+was only reading about them, just as you read the Arabian Nights, which no one
+ever believes; for somehow, when I read about these wonderful countries, I
+never used really to believe what I read, but only thought it very strange, and
+a good deal too strange to be altogether true; though I never thought the men
+who wrote the book meant to tell lies. But I don&rsquo;t know exactly how to
+explain what I mean; but this much I will say, that I never believed in
+Greenland till I saw this Greenlander. And at first, hearing him talk about
+Greenland, only made me still more incredulous. For what business had a man
+from Greenland to be in my company? Why was he not at home among the icebergs,
+and how could he stand a warm summer&rsquo;s sun, and not be melted away?
+Besides, instead of icicles, there were ear-rings hanging from his ears; and he
+did not wear bear-skins, and keep his hands in a huge muff; things, which I
+could not help connecting with Greenland and all Greenlanders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I was telling about my being sea-sick and wanting to retire for the night.
+This Greenlander seeing I was ill, volunteered to turn doctor and cure me; so
+going down into the forecastle, he came back with a brown jug, like a molasses
+jug, and a little tin cannikin, and as soon as the brown jug got near my nose,
+I needed no telling what was in it, for it smelt like a still-house, and sure
+enough proved to be full of Jamaica spirits.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Buttons,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;one little dose of this will be
+better for you than a whole night&rsquo;s sleep; there, take that now, and then
+eat seven or eight biscuits, and you&rsquo;ll feel as strong as the
+mainmast.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I felt very little like doing as I was bid, for I had some scruples about
+drinking spirits; and to tell the plain truth, for I am not ashamed of it, I
+was a member of a society in the village where my mother lived, called the
+Juvenile Total Abstinence Association, of which my friend, Tom Legare, was
+president, secretary, and treasurer, and kept the funds in a little purse that
+his cousin knit for him. There was three and sixpence on hand, I believe, the
+last time he brought in his accounts, on a May day, when we had a meeting in a
+grove on the river-bank. Tom was a very honest treasurer, and never spent the
+Society&rsquo;s money for peanuts; and besides all, was a fine, generous boy,
+whom I much loved. But I must not talk about Tom now.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the Greenlander came to me with his jug of medicine, I thanked him as well
+as I could; for just then I was leaning with my mouth over the side, feeling
+ready to die; but I managed to tell him I was under a solemn obligation never
+to drink spirits upon any consideration whatever; though, as I had a sort of
+presentiment that the spirits would now, for once in my life, do me good, I
+began to feel sorry, that when I signed the pledge of abstinence, I had not
+taken care to insert a little clause, allowing me to drink spirits in case of
+sea-sickness. And I would advise temperance people to attend to this matter in
+future; and then if they come to go to sea, there will be no need of breaking
+their pledges, which I am truly sorry to say was the case with me. And a hard
+thing it was, too, thus to break a vow before unbroken; especially as the
+Jamaica tasted any thing but agreeable, and indeed burnt my mouth so, that I
+did not relish my meals for some time after. Even when I had become quite well
+and strong again, I wondered how the sailors could really like such stuff; but
+many of them had a jug of it, besides the Greenlander, which they brought along
+to sea with them, <i>to taper off with,</i> as they called it. But this
+tapering off did not last very long, for the Jamaica was all gone on the second
+day, and the jugs were tossed overboard. I wonder where they are now?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But to tell the truth, I found, in spite of its sharp taste, the spirits I
+drank was just the thing I needed; but I suppose, if I could have had a cup of
+nice hot coffee, it would have done quite as well, and perhaps much better. But
+that was not to be had at that time of night, or, indeed, at any other time;
+for the thing they called <i>coffee,</i> which was given to us every morning at
+breakfast, was the most curious tasting drink I ever drank, and tasted as
+little like coffee, as it did like lemonade; though, to be sure, it was
+generally as cold as lemonade, and I used to think the cook had an icehouse,
+and dropt ice into his coffee. But what was more curious still, was the
+different quality and taste of it on different mornings. Sometimes it tasted
+fishy, as if it was a decoction of Dutch herrings; and then it would taste very
+salty, as if some <i>old horse,</i> or sea-beef, had been boiled in it; and
+then again it would taste a sort of cheesy, as if the captain had sent his
+cheese-parings forward to make our coffee of; and yet another time it would
+have such a very bad flavor, that I was almost ready to think some old
+stocking-heels had been boiled in it. What under heaven it was made of, that it
+had so many different bad flavors, always remained a mystery; for when at work
+at his vocation, our old cook used to keep himself close shut-up in his
+caboose, a little cook-house, and never told any of his secrets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though a very serious character, as I shall hereafter show, he was for all
+that, and perhaps for that identical reason, a very suspicious looking sort of
+a cook, that I don&rsquo;t believe would ever succeed in getting the cooking at
+Delmonico&rsquo;s in New York. It was well for him that he was a black cook,
+for I have no doubt his color kept us from seeing his dirty face! I never saw
+him wash but once, and that was at one of his own soup pots one dark night when
+he thought no one saw him. What induced him to be washing his face then, I
+never could find out; but I suppose he must have suddenly waked up, after
+dreaming about some real estate on his cheeks. As for his coffee,
+notwithstanding the disagreeableness of its flavor, I always used to have a
+strange curiosity every morning, to see what new taste it was going to have;
+and though, sure enough, I never missed making a new discovery, and adding
+another taste to my palate, I never found that there was any change in the
+badness of the beverage, which always seemed the same in that respect as
+before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It may well be believed, then, that now when I was seasick, a cup of such
+coffee as our old cook made would have done me no good, if indeed it would not
+have come near making an end of me. And bad as it was, and since it was not to
+be had at that time of night, as I said before, I think I was excusable in
+taking something else in place of it, as I did; and under the circumstances, it
+would be unhandsome of them, if my fellow-members of the Temperance Society
+should reproach me for breaking my bond, which I would not have done except in
+case of necessity. But the evil effect of breaking one&rsquo;s bond upon any
+occasion whatever, was witnessed in the present case; for it insidiously opened
+the way to subsequent breaches of it, which though very slight, yet carried no
+apology with them.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap09"></a>CHAPTER IX.<br/>
+THE SAILORS BECOMING A LITTLE SOCIAL, REDBURN CONVERSES WITH THEM</h2>
+
+<p>
+The latter part of this first long watch that we stood was very pleasant, so
+far as the weather was concerned. From being rather cloudy, it became a soft
+moonlight; and the stars peeped out, plain enough to count one by one; and
+there was a fine steady breeze; and it was not very cold; and we were going
+through the water almost as smooth as a sled sliding down hill. And what was
+still better, the wind held so steady, that there was little running aloft,
+little pulling ropes, and scarcely any thing disagreeable of that kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chief mate kept walking up and down the quarter-deck, with a lighted
+long-nine cigar in his mouth by way of a torch; and spoke but few words to us
+the whole watch. He must have had a good deal of thinking to attend to, which
+in truth is the case with most seamen the first night out of port, especially
+when they have thrown away their money in foolish dissipation, and got very
+sick into the bargain. For when ashore, many of these sea-officers are as wild
+and reckless in their way, as the sailors they command.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While I stood watching the red cigar-end promenading up and down, the mate
+suddenly stopped and gave an order, and the men sprang to obey it. It was not
+much, only something about hoisting one of the sails a little higher up on the
+mast. The men took hold of the rope, and began pulling upon it; the foremost
+man of all setting up a song with no words to it, only a strange musical rise
+and fall of notes. In the dark night, and far out upon the lonely sea, it
+sounded wild enough, and made me feel as I had sometimes felt, when in a
+twilight room a cousin of mine, with black eyes, used to play some old German
+airs on the piano. I almost looked round for goblins, and felt just a little
+bit afraid. But I soon got used to this singing; for the sailors never touched
+a rope without it. Sometimes, when no one happened to strike up, and the
+pulling, whatever it might be, did not seem to be getting forward very well,
+the mate would always say, <i>&ldquo;Come, men, can&rsquo;t any of you sing?
+Sing now, and raise the dead.&rdquo;</i> And then some one of them would begin,
+and if every man&rsquo;s arms were as much relieved as mine by the song, and he
+could pull as much better as I did, with such a cheering accompaniment, I am
+sure the song was well worth the breath expended on it. It is a great thing in
+a sailor to know how to sing well, for he gets a great name by it from the
+officers, and a good deal of popularity among his shipmates. Some sea-captains,
+before shipping a man, always ask him whether he can sing out at a rope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the greater part of the watch, the sailors sat on the windlass and told
+long stories of their adventures by sea and land, and talked about Gibraltar,
+and Canton, and Valparaiso, and Bombay, just as you and I would about Peck Slip
+and the Bowery. Every man of them almost was a volume of Voyages and Travels
+round the World. And what most struck me was that like books of voyages they
+often contradicted each other, and would fall into long and violent disputes
+about who was keeping the Foul Anchor tavern in Portsmouth at such a time; or
+whether the King of Canton lived or did not live in Persia; or whether the
+bar-maid of a particular house in Hamburg had black eyes or blue eyes; with
+many other mooted points of that sort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last one of them went below and brought up a box of cigars from his chest,
+for some sailors always provide little delicacies of that kind, to break off
+the first shock of the salt water after laying idle ashore; and also by way of
+<i>tapering off,</i> as I mentioned a little while ago. But I wondered that
+they never carried any pies and tarts to sea with them, instead of spirits and
+cigars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ned, for that was the man&rsquo;s name, split open the box with a blow of his
+fist, and then handed it round along the windlass, just like a waiter at a
+party, every one helping himself. But I was a member of an Anti-Smoking Society
+that had been organized in our village by the Principal of the Sunday School
+there, in conjunction with the Temperance Association. So I did not smoke any
+then, though I did afterward upon the voyage, I am sorry to say.
+Notwithstanding I declined; with a good deal of unnecessary swearing, Ned
+assured me that the cigars were real genuine Havannas; for he had been in
+Havanna, he said, and had them made there under his own eye. According to his
+account, he was very particular about his cigars and other things, and never
+made any importations, for they were unsafe; but always made a voyage himself
+direct to the place where any foreign thing was to be had that he wanted. He
+went to Havre for his woolen shirts, to Panama for his hats, to China for his
+silk handkerchiefs, and direct to Calcutta for his cheroots; and as a great
+joker in the watch used to say, no doubt he would at last have occasion to go
+to Russia for his halter; the wit of which saying was presumed to be in the
+fact, that the Russian hemp is the best; though that is not wit which needs
+explaining.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By dint of the spirits which, besides stimulating my fainting strength, united
+with the cool air of the sea to give me an appetite for our hard biscuit; and
+also by dint of walking briskly up and down the deck before the windlass, I had
+now recovered in good part from my sickness, and finding the sailors all very
+pleasant and sociable, at least among themselves, and seated smoking together
+like old cronies, and nothing on earth to do but sit the watch out, I began to
+think that they were a pretty good set of fellows after all, barring their
+swearing and another ugly way of talking they had; and I thought I had
+misconceived their true characters; for at the outset I had deemed them such a
+parcel of wicked hard-hearted rascals that it would be a severe affliction to
+associate with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, I now began to look on them with a sort of incipient love; but more with
+an eye of pity and compassion, as men of naturally gentle and kind
+dispositions, whom only hardships, and neglect, and ill-usage had made outcasts
+from good society; and not as villains who loved wickedness for the sake of it,
+and would persist in wickedness, even in Paradise, if they ever got there. And
+I called to mind a sermon I had once heard in a church in behalf of sailors,
+when the preacher called them strayed lambs from the fold, and compared them to
+poor lost children, babes in the wood, orphans without fathers or mothers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I remembered reading in a magazine, called the Sailors&rsquo; Magazine,
+with a sea-blue cover, and a ship painted on the back, about pious seamen who
+never swore, and paid over all their wages to the poor heathen in India; and
+how that when they were too old to go to sea, these pious old sailors found a
+delightful home for life in the Hospital, where they had nothing to do, but
+prepare themselves for their latter end. And I wondered whether there were any
+such good sailors among my ship-mates; and observing that one of them laid on
+deck apart from the rest, I thought to be sure he must be one of them: so I did
+not disturb his devotions: but I was afterward shocked at discovering that he
+was only fast asleep, with one of the brown jugs by his side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I forgot to mention by the way, that every once in a while, the men went into
+one corner, where the chief mate could not see them, to take a &ldquo;swig at
+the halyards,&rdquo; as they called it; and this swigging at the halyards it
+was, that enabled them &ldquo;to taper off&rdquo; handsomely, and no doubt it
+was this, too, that had something to do with making them so pleasant and
+sociable that night, for they were seldom so pleasant and sociable afterward,
+and never treated me so kindly as they did then. Yet this might have been owing
+to my being something of a stranger to them, then; and our being just out of
+port. But that very night they turned about, and taught me a bitter lesson; but
+all in good time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have said, that seeing how agreeable they were getting, and how friendly
+their manner was, I began to feel a sort of compassion for them, grounded on
+their sad conditions as amiable outcasts; and feeling so warm an interest in
+them, and being full of pity, and being truly desirous of benefiting them to
+the best of my poor powers, for I knew they were but poor indeed, I made bold
+to ask one of them, whether he was ever in the habit of going to church, when
+he was ashore, or dropping in at the Floating Chapel I had seen lying off the
+dock in the East River at New York; and whether he would think it too much of a
+liberty, if I asked him, if he had any good books in his chest. He stared a
+little at first, but marking what good language I used, seeing my civil bearing
+toward him, he seemed for a moment to be filled with a certain involuntary
+respect for me, and answered, that he had been to church once, some ten or
+twelve years before, in London, and on a week-day had helped to move the
+Floating Chapel round the Battery, from the North River; and that was the only
+time he had seen it. For his books, he said he did not know what I meant by
+good books; but if I wanted the Newgate Calendar, and Pirate&rsquo;s Own, he
+could lend them to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I heard this poor sailor talk in this manner, showing so plainly his
+ignorance and absence of proper views of religion, I pitied him more and more,
+and contrasting my own situation with his, I was grateful that I was different
+from him; and I thought how pleasant it was, to feel wiser and better than he
+could feel; though I was willing to confess to myself, that it was not
+altogether my own good endeavors, so much as my education, which I had received
+from others, that had made me the upright and sensible boy I at that time
+thought myself to be. And it was now, that I began to feel a good degree of
+complacency and satisfaction in surveying my own character; for, before this, I
+had previously associated with persons of a very discreet life, so that there
+was little opportunity to magnify myself, by comparing myself with my
+neighbors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thinking that my superiority to him in a moral way might sit uneasily upon this
+sailor, I thought it would soften the matter down by giving him a chance to
+show his own superiority to me, in a minor thing; for I was far from being vain
+and conceited.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having observed that at certain intervals a little bell was rung on the
+quarter-deck by the man at the wheel; and that as soon as it was heard, some
+one of the sailors forward struck a large bell which hung on the forecastle;
+and having observed that how many times soever the man astern rang his bell,
+the man forward struck his&mdash;tit for tat,&mdash;I inquired of this Floating
+Chapel sailor, what all this ringing meant; and whether, as the big bell hung
+right over the scuttle that went down to the place where the watch below were
+sleeping, such a ringing every little while would not tend to disturb them and
+beget unpleasant dreams; and in asking these questions I was particular to
+address him in a civil and condescending way, so as to show him very plainly
+that I did not deem myself one whit better than he was, that is, taking all
+things together, and not going into particulars. But to my great surprise and
+mortification, he in the rudest land of manner laughed aloud in my face, and
+called me a &ldquo;Jimmy Dux,&rdquo; though that was not my real name, and he
+must have known it; and also the &ldquo;son of a farmer,&rdquo; though as I
+have previously related, my father was a great merchant and French importer in
+Broad-street in New York. And then he began to laugh and joke about me, with
+the other sailors, till they all got round me, and if I had not felt so
+terribly angry, I should certainly have felt very much like a fool. But my
+being so angry prevented me from feeling foolish, which is very lucky for
+people in a passion.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap10"></a>CHAPTER X.<br/>
+HE IS VERY MUCH FRIGHTENED; THE SAILORS ABUSE HIM; AND HE BECOMES MISERABLE AND
+FORLORN</h2>
+
+<p>
+While the scene last described was going on, we were all startled by a horrid
+groaning noise down in the forecastle; and all at once some one came rushing up
+the scuttle in his shirt, clutching something in his hand, and trembling and
+shrieking in the most frightful manner, so that I thought one of the sailors
+must be murdered below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it all passed in a moment; and while we stood aghast at the sight, and
+almost before we knew what it was, the shrieking man jumped over the bows into
+the sea, and we saw him no more. Then there was a great uproar; the sailors
+came running up on deck; and the chief mate ran forward, and learning what had
+happened, began to yell out his orders about the sails and yards; and we all
+went to pulling and hauling the ropes, till at last the ship lay almost still
+on the water. Then they loosed a boat, which kept pulling round the ship for
+more than an hour, but they never caught sight of the man. It seemed that he
+was one of the sailors who had been brought aboard dead drunk, and tumbled into
+his bunk by his landlord; and there he had lain till now. He must have suddenly
+waked up, I suppose, raging mad with the delirium tremens, as the chief mate
+called it, and finding himself in a strange silent place, and knowing not how
+he had got there, he rushed on deck, and so, in a fit of frenzy, put an end to
+himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This event, happening at the dead of night, had a wonderfully solemn and almost
+awful effect upon me. I would have given the whole world, and the sun and moon,
+and all the stars in heaven, if they had been mine, had I been safe back at Mr.
+Jones&rsquo;, or still better, in my home on the Hudson River. I thought it an
+ill-omened voyage, and railed at the folly which had sent me to sea, sore
+against the advice of my best friends, that is to say, my mother and sisters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas! poor Wellingborough, thought I, you will never see your home any more.
+And in this melancholy mood I went below, when the watch had expired, which
+happened soon after. But to my terror, I found that the suicide had been
+occupying the very bunk which I had appropriated to myself, and there was no
+other place for me to sleep in. The thought of lying down there now, seemed too
+horrible to me, and what made it worse, was the way in which the sailors spoke
+of my being frightened. And they took this opportunity to tell me what a hard
+and wicked life I had entered upon, and how that such things happened
+frequently at sea, and they were used to it. But I did not believe this; for
+when the suicide came rushing and shrieking up the scuttle, they looked as
+frightened as I did; and besides that, and what makes their being frightened
+still plainer, is the fact, that if they had had any presence of mind, they
+could have prevented his plunging overboard, since he brushed right by them.
+However, they lay in their bunks smoking, and kept talking on some time in this
+strain, and advising me as soon as ever I got home to pin my ears back, so as
+not to hold the wind, and sail straight away into the interior of the country,
+and never stop until deep in the bush, far off from the least running brook,
+never mind how shallow, and out of sight of even the smallest puddle of
+rainwater.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This kind of talking brought the tears into my eyes, for it was so true and
+real, and the sailors who spoke it seemed so false-hearted and insincere; but
+for all that, in spite of the sickness at my heart, it made me mad, and stung
+me to the quick, that they should speak of me as a poor trembling coward, who
+could never be brought to endure the hardships of a sailor&rsquo;s life; for I
+felt myself trembling, and knew that I was but a coward then, well enough,
+without their telling me of it. And they did not say I was cowardly, because
+they perceived it in me, but because they merely supposed I must be, judging,
+no doubt, from their own secret thoughts about themselves; for I felt sure that
+the suicide frightened them very badly. And at last, being provoked to
+desperation by their taunts, I told them so to their faces; but I might better
+have kept silent; for they now all united to abuse me. They asked me what
+business I, a boy like me, had to go to sea, and take the bread out of the
+mouth of honest sailors, and fill a good seaman&rsquo;s place; and asked me
+whether I ever dreamed of becoming a captain, since I was a gentleman with
+white hands; and if I ever <i>should</i> be, they would like nothing better
+than to ship aboard my vessel and stir up a mutiny. And one of them, whose name
+was Jackson, of whom I shall have a good deal more to say by-and-by, said, I
+had better steer clear of him ever after, for if ever I crossed his path, or
+got into his way, he would be the death of me, and if ever I stumbled about in
+the rigging near <i>him,</i> he would make nothing of pitching me overboard;
+and that he swore too, with an oath. At first, all this nearly stunned me, it
+was so unforeseen; and then I could not believe that they meant what they said,
+or that they could be so cruel and black-hearted. But how could I help seeing,
+that the men who could thus talk to a poor, friendless boy, on the very first
+night of his voyage to sea, must be capable of almost any enormity. I loathed,
+detested, and hated them with all that was left of my bursting heart and soul,
+and I thought myself the most forlorn and miserable wretch that ever breathed.
+May I never be a man, thought I, if to be a boy is to be such a wretch. And I
+wailed and wept, and my heart cracked within me, but all the time I defied them
+through my teeth, and dared them to do their worst.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last they ceased talking and fell fast asleep, leaving me awake, seated on a
+chest with my face bent over my knees between my hands. And there I sat, till
+at length the dull beating against the ship&rsquo;s bows, and the silence
+around soothed me down, and I fell asleep as I sat.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap11"></a>CHAPTER XI.<br/>
+HE HELPS WASH THE DECKS, AND THEN GOES TO BREAKFAST</h2>
+
+<p>
+The next thing I knew, was the loud thumping of a handspike on deck as the
+watch was called again. It was now four o&rsquo;clock in the morning, and when
+we got on deck the first signs of day were shining in the east. The men were
+very sleepy, and sat down on the windlass without speaking, and some of them
+nodded and nodded, till at last they fell off like little boys in church during
+a drowsy sermon. At last it was broad day, and an order was given to wash down
+the decks. A great tub was dragged into the waist, and then one of the men went
+over into the chains, and slipped in behind a band fastened to the shrouds, and
+leaning over, began to swing a bucket into the sea by a long rope; and in that
+way with much expertness and sleight of hand, he managed to fill the tub in a
+very short time. Then the water began to splash about all over the decks, and I
+began to think I should surely get my feet wet, and catch my death of cold. So
+I went to the chief mate, and told him I thought I would just step below, till
+this miserable wetting was over; for I did not have any water-proof boots, and
+an aunt of mine had died of consumption. But he only roared out for me to get a
+broom and go to scrubbing, or he would prove a worse consumption to me than
+ever got hold of my poor aunt. So I scrubbed away fore and aft, till my back
+was almost broke, for the brooms had uncommon short handles, and we were told
+to scrub hard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length the scrubbing being over, the mate began heaving buckets of water
+about, to wash every thing clean, by way of finishing off. He must have thought
+this fine sport, just as captains of fire engines love to point the tube of
+their hose; for he kept me running after him with full buckets of water, and
+sometimes chased a little chip all over the deck, with a continued flood, till
+at last he sent it flying out of a scupper-hole into the sea; when if he had
+only given me permission, I could have picked it up in a trice, and dropped it
+overboard without saying one word, and without wasting so much water. But he
+said there was plenty of water in the ocean, and to spare; which was true
+enough, but then I who had to trot after him with the buckets, had no more legs
+and arms than I wanted for my own use.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thought this washing down the decks was the most foolish thing in the world,
+and besides that it was the most uncomfortable. It was worse than my
+mother&rsquo;s house-cleanings at home, which I used to abominate so.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At eight o&rsquo;clock the bell was struck, and we went to breakfast. And now
+some of the worst of my troubles began. For not having had any friend to tell
+me what I would want at sea, I had not provided myself, as I should have done,
+with a good many things that a sailor needs; and for my own part, it had never
+entered my mind, that sailors had no table to sit down to, no cloth, or
+napkins, or tumblers, and had to provide every thing themselves. But so it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first thing they did was this. Every sailor went to the cook-house with his
+tin pot, and got it filled with coffee; but of course, having no pot, there was
+no coffee for me. And after that, a sort of little tub called a
+&ldquo;kid,&rdquo; was passed down into the forecastle, filled with something
+they called &ldquo;burgoo.&rdquo; This was like mush, made of Indian corn,
+meal, and water. With the <i>&ldquo;kid,&rdquo; a</i> little tin cannikin was
+passed down with molasses. Then the Jackson that I spoke of before, put the kid
+between his knees, and began to pour in the molasses, just like an old landlord
+mixing punch for a party. He scooped out a little hole in the middle of the
+mush, to hold the molasses; so it looked for all the world like a little black
+pool in the Dismal Swamp of Virginia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then they all formed a circle round the kid; and one after the other, with
+great regularity, dipped their spoons into the mush, and after stirring them
+round a little in the molasses-pool, they swallowed down their mouthfuls, and
+smacked their lips over it, as if it tasted very good; which I have no doubt it
+did; but not having any spoon, I wasn&rsquo;t sure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I sat some time watching these proceedings, and wondering how polite they were
+to each other; for, though there were a great many spoons to only one dish,
+they never got entangled. At last, seeing that the mush was getting thinner and
+thinner, and that it was getting low water, or rather low molasses in the
+little pool, I ran on deck, and after searching about, returned with a bit of
+stick; and thinking I had as good a right as any one else to the mush and
+molasses, I worked my way into the circle, intending to make one of the party.
+So I shoved in my stick, and after twirling it about, was just managing to
+carry a little <i>burgoo</i> toward my mouth, which had been for some time
+standing ready open to receive it, when one of the sailors perceiving what I
+was about, knocked the stick out of my hands, and asked me where I learned my
+manners; Was that the way gentlemen eat in my country? Did they eat their
+victuals with splinters of wood, and couldn&rsquo;t that wealthy gentleman my
+father afford to buy his gentlemanly son a spoon?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the rest joined in, and pronounced me an ill-bred, coarse, and unmannerly
+youngster, who, if permitted to go on with such behavior as that, would corrupt
+the whole crew, and make them no better than swine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I felt conscious that a stick was indeed a thing very unsuitable to eat
+with, I did not say much to this, though it vexed me enough; but remembering
+that I had seen one of the steerage passengers with a pan and spoon in his hand
+eating his breakfast on the fore hatch, I now ran on deck again, and to my
+great joy succeeded in borrowing his spoon, for he had got through his meal,
+and down I came again, though at the eleventh hour, and offered myself once
+more as a candidate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But alas! there was little more of the Dismal Swamp left, and when I reached
+over to the opposite end of the kid, I received a rap on the knuckles from a
+spoon, and was told that I must help myself from my own side, for that was the
+rule. But <i>my</i> side was scraped clean, so I got no <i>burgoo</i> that
+morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I made it up by eating some salt beef and biscuit, which I found to be the
+invariable accompaniment of every meal; the sailors sitting cross-legged on
+their chests in a circle, and breaking the hard biscuit, very sociably, over
+each other&rsquo;s heads, which was very convenient indeed, but gave me the
+headache, at least for the first four or five days till I got used to it; and
+then I did not care much about it, only it kept my hair full of crumbs; and I
+had forgot to bring a fine comb and brush, so I used to shake my hair out to
+windward over the bulwarks every evening.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap12"></a>CHAPTER XII.<br/>
+HE GIVES SOME ACCOUNT OF ONE OF HIS SHIPMATES CALLED JACKSON</h2>
+
+<p>
+While we sat eating our beef and biscuit, two of the men got into a dispute,
+about who had been sea-faring the longest; when Jackson, who had mixed the
+<i>burgoo,</i> called upon them in a loud voice to cease their clamor, for he
+would decide the matter for them. Of this sailor, I shall have something more
+to say, as I get on with my narrative; so, I will here try to describe him a
+little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Did you ever see a man, with his hair shaved off, and just recovered from the
+yellow fever? Well, just such a looking man was this sailor. He was as yellow
+as gamboge, had no more whisker on his cheek, than I have on my elbows. His
+hair had fallen out, and left him very bald, except in the nape of his neck,
+and just behind the ears, where it was stuck over with short little tufts, and
+looked like a worn-out shoe-brush. His nose had broken down in the middle, and
+he squinted with one eye, and did not look very straight out of the other. He
+dressed a good deal like a Bowery boy; for he despised the ordinary sailor-rig;
+wearing a pair of great over-all blue trowsers, fastened with suspenders, and
+three red woolen shirts, one over the other; for he was subject to the
+rheumatism, and was not in good health, he said; and he had a large white wool
+hat, with a broad rolling brim. He was a native of New York city, and had a
+good deal to say about <i>highlanders,</i> and <i>rowdies,</i> whom he
+denounced as only good for the gallows; but I thought he looked a good deal
+like a <i>highlander</i> himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His name, as I have said, was Jackson; and he told us, he was a near relation
+of General Jackson of New Orleans, and swore terribly, if any one ventured to
+question what he asserted on that head. In fact he was a great bully, and being
+the best seaman on board, and very overbearing every way, all the men were
+afraid of him, and durst not contradict him, or cross his path in any thing.
+And what made this more wonderful was, that he was the weakest man, bodily, of
+the whole crew; and I have no doubt that young and small as I was then,
+compared to what I am now, I could have thrown him down. But he had such an
+overawing way with him; such a deal of brass and impudence, such an unflinching
+face, and withal was such a hideous looking mortal, that Satan himself would
+have run from him. And besides all this, it was quite plain, that he was by
+nature a marvelously clever, cunning man, though without education; and
+understood human nature to a kink, and well knew whom he had to deal with; and
+then, one glance of his squinting eye, was as good as a knock-down, for it was
+the most deep, subtle, infernal looking eye, that I ever saw lodged in a human
+head. I believe, that by good rights it must have belonged to a wolf, or
+starved tiger; at any rate, I would defy any oculist, to turn out a glass eye,
+half so cold, and snaky, and deadly. It was a horrible thing; and I would give
+much to forget that I have ever seen it; for it haunts me to this day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was impossible to tell how old this Jackson was; for he had no beard, and no
+wrinkles, except small crowsfeet about the eyes. He might have seen thirty, or
+perhaps fifty years. But according to his own account, he had been to sea ever
+since he was eight years old, when he first went as a cabin-boy in an Indiaman,
+and ran away at Calcutta. And according to his own account, too, he had passed
+through every kind of dissipation and abandonment in the worst parts of the
+world. He had served in Portuguese slavers on the coast of Africa; and with a
+diabolical relish used to tell of the <i>middle-passage,</i> where the slaves
+were stowed, heel and point, like logs, and the suffocated and dead were
+unmanacled, and weeded out from the living every morning, before washing down
+the decks; how he had been in a slaving schooner, which being chased by an
+English cruiser off Cape Verde, received three shots in her hull, which raked
+through and through a whole file of slaves, that were chained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He would tell of lying in Batavia during a fever, when his ship lost a man
+every few days, and how they went reeling ashore with the body, and got still
+more intoxicated by way of precaution against the plague. He would talk of
+finding a cobra-di-capello, or hooded snake, under his pillow in India, when he
+slept ashore there. He would talk of sailors being poisoned at Canton with
+drugged <i>&ldquo;shampoo,&rdquo;</i> for the sake of their money; and of the
+Malay ruffians, who stopped ships in the straits of Caspar, and always saved
+the captain for the last, so as to make him point out where the most valuable
+goods were stored.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His whole talk was of this land; full of piracies, plagues and poisonings. And
+often he narrated many passages in his own individual career, which were almost
+incredible, from the consideration that few men could have plunged into such
+infamous vices, and clung to them so long, without paying the death-penalty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in truth, he carried about with him the traces of these things, and the
+mark of a fearful end nigh at hand; like that of King Antiochus of Syria, who
+died a worse death, history says, than if he had been stung out of the world by
+wasps and hornets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing was left of this Jackson but the foul lees and dregs of a man; he was
+thin as a shadow; nothing but skin and bones; and sometimes used to complain,
+that it hurt him to sit on the hard chests. And I sometimes fancied, it was the
+consciousness of his miserable, broken-down condition, and the prospect of soon
+dying like a dog, in consequence of his sins, that made this poor wretch always
+eye me with such malevolence as he did. For I was young and handsome, at least
+my mother so thought me, and as soon as I became a little used to the sea, and
+shook off my low spirits somewhat, I began to have my old color in my cheeks,
+and, spite of misfortune, to appear well and hearty; whereas <i>he</i> was
+being consumed by an incurable malady, that was eating up his vitals, and was
+more fit for a hospital than a ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I am sometimes by nature inclined to indulge in unauthorized surmisings
+about the thoughts going on with regard to me, in the people I meet; especially
+if I have reason to think they dislike me; I will not put it down for a
+certainty that what I suspected concerning this Jackson relative to his
+thoughts of me, was really the truth. But only state my honest opinion, and how
+it struck me at the time; and even now, I think I was not wrong. And indeed,
+unless it was so, how could I account to myself, for the shudder that would run
+through me, when I caught this man gazing at me, as I often did; for he was apt
+to be dumb at times, and would sit with his eyes fixed, and his teeth set, like
+a man in the moody madness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I well remember the first time I saw him, and how I was startled at his eye,
+which was even then fixed upon me. He was standing at the ship&rsquo;s helm,
+being the first man that got there, when a steersman was called for by the
+pilot; for this Jackson was always on the alert for easy duties, and used to
+plead his delicate health as the reason for assuming them, as he did; though I
+used to think, that for a man in poor health, he was very swift on the legs; at
+least when a good place was to be jumped to; though that might only have been a
+sort of spasmodic exertion under strong inducements, which every one knows the
+greatest invalids will sometimes show.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And though the sailors were always very bitter against any thing like
+<i>sogering,</i> as they called it; that is, any thing that savored of a desire
+to get rid of downright hard work; yet, I observed that, though this Jackson
+was a notorious old <i>soger</i> the whole voyage (I mean, in all things not
+perilous to do, from which he was far from hanging back), and in truth was a
+great veteran that way, and one who must have passed unhurt through many
+campaigns; yet, they never presumed to call him to account in any way; or to
+let him so much as think, what they thought of his conduct. But I often heard
+them call him many hard names behind his back; and sometimes, too, when,
+perhaps, they had just been tenderly inquiring after his health before his
+face. They all stood in mortal fear of him; and cringed and fawned about him
+like so many spaniels; and used to rub his back, after he was undressed and
+lying in his bunk; and used to run up on deck to the cook-house, to warm some
+cold coffee for him; and used to fill his pipe, and give him chews of tobacco,
+and mend his jackets and trowsers; and used to watch, and tend, and nurse him
+every way. And all the time, he would sit scowling on them, and found fault
+with what they did; and I noticed, that those who did the most for him, and
+cringed the most before him, were the very ones he most abused; while two or
+three who held more aloof, he treated with a little consideration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is not for me to say, what it was that made a whole ship&rsquo;s company
+submit so to the whims of one poor miserable man like Jackson. I only know that
+so it was; but I have no doubt, that if he had had a blue eye in his head, or
+had had a different face from what he did have, they would not have stood in
+such awe of him. And it astonished me, to see that one of the seamen, a
+remarkably robust and good-humored young man from Belfast in Ireland, was a
+person of no mark or influence among the crew; but on the contrary was hooted
+at, and trampled upon, and made a butt and laughing-stock; and more than all,
+was continually being abused and snubbed by Jackson, who seemed to hate him
+cordially, because of his great strength and fine person, and particularly
+because of his red cheeks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But then, this Belfast man, although he had shipped for an <i>able-seaman,</i>
+was not much of a sailor; and that always lowers a man in the eyes of a
+ship&rsquo;s company; I mean, when he ships for an <i>able-seaman,</i> but is
+not able to do the duty of one. For sailors are of three
+classes&mdash;<i>able-seaman, ordinary-seaman,</i> and <i>boys;</i> and they
+receive different wages according to their rank. Generally, a ship&rsquo;s
+company of twelve men will only have five or six able seamen, who if they prove
+to understand their duty every way (and that is no small matter either, as I
+shall hereafter show, perhaps), are looked up to, and thought much of by the
+ordinary-seamen and boys, who reverence their very pea-jackets, and lay up
+their sayings in their hearts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But you must not think from this, that persons called <i>boys</i> aboard
+merchant-ships are all youngsters, though to be sure, I myself was called a
+<i>boy,</i> and a boy I was. No. In merchant-ships, a <i>boy</i> means a
+green-hand, a landsman on his first voyage. And never mind if he is old enough
+to be a grandfather, he is still called a <i>boy;</i> and boys&rsquo; work is
+put upon him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I am straying off from what I was going to say about Jackson&rsquo;s
+putting an end to the dispute between the two sailors in the forecastle after
+breakfast. After they had been disputing some time about who had been to sea
+the longest, Jackson told them to stop talking; and then bade one of them open
+his mouth; for, said he, I can tell a sailor&rsquo;s age just like a
+horse&rsquo;s&mdash;by his teeth. So the man laughed, and opened his mouth; and
+Jackson made him step out under the scuttle, where the light came down from
+deck; and then made him throw his head back, while he looked into it, and
+probed a little with his jackknife, like a baboon peering into a junk-bottle. I
+trembled for the poor fellow, just as if I had seen him under the hands of a
+crazy barber, making signs to cut his throat, and he all the while sitting
+stock still, with the lather on, to be shaved. For I watched Jackson&rsquo;s
+eye and saw it snapping, and a sort of going in and out, very quick, as if it
+were something like a forked tongue; and somehow, I felt as if he were longing
+to kill the man; but at last he grew more composed, and after concluding his
+examination, said, that the first man was the oldest sailor, for the ends of
+his teeth were the evenest and most worn down; which, he said, arose from
+eating so much hard sea-biscuit; and this was the reason he could tell a
+sailor&rsquo;s age like a horse&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this, every body made merry, and looked at each other, as much as to
+<i>say&mdash;come, boys, let&rsquo;s laugh;</i> and they did laugh; and
+declared it was a rare joke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was always the way with them. They made a point of shouting out, whenever
+Jackson said any thing with a grin; that being the sign to them that he himself
+thought it funny; though I heard many good jokes from others pass off without a
+smile; and once Jackson himself (for, to tell the truth, he sometimes had a
+comical way with him, that is, when his back did not ache) told a truly funny
+story, but with a grave face; when, not knowing how he meant it, whether for a
+laugh or otherwise, they all sat still, waiting what to do, and looking
+perplexed enough; till at last Jackson roared out upon them for a parcel of
+fools and idiots; and told them to their beards, how it was; that he had
+purposely put on his grave face, to see whether they would not look grave, too;
+even when he was telling something that ought to split their sides. And with
+that, he flouted, and jeered at them, and laughed them all to scorn; and broke
+out in such a rage, that his lips began to glue together at the corners with a
+fine white foam.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He seemed to be full of hatred and gall against every thing and every body in
+the world; as if all the world was one person, and had done him some dreadful
+harm, that was rankling and festering in his heart. Sometimes I thought he was
+really crazy; and often felt so frightened at him, that I thought of going to
+the captain about it, and telling him Jackson ought to be confined, lest he
+should do some terrible thing at last. But upon second thoughts, I always gave
+it up; for the captain would only have called me a fool, and sent me forward
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But you must not think that all the sailors were alike in abasing themselves
+before this man. No: there were three or four who used to stand up sometimes
+against him; and when he was absent at the wheel, would plot against him among
+the other sailors, and tell them what a shame and ignominy it was, that such a
+poor miserable wretch should be such a tyrant over much better men than
+himself. And they begged and conjured them as men, to put up with it no longer,
+but the very next time, that Jackson presumed to play the dictator, that they
+should all withstand him, and let him know his place. Two or three times nearly
+all hands agreed to it, with the exception of those who used to slink off
+during such discussions; and swore that they would not any more submit to being
+ruled by Jackson. But when the time came to make good their oaths, they were
+mum again, and let every thing go on the old way; so that those who had put
+them up to it, had to bear all the brunt of Jackson&rsquo;s wrath by
+themselves. And though these last would stick up a little at first, and even
+mutter something about a fight to Jackson; yet in the end, finding themselves
+unbefriended by the rest, they would gradually become silent, and leave the
+field to the tyrant, who would then fly out worse than ever, and dare them to
+do their worst, and jeer at them for white-livered poltroons, who did not have
+a mouthful of heart in them. At such times, there were no bounds to his
+contempt; and indeed, all the time he seemed to have even more contempt than
+hatred, for every body and every thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for me, I was but a boy; and at any time aboard ship, a boy is expected to
+keep quiet, do what he is bid, never presume to interfere, and seldom to talk,
+unless spoken to. For merchant sailors have a great idea of their dignity, and
+superiority to <i>greenhorns</i> and <i>landsmen,</i> who know nothing about a
+ship; and they seem to think, that an <i>able seaman</i> is a great man; at
+least a much greater man than a little boy. And the able seamen in the
+Highlander had such grand notions about their seamanship, that I almost thought
+that able seamen received diplomas, like those given at colleges; and were made
+a sort <i>A.M.S,</i> or <i>Masters of Arts.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But though I kept thus quiet, and had very little to say, and well knew that my
+best plan was to get along peaceably with every body, and indeed endure a good
+deal before showing fight, yet I could not avoid Jackson&rsquo;s evil eye, nor
+escape his bitter enmity. And his being my foe, set many of the rest against
+me; or at least they were afraid to speak out for me before Jackson; so that at
+last I found myself a sort of Ishmael in the ship, without a single friend or
+companion; and I began to feel a hatred growing up in me against the whole
+crew&mdash;so much so, that I prayed against it, that it might not master my
+heart completely, and so make a fiend of me, something like Jackson.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap13"></a>CHAPTER XIII.<br/>
+HE HAS A FINE DAY AT SEA, BEGINS TO LIKE IT; BUT CHANGES HIS MIND</h2>
+
+<p>
+The second day out of port, the decks being washed down and breakfast over, the
+watch was called, and the mate set us to work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a very bright day. The sky and water were both of the same deep hue; and
+the air felt warm and sunny; so that we threw off our jackets. I could hardly
+believe that I was sailing in the same ship I had been in during the night,
+when every thing had been so lonely and dim; and I could hardly imagine that
+this was the same ocean, now so beautiful and blue, that during part of the
+night-watch had rolled along so black and forbidding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were little traces of sunny clouds all over the heavens; and little
+fleeces of foam all over the sea; and the ship made a strange, musical noise
+under her bows, as she glided along, with her sails all still. It seemed a pity
+to go to work at such a time; and if we could only have sat in the windlass
+again; or if they would have let me go out on the bowsprit, and lay down
+between the <i>manropes</i> there, and look over at the fish in the water, and
+think of home, I should have been almost happy for a time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had now completely got over my sea-sickness, and felt very well; at least in
+my body, though my heart was far from feeling right; so that I could now look
+around me, and make observations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And truly, though we were at sea, there was much to behold and wonder at; to
+me, who was on my first voyage. What most amazed me was the sight of the great
+ocean itself, for we were out of sight of land. All round us, on both sides of
+the ship, ahead and astern, nothing was to be seen but
+water&mdash;water&mdash;water; not a single glimpse of green shore, not the
+smallest island, or speck of moss any where. Never did I realize till now what
+the ocean was: how grand and majestic, how solitary, and boundless, and
+beautiful and blue; for that day it gave no tokens of squalls or hurricanes,
+such as I had heard my father tell of; nor could I imagine, how any thing that
+seemed so playful and placid, could be lashed into rage, and troubled into
+rolling avalanches of foam, and great cascades of waves, such as I saw in the
+end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I looked at it so mild and sunny, I could not help calling to mind my little
+brother&rsquo;s face, when he was sleeping an infant in the cradle. It had just
+such a happy, careless, innocent look; and every happy little wave seemed
+gamboling about like a thoughtless little kid in a pasture; and seemed to look
+up in your face as it passed, as if it wanted to be patted and caressed. They
+seemed all live things with hearts in them, that could feel; and I almost felt
+grieved, as we sailed in among them, scattering them under our broad bows in
+sun-flakes, and riding over them like a great elephant among lambs. But what
+seemed perhaps the most strange to me of all, was a certain wonderful rising
+and falling of the sea; I do not mean the waves themselves, but a sort of wide
+heaving and swelling and sinking all over the ocean. It was something I can not
+very well describe; but I know very well what it was, and how it affected me.
+It made me almost dizzy to look at it; and yet I could not keep my eyes off it,
+it seemed so passing strange and wonderful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I felt as if in a dream all the time; and when I could shut the ship out,
+almost thought I was in some new, fairy world, and expected to hear myself
+called to, out of the clear blue air, or from the depths of the deep blue sea.
+But I did not have much leisure to indulge in such thoughts; for the men were
+now getting some <i>stun&rsquo;-sails</i> ready to hoist aloft, as the wind was
+getting fairer and fairer for us; and these stun&rsquo;-sails are light canvas
+which are spread at such times, away out beyond the ends of the yards, where
+they overhang the wide water, like the wings of a great bird.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For my own part, I could do but little to help the rest, not knowing the name
+of any thing, or the proper way to go about aught. Besides, I felt very dreamy,
+as I said before; and did not exactly know where, or what I was; every thing
+was so strange and new.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While the stun&rsquo;-sails were lying all tumbled upon the deck, and the
+sailors were fastening them to the booms, getting them ready to hoist, the mate
+ordered me to do a great many simple things, none of which could I comprehend,
+owing to the queer words he used; and then, seeing me stand quite perplexed and
+confounded, he would roar out at me, and call me all manner of names, and the
+sailors would laugh and wink to each other, but durst not go farther than that,
+for fear of the mate, who in his own presence would not let any body laugh at
+me but himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However, I tried to wake up as much as I could, and keep from dreaming with my
+eyes open; and being, at bottom, a smart, apt lad, at last I managed to learn a
+thing or two, so that I did not appear so much like a fool as at first.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+People who have never gone to sea for the first time as sailors, can not
+imagine how puzzling and confounding it is. It must be like going into a
+barbarous country, where they speak a strange dialect, and dress in strange
+clothes, and live in strange houses. For sailors have their own names, even for
+things that are familiar ashore; and if you call a thing by its shore name, you
+are laughed at for an ignoramus and a landlubber. This first day I speak of,
+the mate having ordered me to draw some water, I asked him where I was to get
+the pail; when I thought I had committed some dreadful crime; for he flew into
+a great passion, and said they never had any <i>pails</i> at sea, and then I
+learned that they were always called <i>buckets.</i> And once I was talking
+about sticking a little wooden peg into a bucket to stop a leak, when he flew
+out again, and said there were no <i>pegs</i> at sea, only <i>plugs.</i> And
+just so it was with every thing else.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But besides all this, there is such an infinite number of totally new names of
+new things to learn, that at first it seemed impossible for me to master them
+all. If you have ever seen a ship, you must have remarked what a thicket of
+ropes there are; and how they all seemed mixed and entangled together like a
+great skein of yarn. Now the very smallest of these ropes has its own proper
+name, and many of them are very lengthy, like the names of young royal princes,
+such as the <i>starboard-main-top-gallant-bow-line,</i> or the
+<i>larboard-fore-top-sail-clue-line.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I think it would not be a bad plan to have a grand new naming of a ship&rsquo;s
+ropes, as I have read, they once had a simplifying of the classes of plants in
+Botany. It is really wonderful how many names there are in the world. There is
+no counting the names, that surgeons and anatomists give to the various parts
+of the human body; which, indeed, is something like a ship; its bones being the
+stiff standing-rigging, and the sinews the small running ropes, that manage all
+the motions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wonder whether mankind could not get along without all these names, which
+keep increasing every day, and hour, and moment; till at last the very air will
+be full of them; and even in a great plain, men will be breathing each
+other&rsquo;s breath, owing to the vast multitude of words they use, that
+consume all the air, just as lamp-burners do gas. But people seem to have a
+great love for names; for to know a great many names, seems to look like
+knowing a good many things; though I should not be surprised, if there were a
+great many more names than things in the world. But I must quit this rambling,
+and return to my story.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last we hoisted the stun&rsquo;-sails up to the top-sail yards, and as soon
+as the vessel felt them, she gave a sort of bound like a horse, and the breeze
+blowing more and more, she went plunging along, shaking off the foam from her
+bows, like foam from a bridle-bit. Every mast and timber seemed to have a pulse
+in it that was beating with life and joy; and I felt a wild exulting in my own
+heart, and felt as if I would be glad to bound along so round the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then was I first conscious of a wonderful thing in me, that responded to all
+the wild commotion of the outer world; and went reeling on and on with the
+planets in their orbits, and was lost in one delirious throb at the center of
+the All. A wild bubbling and bursting was at my heart, as if a hidden spring
+had just gushed out there; and my blood ran tingling along my frame, like
+mountain brooks in spring freshets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes! yes! give me this glorious ocean life, this salt-sea life, this briny,
+foamy life, when the sea neighs and snorts, and you breathe the very breath
+that the great whales respire! Let me roll around the globe, let me rock upon
+the sea; let me race and pant out my life, with an eternal breeze astern, and
+an endless sea before!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But how soon these raptures abated, when after a brief idle interval, we were
+again set to work, and I had a vile commission to clean out the chicken coops,
+and make up the beds of the pigs in the long-boat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Miserable dog&rsquo;s life is this of the sea! commanded like a slave, and set
+to work like an ass! vulgar and brutal men lording it over me, as if I were an
+African in Alabama. Yes, yes, blow on, ye breezes, and make a speedy end to
+this abominable voyage!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap14"></a>CHAPTER XIV.<br/>
+HE CONTEMPLATES MAKING A SOCIAL CALL ON THE CAPTAIN IN HIS CABIN</h2>
+
+<p>
+What reminded me most forcibly of my ignominious condition, was the widely
+altered manner of the captain toward me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had thought him a fine, funny gentleman, full of mirth and good humor, and
+good will to seamen, and one who could not fail to appreciate the difference
+between me and the rude sailors among whom I was thrown. Indeed, I had made no
+doubt that he would in some special manner take me under his protection, and
+prove a kind friend and benefactor to me; as I had heard that some sea-captains
+are fathers to their crew; and so they are; but such fathers as Solomon&rsquo;s
+precepts tend to make&mdash;severe and chastising fathers, fathers whose sense
+of duty overcomes the sense of love, and who every day, in some sort, play the
+part of Brutus, who ordered his son away to execution, as I have read in our
+old family Plutarch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, I thought that Captain Riga, for Riga was his name, would be attentive and
+considerate to me, and strive to cheer me up, and comfort me in my
+lonesomeness. I did not even deem it at all impossible that he would invite me
+down into the cabin of a pleasant night, to ask me questions concerning my
+parents, and prospects in life; besides obtaining from me some anecdotes
+touching my great-uncle, the illustrious senator; or give me a slate and
+pencil, and teach me problems in navigation; or perhaps engage me at a game of
+chess. I even thought he might invite me to dinner on a sunny Sunday, and help
+me plentifully to the nice cabin fare, as knowing how distasteful the salt beef
+and pork, and hard biscuit of the forecastle must at first be to a boy like me,
+who had always lived ashore, and at home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I could not help regarding him with peculiar emotions, almost of tenderness
+and love, as the last visible link in the chain of associations which bound me
+to my home. For, while yet in port, I had seen him and Mr. Jones, my
+brother&rsquo;s friend, standing together and conversing; so that from the
+captain to my brother there was but one intermediate step; and my brother and
+mother and sisters were one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And this reminds me how often I used to pass by the places on deck, where I
+remembered Mr. Jones had stood when we first visited the ship lying at the
+wharf; and how I tried to convince myself that it was indeed true, that he had
+stood there, though now the ship was so far away on the wide Atlantic Ocean,
+and he perhaps was walking down Wall-street, or sitting reading the newspaper
+in his counting room, while poor I was so differently employed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When two or three days had passed without the captain&rsquo;s speaking to me in
+any way, or sending word into the forecastle that he wished me to drop into the
+cabin to pay my respects. I began to think whether I should not make the first
+advances, and whether indeed he did not expect it of me, since I was but a boy,
+and he a man; and perhaps that might have been the reason why he had not spoken
+to me yet, deeming it more proper and respectful for me to address him first. I
+thought he might be offended, too, especially if he were a proud man, with
+tender feelings. So one evening, a little before sundown, in the second
+dog-watch, when there was no more work to be done, I concluded to call and see
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After drawing a bucket of water, and having a good washing, to get off some of
+the chicken-coop stains, I went down into the forecastle to dress myself as
+neatly as I could. I put on a white shirt in place of my red one, and got into
+a pair of cloth trowsers instead of my duck ones, and put on my new pumps, and
+then carefully brushing my shooting-jacket, I put that on over all, so that
+upon the whole, I made quite a genteel figure, at least for a forecastle,
+though I would not have looked so well in a drawing-room.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the sailors saw me thus employed, they did not know what to make of it,
+and wanted to know whether I was dressing to go ashore; I told them no, for we
+were then out of sight of mind; but that I was going to pay my respects to the
+captain. Upon which they all laughed and shouted, as if I were a simpleton;
+though there seemed nothing so very simple in going to make an evening call
+upon a friend. When some of them tried to dissuade me, saying I was green and
+raw; but Jackson, who sat looking on, cried out, with a hideous grin,
+&ldquo;Let him go, let him go, men&mdash;he&rsquo;s a nice boy. Let him go; the
+captain has some nuts and raisins for him.&rdquo; And so he was going on, when
+one of his violent fits of coughing seized him, and he almost choked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I was about leaving the forecastle, I happened to look at my hands, and
+seeing them stained all over of a deep yellow, for that morning the mate had
+set me to tarring some strips of canvas for the rigging I thought it would
+never do to present myself before a gentleman that way; so for want of lads, I
+slipped on a pair of woolen mittens, which my mother had knit for me to carry
+to sea. As I was putting them on, Jackson asked me whether he shouldn&rsquo;t
+call a carriage; and another bade me not forget to present his best respects to
+the skipper. I left them all tittering, and coming on deck was passing the
+cook-house, when the old cook called after me, saying I had forgot my cane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I did not heed their impudence, and was walking straight toward the
+cabin-door on the quarter-deck, when the chief mate met me. I touched my hat,
+and was passing him, when, after staring at me till I thought his eyes would
+burst out, he all at once caught me by the collar, and with a voice of thunder,
+wanted to know what I meant by playing such tricks aboard a ship that he was
+mate of? I told him to let go of me, or I would complain to my friend the
+captain, whom I intended to visit that evening. Upon this he gave me such a
+whirl round, that I thought the Gulf Stream was in my head; and then shoved me
+forward, roaring out I know not what. Meanwhile the sailors were all standing
+round the windlass looking aft, mightily tickled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seeing I could not effect my object that night, I thought it best to defer it
+for the present; and returning among the sailors, Jackson asked me how I had
+found the captain, and whether the next time I went, I would not take a friend
+along and introduce him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The upshot of this business was, that before I went to sleep that night, I felt
+well satisfied that it was not customary for sailors to call on the captain in
+the cabin; and I began to have an inkling of the fact, that I had acted like a
+fool; but it all arose from my ignorance of sea usages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here I may as well state, that I never saw the inside of the cabin during
+the whole interval that elapsed from our sailing till our return to New York;
+though I often used to get a peep at it through a little pane of glass, set in
+the house on deck, just before the helm, where a watch was kept hanging for the
+helmsman to strike the half hours by, with his little bell in the binnacle,
+where the compass was. And it used to be the great amusement of the sailors to
+look in through the pane of glass, when they stood at the wheel, and watch the
+proceedings in the cabin; especially when the steward was setting the table for
+dinner, or the captain was lounging over a decanter of wine on a little
+mahogany stand, or playing the game called <i>solitaire,</i> at cards, of an
+evening; for at times he was all alone with his dignity; though, as will ere
+long be shown, he generally had one pleasant companion, whose society he did
+not dislike.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The day following my attempt to drop in at the cabin, I happened to be making
+fast a rope on the quarter-deck, when the captain suddenly made his appearance,
+promenading up and down, and smoking a cigar. He looked very good-humored and
+amiable, and it being just after his dinner, I thought that this, to be sure,
+was just the chance I wanted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I waited a little while, thinking he would speak to me himself; but as he did
+not, I went up to him, and began by saying it was a very pleasant day, and
+hoped he was very well. I never saw a man fly into such a rage; I thought he
+was going to knock me down; but after standing speechless awhile, he all at
+once plucked his cap from his head and threw it at me. I don&rsquo;t know what
+impelled me, but I ran to the lee-scuppers where it fell, picked it up, and
+gave it to him with a bow; when the mate came running up, and thrust me forward
+again; and after he had got me as far as the windlass, he wanted to know
+whether I was crazy or not; for if I was, he would put me in irons right off,
+and have done with it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I assured him I was in my right mind, and knew perfectly well that I had
+been treated in the most rude and un-gentlemanly manner both by him and Captain
+Riga. Upon this, he rapped out a great oath, and told me if I ever repeated
+what I had done that evening, or ever again presumed so much as to lift my hat
+to the captain, he would tie me into the rigging, and keep me there until I
+learned better manners. &ldquo;You are very green,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;but
+I&rsquo;ll ripen you.&rdquo; Indeed this chief mate seemed to have the keeping
+of the dignity of the captain; who, in some sort, seemed too dignified
+personally to protect his own dignity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thought this strange enough, to be reprimanded, and charged with rudeness for
+an act of common civility. However, seeing how matters stood, I resolved to let
+the captain alone for the future, particularly as he had shown himself so
+deficient in the ordinary breeding of a gentleman. And I could hardly credit
+it, that this was the same man who had been so very civil, and polite, and
+witty, when Mr. Jones and I called upon him in port.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this astonishment of mine was much increased, when some days after, a storm
+came upon us, and the captain rushed out of the cabin in his nightcap, and
+nothing else but his shirt on; and leaping up on the poop, began to jump up and
+down, and curse and swear, and call the men aloft all manner of hard names,
+just like a common loafer in the street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Besides all this, too, I noticed that while we were at sea, he wore nothing but
+old shabby clothes, very different from the glossy suit I had seen him in at
+our first interview, and after that on the steps of the City Hotel, where he
+always boarded when in New York. Now, he wore nothing but old-fashioned
+snuff-colored coats, with high collars and short waists; and faded,
+short-legged pantaloons, very tight about the knees; and vests, that did not
+conceal his waistbands, owing to their being so short, just like a little
+boy&rsquo;s. And his hats were all caved in, and battered, as if they had been
+knocked about in a cellar; and his boots were sadly patched. Indeed, I began to
+think that he was but a shabby fellow after all; particularly as his whiskers
+lost their gloss, and he went days together without shaving; and his hair, by a
+sort of miracle, began to grow of a pepper and salt color, which might have
+been owing, though, to his discontinuing the use of some kind of dye while at
+sea. I put him down as a sort of impostor; and while ashore, a gentleman on
+false pretenses; for no gentleman would have treated another gentleman as he
+did me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, Captain Riga, thought I, you are no gentleman, and you know it!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap15"></a>CHAPTER XV.<br/>
+THE MELANCHOLY STATE OF HIS WARDROBE</h2>
+
+<p>
+And now that I have been speaking of the captain&rsquo;s old clothes, I may as
+well speak of mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was very early in the month of June that we sailed; and I had greatly
+rejoiced that it was that time of the year; for it would be warm and pleasant
+upon the ocean, I thought; and my voyage would be like a summer excursion to
+the sea shore, for the benefit of the salt water, and a change of scene and
+society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I had not given myself much concern about what I should wear; and deemed it
+wholly unnecessary to provide myself with a great outfit of pilot-cloth
+jackets, and browsers, and Guernsey frocks, and oil-skin suits, and sea-boots,
+and many other things, which old seamen carry in their chests. But one reason
+was, that I did not have the money to buy them with, even if I had wanted to.
+So in addition to the clothes I had brought from home, I had only bought a red
+shirt, a tarpaulin hat, and a belt and knife, as I have previously related,
+which gave me a sea outfit, something like the Texan rangers&rsquo;, whose
+uniform, they say, consists of a shirt collar and a pair of spurs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I was not many days at sea, when I found that my shore clothing, or
+<i>&ldquo;long togs,&rdquo;</i> as the sailors call them, were but ill adapted
+to the life I now led. When I went aloft, at my yard-arm gymnastics, my
+pantaloons were all the time ripping and splitting in every direction,
+particularly about the seat, owing to their not being cut sailor-fashion, with
+low waistbands, and to wear without suspenders. So that I was often placed in
+most unpleasant predicaments, straddling the rigging, sometimes in plain sight
+of the cabin, with my table linen exposed in the most inelegant and
+ungentlemanly manner possible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And worse than all, my best pair of pantaloons, and the pair I most prided
+myself upon, was a very conspicuous and remarkable looking pair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had had them made to order by our village tailor, a little fat man, very thin
+in the legs, and who used to say he imported the latest fashions direct from
+Paris; though all the fashion plates in his shop were very dirty with
+fly-marks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, this tailor made the pantaloons I speak of, and while he had them in
+hand, I used to call and see him two or three times a day to try them on, and
+hurry him forward; for he was an old man with large round spectacles, and could
+not see very well, and had no one to help him but a sick wife, with five
+grandchildren to take care of; and besides that, he was such a great
+snuff-taker, that it interfered with his business; for he took several pinches
+for every stitch, and would sit snuffing and blowing his nose over my
+pantaloons, till I used to get disgusted with him. Now, this old tailor had
+shown me the pattern, after which he intended to make my pantaloons; but I
+improved upon it, and bade him have a slit on the outside of each leg, at the
+foot, to button up with a row of six brass bell buttons; for a grown-up cousin
+of mine, who was a great sportsman, used to wear a beautiful pair of
+pantaloons, made precisely in that way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And these were the very pair I now had at sea; the sailors made a great deal of
+fun of them, and were all the time calling on each other to &ldquo;twig&rdquo;
+them; and they would ask me to lend them a button or two, by way of a joke; and
+then they would ask me if I was not a soldier. Showing very plainly that they
+had no idea that my pantaloons were a very genteel pair, made in the height of
+the sporting fashion, and copied from my cousin&rsquo;s, who was a young man of
+fortune and drove a tilbury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When my pantaloons ripped and tore, as I have said, I did my best to mend and
+patch them; but not being much of a sempstress, the more I patched the more
+they parted; because I put my patches on, without heeding the joints of the
+legs, which only irritated my poor pants the more, and put them out of temper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor must I forget my boots, which were almost new when I left home. They had
+been my Sunday boots, and fitted me to a charm. I never had had a pair of boots
+that I liked better; I used to turn my toes out when I walked in them, unless
+it was night time, when no one could see me, and I had something else to think
+of; and I used to keep looking at them during church; so that I lost a good
+deal of the sermon. In a word, they were a beautiful pair of boots. But all
+this only unfitted them the more for sea-service; as I soon discovered. They
+had very high heels, which were all the time tripping me in the rigging, and
+several times came near pitching me overboard; and the salt water made them
+shrink in such a manner, that they pinched me terribly about the instep; and I
+was obliged to gash them cruelly, which went to my very heart. The legs were
+quite long, coming a good way up toward my knees, and the edges were mounted
+with red morocco. The sailors used to call them my
+<i>&ldquo;gaff-topsail-boots.&rdquo;</i> And sometimes they used to call me
+&ldquo;Boots,&rdquo; and sometimes &ldquo;Buttons,&rdquo; on account of the
+ornaments on my pantaloons and shooting-jacket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, I took their advice, and <i>&ldquo;razeed&rdquo;</i> them, as they
+phrased it. That is, I amputated the legs, and shaved off the heels to the bare
+soles; which, however, did not much improve them, for it made my feet feel flat
+as flounders, and besides, brought me down in the world, and made me slip and
+slide about the decks, as I used to at home, when I wore straps on the ice.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for my tarpaulin hat, it was a very cheap one; and therefore proved a real
+sham and shave; it leaked like an old shingle roof; and in a rain storm, kept
+my hair wet and disagreeable. Besides, from lying down on deck in it, during
+the night watches, it got bruised and battered, and lost all its beauty; so
+that it was unprofitable every way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I had almost forgotten my shooting-jacket, which was made of moleskin.
+Every day, it grew smaller and smaller, particularly after a rain, until at
+last I thought it would completely exhale, and leave nothing but the bare
+seams, by way of a skeleton, on my back. It became unspeakably unpleasant, when
+we got into rather cold weather, crossing the Banks of Newfoundland, when the
+only way I had to keep warm during the night, was to pull on my waistcoat and
+my roundabout, and then clap the shooting-jacket over all. This made it pinch
+me under the arms, and it vexed, irritated, and tormented me every way; and
+used to incommode my arms seriously when I was pulling the ropes; so much so,
+that the mate asked me once if I had the cramp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I may as well here glance at some trials and tribulations of a similar kind. I
+had no mattress, or bed-clothes, of any sort; for the thought of them had never
+entered my mind before going to sea; so that I was obliged to sleep on the bare
+boards of my bunk; and when the ship pitched violently, and almost stood upon
+end, I must have looked like an Indian baby tied to a plank, and hung up
+against a tree like a crucifix.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have already mentioned my total want of table-tools; never dreaming, that, in
+this respect, going to sea as a sailor was something like going to a
+boarding-school, where you must furnish your own spoon and knife, fork, and
+napkin. But at length, I was so happy as to barter with a steerage passenger a
+silk handkerchief of mine for a half-gallon iron pot, with hooks to it, to hang
+on a grate; and this pot I used to present at the cook-house for my allowance
+of coffee and tea. It gave me a good deal of trouble, though, to keep it clean,
+being much disposed to rust; and the hooks sometimes scratched my face when I
+was drinking; and it was unusually large and heavy; so that my breakfasts were
+deprived of all ease and satisfaction, and became a toil and a labor to me. And
+I was forced to use the same pot for my bean-soup, three times a week, which
+imparted to it a bad flavor for coffee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I can not tell how I really suffered in many ways for my improvidence and
+heedlessness, in going to sea so ill provided with every thing calculated to
+make my situation at all comfortable, or even tolerable. In time, my wretched
+&ldquo;long togs&rdquo; began to drop off my back, and I looked like a Sam
+Patch, shambling round the deck in my rags and the wreck of my
+gaff-topsail-boots. I often thought what my friends at home would have said, if
+they could but get one peep at me. But I hugged myself in my miserable
+shooting-jacket, when I considered that that degradation and shame never could
+overtake me; yet, I thought it a galling mockery, when I remembered that my
+sisters had promised to tell all inquiring friends, that Wellingborough had
+gone <i>&ldquo;abroad&rdquo;</i> just as if I was visiting Europe on a tour
+with my tutor, as poor simple Mr. Jones had hinted to the captain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Still, in spite of the melancholy which sometimes overtook me, there were
+several little incidents that made me forget myself in the contemplation of the
+strange and to me most wonderful sights of the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And perhaps nothing struck into me such a feeling of wild romance, as a view of
+the first vessel we spoke. It was of a clear sunny afternoon, and she came
+bearing down upon us, a most beautiful sight, with all her sails spread wide.
+She came very near, and passed under our stern; and as she leaned over to the
+breeze, showed her decks fore and aft; and I saw the strange sailors grouped
+upon the forecastle, and the cook looking out of his cook-house with a ladle in
+his hand, and the captain in a green jacket sitting on the taffrail with a
+speaking-trumpet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here, had this vessel come out of the infinite blue ocean, with all these
+human beings on board, and the smoke tranquilly mounting up into the sea-air
+from the cook&rsquo;s funnel as if it were a chimney in a city; and every thing
+looking so cool, and calm, and of-course, in the midst of what to me, at least,
+seemed a superlative marvel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hoisted at her mizzen-peak was a red flag, with a turreted white castle in the
+middle, which looked foreign enough, and made me stare all the harder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our captain, who had put on another hat and coat, and was lounging in an
+elegant attitude on the poop, now put his high polished brass trumpet to his
+mouth, and said in a very rude voice for conversation, <i>&ldquo;Where
+from?&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To which the other captain rejoined with some outlandish Dutch gibberish, of
+which we could only make out, that the ship belonged to Hamburg, as her flag
+denoted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Hamburg!</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bless my soul! and here I am on the great Atlantic Ocean, actually beholding a
+ship from Holland! It was passing strange. In my intervals of leisure from
+other duties, I followed the strange ship till she was quite a little speck in
+the distance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not but be struck with the manner of the two sea-captains during their
+brief interview. Seated at their ease on their respective &ldquo;poops&rdquo;
+toward the stern of their ships, while the sailors were obeying their behests;
+they touched hats to each other, exchanged compliments, and drove on, with all
+the indifference of two Arab horsemen accosting each other on an airing in the
+Desert. To them, I suppose, the great Atlantic Ocean was a puddle.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap16"></a>CHAPTER XVI.<br/>
+AT DEAD OF NIGHT HE IS SENT UP TO LOOSE THE MAIN-SKYSAIL</h2>
+
+<p>
+I must now run back a little, and tell of my first going aloft at middle watch,
+when the sea was quite calm, and the breeze was mild.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The order was given to loose the <i>main-skysail,</i> which is the fifth and
+highest sail from deck. It was a very small sail, and from the forecastle
+looked no bigger than a cambric pocket-handkerchief. But I have heard that some
+ships carry still smaller sails, above the skysail; called <i>moon-sails,</i>
+and <i>skyscrapers,</i> and <i>cloud-rakers.</i> But I shall not believe in
+them till I see them; a <i>skysail</i> seems high enough in all conscience; and
+the idea of any thing higher than that, seems preposterous. Besides, it looks
+almost like tempting heaven, to brush the very firmament so, and almost put the
+eyes of the stars out; when a flaw of wind, too, might very soon take the
+conceit out of these cloud-defying <i>cloud-rakers.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, when the order was passed to loose the skysail, an old Dutch sailor came
+up to me, and said, &ldquo;Buttons, my boy, it&rsquo;s high time you be doing
+something; and it&rsquo;s boy&rsquo;s business, Buttons, to loose de royals,
+and not old men&rsquo;s business, like me. Now, d&rsquo;ye see dat leelle
+fellow way up dare? <i>dare,</i> just behind dem stars dare: well, tumble up,
+now, Buttons, I zay, and looze him; way you go, Buttons.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All the rest joining in, and seeming unanimous in the opinion, that it was high
+time for me to be stirring myself, and doing <i>boy&rsquo;s business,</i> as
+they called it, I made no more ado, but jumped into the rigging. Up I went, not
+daring to look down, but keeping my eyes glued, as it were, to the shrouds, as
+I ascended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a long road up those stairs, and I began to pant and breathe hard,
+before I was half way. But I kept at it till I got to the <i>Jacob&rsquo;s
+Ladder;</i> and they may well call it so, for it took me almost into the
+clouds; and at last, to my own amazement, I found myself hanging on the
+skysail-yard, holding on might and main to the mast; and curling my feet round
+the rigging, as if they were another pair of hands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a few moments I stood awe-stricken and mute. I could not see far out upon
+the ocean, owing to the darkness of the night; and from my lofty perch, the sea
+looked like a great, black gulf, hemmed in, all round, by beetling black
+cliffs. I seemed all alone; treading the midnight clouds; and every second,
+expected to find myself falling&mdash;falling&mdash;falling, as I have felt
+when the nightmare has been on me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could but just perceive the ship below me, like a long narrow plank in the
+water; and it did not seem to belong at all to the yard, over which I was
+hanging. A gull, or some sort of sea-fowl, was flying round the truck over my
+head, within a few yards of my face; and it almost frightened me to hear it; it
+seemed so much like a spirit, at such a lofty and solitary height.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though there was a pretty smooth sea, and little wind; yet, at this extreme
+elevation, the ship&rsquo;s motion was very great; so that when the ship rolled
+one way, I felt something as a fly must feel, walking the ceiling; and when it
+rolled the other way, I felt as if I was hanging along a slanting pine-tree.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But presently I heard a distant, hoarse noise from below; and though I could
+not make out any thing intelligible, I knew it was the mate hurrying me. So in
+a nervous, trembling desperation, I went to casting off the <i>gaskets,</i> or
+lines tying up the sail; and when all was ready, sung out as I had been told,
+to <i>&ldquo;hoist away!&rdquo;</i> And hoist they did, and me too along with
+the yard and sail; for I had no time to get off, they were so unexpectedly
+quick about it. It seemed like magic; there I was, going up higher and higher;
+the yard rising under me, as if it were alive, and no soul in sight. Without
+knowing it at the time, I was in a good deal of danger, but it was so dark that
+I could not see well enough to feel afraid&mdash;at least on that account;
+though I felt frightened enough in a promiscuous way. I only held on hard, and
+made good the saying of old sailors, that the last person to fall overboard
+from the rigging is a landsman, because he grips the ropes so fiercely; whereas
+old tars are less careful, and sometimes pay the penalty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this feat, I got down rapidly on deck, and received something like a
+compliment from Max the Dutchman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This man was perhaps the best natured man among the crew; at any rate, he
+treated me better than the rest did; and for that reason he deserves some
+mention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Max was an old bachelor of a sailor, very precise about his wardrobe, and
+prided himself greatly upon his seamanship, and entertained some
+straight-laced, old-fashioned notions about the duties of boys at sea. His
+hair, whiskers, and cheeks were of a fiery red; and as he wore a red shirt, he
+was altogether the most combustible looking man I ever saw.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor did his appearance belie him; for his temper was very inflammable; and at a
+word, he would explode in a shower of hard words and imprecations. It was Max
+that several times set on foot those conspiracies against Jackson, which I have
+spoken of before; but he ended by paying him a grumbling homage, full of
+resentful reservations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Max sometimes manifested some little interest in my welfare; and often
+discoursed concerning the sorry figure I would cut in my tatters when we got to
+Liverpool, and the discredit it would bring on the American Merchant Service;
+for like all European seamen in American ships, Max prided himself not a little
+upon his naturalization as a Yankee, and if he could, would have been very glad
+to have passed himself off for a born native.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But notwithstanding his grief at the prospect of my reflecting discredit upon
+his adopted country, he never offered to better my wardrobe, by loaning me any
+thing from his own well-stored chest. Like many other well-wishers, he
+contented him with sympathy. Max also betrayed some anxiety to know whether I
+knew how to dance; lest, when the ship&rsquo;s company went ashore, I should
+disgrace them by exposing my awkwardness in some of the sailor saloons. But I
+relieved his anxiety on that head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a great scold, and fault-finder, and often took me to task about my
+short-comings; but herein, he was not alone; for every one had a finger, or a
+thumb, and sometimes both hands, in my unfortunate pie.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap17"></a>CHAPTER XVII.<br/>
+THE COOK AND STEWARD</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was on a Sunday we made the Banks of Newfoundland; a drizzling, foggy,
+clammy Sunday. You could hardly see the water, owing to the mist and vapor upon
+it; and every thing was so flat and calm, I almost thought we must have somehow
+got back to New York, and were lying at the foot of Wall-street again in a
+rainy twilight. The decks were dripping with wet, so that in the dense fog, it
+seemed as if we were standing on the roof of a house in a shower.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a most miserable Sunday; and several of the sailors had twinges of the
+rheumatism, and pulled on their monkey-jackets. As for Jackson, he was all the
+time rubbing his back and snarling like a dog.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I tried to recall all my pleasant, sunny Sundays ashore; and tried to imagine
+what they were doing at home; and whether our old family friend, Mr.
+Bridenstoke, would drop in, with his silver-mounted tasseled cane, between
+churches, as he used to; and whether he would inquire about myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it would not do. I could hardly realize that it was Sunday at all. Every
+thing went on pretty much the same as before. There was no church to go to; no
+place to take a walk in; no friend to call upon. I began to think it must be a
+sort of second Saturday; a foggy Saturday, when school-boys stay at home
+reading Robinson Crusoe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The only man who seemed to be taking his ease that day, was our black cook; who
+according to the invariable custom at sea, always went by the name of <i>the
+doctor.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And <i>doctors,</i> cooks certainly are, the very best medicos in the world;
+for what pestilent pills and potions of the Faculty are half so serviceable to
+man, and health-and-strength-giving, as roasted lamb and green peas, say, in
+spring; and roast beef and cranberry sauce in winter? Will a dose of calomel
+and jalap do you as much good? Will a bolus build up a fainting man? Is there
+any satisfaction in dining off a powder? But these doctors of the frying-pan
+sometimes loll men off by a surfeit; or give them the headache, at least. Well,
+what then? No matter. For if with their most goodly and ten times jolly
+medicines, they now and then fill our nights with tribulations, and abridge our
+days, what of the social homicides perpetrated by the Faculty? And when you die
+by a pill-doctor&rsquo;s hands, it is never with a sweet relish in your mouth,
+as though you died by a frying-pan-doctor; but your last breath villainously
+savors of ipecac and rhubarb. Then, what charges they make for the abominable
+lunches they serve out so stingily! One of their bills for boluses would keep
+you in good dinners a twelve-month.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, our doctor was a serious old fellow, much given to metaphysics, and used
+to talk about original sin. All that Sunday morning, he sat over his boiling
+pots, reading out of a book which was very much soiled and covered with grease
+spots: for he kept it stuck into a little leather strap, nailed to the keg
+where he kept the fat skimmed off the water in which the salt beef was cooked.
+I could hardly believe my eyes when I found this book was the Bible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I loved to peep in upon him, when he was thus absorbed; for his smoky studio or
+study was a strange-looking place enough; not more than five feet square, and
+about as many high; a mere box to hold the stove, the pipe of which stuck out
+of the roof.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Within, it was hung round with pots and pans; and on one side was a little
+looking-glass, where he used to shave; and on a small shelf were his shaving
+tools, and a comb and brush. Fronting the stove, and very close to it, was a
+sort of narrow shelf, where he used to sit with his legs spread out very wide,
+to keep them from scorching; and there, with his book in one hand, and a pewter
+spoon in the other, he sat all that Sunday morning, stirring up his pots, and
+studying away at the same time; seldom taking his eye off the page. Reading
+must have been very hard work for him; for he muttered to himself quite loud as
+he read; and big drops of sweat would stand upon his brow, and roll off, till
+they hissed on the hot stove before him. But on the day I speak of, it was no
+wonder that he got perplexed, for he was reading a mysterious passage in the
+Book of Chronicles. Being aware that I knew how to read, he called me as I was
+passing his premises, and read the passage over, demanding an explanation. I
+told him it was a mystery that no one could explain; not even a parson. But
+this did not satisfy him, and I left him poring over it still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He must have been a member of one of those negro churches, which are to be
+found in New York. For when we lay at the wharf, I remembered that a committee
+of three reverend looking old darkies, who, besides their natural canonicals,
+wore quaker-cut black coats, and broad-brimmed black hats, and white
+neck-cloths; these colored gentlemen called upon him, and remained conversing
+with him at his cookhouse door for more than an hour; and before they went away
+they stepped inside, and the sliding doors were closed; and then we heard some
+one reading aloud and preaching; and after that a psalm was sung and a
+benediction given; when the door opened again, and the congregation came out in
+a great perspiration; owing, I suppose, to the chapel being so small, and there
+being only one seat besides the stove.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But notwithstanding his religious studies and meditations, this old fellow used
+to use some bad language occasionally; particularly of cold, wet stormy
+mornings, when he had to get up before daylight and make his fire; with the sea
+breaking over the bows, and now and then dashing into his stove.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, under the circumstances, you could not blame him much, if he did rip a
+little, for it would have tried old Job&rsquo;s temper, to be set to work
+making a fire in the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Without being at all neat about his premises, this old cook was very particular
+about them; he had a warm love and affection for his cook-house. In fair
+weather, he spread the skirt of an old jacket before the door, by way of a mat;
+and screwed a small ring-bolt into the door for a knocker; and wrote his name,
+&ldquo;Mr. Thompson,&rdquo; over it, with a bit of red chalk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men said he lived round the corner of <i>Forecastle-square,</i> opposite
+the <i>Liberty Pole;</i> because his cook-house was right behind the foremast,
+and very near the quarters occupied by themselves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sailors have a great fancy for naming things that way on shipboard. When a man
+is hung at sea, which is always done from one of the lower yard-arms, they say
+he <i>&ldquo;takes a walk up Ladder-lane, and down Hemp-street.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Thompson was a great crony of the steward&rsquo;s, who, being a handsome,
+dandy mulatto, that had once been a barber in West-Broadway, went by the name
+of Lavender. I have mentioned the gorgeous turban he wore when Mr. Jones and I
+visited the captain in the cabin. He never wore that turban at sea, though; but
+sported an uncommon head of frizzled hair, just like the large, round brush,
+used for washing windows, called a <i>Pope&rsquo;s Head.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He kept it well perfumed with Cologne water, of which he had a large supply,
+the relics of his West-Broadway stock in trade. His clothes, being mostly
+cast-off suits of the captain of a London liner, whom he had sailed with upon
+many previous voyages, were all in the height of the exploded fashions, and of
+every kind of color and cut. He had claret-colored suits, and snuff-colored
+suits, and red velvet vests, and buff and brimstone pantaloons, and several
+full suits of black, which, with his dark-colored face, made him look quite
+clerical; like a serious young colored gentleman of Barbados, about to take
+orders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He wore an uncommon large pursy ring on his forefinger, with something he
+called a real diamond in it; though it was very dim, and looked more like a
+glass eye than any thing else. He was very proud of his ring, and was always
+calling your attention to something, and pointing at it with his ornamented
+finger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a sentimental sort of a darky, and read the <i>&ldquo;Three
+Spaniards,&rdquo;</i> and <i>&ldquo;Charlotte Temple,&rdquo;</i> and carried a
+lock of frizzled hair in his vest pocket, which he frequently volunteered to
+show to people, with his handkerchief to his eyes. Every fine evening, about
+sunset, these two, the cook and steward, used to sit on the little shelf in the
+cook-house, leaning up against each other like the Siamese twins, to keep from
+falling off, for the shelf was very short; and there they would stay till after
+dark, smoking their pipes, and gossiping about the events that had happened
+during the day in the cabin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And sometimes Mr. Thompson would take down his Bible, and read a chapter for
+the edification of Lavender, whom he knew to be a sad profligate and gay
+deceiver ashore; addicted to every youthful indiscretion. He would read over to
+him the story of Joseph and Potiphar&rsquo;s wife; and hold Joseph up to him as
+a young man of excellent principles, whom he ought to imitate, and not be
+guilty of his indiscretion any more. And Lavender would look serious, and say
+that he knew it was all true&mdash;he was a wicked youth, he knew it&mdash;he
+had broken a good many hearts, and many eyes were weeping for him even then,
+both in New York, and Liverpool, and London, and Havre. But how could he help
+it? He hadn&rsquo;t made his handsome face, and fine head of hair, and graceful
+figure. It was not <i>he,</i> but the others, that were to blame; for his
+bewitching person turned all heads and subdued all hearts, wherever he went.
+And then he would look very serious and penitent, and go up to the little
+glass, and pass his hands through his hair, and see how his whiskers were
+coming on.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap18"></a>CHAPTER XVIII.<br/>
+HE ENDEAVORS TO IMPROVE HIS MIND; AND TELLS OF ONE BLUNT AND HIS DREAM
+BOOK</h2>
+
+<p>
+On the Sunday afternoon I spoke of, it was my watch below, and I thought I
+would spend it profitably, in improving my mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My bunk was an upper one; and right over the head of it was a
+<i>bull&rsquo;s-eye,</i> or circular piece of thick ground glass, inserted into
+the deck to give light. It was a dull, dubious light, though; and I often found
+myself looking up anxiously to see whether the bull&rsquo;s-eye had not
+suddenly been put out; for whenever any one trod on it, in walking the deck, it
+was momentarily quenched; and what was still worse, sometimes a coil of rope
+would be thrown down on it, and stay there till I dressed myself and went up to
+remove it&mdash;a kind of interruption to my studies which annoyed me very
+much, when diligently occupied in reading.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However, I was glad of any light at all, down in that gloomy hole, where we
+burrowed like rabbits in a warren; and it was the happiest time I had, when all
+my messmates were asleep, and I could lie on my back, during a forenoon watch
+below, and read in comparative quiet and seclusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had already read two books loaned to me by Max, to whose share they had
+fallen, in dividing the effects of the sailor who had jumped overboard. One was
+an account of Shipwrecks and Disasters at Sea, and the other was a large black
+volume, with <i>Delirium Tremens</i> in great gilt letters on the back. This
+proved to be a popular treatise on the subject of that disease; and I
+remembered seeing several copies in the sailor book-stalls about Fulton Market,
+and along South-street, in New York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this Sunday I got out a book, from which I expected to reap great profit
+and sound instruction. It had been presented to me by Mr. Jones, who had quite
+a library, and took down this book from a top shelf, where it lay very dusty.
+When he gave it to me, he said, that although I was going to sea, I must not
+forget the importance of a good education; and that there was hardly any
+situation in life, however humble and depressed, or dark and gloomy, but one
+might find leisure in it to store his mind, and build himself up in the exact
+sciences. And he added, that though it <i>did</i> look rather unfavorable for
+my future prospects, to be going to sea as a common sailor so early in life;
+yet, it would no doubt turn out for my benefit in the end; and, at any rate, if
+I would only take good care of myself, would give me a sound constitution, if
+nothing more; and <i>that</i> was not to be undervalued, for how many very rich
+men would give all their bonds and mortgages for my boyish robustness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He added, that I need not expect any light, trivial work, that was merely
+entertaining, and nothing more; but here I would find entertainment and
+edification beautifully and harmoniously combined; and though, at first, I
+might possibly find it dull, yet, if I perused the book thoroughly, it would
+soon discover hidden charms and unforeseen attractions; besides teaching me,
+perhaps, the true way to retrieve the poverty of my family, and again make them
+all well-to-do in the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Saying this, he handed it to me, and I blew the dust off, and looked at the
+back: <i>&ldquo;Smith&rsquo;s Wealth of Nations.&rdquo;</i> This not satisfying
+me, I glanced at the title page, and found it was an <i>&ldquo;Enquiry into the
+Nature and Causes&rdquo;</i> of the alleged wealth of nations. But happening to
+look further down, I caught sight of <i>&ldquo;Aberdeen,&rdquo;</i> where the
+book was printed; and thinking that any thing from Scotland, a foreign country,
+must prove some way or other pleasing to me, I thanked Mr. Jones very kindly,
+and promised to peruse the volume carefully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, now, lying in my bunk, I began the book methodically, at page number one,
+resolved not to permit a few flying glimpses into it, taken previously, to
+prevent me from making regular approaches to the gist and body of the book,
+where I fancied lay something like the philosopher&rsquo;s stone, a secret
+talisman, which would transmute even pitch and tar to silver and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pleasant, though vague visions of future opulence floated before me, as I
+commenced the first chapter, entitled <i>&ldquo;Of the causes of improvement in
+the productive power of labor.&rdquo;</i> Dry as crackers and cheese, to be
+sure; and the chapter itself was not much better. But this was only getting
+initiated; and if I read on, the grand secret would be opened to me. So I read
+on and on, about <i>&ldquo;wages and profits of labor,&rdquo;</i> without
+getting any profits myself for my pains in perusing it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dryer and dryer; the very leaves smelt of saw-dust; till at last I drank some
+water, and went at it again. But soon I had to give it up for lost work; and
+thought that the old backgammon board, we had at home, lettered on the back,
+<i>&ldquo;The History of Rome&rdquo;</i> was quite as full of matter, and a
+great deal more entertaining. I wondered whether Mr. Jones had ever read the
+volume himself; and could not help remembering, that he had to get on a chair
+when he reached it down from its dusty shelf; <i>that</i> certainly looked
+suspicious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The best reading was on the fly leaves; and, on turning them over, I lighted
+upon some half effaced pencil-marks to the following effect: <i>&ldquo;Jonathan
+Jones, from his particular friend Daniel Dods,</i> 1798.&rdquo; So it must have
+originally belonged to Mr. Jones&rsquo; father; and I wondered whether
+<i>he</i> had ever read it; or, indeed, whether any body had ever read it, even
+the author himself; but then authors, they say, never read their own books;
+writing them, being enough in all conscience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length I fell asleep, with the volume in my hand; and never slept so sound
+before; after that, I used to wrap my jacket round it, and use it for a pillow;
+for which purpose it answered very well; only I sometimes waked up feeling dull
+and stupid; but of course the book could not have been the cause of that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now I am talking of books, I must tell of Jack Blunt the sailor, and his
+Dream Book.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jackson, who seemed to know every thing about all parts of the world, used to
+tell Jack in reproach, that he was an <i>Irish Cockney.</i> By which I
+understood, that he was an Irishman born, but had graduated in London,
+somewhere about Radcliffe Highway; but he had no sort of brogue that I could
+hear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a curious looking fellow, about twenty-five years old, as I should
+judge; but to look at his back, you would have taken him for a little old man.
+His arms and legs were very large, round, short, and stumpy; so that when he
+had on his great monkey-jacket, and sou&rsquo;west cap flapping in his face,
+and his sea boots drawn up to his knees, he looked like a fat porpoise,
+standing on end. He had a round face, too, like a walrus; and with about the
+same expression, half human and half indescribable. He was, upon the whole, a
+good-natured fellow, and a little given to looking at sea-life romantically;
+singing songs about susceptible mermaids who fell in love with handsome young
+oyster boys and gallant fishermen. And he had a sad story about a
+man-of-war&rsquo;s-man who broke his heart at Portsmouth during the late war,
+and threw away his life recklessly at one of the quarter-deck cannonades, in
+the battle between the Guerriere and Constitution; and another incomprehensible
+story about a sort of fairy sea-queen, who used to be dunning a sea-captain all
+the time for his autograph to boil in some eel soup, for a spell against the
+scurvy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He believed in all kinds of witch-work and magic; and had some wild Irish words
+he used to mutter over during a calm for a fair wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And he frequently related his interviews in Liverpool with a fortune-teller, an
+old negro woman by the name of De Squak, whose house was much frequented by
+sailors; and how she had two black cats, with remarkably green eyes, and
+nightcaps on their heads, solemnly seated on a claw-footed table near the old
+goblin; when she felt his pulse, to tell what was going to befall him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This Blunt had a large head of hair, very thick and bushy; but from some cause
+or other, it was rapidly turning gray; and in its transition state made him
+look as if he wore a shako of badger skin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The phenomenon of gray hairs on a young head, had perplexed and confounded this
+Blunt to such a degree that he at last came to the conclusion it must be the
+result of the black art, wrought upon him by an enemy; and that enemy, he
+opined, was an old sailor landlord in Marseilles, whom he had once seriously
+offended, by knocking him down in a fray.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So while in New York, finding his hair growing grayer and grayer, and all his
+friends, the ladies and others, laughing at him, and calling him an old man
+with one foot in the grave, he slipt out one night to an apothecary&rsquo;s,
+stated his case, and wanted to know what could be done for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The apothecary immediately gave him a pint bottle of something he called
+<i>&ldquo;Trafalgar Oil</i> for restoring the hair,&rdquo; <i>price one
+dollar;</i> and told him that after he had used that bottle, and it did not
+have the desired effect, he must try bottle No. 2, called <i>&ldquo;Balm of
+Paradise, or the Elixir of the Battle of Copenhagen.&rdquo;</i> These
+high-sounding naval names delighted Blunt, and he had no doubt there must be
+virtue in them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I saw both bottles; and on one of them was an engraving, representing a young
+man, presumed to be gray-headed, standing in his night-dress in the middle of
+his chamber, and with closed eyes applying the Elixir to his head, with both
+hands; while on the bed adjacent stood a large bottle, conspicuously labeled,
+<i>&ldquo;Balm of Paradise.&rdquo;</i> It seemed from the text, that this
+gray-headed young man was so smitten with his hair-oil, and was so thoroughly
+persuaded of its virtues, that he had got out of bed, even in his sleep; groped
+into his closet, seized the precious bottle, applied its contents, and then to
+bed again, getting up in the morning without knowing any thing about it. Which,
+indeed, was a most mysterious occurrence; and it was still more mysterious, how
+the engraver came to know an event, of which the actor himself was ignorant,
+and where there were no bystanders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three times in the twenty-four hours, Blunt, while at sea, regularly rubbed in
+his liniments; but though the first bottle was soon exhausted by his copious
+applications, and the second half gone, he still stuck to it, that by the time
+we got to Liverpool, his exertions would be crowned with success. And he was
+not a little delighted, that this gradual change would be operating while we
+were at sea; so as not to expose him to the invidious observations of people
+ashore; on the same principle that dandies go into the country when they
+purpose raising whiskers. He would often ask his shipmates, whether they
+noticed any change yet; and if so, how much of a change? And to tell the truth,
+there was a very great change indeed; for the constant soaking of his hair with
+oil, operating in conjunction with the neglect of his toilet, and want of a
+brush and comb, had matted his locks together like a wild horse&rsquo;s mane,
+and imparted to it a blackish and extremely glossy hue. Besides his collection
+of hair-oils, Blunt had also provided himself with several boxes of pills,
+which he had purchased from a sailor doctor in New York, who by placards stuck
+on the posts along the wharves, advertised to remain standing at the northeast
+corner of Catharine Market, every Monday and Friday, between the hours of ten
+and twelve in the morning, to receive calls from patients, distribute
+medicines, and give advice gratis.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whether Blunt thought he had the dyspepsia or not, I can not say; but at
+breakfast, he always took three pills with his coffee; something as they do in
+Iowa, when the bilious fever prevails; where, at the boarding-houses, they put
+a vial of blue pills into the castor, along with the pepper and mustard, and
+next door to another vial of toothpicks. But they are very ill-bred and
+unpolished in the western country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Several times, too, Blunt treated himself to a flowing bumper of <i>horse
+salts</i> (Glauber salts); for like many other seamen, he never went to sea
+without a good supply of that luxury. He would frequently, also, take this
+medicine in a wet jacket, and then go on deck into a rain storm. But this is
+nothing to other sailors, who at sea will doctor themselves with calomel off
+Cape Horn, and still remain on duty. And in this connection, some really
+frightful stories might be told; but I forbear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a landsman to take salts as this Blunt did, it would perhaps be the death
+of him; but at sea the salt air and the salt water prevent you from catching
+cold so readily as on land; and for my own part, on board this very ship, being
+so illy-provided with clothes, I frequently turned into my bunk soaking wet,
+and turned out again piping hot, and smoking like a roasted sirloin; and yet
+was never the worse for it; for then, I bore a charmed life of youth and
+health, and was dagger-proof to bodily ill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it is time to tell of the Dream Book. Snugly hidden in one corner of his
+chest, Blunt had an extraordinary looking pamphlet, with a red cover, marked
+all over with astrological signs and ciphers, and purporting to be a full and
+complete treatise on the art of Divination; so that the most simple sailor
+could teach it to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It also purported to be the selfsame system, by aid of which Napoleon Bonaparte
+had risen in the world from being a corporal to an emperor. Hence it was
+entitled the <i>Bonaparte Dream Book;</i> for the magic of it lay in the
+interpretation of dreams, and their application to the foreseeing of future
+events; so that all preparatory measures might be taken beforehand; which would
+be exceedingly convenient, and satisfactory every way, if true. The problems
+were to be cast by means of figures, in some perplexed and difficult way,
+which, however, was facilitated by a set of tables in the end of the pamphlet,
+something like the Logarithm Tables at the end of Bowditch&rsquo;s Navigator.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, Blunt revered, adored, and worshiped this <i>Bonaparte Dream Book</i> of
+his; and was fully persuaded that between those red covers, and in his own
+dreams, lay all the secrets of futurity. Every morning before taking his pills,
+and applying his hair-oils, he would steal out of his bunk before the rest of
+the watch were awake; take out his pamphlet, and a bit of chalk; and then
+straddling his chest, begin scratching his oily head to remember his fugitive
+dreams; marking down strokes on his chest-lid, as if he were casting up his
+daily accounts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though often perplexed and lost in mazes concerning the cabalistic figures in
+the book, and the chapter of directions to beginners; for he could with
+difficulty read at all; yet, in the end, if not interrupted, he somehow managed
+to arrive at a conclusion satisfactory to him. So that, as he generally wore a
+good-humored expression, no doubt he must have thought, that all his future
+affairs were working together for the best.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But one night he started us all up in a fright, by springing from his bunk, his
+eyes ready to start out of his head, and crying, in a husky
+voice&mdash;&ldquo;Boys! boys! get the benches ready! Quick, quick!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What benches?&rdquo; growled Max&mdash;&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the
+matter?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Benches! benches!&rdquo; screamed Blunt, without heeding him, &ldquo;cut
+down the forests, bear a hand, boys; the Day of Judgment&rsquo;s coming!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the next moment, he got quietly into his bunk, and laid still, muttering to
+himself, he had only been rambling in his sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I did not know exactly what he had meant by his <i>benches;</i> till, shortly
+after, I overheard two of the sailors debating, whether mankind would stand or
+sit at the Last Day.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap19"></a>CHAPTER XIX.<br/>
+A NARROW ESCAPE</h2>
+
+<p>
+This Dream Book of Blunt&rsquo;s reminds me of a narrow escape we had, early
+one morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the larboard watch&rsquo;s turn to remain below from midnight till four
+o&rsquo;clock; and having turned in and slept, Blunt suddenly turned out again
+about three o&rsquo;clock, with a wonderful dream in his head; which he was
+desirous of at once having interpreted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he goes to his chest, gets out his tools, and falls to ciphering on the lid.
+When, all at once, a terrible cry was heard, that routed him and all the rest
+of us up, and sent the whole ship&rsquo;s company flying on deck in the dark.
+We did not know what it was; but somehow, among sailors at sea, they seem to
+know when real danger of any land is at hand, even in their sleep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When we got on deck, we saw the mate standing on the bowsprit, and crying out
+<i>Luff! Luff!</i> to some one in the dark water before the ship. In that
+direction, we could just see a light, and then, the great black hull of a
+strange vessel, that was coming down on us obliquely; and so near, that we
+heard the flap of her topsails as they shook in the wind, the trampling of feet
+on the deck, and the same cry of <i>Luff! Luff!</i> that our own mate, was
+raising.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a minute more, I caught my breath, as I heard a snap and a crash, like the
+fall of a tree, and suddenly, one of our flying-jib guys jerked out the bolt
+near the cat-head; and presently, we heard our jib-boom thumping against our
+bows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime, the strange ship, scraping by us thus, shot off into the darkness,
+and we saw her no more. But she, also, must have been injured; for when it grew
+light, we found pieces of strange rigging mixed with ours. We repaired the
+damage, and replaced the broken spar with another jib-boom we had; for all
+ships carry spare spars against emergencies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cause of this accident, which came near being the death of all on board,
+was nothing but the drowsiness of the look-out men on the forecastles of both
+ships. The sailor who had the look-out on our vessel was terribly reprimanded
+by the mate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No doubt, many ships that are never heard of after leaving port, meet their
+fate in this way; and it may be, that sometimes two vessels coming together,
+jib-boom-and-jib-boom, with a sudden shock in the middle watch of the night,
+mutually destroy each other; and like fighting elks, sink down into the ocean,
+with their antlers locked in death.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While I was at Liverpool, a fine ship that lay near us in the docks, having got
+her cargo on board, went to sea, bound for India, with a good breeze; and all
+her crew felt sure of a prosperous voyage. But in about seven days after, she
+came back, a most distressing object to behold. All her starboard side was torn
+and splintered; her starboard anchor was gone; and a great part of the
+starboard bulwarks; while every one of the lower yard-arms had been broken, in
+the same direction; so that she now carried small and unsightly
+<i>jury-yards.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I looked at this vessel, with the whole of one side thus shattered, but
+the other still in fine trim; and when I remembered her gay and gallant
+appearance, when she left the same harbor into which she now entered so
+forlorn; I could not help thinking of a young man I had known at home, who had
+left his cottage one morning in high spirits, and was brought back at noon with
+his right side paralyzed from head to foot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seems that this vessel had been run against by a strange ship, crowding all
+sail before a fresh breeze; and the stranger had rushed past her starboard
+side, reducing her to the sad state in which she now was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sailors can not be too wakeful and cautious, when keeping their night
+look-outs; though, as I well know, they too often suffer themselves to become
+negligent, and nod. And this is not so wonderful, after all; for though every
+seaman has heard of those accidents at sea; and many of them, perhaps, have
+been in ships that have suffered from them; yet, when you find yourself sailing
+along on the ocean at night, without having seen a sail for weeks and weeks, it
+is hard for you to realize that any are near. Then, if they <i>are</i> near, it
+seems almost incredible that on the broad, boundless sea, which washes
+Greenland at one end of the world, and the Falkland Islands at the other, that
+any one vessel upon such a vast highway, should come into close contact with
+another. But the likelihood of great calamities occurring, seldom obtrudes upon
+the minds of ignorant men, such as sailors generally are; for the things which
+wise people know, anticipate, and guard against, the ignorant can only become
+acquainted with, by meeting them face to face. And even when experience has
+taught them, the lesson only serves for that day; inasmuch as the foolish in
+prosperity are infidels to the possibility of adversity; they see the sun in
+heaven, and believe it to be far too bright ever to set. And even, as suddenly
+as the bravest and fleetest ships, while careering in pride of canvas over the
+sea, have been struck, as by lightning, and quenched out of sight; even so, do
+some lordly men, with all their plans and prospects gallantly trimmed to the
+fair, rushing breeze of life, and with no thought of death and disaster,
+suddenly encounter a shock unforeseen, and go down, foundering, into death.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap20"></a>CHAPTER XX.<br/>
+IN A FOG HE IS SET TO WORK AS A BELL-TOLLER, AND BEHOLDS A HERD OF
+OCEAN-ELEPHANTS</h2>
+
+<p>
+What is this that we sail through? What palpable obscure? What smoke and reek,
+as if the whole steaming world were revolving on its axis, as a spit?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a Newfoundland Fog; and we are yet crossing the Grand Banks, wrapt in a
+mist, that no London in the Novemberest November ever equaled. The chronometer
+pronounced it noon; but do you call this midnight or midday? So dense is the
+fog, that though we have a fair wind, we shorten sail for fear of accidents;
+and not only that, but here am I, poor Wellingborough, mounted aloft on a sort
+of belfry, the top of the <i>&ldquo;Sampson-Post,&rdquo;</i> a lofty tower of
+timber, so called; and tolling the ship&rsquo;s bell, as if for a funeral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is intended to proclaim our approach, and warn all strangers from our
+track.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dreary sound! toll, toll, toll, through the dismal mist and fog.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bell is green with verdigris, and damp with dew; and the little cord
+attached to the clapper, by which I toll it, now and then slides through my
+fingers, slippery with wet. Here I am, in my slouched black hat, like the
+<i>&ldquo;bull that could pull,&rdquo;</i> announcing the decease of the
+lamented Cock-Robin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A better device than the bell, however, was once pitched upon by an ingenious
+sea-captain, of whom I have heard. He had a litter of young porkers on board;
+and while sailing through the fog, he stationed men at both ends of the pen
+with long poles, wherewith they incessantly stirred up and irritated the
+porkers, who split the air with their squeals; and no doubt saved the ship, as
+the geese saved the Capitol.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The most strange and unheard-of noises came out of the fog at times: a vast
+sound of sighing and sobbing. What could it be? This would be followed by a
+spout, and a gush, and a cascading commotion, as if some fountain had suddenly
+jetted out of the ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seated on my Sampson-Post, I stared more and more, and suspended my duty as a
+sexton. But presently some one cried out&mdash;<i>&ldquo;There she blows!
+whales! whales close alongside!&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A whale! Think of it! whales close to <i>me,</i> Wellingborough;&mdash; would
+my own brother believe it? I dropt the clapper as if it were red-hot, and
+rushed to the side; and there, dimly floating, lay four or five long, black
+snaky-looking shapes, only a few inches out of the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Can these be whales? Monstrous whales, such as I had heard of? I thought they
+would look like mountains on the sea; hills and valleys of flesh! regular
+krakens, that made it high tide, and inundated continents, when they descended
+to feed!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a bitter disappointment, from which I was long in recovering. I lost all
+respect for whales; and began to be a little dubious about the story of Jonah;
+for how could Jonah reside in such an insignificant tenement; how could he have
+had elbow-room there? But perhaps, thought I, the whale which according to
+Rabbinical traditions was a female one, might have expanded to receive him like
+an anaconda, when it swallows an elk and leaves the antlers sticking out of its
+mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nevertheless, from that day, whales greatly fell in my estimation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it is always thus. If you read of St. Peter&rsquo;s, they say, and then go
+and visit it, ten to one, you account it a dwarf compared to your high-raised
+ideal. And, doubtless, Jonah himself must have been disappointed when he looked
+up to the domed midriff surmounting the whale&rsquo;s belly, and surveyed the
+ribbed pillars around him. A pretty large belly, to be sure, thought he, but
+not so big as it might have been.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the next day, the fog lifted; and by noon, we found ourselves sailing
+through fleets of fishermen at anchor. They were very small craft; and when I
+beheld them, I perceived the force of that sailor saying, intended to
+illustrate restricted quarters, or being <i>on the limits. It is like a
+fisherman&rsquo;s walk,</i> say they, <i>three steps and overboard.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lying right in the track of the multitudinous ships crossing the ocean between
+England and America, these little vessels are sometimes run down, and
+obliterated from the face of the waters; the cry of the sailors ceasing with
+the last whirl of the whirlpool that closes over their craft. Their sad fate is
+frequently the result of their own remissness in keeping a good look-out by
+day, and not having their lamps trimmed, like the wise virgins, by night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I shall not make mention of the Grand Banks on our homeward-bound passage, I
+may as well here relate, that on our return, we approached them in the night;
+and by way of making sure of our whereabouts, the deep-sea-lead was heaved. The
+line attached is generally upward of three hundred fathoms in length; and the
+lead itself, weighing some forty or fifty pounds, has a hole in the lower end,
+in which, previous to sounding, some tallow is thrust, that it may bring up the
+soil at the bottom, for the captain to inspect. This is called
+&ldquo;arming&rdquo; the lead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We &ldquo;hove&rdquo; our deep-sea-line by night, and the operation was very
+interesting, at least to me. In the first place, the vessel&rsquo;s heading was
+stopt; then, coiled away in a tub, like a whale-rope, the line was placed
+toward the after part of the quarter-deck; and one of the sailors carried the
+lead outside of the ship, away along to the end of the jib-boom, and at the
+word of command, far ahead and overboard it went, with a plunge; scraping by
+the side, till it came to the stern, when the line ran out of the tub like
+light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When we came to haul <i>it</i> up, I was astonished at the force necessary to
+perform the work. The whole watch pulled at the line, which was rove through a
+block in the mizzen-rigging, as if we were hauling up a fat porpoise. When the
+lead came in sight, I was all eagerness to examine the tallow, and get a peep
+at a specimen of the bottom of the sea; but the sailors did not seem to be much
+interested by it, calling me a fool for wanting to preserve a few grains of the
+sand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had almost forgotten to make mention of the Gulf Stream, in which we found
+ourselves previous to crossing the Banks. The fact of our being in it was
+proved by the captain in person, who superintended the drawing of a bucket of
+salt water, in which he dipped his thermometer. In the absence of the
+Gulf-weed, this is the general test; for the temperature of this current is
+eight degrees higher than that of the ocean, and the temperature of the ocean
+is twenty degrees higher than that of the Grand Banks. And it is to this
+remarkable difference of temperature, for which there can be no equilibrium,
+that many seamen impute the fogs on the coast of Nova Scotia and Newfoundland;
+but why there should always be such ugly weather in the Gulf, is something that
+I do not know has ever been accounted for.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is curious to dip one&rsquo;s finger in a bucket full of the Gulf Stream,
+and find it so warm; as if the Gulf of Mexico, from whence this current comes,
+were a great caldron or boiler, on purpose to keep warm the North Atlantic,
+which is traversed by it for a distance of two thousand miles, as some large
+halls in winter are by hot air tubes. Its mean breadth being about two hundred
+leagues, it comprises an area larger than that of the whole Mediterranean, and
+may be deemed a sort of Mississippi of hot water flowing through the ocean; off
+the coast of Florida, running at the rate of one mile and a half an hour.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap21"></a>CHAPTER XXI.<br/>
+A WHALEMAN AND A MAN-OF-WAR&rsquo;S-MAN</h2>
+
+<p>
+The sight of the whales mentioned in the preceding chapter was the bringing out
+of Larry, one of our crew, who hitherto had been quite silent and reserved, as
+if from some conscious inferiority, though he had shipped as an <i>ordinary
+seaman,</i> and, for aught I could see, performed his duty very well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the men fell into a dispute concerning what kind of whales they were which
+we saw, Larry stood by attentively, and after garnering in their ignorance, all
+at once broke out, and astonished every body by his intimate acquaintance with
+the monsters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t sperm whales,&rdquo; said Larry, &ldquo;their
+spouts ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t bushy enough; they ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t
+Sulphur-bottoms, or they wouldn&rsquo;t stay up so long; they
+ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t Hump-backs, for they ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t got any humps; they
+ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t Fin-backs, for you won&rsquo;t catch a Finback so near a
+ship; they ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t Greenland whales, for we ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t off
+the coast of Greenland; and they ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t right whales, for it
+wouldn&rsquo;t be right to say so. I tell ye, men, them&rsquo;s Crinkum-crankum
+whales.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what are them?&rdquo; said a sailor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, them is whales that can&rsquo;t be cotched.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, as it turned out that this Larry had been bred to the sea in a whaler, and
+had sailed out of Nantucket many times; no one but Jackson ventured to dispute
+his opinion; and even Jackson did not press him very hard. And ever after,
+Larry&rsquo;s judgment was relied upon concerning all strange fish that
+happened to float by us during the voyage; for whalemen are far more familiar
+with the wonders of the deep than any other class of seaman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was Larry&rsquo;s first voyage in the merchant service, and that was the
+reason why, hitherto, he had been so reserved; since he well knew that merchant
+seamen generally affect a certain superiority to
+<i>&ldquo;blubber-boilers,&rdquo;</i> as they contemptuously style those who
+hunt the leviathan. But Larry turned out to be such an inoffensive fellow, and
+so well understood his business aboard ship, and was so ready to jump to an
+order, that he was exempted from the taunts which he might otherwise have
+encountered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a somewhat singular man, who wore his hat slanting forward over the
+bridge of his nose, with his eyes cast down, and seemed always examining your
+boots, when speaking to you. I loved to hear him talk about the wild places in
+the Indian Ocean, and on the coast of Madagascar, where he had frequently
+touched during his whaling voyages. And this familiarity with the life of
+nature led by the people in that remote part of the world, had furnished Larry
+with a sentimental distaste for civilized society. When opportunity offered, he
+never omitted extolling the delights of the free and easy Indian Ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why,&rdquo; said Larry, talking through his nose, as usual, &ldquo;in
+<i>Madagasky</i> there, they don&rsquo;t wear any togs at all, nothing but a
+bowline round the midships; they don&rsquo;t have no dinners, but keeps a
+dinin&rsquo; all day off fat pigs and dogs; they don&rsquo;t go to bed any
+where, but keeps a noddin&rsquo; all the time; and they gets drunk, too, from
+some first rate arrack they make from cocoa-nuts; and smokes plenty of
+&rsquo;baccy, too, I tell ye. Fine country, that! Blast Ameriky, I say!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To tell the truth, this Larry dealt in some illiberal insinuations against
+civilization.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what&rsquo;s the use of bein&rsquo; <i>snivelized!&rdquo;</i> said
+he to me one night during our watch on deck; &ldquo;snivelized chaps only
+learns the way to take on &rsquo;bout life, and snivel. You don&rsquo;t see any
+Methodist chaps feelin&rsquo; dreadful about their souls; you don&rsquo;t see
+any darned beggars and pesky constables in <i>Madagasky, I</i> tell ye; and
+none o&rsquo; them kings there gets their big toes pinched by the gout. Blast
+Ameriky, I say.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, this Larry was rather cutting in his innuendoes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are <i>you</i> now, Buttons, any better off for bein&rsquo;
+snivelized?&rdquo; coming close up to me and eying the wreck of my
+gaff-topsail-boots very steadfastly. &ldquo;No; you ar&rsquo;n&rsquo;t a
+bit&mdash;but you&rsquo;re a good deal <i>worse</i> for it, Buttons. I tell ye,
+ye wouldn&rsquo;t have been to sea here, leadin&rsquo; this dog&rsquo;s life,
+if you hadn&rsquo;t been snivelized&mdash;that&rsquo;s the cause why, now.
+Snivelization has been the ruin on ye; and it&rsquo;s spiled me complete; I
+might have been a great man in Madagasky; it&rsquo;s too darned bad! Blast
+Ameriky, I say.&rdquo; And in bitter grief at the social blight upon his whole
+past, present, and future, Larry turned away, pulling his hat still lower down
+over the bridge of his nose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In strong contrast to Larry, was a young man-of-war&rsquo;s man we had, who
+went by the name of <i>&ldquo;Gun-Deck,&rdquo;</i> from his always talking of
+sailor life in the navy. He was a little fellow with a small face and a
+prodigious mop of brown hair; who always dressed in man-of-war style, with a
+wide, braided collar to his frock, and Turkish trowsers. But he particularly
+prided himself upon his feet, which were quite small; and when we washed down
+decks of a morning, never mind how chilly it might be, he always took off his
+boots, and went paddling about like a duck, turning out his pretty toes to show
+his charming feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had served in the armed steamers during the Seminole War in Florida, and had
+a good deal to say about sailing up the rivers there, through the everglades,
+and popping off Indians on the banks. I remember his telling a story about a
+party being discovered at quite a distance from them; but one of the savages
+was made very conspicuous by a pewter plate, which he wore round his neck, and
+which glittered in the sun. This plate proved his death; for, according to
+<i>Gun-Deck,</i> he himself shot it through the middle, and the ball entered
+the wearer&rsquo;s heart. It was a rat-killing war, he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Gun-Deck</i> had touched at Cadiz: had been to Gibraltar; and ashore at
+Marseilles. He had sunned himself in the Bay of Naples: eaten figs and oranges
+in Messina; and cheerfully lost one of his hearts at Malta, among the ladies
+there. And about all these things, he talked like a romantic man-of-war&rsquo;s
+man, who had seen the civilized world, and loved it; found it good, and a
+comfortable place to live in. So he and Larry never could agree in their
+respective views of civilization, and of savagery, of the Mediterranean and
+<i>Madagasky.</i>
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap22"></a>CHAPTER XXII.<br/>
+THE HIGHLANDER PASSES A WRECK </h2>
+
+<p>
+We were still on the Banks, when a terrific storm came down upon us, the like
+of which I had never before beheld, or imagined. The rain poured down in sheets
+and cascades; the scupper holes could hardly carry it off the decks; and in
+bracing the yards we waded about almost up to our knees; every thing floating
+about, like chips in a dock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This violent rain was the precursor of a hard squall, for which we duly
+prepared, taking in our canvas to double-reefed-top-sails.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The tornado came rushing along at last, like a troop of wild horses before the
+flaming rush of a burning prairie. But after bowing and cringing to it awhile,
+the good Highlander was put off before it; and with her nose in the water, went
+wallowing on, ploughing milk-white waves, and leaving a streak of illuminated
+foam in her wake.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was an awful scene. It made me catch my breath as I gazed. I could hardly
+stand on my feet, so violent was the motion of the ship. But while I reeled to
+and fro, the sailors only laughed at me; and bade me look out that the ship did
+not fall overboard; and advised me to get a handspike, and hold it down hard in
+the weather-scuppers, to steady her wild motions. But I was now getting a
+little too wise for this foolish kind of talk; though all through the voyage,
+they never gave it over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This storm past, we had fair weather until we got into the Irish Sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The morning following the storm, when the sea and sky had become blue again,
+the man aloft sung out that there was a wreck on the lee-beam. We bore away for
+it, all hands looking eagerly toward it, and the captain in the mizzen-top with
+his spy-glass. Presently, we slowly passed alongside of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a dismantled, water-logged schooner, a most dismal sight, that must have
+been drifting about for several long weeks. The bulwarks were pretty much gone;
+and here and there the bare <i>stanchions,</i> or posts, were left standing,
+splitting in two the waves which broke clear over the deck, lying almost even
+with the sea. The foremast was snapt off less than four feet from its base; and
+the shattered and splintered remnant looked like the stump of a pine tree
+thrown over in the woods. Every time she rolled in the trough of the sea, her
+open main-hatchway yawned into view; but was as quickly filled, and submerged
+again, with a rushing, gurgling sound, as the water ran into it with the
+lee-roll.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the head of the stump of the mainmast, about ten feet above the deck,
+something like a sleeve seemed nailed; it was supposed to be the relic of a
+jacket, which must have been fastened there by the crew for a signal, and been
+frayed out and blown away by the wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lashed, and leaning over sideways against the taffrail, were three dark, green,
+grassy objects, that slowly swayed with every roll, but otherwise were
+motionless. I saw the captain&rsquo;s, glass directed toward them, and heard
+him say at last, &ldquo;They must have been dead a long time.&rdquo; These were
+sailors, who long ago had lashed themselves to the taffrail for safety; but
+must have famished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Full of the awful interest of the scene, I surely thought the captain would
+lower a boat to bury the bodies, and find out something about the schooner. But
+we did not stop at all; passing on our course, without so much as learning the
+schooner&rsquo;s name, though every one supposed her to be a New Brunswick
+lumberman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the part of the sailors, no surprise was shown that our captain did not send
+off a boat to the wreck; but the steerage passengers were indignant at what
+they called his barbarity. For me, I could not but feel amazed and shocked at
+his indifference; but my subsequent sea experiences have shown me, that such
+conduct as this is very common, though not, of course, when human life can be
+saved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So away we sailed, and left her; drifting, drifting on; a garden spot for
+barnacles, and a playhouse for the sharks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look there,&rdquo; said Jackson, hanging over the rail and
+coughing&mdash;&ldquo;look there; that&rsquo;s a sailor&rsquo;s coffin. Ha! ha!
+Buttons,&rdquo; turning round to me&mdash;&ldquo;how do you like that, Buttons?
+Wouldn&rsquo;t you like to take a sail with them &rsquo;ere dead men?
+Wouldn&rsquo;t it be nice?&rdquo; And then he tried to laugh, but only coughed
+again. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t laugh at dem poor fellows,&rdquo; said Max, looking
+grave; &ldquo;do&rsquo; you see dar bodies, dar souls are farder off dan de
+Cape of Dood Hope.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Dood Hope, Dood Hope,&rdquo; shrieked Jackson, with a horrid grin,
+mimicking the Dutchman, &ldquo;dare is no dood hope for dem, old boy; dey are
+drowned and d .... d, as you and I will be, Red Max, one of dese dark
+nights.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, no,&rdquo; said Blunt, &ldquo;all sailors are saved; they have
+plenty of squalls here below, but fair weather aloft.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And did you get that out of your silly Dream Book, you Greek?&rdquo;
+howled Jackson through a cough. &ldquo;Don&rsquo;t talk of heaven to
+me&mdash;it&rsquo;s a lie&mdash;I know it&mdash;and they are all fools that
+believe in it. Do you think, you Greek, that there&rsquo;s any heaven for
+<i>you?</i> Will they let <i>you</i> in there, with that tarry hand, and that
+oily head of hair? Avast! when some shark gulps you down his hatchway one of
+these days, you&rsquo;ll find, that by dying, you&rsquo;ll only go from one
+gale of wind to another; mind that, you Irish cockney! Yes, you&rsquo;ll be
+bolted down like one of your own pills: and I should like to see the whole ship
+swallowed down in the Norway maelstrom, like a box on &rsquo;em. That would be
+a dose of salts for ye!&rdquo; And so saying, he went off, holding his hands to
+his chest, and coughing, as if his last hour was come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every day this Jackson seemed to grow worse and worse, both in body and mind.
+He seldom spoke, but to contradict, deride, or curse; and all the time, though
+his face grew thinner and thinner, his eyes seemed to kindle more and more, as
+if he were going to die out at last, and leave them burning like tapers before
+a corpse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though he had never attended churches, and knew nothing about Christianity; no
+more than a Malay pirate; and though he could not read a word, yet he was
+spontaneously an atheist and an infidel; and during the long night watches,
+would enter into arguments, to prove that there was nothing to be believed;
+nothing to be loved, and nothing worth living for; but every thing to be hated,
+in the wide world. He was a horrid desperado; and like a wild Indian, whom he
+resembled in his tawny skin and high cheek bones, he seemed to run amuck at
+heaven and earth. He was a Cain afloat; branded on his yellow brow with some
+inscrutable curse; and going about corrupting and searing every heart that beat
+near him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there seemed even more woe than wickedness about the man; and his
+wickedness seemed to spring from his woe; and for all his hideousness, there
+was that in his eye at times, that was ineffably pitiable and touching; and
+though there were moments when I almost hated this Jackson, yet I have pitied
+no man as I have pitied him.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap23"></a>CHAPTER XXIII.<br/>
+AN UNACCOUNTABLE CABIN-PASSENGER, AND A MYSTERIOUS YOUNG LADY</h2>
+
+<p>
+As yet, I have said nothing special about the passengers we carried out. But
+before making what little mention I shall of them, you must know that the
+Highlander was not a Liverpool liner, or packet-ship, plying in connection with
+a sisterhood of packets, at stated intervals, between the two ports. No: she
+was only what is called a <i>regular trader</i> to Liverpool; sailing upon no
+fixed days, and acting very much as she pleased, being bound by no obligations
+of any kind: though in all her voyages, ever having New York or Liverpool for
+her destination. Merchant vessels which are neither liners nor regular traders,
+among sailors come under the general head of <i>transient ships;</i> which
+implies that they are here to-day, and somewhere else to-morrow, like
+Mullins&rsquo;s dog.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I had no reason to regret that the Highlander was not a liner; for aboard
+of those liners, from all I could gather from those who had sailed in them, the
+crew have terrible hard work, owing to their carrying such a press of sail, in
+order to make as rapid passages as possible, and sustain the ship&rsquo;s
+reputation for speed. Hence it is, that although they are the very best of
+sea-going craft, and built in the best possible manner, and with the very best
+materials, yet, a few years of scudding before the wind, as they do, seriously
+impairs their constitutions&mdash; like robust young men, who live too fast in
+their teens&mdash;and they are soon sold out for a song; generally to the
+people of Nantucket, New Bedford, and Sag Harbor, who repair and fit them out
+for the whaling business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus, the ship that once carried over gay parties of ladies and gentlemen, as
+tourists, to Liverpool or London, now carries a crew of harpooners round Cape
+Horn into the Pacific. And the mahogany and bird&rsquo;s-eye maple cabin, which
+once held rosewood card-tables and brilliant coffee-urns, and in which many a
+bottle of champagne, and many a bright eye sparkled, <i>now</i> accommodates a
+bluff Quaker captain from Martha&rsquo;s Vineyard; who, perhaps, while lying
+with his ship in the Bay of Islands, in New Zealand, entertains a party of
+naked chiefs and savages at dinner, in place of the packet-captain doing the
+honors to the literati, theatrical stars, foreign princes, and gentlemen of
+leisure and fortune, who generally talked gossip, politics, and nonsense across
+the table, in transatlantic trips. The broad quarter-deck, too, where these
+gentry promenaded, is now often choked up by the enormous head of the
+sperm-whale, and vast masses of unctuous blubber; and every where reeks with
+oil during the prosecution of the fishery. Sic <i>transit gloria mundi!</i>
+Thus departs the pride and glory of packet-ships! <i>It is</i> like a broken
+down importer of French silks embarking in the soap-boning business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So, not being a liner, the Highlander of course did not have very ample
+accommodations for cabin passengers. I believe there were not more than five or
+six state-rooms, with two or three berths in each. At any rate, on this
+particular voyage she only carried out one regular cabin-passenger; that is, a
+person previously unacquainted with the captain, who paid his fare down, and
+came on board soberly, and in a business-like manner with his baggage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was an extremely little man, that solitary cabin-passenger&mdash;the
+passenger who came on board in a business-like manner with his baggage; never
+spoke to any one, and the captain seldom spoke to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Perhaps he was a deputy from the Deaf and Dumb Institution in New York, going
+over to London to address the public in pantomime at Exeter Hall concerning the
+signs of the times.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was always in a brown study; sometimes sitting on the quarter-deck with arms
+folded, and head hanging upon his chest. Then he would rise, and gaze out to
+windward, as if he had suddenly discovered a friend. But looking disappointed,
+would retire slowly into his state-room, where you could see him through the
+little window, in an irregular sitting position, with the back part of him
+inserted into his berth, and his head, arms, and legs hanging out, buried in
+profound meditation, with his fore-finger aside of his nose. He never was seen
+reading; never took a hand at cards; never smoked; never drank wine; never
+conversed; and never staid to the dessert at dinner-time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He seemed the true microcosm, or little world to himself: standing in no need
+of levying contributions upon the surrounding universe. Conjecture was lost in
+speculating as to who he was, and what was his business. The sailors, who are
+always curious with regard to such matters, and criticise cabin-passengers more
+than cabin-passengers are perhaps aware at the time, completely exhausted
+themselves in suppositions, some of which are characteristically curious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the crew said he was a mysterious bearer of secret dispatches to the
+English court; others opined that he was a traveling surgeon and bonesetter,
+but for what reason they thought so, I never could learn; and others declared
+that he must either be an unprincipled bigamist, flying from his last wife and
+several small children; or a scoundrelly forger, bank-robber, or general
+burglar, who was returning to his beloved country with his ill-gotten booty.
+One observing sailor was of opinion that he was an English murderer,
+overwhelmed with speechless remorse, and returning home to make a full
+confession and be hanged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was a little singular, that among all their sage and sometimes confident
+opinings, not one charitable one was made; no! they were all sadly to the
+prejudice of his moral and religious character. But this is the way all the
+world over. Miserable man! could you have had an inkling of what they thought
+of you, I know not what you would have done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However, not knowing any thing about these surmisings and suspicions, this
+mysterious cabin-passenger went on his way, calm, cool, and collected; never
+troubled any body, and nobody troubled him. Sometimes, of a moonlight night he
+glided about the deck, like the ghost of a hospital attendant; flitting from
+mast to mast; now hovering round the skylight, now vibrating in the vicinity of
+the binnacle. Blunt, the Dream Book tar, swore he was a magician; and took an
+extra dose of salts, by way of precaution against his spells.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When we were but a few days from port, a comical adventure befell this
+cabin-passenger. There is an old custom, still in vogue among some merchant
+sailors, of tying fast in the rigging any lubberly landsman of a passenger who
+may be detected taking excursions aloft, however moderate the flight of the
+awkward fowl. This is called <i>&ldquo;making a spread eagle&rdquo;</i> of the
+man; and before he is liberated, a promise is exacted, that before arriving in
+port, he shall furnish the ship&rsquo;s company with money enough for a treat
+all round.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now this being one of the perquisites of sailors, they are always on the keen
+look-out for an opportunity of levying such contributions upon incautious
+strangers; though they never attempt it in presence of the captain; as for the
+mates, they purposely avert their eyes, and are earnestly engaged about
+something else, whenever they get an inkling of this proceeding going on. But,
+with only one poor fellow of a cabin-passenger on board of the Highlander, and
+<i>he</i> such a quiet, unobtrusive, unadventurous wight, there seemed little
+chance for levying contributions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One remarkably pleasant morning, however, what should be seen, half way up the
+mizzen rigging, but the figure of our cabin-passenger, holding on with might
+and main by all four limbs, and with his head fearfully turned round, gazing
+off to the horizon. He looked as if he had the nightmare; and in some sudden
+and unaccountable fit of insanity, he must have been impelled to the taking up
+of that perilous position.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good heavens!&rdquo; said the mate, who was a bit of a wag, &ldquo;you
+will surely fall, sir! Steward, spread a mattress on deck, under the
+gentleman!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But no sooner was our Greenland sailor&rsquo;s attention called to the sight,
+than snatching up some rope-yarn, he ran softly up behind the passenger, and
+without speaking a word, began binding him hand and foot. The stranger was more
+dumb than ever with amazement; at last violently remonstrated; but in vain; for
+as his fearfulness of falling made him keep his hands glued to the ropes, and
+so prevented him from any effectual resistance, he was soon made a handsome
+<i>spread-eagle</i> of, to the great satisfaction of the crew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was now discovered for the first, that this singular passenger stammered and
+stuttered very badly, which, perhaps, was the cause of his reservedness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wha-wha-what i-i-is this f-f-for?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Spread-eagle, sir,&rdquo; said the Greenlander, thinking that those few
+words would at once make the matter plain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wha-wha-what that me-me-mean?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Treats all round, sir,&rdquo; said the Greenlander, wondering at the
+other&rsquo;s obtusity, who, however, had never so much as heard of the thing
+before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, upon his reluctant acquiescence in the demands of the sailor, and
+handing him two half-crown pieces, the unfortunate passenger was suffered to
+descend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The last I ever saw of this man was his getting into a cab at Prince&rsquo;s
+Dock Gates in Liverpool, and driving off alone to parts unknown. He had nothing
+but a valise with him, and an umbrella; but his pockets looked stuffed out;
+perhaps he used them for carpet-bags.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I must now give some account of another and still more mysterious, though very
+different, sort of an occupant of the cabin, of whom I have previously hinted.
+What say you to a charming young girl?&mdash;just the girl to sing the Dashing
+White Sergeant; a martial, military-looking girl; her father must have been a
+general. Her hair was auburn; her eyes were blue; her cheeks were white and
+red; and Captain Riga was her most devoted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the curious questions of the sailors concerning who she was, the steward
+used to answer, that she was the daughter of one of the Liverpool dock-masters,
+who, for the benefit of her health and the improvement of her mind, had sent
+her out to America in the Highlander, under the captain&rsquo;s charge, who was
+his particular friend; and that now the young lady was returning home from her
+tour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And truly the captain proved an attentive father to her, and often promenaded
+with her hanging on his arm, past the forlorn bearer of secret dispatches, who
+would look up now and then out of his reveries, and cast a furtive glance of
+wonder, as if he thought the captain was audacious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Considering his beautiful ward, I thought the captain behaved ungallantly, to
+say the least, in availing himself of the opportunity of her charming society,
+to wear out his remaining old clothes; for no gentleman ever pretends to save
+his best coat when a lady is in the case; indeed, he generally thirsts for a
+chance to abase it, by converting it into a pontoon over a puddle, like Sir
+Walter Raleigh, that the ladies may not soil the soles of their dainty
+slippers. But this Captain Riga was no Raleigh, and hardly any sort of a true
+gentleman whatever, as I have formerly declared. Yet, perhaps, he might have
+worn his old clothes in this instance, for the express purpose of proving, by
+his disdain for the toilet, that he was nothing but the young lady&rsquo;s
+guardian; for many guardians do not care one fig how shabby they look.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But for all this, the passage out was one long paternal sort of a shabby
+flirtation between this hoydenish nymph and the ill-dressed captain. And
+surely, if her good mother, were she living, could have seen this young lady,
+she would have given her an endless lecture for her conduct, and a copy of Mrs.
+Ellis&rsquo;s Daughters of England to read and digest. I shall say no more of
+this anonymous nymph; only, that when we arrived at Liverpool, she issued from
+her cabin in a richly embroidered silk dress, and lace hat and veil, and a sort
+of Chinese umbrella or parasol, which one of the sailors declared
+&ldquo;spandangalous;&rdquo; and the captain followed after in his best
+broadcloth and beaver, with a gold-headed cane; and away they went in a
+carriage, and that was the last of her; I hope she is well and happy now; but I
+have some misgivings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It now remains to speak of the steerage passengers. There were not more than
+twenty or thirty of them, mostly mechanics, returning home, after a prosperous
+stay in America, to escort their wives and families back. These were the only
+occupants of the steerage that I ever knew of; till early one morning, in the
+gray dawn, when we made Cape Clear, the south point of Ireland, the apparition
+of a tall Irishman, in a shabby shirt of bed-ticking, emerged from the fore
+hatchway, and stood leaning on the rail, looking landward with a fixed,
+reminiscent expression, and diligently scratching its back with both hands. We
+all started at the sight, for no one had ever seen the apparition before; and
+when we remembered that it must have been burrowing all the passage down in its
+bunk, the only probable reason of its so manipulating its back became
+shockingly obvious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had almost forgotten another passenger of ours, a little boy not four feet
+high, an English lad, who, when we were about forty-eight hours from New York,
+suddenly appeared on deck, asking for something to eat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seems he was the son of a carpenter, a widower, with this only child, who
+had gone out to America in the Highlander some six months previous, where he
+fell to drinking, and soon died, leaving the boy a friendless orphan in a
+foreign land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For several weeks the boy wandered about the wharves, picking up a precarious
+livelihood by sucking molasses out of the casks discharged from West India
+ships, and occasionally regaling himself upon stray oranges and lemons found
+floating in the docks. He passed his nights sometimes in a stall in the
+markets, sometimes in an empty hogshead on the piers, sometimes in a doorway,
+and once in the watchhouse, from which he escaped the next morning, running as
+he told me, right between the doorkeeper&rsquo;s legs, when he was taking
+another vagrant to task for repeatedly throwing himself upon the public
+charities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, while straying along the docks, he chanced to catch sight of the
+Highlander, and immediately recognized her as the very ship which brought him
+and his father out from England. He at once resolved to return in her; and,
+accosting the captain, stated his case, and begged a passage. The captain
+refused to give it; but, nothing daunted, the heroic little fellow resolved to
+conceal himself on board previous to the ship&rsquo;s sailing; which he did,
+stowing himself away in the <i>between-decks;</i> and moreover, as he told us,
+in a narrow space between two large casks of water, from which he now and then
+thrust out his head for air. And once a steerage passenger rose in the night
+and poked in and rattled about a stick where he was, thinking him an uncommon
+large rat, who was after stealing a passage across the Atlantic. There are
+plenty of passengers of that kind continually plying between Liverpool and New
+York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as he divulged the fact of his being on board, which he took care
+should not happen till he thought the ship must be out of sight of land; the
+captain had him called aft, and after giving him a thorough shaking, and
+threatening to toss him overboard as a tit-bit for <i>John Shark,</i> he told
+the mate to send him forward among the sailors, and let him live there. The
+sailors received him with open arms; but before caressing him much, they gave
+him a thorough washing in the lee-scuppers, when he turned out to be quite a
+handsome lad, though thin and pale with the hardships he had suffered. However,
+by good nursing and plenty to eat, he soon improved and grew fat; and before
+many days was as fine a looking little fellow, as you might pick out of Queen
+Victoria&rsquo;s nursery. The sailors took the warmest interest in him. One
+made him a little hat with a long ribbon; another a little jacket; a third a
+comical little pair of man-of-war&rsquo;s-man&rsquo;s trowsers; so that in the
+end, he looked like a juvenile boatswain&rsquo;s mate. Then the cook furnished
+him with a little tin pot and pan; and the steward made him a present of a
+pewter tea-spoon; and a steerage passenger gave him a jack knife. And thus
+provided, he used to sit at meal times half way up on the forecastle ladder,
+making a great racket with his pot and pan, and merry as a cricket. He was an
+uncommonly fine, cheerful, clever, arch little fellow, only six years old, and
+it was a thousand pities that he should be abandoned, as he was. Who can say,
+whether he is fated to be a convict in New South Wales, or a member of
+Parliament for Liverpool? When we got to that port, by the way, a purse was
+made up for him; the captain, officers, and the mysterious cabin passenger
+contributing their best wishes, and the sailors and poor steerage passengers
+something like fifteen dollars in cash and tobacco. But I had almost forgot to
+add that the daughter of the dock-master gave him a fine lace
+pocket-handkerchief and a card-case to remember her by; very valuable, but
+somewhat inappropriate presents. Thus supplied, the little hero went ashore by
+himself; and I lost sight of him in the vast crowds thronging the docks of
+Liverpool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I must here mention, as some relief to the impression which Jackson&rsquo;s
+character must have made upon the reader, that in several ways he at first
+befriended this boy; but the boy always shrunk from him; till, at last, stung
+by his conduct, Jackson spoke to him no more; and seemed to hate him, harmless
+as he was, along with all the rest of the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for the Lancashire lad, he was a stupid sort of fellow, as I have before
+hinted. So, little interest was taken in him, that he was permitted to go
+ashore at last, without a good-by from any person but one.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap24"></a>CHAPTER XXIV.<br/>
+HE BEGINS TO HOP ABOUT IN THE RIGGING LIKE A SAINT JAGO&rsquo;S MONKEY</h2>
+
+<p>
+But we have not got to Liverpool yet; though, as there is little more to be
+said concerning the passage out, the Highlander may as well make sail and get
+there as soon as possible. The brief interval will perhaps be profitably
+employed in relating what progress I made in learning the duties of a sailor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After my heroic feat in loosing the main-skysail, the mate entertained good
+hopes of my becoming a rare mariner. In the fullness of his heart, he ordered
+me to turn over the superintendence of the chicken-coop to the Lancashire boy;
+which I did, very willingly. After that, I took care to show the utmost
+alacrity in running aloft, which by this time became mere fun for me; and
+nothing delighted me more than to sit on one of the topsail-yards, for hours
+together, helping Max or the Greenlander as they worked at the rigging.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At sea, the sailors are continually engaged in <i>&ldquo;parcelling,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;serving,&rdquo;</i> and in a thousand ways ornamenting and repairing the
+numberless shrouds and stays; mending sails, or turning one side of the deck
+into a rope-walk, where they manufacture a clumsy sort of twine, called
+<i>spun-yarn.</i> This is spun with a winch; and many an hour the Lancashire
+boy had to play the part of an engine, and contribute the motive power. For
+material, they use odds and ends of old rigging called
+<i>&ldquo;junk,&rdquo;</i> the yarns of which are picked to pieces, and then
+twisted into new combinations, something as most books are manufactured. This
+&ldquo;junk&rdquo; is bought at the junk shops along the wharves; outlandish
+looking dens, generally subterranean, full of old iron, old shrouds, spars,
+rusty blocks, and superannuated tackles; and kept by villainous looking old
+men, in tarred trowsers, and with yellow beards like oakum. They look like
+wreckers; and the scattered goods they expose for sale, involuntarily remind
+one of the sea-beach, covered with keels and cordage, swept ashore in a gale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, I was now as nimble as a monkey in the rigging, and at the cry of
+<i>&ldquo;tumble up there, my hearties, and take in sail,&rdquo; I</i> was
+among the first ground-and-lofty tumblers, that sprang aloft at the word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the first time we reefed top-sails of a dark night, and I found myself
+hanging over the yard with eleven others, the ship plunging and rearing like a
+mad horse, till I felt like being jerked off the spar; then, indeed, I thought
+of a feather-bed at home, and hung on with tooth and nail; with no chance for
+snoring. But a few repetitions, soon made me used to it; and before long, I
+tied my reef-point as quickly and expertly as the best of them; never making
+what they call a <i>&ldquo;granny-knot,&rdquo;</i> and slipt down on deck by
+the bare stays, instead of the shrouds. It is surprising, how soon a boy
+overcomes his timidity about going aloft. For my own part, my nerves became as
+steady as the earth&rsquo;s diameter, and I felt as fearless on the royal yard,
+as Sam Patch on the cliff of Niagara. To my amazement, also, I found, that
+running up the rigging at sea, especially during a squall, was much easier than
+while lying in port. For as you always go up on the windward side, and the ship
+leans over, it makes more of a <i>stairs</i> of the rigging; whereas, in
+harbor, it is almost straight up and down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Besides, the pitching and rolling only imparts a pleasant sort of vitality to
+the vessel; so that the difference in being aloft in a ship at sea, and a ship
+in harbor, is pretty much the same, as riding a real live horse and a wooden
+one. And even if the live charger should pitch you over his head, <i>that</i>
+would be much more satisfactory, than an inglorious fall from the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I took great delight in furling the top-gallant sails and royals in a hard
+blow; which duty required two hands on the yard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a wild delirium about it; a fine rushing of the blood about the
+heart; and a glad, thrilling, and throbbing of the whole system, to find
+yourself tossed up at every pitch into the clouds of a stormy sky, and hovering
+like a judgment angel between heaven and earth; both hands free, with one foot
+in the rigging, and one somewhere behind you in the air. The sail would fill
+out like a balloon, with a report like a small cannon, and then collapse and
+sink away into a handful. And the feeling of mastering the rebellious canvas,
+and tying it down like a slave to the spar, and binding it over and over with
+the <i>gasket,</i> had a touch of pride and power in it, such as young King
+Richard must have felt, when he trampled down the insurgents of Wat Tyler.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for steering, they never would let me go to the helm, except during a calm,
+when I and the figure-head on the bow were about equally employed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By the way, that figure-head was a passenger I forgot to make mention of
+before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a gallant six-footer of a Highlander <i>&ldquo;in full fig,&rdquo;</i>
+with bright tartans, bare knees, barred leggings, and blue bonnet and the most
+vermilion of cheeks. He was game to his wooden marrow, and stood up to it
+through thick and thin; one foot a little advanced, and his right arm stretched
+forward, daring on the waves. In a gale of wind it was glorious to watch him
+standing at his post like a hero, and plunging up and down the watery Highlands
+and Lowlands, as the ship went roaming on her way. He was a veteran with many
+wounds of many sea-fights; and when he got to Liverpool a figure-head-builder
+there, amputated his left leg, and gave him another wooden one, which I am
+sorry to say, did not fit him very well, for ever after he looked as if he
+limped. Then this figure-head-surgeon gave him another nose, and touched up one
+eye, and repaired a rent in his tartans. After that the painter came and made
+his toilet all over again; giving him a new suit throughout, with a plaid of a
+beautiful pattern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I do not know what has become of Donald now, but I hope he is safe and snug
+with a handsome pension in the &ldquo;Sailors&rsquo;-Snug-Harbor&rdquo; on
+Staten Island.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The reason why they gave me such a slender chance of learning to steer was
+this. I was quite young and raw, and steering a ship is a great art, upon which
+much depends; especially the making a short passage; for if the helmsman be a
+clumsy, careless fellow, or ignorant of his duty, he keeps the ship going about
+in a melancholy state of indecision as to its precise destination; so that on a
+voyage to Liverpool, it may be pointing one while for Gibraltar, then for
+Rotterdam, and now for John o&rsquo; Groat&rsquo;s; all of which is worse than
+wasted time. Whereas, a true steersman keeps her to her work night and day; and
+tries to make a bee-line from port to port.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, in a sudden squall, inattention, or want of quickness at the helm, might
+make the ship <i>&ldquo;lurch to&rdquo;&mdash;or &ldquo;bring her by the
+lee.&rdquo;</i> And what those things are, the cabin passengers would never
+find out, when they found themselves going down, down, down, and bidding
+good-by forever to the moon and stars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And they little think, many of them, fine gentlemen and ladies that they are,
+what an important personage, and how much to be had in reverence, is the rough
+fellow in the pea-jacket, whom they see standing at the wheel, now cocking his
+eye aloft, and then peeping at the compass, or looking out to windward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why, that fellow has all your lives and eternities in his hand; and with one
+small and almost imperceptible motion of a spoke, in a gale of wind, might give
+a vast deal of work to surrogates and lawyers, in proving last wills and
+testaments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ay, you may well stare at him now. He does not look much like a man who might
+play into the hands of an heir-at-law, does he? Yet such is the case. Watch him
+close, therefore; take him down into your state-room occasionally after a
+stormy watch, and make a friend of him. A glass of cordial will do it. And if
+you or your heirs are interested with the underwriters, then also have an eye
+on him. And if you remark, that of the crew, all the men who come to the helm
+are careless, or inefficient; and if you observe the captain scolding them
+often, and crying out: <i>&ldquo;Luff, you rascal; she&rsquo;s falling
+off!&rdquo;</i> or, <i>&ldquo;Keep her steady, you scoundrel, you&rsquo;re
+boxing the compass!&rdquo;</i> then hurry down to your state-room, and if you
+have not yet made a will, get out your stationery and go at it; and when it is
+done, seal it up in a bottle, like Columbus&rsquo; log, and it may possibly
+drift ashore, when you are drowned in the next gale of wind.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap25"></a>CHAPTER XXV.<br/>
+QUARTER-DECK FURNITURE</h2>
+
+<p>
+Though, for reasons hinted at above, they would not let me steer, I contented
+myself with learning the compass, a graphic facsimile of which I drew on a
+blank leaf of the <i>&ldquo;Wealth of Nations,&rdquo;</i> and studied it every
+morning, like the multiplication table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I liked to peep in at the binnacle, and watch the needle; and I wondered how it
+was that it pointed north, rather than south or west; for I do not know that
+any reason can be given why it points in the precise direction it does. One
+would think, too, that, as since the beginning of the world almost, the tide of
+emigration has been setting west, the needle would point that way; whereas, it
+is forever pointing its fixed fore-finger toward the Pole, where there are few
+inducements to attract a sailor, unless it be plenty of ice for mint-juleps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our binnacle, by the way, the place that holds a ship&rsquo;s compasses,
+deserves a word of mention. It was a little house, about the bigness of a
+common bird-cage, with sliding panel doors, and two drawing-rooms within, and
+constantly perched upon a stand, right in front of the helm. It had two chimney
+stacks to carry off the smoke of the lamp that burned in it by night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was painted green, and on two sides had Venetian blinds; and on one side two
+glazed sashes; so that it looked like a cool little summer retreat, a snug bit
+of an arbor at the end of a shady garden lane. Had I been the captain, I would
+have planted vines in boxes, and placed them so as to overrun this binnacle; or
+I would have put canary-birds within; and so made an aviary of it. It is
+surprising what a different air may be imparted to the meanest thing by the
+dainty hand of taste. Nor must I omit the helm itself, which was one of a new
+construction, and a particular favorite of the captain. It was a complex system
+of cogs and wheels and spindles, all of polished brass, and looked something
+like a printing-press, or power-loom. The sailors, however, did not like it
+much, owing to the casualties that happened to their imprudent fingers, by
+catching in among the cogs and other intricate contrivances. Then, sometimes in
+a calm, when the sudden swells would lift the ship, the helm would fetch a
+lurch, and send the helmsman revolving round like Ixion, often seriously
+hurting him; a sort of breaking on the wheel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <i>harness-cask,</i> also, a sort of sea side-board, or rather meat-safe,
+in which a week&rsquo;s allowance of salt pork and beef is kept, deserves being
+chronicled. It formed part of the standing furniture of the quarter-deck. Of an
+oval shape, it was banded round with hoops all silver-gilt, with gilded bands
+secured with gilded screws, and a gilded padlock, richly chased. This formed
+the captain&rsquo;s smoking-seat, where he would perch himself of an afternoon,
+a tasseled Chinese cap upon his head, and a fragrant Havanna between his white
+and canine-looking teeth. He took much solid comfort, Captain Riga.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then the magnificent <i>capstan!</i> The pride and glory of the whole
+ship&rsquo;s company, the constant care and dandled darling of the cook, whose
+duty it was to keep it polished like a teapot; and it was an object of distant
+admiration to the steerage passengers. Like a parlor center-table, it stood
+full in the middle of the quarter-deck, radiant with brazen stars, and
+variegated with diamond-shaped veneerings of mahogany and satin wood. This was
+the captain&rsquo;s lounge, and the chief mate&rsquo;s secretary, in the
+bar-holes keeping paper and pencil for memorandums.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I might proceed and speak of the <i>booby-hatch,</i> used as a sort of settee
+by the officers, and the <i>fife-rail</i> round the mainmast, inclosing a
+little ark of canvas, painted green, where a small white dog with a blue ribbon
+round his neck, belonging to the dock-master&rsquo;s daughter, used to take his
+morning walks, and air himself in this small edition of the New York
+Bowling-Green.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap26"></a>CHAPTER XXVI.<br/>
+A SAILOR A JACK OF ALL TRADES </h2>
+
+<p>
+As I began to learn my sailor duties, and show activity in running aloft, the
+men, I observed, treated me with a little more consideration, though not at all
+relaxing in a certain air of professional superiority. For the mere knowing of
+the names of the ropes, and familiarizing yourself with their places, so that
+you can lay hold of them in the darkest night; and the loosing and furling of
+the canvas, and reefing topsails, and hauling braces; all this, though of
+course forming an indispensable part of a seaman&rsquo;s vocation, and the
+business in which he is principally engaged; yet these are things which a
+beginner of ordinary capacity soon masters, and which are far inferior to many
+other matters familiar to an <i>&ldquo;able seaman.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What did I know, for instance, about <i>striking a top-gallant-mast,</i> and
+sending it down on deck in a gale of wind? Could I have <i>turned in a
+dead-eye,</i> or in the approved nautical style have <i>clapt a seizing on the
+main-stay?</i> What did I know of <i>&ldquo;passing a gammoning,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;reiving a Burton,&rdquo; &ldquo;strapping a shoe-block,&rdquo;
+&ldquo;clearing a foul hawse,&rdquo;</i> and innumerable other intricacies?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The business of a thorough-bred sailor is a special calling, as much of a
+regular trade as a carpenter&rsquo;s or locksmith&rsquo;s. Indeed, it requires
+considerably more adroitness, and far more versatility of talent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the English merchant service boys serve a long apprenticeship to the sea, of
+seven years. Most of them first enter the Newcastle colliers, where they see a
+great deal of severe coasting service. In an old copy of the Letters of Junius,
+belonging to my father, I remember reading, that coal to supply the city of
+London could be dug at Blackheath, and sold for one half the price that the
+people of London then paid for it; but the Government would not suffer the
+mines to be opened, as it would destroy the great nursery for British seamen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A thorough sailor must understand much of other avocations. He must be a bit of
+an embroiderer, to work fanciful collars of hempen lace about the shrouds; he
+must be something of a weaver, to weave mats of rope-yarns for lashings to the
+boats; he must have a touch of millinery, so as to tie graceful bows and knots,
+such as <i>Matthew Walker&rsquo;s roses,</i> and <i>Turk&rsquo;s heads;</i> he
+must be a bit of a musician, in order to sing out at the halyards; he must be a
+sort of jeweler, to set dead-eyes in the standing rigging; he must be a
+carpenter, to enable him to make a jurymast out of a yard in case of emergency;
+he must be a sempstress, to darn and mend the sails; a ropemaker, to twist
+<i>marline</i> and <i>Spanish foxes;</i> a blacksmith, to make hooks and
+thimbles for the blocks: in short, he must be a sort of Jack of all trades, in
+order to master his own. And this, perhaps, in a greater or less degree, is
+pretty much the case with all things else; for you know nothing till you know
+all; which is the reason we never know anything.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A sailor, also, in working at the rigging, uses special tools peculiar to his
+calling&mdash;<i>fids, serving-mallets, toggles, prickers, marlingspikes,
+palms, heavers,</i> and many more. The smaller sort he generally carries with
+him from ship to ship in a sort of canvas reticule.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The estimation in which a ship&rsquo;s crew hold the knowledge of such
+accomplishments as these, is expressed in the phrase they apply to one who is a
+clever practitioner. To distinguish such a mariner from those who merely
+<i>&ldquo;hand, reef, and steer,&rdquo;</i> that is, run aloft, furl sails,
+haul ropes, and stand at the wheel, they say he is <i>&ldquo;a
+sailor-man&rdquo;</i> which means that he not only knows how to reef a topsail,
+but is an artist in the rigging.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, alas! I had no chance given me to become initiated in this art and
+mystery; no further, at least, than by looking on, and watching how that these
+things might be done as well as others, the reason was, that I had only shipped
+for this one voyage in the Highlander, a short voyage too; and it was not worth
+while to teach <i>me</i> any thing, the fruit of which instructions could be
+only reaped by the next ship I might belong to. All they wanted of me was the
+good-will of my muscles, and the use of my backbone&mdash;comparatively small
+though it was at that time&mdash;by way of a lever, for the above-mentioned
+artists to employ when wanted. Accordingly, when any embroidery was going on in
+the rigging, I was set to the most inglorious avocations; as in the merchant
+service it is a religious maxim to keep the hands always employed at something
+or other, never mind what, during their watch on deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Often furnished with a club-hammer, they swung me over the bows in a bowline,
+to pound the rust off the anchor: a most monotonous, and to me a most
+uncongenial and irksome business. There was a remarkable fatality attending the
+various hammers I carried over with me. Somehow they <i>would</i> drop out of
+my hands into the sea. But the supply of reserved hammers seemed unlimited:
+also the blessings and benedictions I received from the chief mate for my
+clumsiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At other times, they set me to picking oakum, like a convict, which hempen
+business disagreeably obtruded thoughts of halters and the gallows; or
+whittling belaying-pins, like a Down-Easter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However, I endeavored to bear it all like a young philosopher, and whiled away
+the tedious hours by gazing through a port-hole while my hands were plying, and
+repeating Lord Byron&rsquo;s Address to the Ocean, which I had often spouted on
+the stage at the High School at home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, I got used to all these matters, and took most things coolly, in the
+spirit of Seneca and the stoics.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All but the <i>&ldquo;turning out&rdquo;</i> or rising from your berth when the
+watch was called at night&mdash;<i>that</i> I never fancied. It was a sort of
+acquaintance, which the more I cultivated, the more I shrunk from; a thankless,
+miserable business, truly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Consider that after walking the deck for four full hours, you go below to
+sleep: and while thus innocently employed in reposing your wearied limbs, you
+are started up&mdash;it seems but the next instant after closing your
+lids&mdash;and hurried on deck again, into the same disagreeably dark and,
+perhaps, stormy night, from which you descended into the forecastle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The previous interval of slumber was almost wholly lost to me; at least the
+golden opportunity could not be appreciated: for though it is usually deemed a
+comfortable thing to be asleep, yet at the time no one is conscious that he is
+so enjoying himself. Therefore I made a little private arrangement with the
+Lancashire lad, who was in the other watch, just to step below occasionally,
+and shake me, and whisper in my ear&mdash;<i>&ldquo;Watch below, Buttons; watch
+below&rdquo;&mdash;</i>which pleasantly reminded me of the delightful fact.
+Then I would turn over on my side, and take another nap; and in this manner I
+enjoyed several complete watches in my bunk to the other sailor&rsquo;s one. I
+recommend the plan to all landsmen contemplating a voyage to sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But notwithstanding all these contrivances, the dreadful sequel could not be
+avoided. Eight bells would at last be struck, and the men on deck, exhilarated
+by the prospect of changing places with us, would call the watch in a most
+provoking but mirthful and facetious style.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As thus:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Starboard watch, ahoy! eight bells there, below! Tumble up, my lively
+hearties; steamboat alongside waiting for your trunks: bear a hand, bear a hand
+with your knee-buckles, my sweet and pleasant fellows! fine shower-bath here on
+deck. Hurrah, hurrah! your ice-cream is getting cold!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whereupon some of the old croakers who were getting into their trowsers would
+reply with&mdash;&ldquo;Oh, stop your gabble, will you? don&rsquo;t be in such
+a hurry, now. You feel sweet, don&rsquo;t you?&rdquo; with other exclamations,
+some of which were full of fury.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And it was not a little curious to remark, that at the expiration of the
+ensuing watch, the tables would be turned; and we on deck became the wits and
+jokers, and those below the grizzly bears and growlers.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap27"></a>CHAPTER XXVII.<br/>
+HE GETS A PEEP AT IRELAND, AND AT LAST ARRIVES AT LIVERPOOL</h2>
+
+<p>
+The Highlander was not a grayhound, not a very fast sailer; and so, the
+passage, which some of the packet ships make in fifteen or sixteen days,
+employed us about thirty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, one morning I came on deck, and they told me that Ireland was in
+sight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ireland in sight! A foreign country actually visible! I peered hard, but could
+see nothing but a bluish, cloud-like spot to the northeast. Was that Ireland?
+Why, there was nothing remarkable about that; nothing startling. If
+<i>that&rsquo;s</i> the way a foreign country looks, I might as well have staid
+at home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now what, exactly, I had fancied the shore would look like, I can not say; but
+I had a vague idea that it would be something strange and wonderful. However,
+there it was; and as the light increased and the ship sailed nearer and nearer,
+the land began to magnify, and I gazed at it with increasing interest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ireland! I thought of Robert Emmet, and that last speech of his before Lord
+Norbury; I thought of Tommy Moore, and his amatory verses: I thought of Curran,
+Grattan, Plunket, and O&rsquo;Connell; I thought of my uncle&rsquo;s ostler,
+Patrick Flinnigan; and I thought of the shipwreck of the gallant Albion, tost
+to pieces on the very shore now in sight; and I thought I should very much like
+to leave the ship and visit Dublin and the Giant&rsquo;s Causeway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently a fishing-boat drew near, and I rushed to get a view of it; but it
+was a very ordinary looking boat, bobbing up and down, as any other boat would
+have done; yet, when I considered that the solitary man in it was actually a
+born native of the land in sight; that in all probability he had never been in
+America, and knew nothing about my friends at home, I began to think that he
+looked somewhat strange.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a very fluent fellow, and as soon as we were within hailing distance,
+cried out&mdash;&ldquo;Ah, my fine sailors, from Ameriky, ain&rsquo;t ye, my
+beautiful sailors?&rdquo; And concluded by calling upon us to stop and heave a
+rope. Thinking he might have something important to communicate, the mate
+accordingly backed the main yard, and a rope being thrown, the stranger kept
+hauling in upon it, and coiling it down, crying, &ldquo;pay out! pay out, my
+honeys; ah! but you&rsquo;re noble fellows!&rdquo; Till at last the mate asked
+him why he did not come alongside, adding, &ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t you enough rope
+yet?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sure and I have,&rdquo; replied the fisherman, &ldquo;and it&rsquo;s
+time for Pat to cut and run!&rdquo; and so saying, his knife severed the rope,
+and with a Kilkenny grin, he sprang to his tiller, put his little craft before
+the wind, and bowled away from us, with some fifteen fathoms of our tow-line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And may the Old Boy hurry after you, and hang you in your stolen hemp,
+you Irish blackguard!&rdquo; cried the mate, shaking his fist at the receding
+boat, after recovering from his first fit of amazement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, then, was a beautiful introduction to the eastern hemisphere; fairly
+robbed before striking soundings. This trick upon experienced travelers
+certainly beat all I had ever heard about the wooden nutmegs and bass-wood
+pumpkin seeds of Connecticut. And I thought if there were any more Hibernians
+like our friend Pat, the Yankee peddlers might as well give it up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next land we saw was Wales. It was high noon, and a long line of purple
+mountains lay like banks of clouds against the east.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Could this be really Wales?&mdash;Wales?&mdash;and I thought of the Prince of
+Wales.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And did a real queen with a diadem reign over that very land I was looking at,
+with the identical eyes in my own head?&mdash;And then I thought of a
+grandfather of mine, who had fought against the ancestor of this queen at
+Bunker&rsquo;s Hill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, after all, the general effect of these mountains was mortifyingly like the
+general effect of the Kaatskill Mountains on the Hudson River.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a light breeze, we sailed on till next day, when we made Holyhead and
+Anglesea. Then it fell almost calm, and what little wind we had, was ahead; so
+we kept tacking to and fro, just gliding through the water, and always hovering
+in sight of a snow-white tower in the distance, which might have been a fort,
+or a light-house. I lost myself in conjectures as to what sort of people might
+be tenanting that lonely edifice, and whether they knew any thing about us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The third day, with a good wind over the taffrail, we arrived so near our
+destination, that we took a pilot at dusk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He, and every thing connected with him were very different from our New York
+pilot. In the first place, the pilot boat that brought him was a plethoric
+looking sloop-rigged boat, with flat bows, that went wheezing through the
+water; quite in contrast to the little gull of a schooner, that bade us adieu
+off Sandy Hook. Aboard of her were ten or twelve other pilots, fellows with
+shaggy brows, and muffled in shaggy coats, who sat grouped together on deck
+like a fire-side of bears, wintering in Aroostook. They must have had fine
+sociable times, though, together; cruising about the Irish Sea in quest of
+Liverpool-bound vessels; smoking cigars, drinking brandy-and-water, and
+spinning yarns; till at last, one by one, they are all scattered on board of
+different ships, and meet again by the side of a blazing sea-coal fire in some
+Liverpool taproom, and prepare for another yachting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, when this English pilot boarded us, I stared at him as if he had been some
+wild animal just escaped from the Zoological Gardens; for here was a real live
+Englishman, just from England. Nevertheless, as he soon fell to ordering us
+here and there, and swearing vociferously in a language quite familiar to me; I
+began to think him very common-place, and considerable of a bore after all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After running till about midnight, we <i>&ldquo;hove-to&rdquo;</i> near the
+mouth of the Mersey; and next morning, before day-break, took the first of the
+flood; and with a fair wind, stood into the river; which, at its mouth, is
+quite an arm of the sea. Presently, in the misty twilight, we passed immense
+buoys, and caught sight of distant objects on shore, vague and shadowy shapes,
+like Ossian&rsquo;s ghosts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I stood leaning over the side, and trying to summon up some image of
+Liverpool, to see how the reality would answer to my conceit; and while the
+fog, and mist, and gray dawn were investing every thing with a mysterious
+interest, I was startled by the doleful, dismal sound of a great bell, whose
+slow intermitting tolling seemed in unison with the solemn roll of the billows.
+I thought I had never heard so boding a sound; a sound that seemed to speak of
+judgment and the resurrection, like belfry-mouthed Paul of Tarsus.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not in the direction of the shore; but seemed to come out of the vaults
+of the sea, and out of the mist and fog.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Who was dead, and what could it be?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I soon learned from my shipmates, that this was the famous <i>Bett-Buoy,</i>
+which is precisely what its name implies; and tolls fast or slow, according to
+the agitation of the waves. In a calm, it is dumb; in a moderate breeze, it
+tolls gently; but in a gale, it is an alarum like the tocsin, warning all
+mariners to flee. But it seemed fuller of dirges for the past, than of
+monitions for the future; and no one can give ear to it, without thinking of
+the sailors who sleep far beneath it at the bottom of the deep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we sailed ahead the river contracted. The day came, and soon, passing two
+lofty land-marks on the Lancashire shore, we rapidly drew near the town, and at
+last, came to anchor in the stream.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Looking shoreward, I beheld lofty ranges of dingy warehouses, which seemed very
+deficient in the elements of the marvelous; and bore a most unexpected
+resemblance to the ware-houses along South-street in New York. There was
+nothing strange; nothing extraordinary about them. There they stood; a row of
+calm and collected ware-houses; very good and substantial edifices, doubtless,
+and admirably adapted to the ends had in view by the builders; but plain,
+matter-of-fact ware-houses, nevertheless, and that was all that could be said
+of them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To be sure, I did not expect that every house in Liverpool must be a Leaning
+Tower of Pisa, or a Strasbourg Cathedral; but yet, these edifices I must
+confess, were a sad and bitter disappointment to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it was different with Larry the whaleman; who to my surprise, looking about
+him delighted, exclaimed, &ldquo;Why, this &rsquo;ere is a considerable
+place&mdash;I&rsquo;m <i>dummed if</i> it ain&rsquo;t quite a place.&mdash;Why,
+them &rsquo;ere houses is considerable houses. It beats the coast of Afriky,
+all hollow; nothing like this in <i>Madagasky,</i> I tell you;&mdash;I&rsquo;m
+<i>dummed,</i> boys if Liverpool ain&rsquo;t a city!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this occasion, indeed, Larry altogether forgot his hostility to
+civilization. Having been so long accustomed to associate foreign lands with
+the savage places of the Indian Ocean, he had been under the impression, that
+Liverpool must be a town of bamboos, situated in some swamp, and whose
+inhabitants turned their attention principally to the cultivation of log-wood
+and curing of flying-fish. For that any great commercial city existed three
+thousand miles from home, was a thing, of which Larry had never before had a
+<i>&ldquo;realizing sense.&rdquo;</i> He was accordingly astonished and
+delighted; and began to feel a sort of consideration for the country which
+could boast so extensive a town. Instead of holding Queen Victoria on a par
+with the Queen of Madagascar, as he had been accustomed to do; he ever after
+alluded to that lady with feeling and respect.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for the other seamen, the sight of a foreign country seemed to kindle no
+enthusiasm in them at all: no emotion in the least. They looked around them
+with great presence of mind, and acted precisely as you or I would, if, after a
+morning&rsquo;s absence round the corner, we found ourselves returning home.
+Nearly all of them had made frequent voyages to Liverpool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not long after anchoring, several boats came off; and from one of them stept a
+neatly-dressed and very respectable-looking woman, some thirty years of age, I
+should think, carrying a bundle. Coming forward among the sailors, she inquired
+for Max the Dutchman, who immediately was forthcoming, and saluted her by the
+mellifluous appellation of <i>Sally.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now during the passage, Max in discoursing to me of Liverpool, had often
+assured me, that that city had the honor of containing a spouse of his; and
+that in all probability, I would have the pleasure of seeing her. But having
+heard a good many stories about the bigamies of seamen, and their having wives
+and sweethearts in every port, the round world over; and having been an
+eye-witness to a nuptial parting between this very Max and a lady in New York;
+I put down this relation of his, for what I thought it might reasonably be
+worth. What was my astonishment, therefore, to see this really decent, civil
+woman coming with a neat parcel of Max&rsquo;s shore clothes, all washed,
+plaited, and ironed, and ready to put on at a moment&rsquo;s warning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They stood apart a few moments giving loose to those transports of pleasure,
+which always take place, I suppose, between man and wife after long
+separations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, after many earnest inquiries as to how he had behaved himself in New
+York; and concerning the state of his wardrobe; and going down into the
+forecastle, and inspecting it in person, Sally departed; having exchanged her
+bundle of clean clothes for a bundle of soiled ones, and this was precisely
+what the New York wife had done for Max, not thirty days previous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So long as we laid in port, Sally visited the Highlander daily; and approved
+herself a neat and expeditious getter-up of duck frocks and trowsers, a capital
+tailoress, and as far as I could see, a very well-behaved, discreet, and
+reputable woman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But from all I had seen of her, I should suppose Meg, the New York wife, to
+have been equally well-behaved, discreet, and reputable; and equally devoted to
+the keeping in good order Max&rsquo;s wardrobe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when we left England at last, Sally bade Max good-by, just as Meg had done;
+and when we arrived at New York, Meg greeted Max precisely as Sally had greeted
+him in Liverpool. Indeed, a pair of more amiable wives never belonged to one
+man; they never quarreled, or had so much as a difference of any kind; the
+whole broad Atlantic being between them; and Max was equally polite and civil
+to both. For many years, he had been going Liverpool and New York voyages,
+plying between wife and wife with great regularity, and sure of receiving a
+hearty domestic welcome on either side of the ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thinking this conduct of his, however, altogether wrong and every way immoral,
+I once ventured to express to him my opinion on the subject. But I never did so
+again. He turned round on me, very savagely; and after rating me soundly for
+meddling in concerns not my own, concluded by asking me triumphantly, whether
+<i>old King Sol,</i> as he called the son of David, did not have a whole
+frigate-full of wives; and that being the case, whether he, a poor sailor, did
+not have just as good a right to have two? &ldquo;What was not wrong then, is
+right now,&rdquo; said Max; &ldquo;so, mind your eye, Buttons, or I&rsquo;ll
+crack your pepper-box for you!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap28"></a>CHAPTER XXVIII.<br/>
+HE GOES TO SUPPER AT THE SIGN OF THE BALTIMORE CLIPPER</h2>
+
+<p>
+In the afternoon our pilot was all alive with his orders; we hove up the
+anchor, and after a deal of pulling, and hauling, and jamming against other
+ships, we wedged our way through a lock at high tide; and about dark, succeeded
+in working up to a berth in <i>Prince&rsquo;s Dock.</i> The hawsers and
+tow-lines being then coiled away, the crew were told to go ashore, select their
+boarding-house, and sit down to supper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here it must be mentioned, that owing to the strict but necessary regulations
+of the Liverpool docks, no fires of any kind are allowed on board the vessels
+within them; and hence, though the sailors are supposed to sleep in the
+forecastle, yet they must get their meals ashore, or live upon cold potatoes.
+To a ship, the American merchantmen adopt the former plan; the owners, of
+course, paying the landlord&rsquo;s bill; which, in a large crew remaining at
+Liverpool more than six weeks, as we of the Highlander did, forms no
+inconsiderable item in the expenses of the voyage. Other ships,
+however&mdash;the economical Dutch and Danish, for instance, and sometimes the
+prudent Scotch&mdash;feed their luckless tars in dock, with precisely the same
+fare which they give them at sea; taking their salt junk ashore to be cooked,
+which, indeed, is but scurvy sort of treatment, since it is very apt to induce
+the scurvy. A parsimonious proceeding like this is regarded with immeasurable
+disdain by the crews of the New York vessels, who, if their captains treated
+them after that fashion, would soon bolt and run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was quite dark, when we all sprang ashore; and, for the first time, I felt
+dusty particles of the renowned British soil penetrating into my eyes and
+lungs. As for <i>stepping</i> on it, that was out of the question, in the
+well-paved and flagged condition of the streets; and I did not have an
+opportunity to do so till some time afterward, when I got out into the country;
+and then, indeed, I saw England, and snuffed its immortal loam&mdash;but not
+till then.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Jackson led the van; and after stopping at a tavern, took us up this street,
+and down that, till at last he brought us to a narrow lane, filled with
+boarding-houses, spirit-vaults, and sailors. Here we stopped before the sign of
+a Baltimore Clipper, flanked on one side by a gilded bunch of grapes and a
+bottle, and on the other by the British Unicorn and American Eagle, lying down
+by each other, like the lion and lamb in the millennium.&mdash;A very judicious
+and tasty device, showing a delicate apprehension of the propriety of
+conciliating American sailors in an English boarding-house; and yet in no way
+derogating from the honor and dignity of England, but placing the two nations,
+indeed, upon a footing of perfect equality.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Near the unicorn was a very small animal, which at first I took for a young
+unicorn; but it looked more like a yearling lion. It was holding up one paw, as
+if it had a splinter in it; and on its head was a sort of basket-hilted,
+low-crowned hat, without a rim. I asked a sailor standing by, what this animal
+meant, when, looking at me with a grin, he answered, &ldquo;Why, youngster,
+don&rsquo;t you know what that means? It&rsquo;s a young jackass, limping off
+with a kedgeree pot of rice out of the cuddy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though it was an English boarding-house, it was kept by a broken-down American
+mariner, one Danby, a dissolute, idle fellow, who had married a buxom English
+wife, and now lived upon her industry; for the lady, and not the sailor, proved
+to be the head of the establishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was a hale, good-looking woman, about forty years old, and among the seamen
+went by the name of <i>&ldquo;Handsome Mary.&rdquo;</i> But though, from the
+dissipated character of her spouse, Mary had become the business personage of
+the house, bought the marketing, overlooked the tables, and conducted all the
+more important arrangements, yet she was by no means an Amazon to her husband,
+if she <i>did</i> play a masculine part in other matters. No; and the more is
+the pity, poor Mary seemed too much attached to Danby, to seek to rule him as a
+termagant. Often she went about her household concerns with the tears in her
+eyes, when, after a fit of intoxication, this brutal husband of hers had been
+beating her. The sailors took her part, and many a time volunteered to give him
+a thorough thrashing before her eyes; but Mary would beg them not to do so, as
+Danby would, no doubt, be a better boy next time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But there seemed no likelihood of this, so long as that abominable bar of his
+stood upon the premises. As you entered the passage, it stared upon you on one
+side, ready to entrap all guests.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a grotesque, old-fashioned, castellated sort of a sentry-box, made of a
+smoky-colored wood, and with a grating in front, that lifted up like a
+portcullis. And here would this Danby sit all the day long; and when customers
+grew thin, would patronize his own ale himself, pouring down mug after mug, as
+if he took himself for one of his own quarter-casks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sometimes an old crony of his, one Bob Still, would come in; and then they
+would occupy the sentry-box together, and swill their beer in concert. This
+pot-friend of Danby was portly as a dray-horse, and had a round, sleek, oily
+head, twinkling eyes, and moist red cheeks. He was a lusty troller of
+ale-songs; and, with his mug in his hand, would lean his waddling bulk partly
+out of the sentry-box, singing:
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;No frost, no snow, no wind, I trow,<br/>
+    Can hurt me if I wold,<br/>
+I am so wrapt, and thoroughly lapt<br/>
+    In jolly good ale and old,&mdash;<br/>
+I stuff my skin so full within,<br/>
+    Of jolly good ale and old.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p class="noindent">
+Or this,
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+&ldquo;Four wines and brandies I detest,<br/>
+Here&rsquo;s richer juice from barley press&rsquo;d.<br/>
+It is the quintessence of malt,<br/>
+And they that drink it want no salt.<br/>
+Come, then, quick come, and take this beer,<br/>
+And water henceforth you&rsquo;ll forswear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas! Handsome Mary. What avail all thy private tears and remonstrances with
+the incorrigible Danby, so long as that brewery of a toper, Bob Still, daily
+eclipses thy threshold with the vast diameter of his paunch, and enthrones
+himself in the sentry-box, holding divided rule with thy spouse?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The more he drinks, the fatter and rounder waxes Bob; and the songs pour out as
+the ale pours in, on the well-known principle, that the air in a vessel is
+displaced and expelled, as the liquid rises higher and higher in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as for Danby, the miserable Yankee grows sour on good cheer, and dries up
+the thinner for every drop of fat ale he imbibes. It is plain and demonstrable,
+that much ale is not good for Yankees, and operates differently upon them from
+what it does upon a Briton: ale must be drank in a fog and a drizzle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Entering the sign of the Clipper, Jackson ushered us into a small room on one
+side, and shortly after, Handsome Mary waited upon us with a courtesy, and
+received the compliments of several old guests among our crew. She then
+disappeared to provide our supper. While my shipmates were now engaged in
+tippling, and talking with numerous old acquaintances of theirs in the
+neighborhood, who thronged about the door, I remained alone in the little room,
+meditating profoundly upon the fact, that I was now seated upon an English
+bench, under an English roof, in an English tavern, forming an integral part of
+the English empire. It was a staggering fact, but none the less true.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I examined the place attentively; it was a long, narrow, little room, with one
+small arched window with red curtains, looking out upon a smoky, untidy yard,
+bounded by a dingy brick-wall, the top of which was horrible with pieces of
+broken old bottles, stuck into mortar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A dull lamp swung overhead, placed in a wooden ship suspended from the ceiling.
+The walls were covered with a paper, representing an endless succession of
+vessels of all nations continually circumnavigating the apartment. By way of a
+pictorial mainsail to one of these ships, a map was hung against it,
+representing in faded colors the flags of all nations. From the street came a
+confused uproar of ballad-singers, bawling women, babies, and drunken sailors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And this is England?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But where are the old abbeys, and the York Minsters, and the lord mayors, and
+coronations, and the May-poles, and fox-hunters, and Derby races, and the dukes
+and duchesses, and the Count d&rsquo;Orsays, which, from all my reading, I had
+been in the habit of associating with England? Not the most distant glimpse of
+them was to be seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas! Wellingborough, thought I, I fear you stand but a poor chance to see the
+sights. You are nothing but a poor sailor boy; and the Queen is not going to
+send a deputation of noblemen to invite you to St. James&rsquo;s.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was then, I began to see, that my prospects of seeing the world as a sailor
+were, after all, but very doubtful; for sailors only go <i>round</i> the world,
+without going <i>into</i> it; and their reminiscences of travel are only a dim
+recollection of a chain of tap-rooms surrounding the globe, parallel with the
+Equator. They but touch the perimeter of the circle; hover about the edges of
+terra-firma; and only land upon wharves and pier-heads. They would dream as
+little of traveling inland to see Kenilworth, or Blenheim Castle, as they would
+of sending a car overland to the Pope, when they touched at Naples.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From these reveries I was soon roused, by a servant girl hurrying from room to
+room, in shrill tones exclaiming, &ldquo;Supper, supper ready.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mounting a rickety staircase, we entered a room on the second floor. Three tall
+brass candlesticks shed a smoky light upon smoky walls, of what had once been
+sea-blue, covered with sailor-scrawls of foul anchors, lovers&rsquo; sonnets,
+and ocean ditties. On one side, nailed against the wainscot in a row, were the
+four knaves of cards, each Jack putting his best foot foremost as usual. What
+these signified I never heard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But such ample cheer! Such a groaning table! Such a superabundance of solids
+and substantial! Was it possible that sailors fared thus?&mdash;the sailors,
+who at sea live upon salt beef and biscuit?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+First and foremost, was a mighty pewter dish, big as Achilles&rsquo; shield,
+sustaining a pyramid of smoking sausages. This stood at one end; midway was a
+similar dish, heavily laden with farmers&rsquo; slices of head-cheese; and at
+the opposite end, a congregation of beef-steaks, piled tier over tier.
+Scattered at intervals between, were side dishes of boiled potatoes, eggs by
+the score, bread, and pickles; and on a stand adjoining, was an ample reserve
+of every thing on the supper table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We fell to with all our hearts; wrapt ourselves in hot jackets of beef-steaks;
+curtailed the sausages with great celerity; and sitting down before the
+head-cheese, soon razed it to its foundations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Toward the close of the entertainment, I suggested to Peggy, one of the girls
+who had waited upon us, that a cup of tea would be a nice thing to take; and I
+would thank her for one. She replied that it was too late for tea; but she
+would get me a cup of <i>&ldquo;swipes&rdquo;</i> if I wanted it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not knowing what <i>&ldquo;swipes&rdquo;</i> might be, I thought I would run
+the risk and try it; but it proved a miserable beverage, with a musty, sour
+flavor, as if it had been a decoction of spoiled pickles. I never patronized
+<i>swipes</i> again; but gave it a wide berth; though, at dinner afterward, it
+was furnished to an unlimited extent, and drunk by most of my shipmates, who
+pronounced it good.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Bob Still would not have pronounced it so; for this <i>stripes, as I</i>
+learned, was a sort of cheap substitute for beer; or a bastard kind of beer; or
+the washings and rinsings of old beer-barrels. But I do not remember now what
+they said it was, precisely. I only know, that <i>swipes</i> was my
+abomination. As for the taste of it, I can only describe it as answering to the
+name itself; which is certainly significant of something vile. But it is drunk
+in large quantities by the poor people about Liverpool, which, perhaps, in some
+degree, accounts for their poverty.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap29"></a>CHAPTER XXIX.<br/>
+REDBURN DEFERENTIALLY DISCOURSES CONCERNING THE PROSPECTS OF SAILORS</h2>
+
+<p>
+The ship remained in Prince&rsquo;s Dock over six weeks; but as I do not mean
+to present a diary of my stay there, I shall here simply record the general
+tenor of the life led by our crew during that interval; and will then proceed
+to note down, at random, my own wanderings about town, and impressions of
+things as they are recalled to me now, after the lapse of so many years.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But first, I must mention that we saw little of the captain during our stay in
+the dock. Sometimes, cane in hand, he sauntered down of a pleasant morning from
+the <i>Arms Hotel</i>, I believe it was, where he boarded; and after lounging
+about the ship, giving orders to his Prime Minister and Grand Vizier, the chief
+mate, he would saunter back to his drawing-rooms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the glimpse of a play-bill, which I detected peeping out of his pocket, I
+inferred that he patronized the theaters; and from the flush of his cheeks,
+that he patronized the fine old Port wine, for which Liverpool is famous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Occasionally, however, he spent his nights on board; and mad, roystering nights
+they were, such as rare Ben Jonson would have delighted in. For company over
+the cabin-table, he would have four or five whiskered sea-captains, who kept
+the steward drawing corks and filling glasses all the time. And once, the whole
+company were found under the table at four o&rsquo;clock in the morning, and
+were put to bed and tucked in by the two mates. Upon this occasion, I agreed
+with our woolly Doctor of Divinity, the black cook, that they should have been
+ashamed of themselves; but there is no shame in some sea-captains, who only
+blush after the third bottle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the many visits of Captain Riga to the ship, he always said something
+courteous to a gentlemanly, friendless custom-house officer, who staid on board
+of us nearly all the time we lay in the dock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And weary days they must have been to this friendless custom-house officer;
+trying to kill time in the cabin with a newspaper; and rapping on the transom
+with his knuckles. He was kept on board to prevent smuggling; but he used to
+smuggle himself ashore very often, when, according to law, he should have been
+at his post on board ship. But no wonder; he seemed to be a man of fine
+feelings, altogether above his situation; a most inglorious one, indeed; worse
+than driving geese to water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now, to proceed with the crew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At daylight, all hands were called, and the decks were washed down; then we had
+an hour to go ashore to breakfast; after which we worked at the rigging, or
+picked oakum, or were set to some employment or other, never mind how trivial,
+till twelve o&rsquo;clock, when we went to dinner. At half-past nine we resumed
+work; and finally <i>knocked off</i> at four o&rsquo;clock in the afternoon,
+unless something particular was in hand. And after four o&rsquo;clock, we could
+go where we pleased, and were not required to be on board again till next
+morning at daylight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we had nothing to do with the cargo, of course, our duties were light
+enough; and the chief mate was often put to it to devise some employment for
+us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We had no watches to stand, a ship-keeper, hired from shore, relieving us from
+that; and all the while the men&rsquo;s wages ran on, as at sea. Sundays we had
+to ourselves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus, it will be seen, that the life led by sailors of American ships in
+Liverpool, is an exceedingly easy one, and abounding in leisure. They live
+ashore on the fat of the land; and after a little wholesome exercise in the
+morning, have the rest of the day to themselves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nevertheless, these Liverpool voyages, likewise those to London and Havre, are
+the least profitable that an improvident seaman can take. Because, in New York
+he receives his month&rsquo;s advance; in Liverpool, another; both of which, in
+most cases, quickly disappear; so that by the time his voyage terminates, he
+generally has but little coming to him; sometimes not a cent. Whereas, upon a
+long voyage, say to India or China, his wages accumulate; he has more
+inducements to economize, and far fewer motives to extravagance; and when he is
+paid off at last, he goes away jingling a quart measure of dollars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Besides, of all sea-ports in the world, Liverpool, perhaps, most abounds in all
+the variety of land-sharks, land-rats, and other vermin, which make the hapless
+mariner their prey. In the shape of landlords, bar-keepers, clothiers, crimps,
+and boarding-house loungers, the land-sharks devour him, limb by limb; while
+the land-rats and mice constantly nibble at his purse.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Other perils he runs, also, far worse; from the denizens of notorious
+Corinthian haunts in the vicinity of the docks, which in depravity are not to
+be matched by any thing this side of the pit that is bottomless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet, sailors love this Liverpool; and upon long voyages to distant parts of
+the globe, will be continually dilating upon its charms and attractions, and
+extolling it above all other seaports in the world. For in Liverpool they find
+their Paradise&mdash;not the well known street of that name&mdash;and one of
+them told me he would be content to lie in Prince&rsquo;s Dock till <i>he hove
+up anchor</i> for the world to come.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Much is said of ameliorating the condition of sailors; but it must ever prove a
+most difficult endeavor, so long as the antidote is given before the bane is
+removed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Consider, that, with the majority of them, the very fact of their being
+sailors, argues a certain recklessness and sensualism of character, ignorance,
+and depravity; consider that they are generally friendless and alone in the
+world; or if they have friends and relatives, they are almost constantly beyond
+the reach of their good influences; consider that after the rigorous
+discipline, hardships, dangers, and privations of a voyage, they are set adrift
+in a foreign port, and exposed to a thousand enticements, which, under the
+circumstances, would be hard even for virtue itself to withstand, unless virtue
+went about on crutches; consider that by their very vocation they are shunned
+by the better classes of people, and cut off from all access to respectable and
+improving society; consider all this, and the reflecting mind must very soon
+perceive that the case of sailors, as a class, is not a very promising one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, the bad things of their condition come under the head of those chronic
+evils which can only be ameliorated, it would seem, by ameliorating the moral
+organization of all civilization.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though old seventy-fours and old frigates are converted into chapels, and
+launched into the docks; though the &ldquo;Boatswain&rsquo;s Mate&rdquo; and
+other clever religious tracts in the nautical dialect are distributed among
+them; though clergymen harangue them from the pier-heads: and chaplains in the
+navy read sermons to them on the gun-deck; though evangelical boarding-houses
+are provided for them; though the parsimony of ship-owners has seconded the
+really sincere and pious efforts of Temperance Societies, to take away from
+seamen their old rations of grog while at sea:&mdash;notwithstanding all these
+things, and many more, the relative condition of the great bulk of sailors to
+the rest of mankind, seems to remain pretty much where it was, a century ago.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is too much the custom, perhaps, to regard as a special advance, that
+unavoidable, and merely participative progress, which any one class makes in
+sharing the general movement of the race. Thus, because the sailor, who to-day
+steers the Hibernia or Unicorn steam-ship across the Atlantic, is a somewhat
+different man from the exaggerated sailors of Smollett, and the men who fought
+with Nelson at Copenhagen, and survived to riot themselves away at North Corner
+in Plymouth;&mdash;because the modem tar is not quite so gross as heretofore,
+and has shaken off some of his shaggy jackets, and docked his Lord Rodney
+queue:&mdash;therefore, in the estimation of some observers, he has begun to
+see the evils of his condition, and has voluntarily improved. But upon a closer
+scrutiny, it will be seen that he has but drifted along with that great tide,
+which, perhaps, has two flows for one ebb; he has made no individual advance of
+his own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are classes of men in the world, who bear the same relation to society at
+large, that the wheels do to a coach: and are just as indispensable. But
+however easy and delectable the springs upon which the insiders pleasantly
+vibrate: however sumptuous the hammer-cloth, and glossy the door-panels; yet,
+for all this, the wheels must still revolve in dusty, or muddy revolutions. No
+contrivance, no sagacity can lift <i>them</i> out of the mire; for upon
+something the coach must be bottomed; on something the insiders must roll.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, sailors form one of these wheels: they go and come round the globe; they
+are the true importers, and exporters of spices and silks; of fruits and wines
+and marbles; they carry missionaries, embassadors, opera-singers, armies,
+merchants, tourists, and scholars to their destination: they are a bridge of
+boats across the Atlantic; they are the <i>primum mobile</i> of all commerce;
+and, in short, were they to emigrate in a body to man the navies of the moon,
+almost every thing would stop here on earth except its revolution on its axis,
+and the orators in the American Congress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And yet, what are sailors? What in your heart do you think of that fellow
+staggering along the dock? Do you not give him a wide berth, shun him, and
+account him but little above the brutes that perish? Will you throw open your
+parlors to him; invite him to dinner? or give him a season ticket to your pew
+in church?&mdash;No. You will do no such thing; but at a distance, you will
+perhaps subscribe a dollar or two for the building of a hospital, to
+accommodate sailors already broken down; or for the distribution of excellent
+books among tars who can not read. And the very mode and manner in which such
+charities are made, bespeak, more than words, the low estimation in which
+sailors are held. It is useless to gainsay it; they are deemed almost the
+refuse and offscourings of the earth; and the romantic view of them is
+principally had through romances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But can sailors, one of the wheels of this world, be wholly lifted up from the
+mire? There seems not much chance for it, in the old systems and programmes of
+the future, however well-intentioned and sincere; for with such systems, the
+thought of lifting them up seems almost as hopeless as that of growing the
+grape in Nova Zembla.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But we must not altogether despair for the sailor; nor need those who toil for
+his good be at bottom disheartened, or Time must prove his friend in the end;
+and though sometimes he would almost seem as a neglected step-son of heaven,
+permitted to run on and riot out his days with no hand to restrain him, while
+others are watched over and tenderly cared for; yet we feel and we know that
+God is the true Father of all, and that none of his children are without the
+pale of his care.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap30"></a>CHAPTER XXX.<br/>
+REDBURN GROWS INTOLERABLY FLAT AND STUPID OVER SOME OUTLANDISH OLD
+GUIDE-BOOKS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Among the odd volumes in my father&rsquo;s library, was a collection of old
+European and English guide-books, which he had bought on his travels, a great
+many years ago. In my childhood, I went through many courses of studying them,
+and never tired of gazing at the numerous quaint embellishments and plates, and
+staring at the strange title-pages, some of which I thought resembled the
+mustached faces of foreigners. Among others was a Parisian-looking, faded,
+pink-covered pamphlet, the rouge here and there effaced upon its now thin and
+attenuated cheeks, entitled, <i>&ldquo;Voyage Descriptif et Philosophique de
+L&rsquo;Ancien et du Nouveau Paris: Miroir Fidèle&rdquo;</i> also a
+time-darkened, mossy old book, in marbleized binding, much resembling
+verd-antique, entitled, <i>&ldquo;Itinéraire Instructif de Rome, ou Description
+Générale des Monumens Antiques et Modernes et des Ouvrages les plus
+Remarquables de Peinteur, de Sculpture, et de Architecture de cette Célébre
+Ville;&rdquo;</i> on the russet title-page is a vignette representing a barren
+rock, partly shaded by a scrub-oak (a forlorn bit of landscape), and under the
+lee of the rock and the shade of the tree, maternally reclines the houseless
+foster-mother of Romulus and Remus, giving suck to the illustrious twins; a
+pair of naked little cherubs sprawling on the ground, with locked arms, eagerly
+engaged at their absorbing occupation; a large cactus-leaf or diaper hangs from
+a bough, and the wolf looks a good deal like one of the no-horn breed of
+barn-yard cows; the work is published <i>&ldquo;Avec privilege du Souverain
+Pontife.&rdquo;</i> There was also a velvet-bound old volume, in brass clasps,
+entitled, <i>&ldquo;The Conductor through Holland&rdquo;</i> with a plate of
+the Stadt House; also a venerable <i>&ldquo;Picture of London&rdquo;</i>
+abounding in representations of St. Paul&rsquo;s, the Monument, Temple-Bar,
+Hyde-Park-Corner, the Horse Guards, the Admiralty, Charing-Cross, and Vauxhall
+Bridge. Also, a bulky book, in a dusty-looking yellow cover, reminding one of
+the paneled doors of a mail-coach, and bearing an elaborate title-page, full of
+printer&rsquo;s flourishes, in emulation of the cracks of a four-in-hand whip,
+entitled, in part, <i>&ldquo;The Great Roads, both direct and cross, throughout
+England and Wales, from an actual Admeasurement by order of His Majesty&rsquo;s
+Postmaster-General: This work describes the Cities, Market and Borough and
+Corporate Towns, and those at which the Assizes are held, and gives the time of
+the Mails&rsquo; arrival and departure from each: Describes the Inns in the
+Metropolis from which the stages go, and the Inns in the country which supply
+post-horses and carriages: Describes the Noblemen and Gentlemen&rsquo;s Seats
+situated near the Road, with Maps of the Environs of London, Bath, Brighton,
+and Margate.&rdquo;</i> It is dedicated <i>&ldquo;To the Right Honorable the
+Earls of Chesterfield and Leicester, by their Lordships&rsquo; Most Obliged,
+Obedient, and Obsequious Servant, John Gary,</i> 1798.&rdquo; Also a green
+pamphlet, with a motto from Virgil, and an intricate coat of arms on the cover,
+looking like a diagram of the Labyrinth of Crete, entitled, &ldquo;A
+<i>Description of York, its Antiquities and Public Buildings, particularly the
+Cathedral; compiled with great pains from the most authentic
+records.&rdquo;</i> Also a small scholastic-looking volume, in a classic vellum
+binding, and with a frontispiece bringing together at one view the towers and
+turrets of King&rsquo;s College and the magnificent Cathedral of Ely, though
+geographically sixteen miles apart, entitled, <i>&ldquo;The Cambridge Guide:
+its Colleges, Halls, Libraries, and Museums, with the Ceremonies of the Town
+and University, and some account of Ely Cathedral.&rdquo;</i> Also a pamphlet,
+with a japanned sort of cover, stamped with a disorderly higgledy-piggledy
+group of pagoda-looking structures, claiming to be an accurate representation
+of the <i>&ldquo;North or Grand Front of Blenheim,&rdquo;</i> and entitled,
+&ldquo;A <i>Description of Blenheim, the Seat of His Grace the Duke of
+Marlborough; containing a full account of the Paintings, Tapestry, and
+Furniture: a Picturesque Tour of the Gardens and Parks, and a General
+Description of the famous China Gallery,</i> &amp;.; <i>with an Essay on Landscape
+Gardening: and embellished with a View of the Palace, and a New and Elegant
+Plan of the Great Park.&rdquo;</i> And lastly, and to the purpose, there was a
+volume called &ldquo;THE PICTURE OF LIVERPOOL.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a curious and remarkable book; and from the many fond associations
+connected with it, I should like to immortalize it, if I could.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But let me get it down from its shrine, and paint it, if I may, from the life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I now linger over the volume, to and fro turning the pages so dear to my
+boyhood,&mdash;the very pages which, years and years ago, my father turned over
+amid the very scenes that are here described; what a soft, pleasing sadness
+steals over me, and how I melt into the past and forgotten!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dear book! I will sell my Shakespeare, and even sacrifice my old quarto
+Hogarth, before I will part with you. Yes, I will go to the hammer myself, ere
+I send you to be knocked down in the auctioneer&rsquo;s shambles. I will, my
+beloved,&mdash;old family relic that you are;&mdash;till you drop leaf from
+leaf, and letter from letter, you shall have a snug shelf somewhere, though I
+have no bench for myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In size, it is what the booksellers call an <i>18mo;</i> it is bound in green
+morocco, which from my earliest recollection has been spotted and tarnished
+with time; the corners are marked with triangular patches of red, like little
+cocked hats; and some unknown Goth has inflicted an incurable wound upon the
+back. There is no lettering outside; so that he who lounges past my humble
+shelves, seldom dreams of opening the anonymous little book in green. There it
+stands; day after day, week after week, year after year; and no one but myself
+regards it. But I make up for all neglects, with my own abounding love for it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But let us open the volume.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What are these scrawls in the fly-leaves? what incorrigible pupil of a
+writing-master has been here? what crayon sketcher of wild animals and falling
+air-castles? Ah, no!&mdash;these are all part and parcel of the precious book,
+which go to make up the sum of its treasure to me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some of the scrawls are my own; and as poets do with their juvenile sonnets, I
+might write under this horse, <i>&ldquo;Drawn at the age of three
+years,&rdquo;</i> and under this autograph, <i>&ldquo;Executed at the age of
+eight.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Others are the handiwork of my brothers, and sisters, and cousins; and the
+hands that sketched some of them are now moldered away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what does this anchor here? this ship? and this sea-ditty of
+Dibdin&rsquo;s? The book must have fallen into the hands of some tarry captain
+of a forecastle. No: that anchor, ship, and Dibdin&rsquo;s ditty are mine; this
+hand drew them; and on this very voyage to Liverpool. But not so fast; I did
+not mean to tell that yet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Full in the midst of these pencil scrawlings, completely surrounded indeed,
+stands in indelible, though faded ink, and in my father&rsquo;s hand-writing,
+the following:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+WALTER REDBURN.
+</p>
+
+<p class="right">
+Riddough&rsquo;s Royal Hotel,<br/>
+Liverpool, March 20th, 1808.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Turning over that leaf, I come upon some half-effaced miscellaneous memoranda
+in pencil, characteristic of a methodical mind, and therefore indubitably my
+father&rsquo;s, which he must have made at various times during his stay in
+Liverpool. These are full of a strange, subdued, old, midsummer interest to me:
+and though, from the numerous effacements, it is much like cross-reading to
+make them out; yet, I must here copy a few at random:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<table summary="" style="">
+
+<tr>
+<td></td><td>    </td><td>£</td><td>s.</td><td>d</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><i>Guide-Book</i></td><td>    </td><td></td><td>3</td><td>6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><i>Dinner at the Star and Garter</i></td><td>    </td><td></td><td></td><td>10</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><i>Trip to Preston (distance 31 m.)</i></td><td>    </td><td>2</td><td>6</td><td>3</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><i>Gratuities</i></td><td>    </td><td></td><td></td><td>4</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><i>Hack</i></td><td>    </td><td></td><td>4</td><td>6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><i>Thompson&rsquo;s Seasons</i></td><td>    </td><td></td><td></td><td>5</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><i>Library</i></td><td>    </td><td></td><td></td><td>1</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><i>Boat on the river</i></td><td>    </td><td></td><td></td><td>6</td>
+</tr>
+
+<tr>
+<td><i>Port wine and cigar</i></td><td>    </td><td></td><td></td><td>4</td>
+</tr>
+
+</table>
+
+<p class="p2">
+And on the opposite page, I can just decipher the following:
+</p>
+
+<p class="letter">
+<i>Dine with Mr. Roscoe on Monday.</i><br/>
+<i>Call upon Mr. Morille same day.</i><br/>
+<i>Leave card at Colonel Digby&rsquo;s on Tuesday.</i><br/>
+<i>Theatre Friday night&mdash;Richard III. and new farce.</i><br/>
+<i>Present letter at Miss L&mdash;&mdash;&rsquo;s on Tuesday.</i><br/>
+<i>Call on Sampson &amp; Wilt, Friday.</i><br/>
+<i>Get my draft on London cashed.</i><br/>
+<i>Write home by the Princess.</i><br/>
+<i>Letter bag at Sampson and Wilt&rsquo;s.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Turning over the next leaf, I unfold a map, which in the midst of the British
+Arms, in one corner displays in sturdy text, that this is <i>&ldquo;A Plan of
+the Town of Liverpool.&rdquo;</i> But there seems little plan in the confined
+and crooked looking marks for the streets, and the docks irregularly scattered
+along the bank of the Mersey, which flows along, a peaceful stream of shaded
+line engraving.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the northeast corner of the map, lies a level Sahara of yellowish white: a
+desert, which still bears marks of my zeal in endeavoring to populate it with
+all manner of uncouth monsters in crayons. The space designated by that spot is
+now, doubtless, completely built up in Liverpool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Traced with a pen, I discover a number of dotted lines, radiating in all
+directions from the foot of Lord-street, where stands marked
+<i>&ldquo;Riddough&rsquo;s Hotel,&rdquo;</i> the house my father stopped at.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These marks delineate his various excursions in the town; and I follow the
+lines on, through street and lane; and across broad squares; and penetrate with
+them into the narrowest courts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By these marks, I perceive that my father forgot not his religion in a foreign
+land; but attended St. John&rsquo;s Church near the Hay-market, and other
+places of public worship: I see that he visited the News Room in Duke-street,
+the Lyceum in Bold-street, and the Theater Royal; and that he called to pay his
+respects to the eminent Mr. Roscoe, the historian, poet, and banker.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reverentially folding this map, I pass a plate of the Town Hall, and come upon
+the Title Page, which, in the middle, is ornamented with a piece of landscape,
+representing a loosely clad lady in sandals, pensively seated upon a bleak rock
+on the sea shore, supporting her head with one hand, and with the other,
+exhibiting to the stranger an oval sort of salver, bearing the figure of a
+strange bird, with this motto elastically stretched for a
+border&mdash;<i>&ldquo;Deus nobis haec otia fecit.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bird forms part of the city arms, and is an imaginary representation of a
+now extinct fowl, called the <i>&ldquo;Liver,&rdquo;</i> said to have inhabited
+a <i>&ldquo;pool,&rdquo;</i> which antiquarians assert once covered a good part
+of the ground where Liverpool now stands; and from that bird, and this pool,
+Liverpool derives its name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At a distance from the pensive lady in sandals, is a ship under full sail; and
+on the beach is the figure of a small man, vainly essaying to roll over a huge
+bale of goods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Equally divided at the top and bottom of this design, is the following title
+complete; but I fear the printer will not be able to give a facsimile:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+<i>The Picture<br/>
+of Liverpool:<br/>
+or, Stranger&rsquo;s Guide<br/>
+and Gentleman&rsquo;s Pocket Companion<br/>
+</i><b> FOR THE TOWN.<br/>
+</b> Embellished<br/>
+With Engravings<br/>
+By the Most Accomplished and Eminent Artists.<br/>
+Liverpool:<br/>
+Printed in Swift&rsquo;s Court,<br/>
+And sold by Woodward and Alderson, 56 Castle St. 1803.<br/>
+<br/>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A brief and reverential preface, as if the writer were all the time bowing,
+informs the reader of the flattering reception accorded to previous editions of
+the work; and quotes <i>&ldquo;testimonies of respect which had lately appeared
+in various quarters</i> &mdash;<i>the British Critic, Review, and the seventh
+volume of the Beauties of England and Wales&rdquo;&mdash;</i>and concludes by
+expressing the hope, that this new, revised, and illustrated edition might
+<i>&ldquo;render it less unworthy of the public notice, and less unworthy also
+of the subject it is intended to illustrate.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A very nice, dapper, and respectful little preface, the time and place of
+writing which is solemnly recorded at the end-Hope <i>Place, 1st Sept.</i>
+1803.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But how much fuller my satisfaction, as I fondly linger over this
+circumstantial paragraph, if the writer had recorded the precise hour of the
+day, and by what timepiece; and if he had but mentioned his age, occupation,
+and name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But all is now lost; I know not who he was; and this estimable author must
+needs share the oblivious fate of all literary incognitos.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He must have possessed the grandest and most elevated ideas of true fame, since
+he scorned to be perpetuated by a solitary initial. Could I find him out now,
+sleeping neglected in some churchyard, I would buy him a headstone, and record
+upon it naught but his title-page, deeming that his noblest epitaph.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the preface, the book opens with an extract from a prologue written by
+the excellent Dr. Aiken, the brother of Mrs. Barbauld, upon the opening of the
+Theater Royal, Liverpool, in 1772:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<i>&ldquo;Where Mersey&rsquo;s stream, long winding o&rsquo;er the plain,<br/>
+Pours his full tribute to the circling main,<br/>
+A band of fishers chose their humble seat;<br/>
+Contented labor blessed the fair retreat,<br/>
+Inured to hardship, patient, bold, and rude,<br/>
+They braved the billows for precarious food:<br/>
+Their straggling huts were ranged along the shore,<br/>
+Their nets and little boats their only store.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Indeed, throughout, the work abounds with quaint poetical quotations, and
+old-fashioned classical allusions to the Aeneid and Falconer&rsquo;s Shipwreck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And the anonymous author must have been not only a scholar and a gentleman, but
+a man of gentle disinterestedness, combined with true city patriotism; for in
+his <i>&ldquo;Survey of</i><i> the Town&rdquo;</i> are nine thickly printed
+pages of a neglected poem by a neglected Liverpool poet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By way of apologizing for what might seem an obtrusion upon the public of so
+long an episode, he courteously and feelingly introduces it by saying, that
+<i>&ldquo;the poem has now for several years been scarce, and is at present but
+little known; and hence a very small portion of it will no doubt be highly
+acceptable to the cultivated reader; especially as this noble epic is written
+with great felicity of expression and the sweetest delicacy of
+feeling.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once, but once only, an uncharitable thought crossed my mind, that the author
+of the Guide-Book might have been the author of the epic. But that was years
+ago; and I have never since permitted so uncharitable a reflection to insinuate
+itself into my mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This epic, from the specimen before me, is composed in the old stately style,
+and rolls along commanding as a coach and four. It sings of Liverpool and the
+Mersey; its docks, and ships, and warehouses, and bales, and anchors; and after
+descanting upon the abject times, when <i>&ldquo;his noble waves, inglorious,
+Mersey rolled,&rdquo;</i> the poet breaks forth like all Parnassus with:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<i>&ldquo;Now o&rsquo;er the wondering world her name resounds,<br/>
+From northern climes to India&rsquo;s distant bounds&mdash;<br/>
+Where&rsquo;er his shores the broad Atlantic waves;<br/>
+Where&rsquo;er the Baltic rolls his wintry waves;<br/>
+Where&rsquo;er the honored flood extends his tide,<br/>
+That clasps Sicilia like a favored bride.<br/>
+Greenland for her its bulky whale resigns,<br/>
+And temperate Gallia rears her generous vines:<br/>
+&rsquo;Midst warm Iberia citron orchards blow,<br/>
+And the ripe fruitage bends the laboring bough;<br/>
+In every clime her prosperous fleets are known,<br/>
+She makes the wealth of every clime her own.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+It also contains a delicately-curtained allusion to Mr. Roscoe:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<i>&ldquo;And here</i> R*s*o*, <i>with genius all his own,<br/>
+New tracks explores, and all before unknown?&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, both the anonymous author of the Guide-Book, and the gifted bard of the
+Mersey, seem to have nourished the warmest appreciation of the fact, that to
+their beloved town Roscoe imparted a reputation which gracefully embellished
+its notoriety as a mere place of commerce. He is called the modern Guicciardini
+of the modern Florence, and his histories, translations, and Italian Lives, are
+spoken of with classical admiration.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first chapter begins in a methodical, business-like way, by informing the
+impatient reader of the precise latitude and longitude of Liverpool; so that,
+at the outset, there may be no misunderstanding on that head. It then goes on
+to give an account of the history and antiquities of the town, beginning with a
+record in the <i>Doomsday-Book</i> of William the Conqueror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, it must be sincerely confessed, however, that notwithstanding his
+numerous other merits, my favorite author betrays a want of the uttermost
+antiquarian and penetrating spirit, which would have scorned to stop in its
+researches at the reign of the Norman monarch, but would have pushed on
+resolutely through the dark ages, up to Moses, the man of Uz, and Adam; and
+finally established the fact beyond a doubt, that the soil of Liverpool was
+created with the creation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, perhaps, one of the most curious passages in the chapter of antiquarian
+research, is the pious author&rsquo;s moralizing reflections upon an
+interesting fact he records: to wit, that in a.d. 1571, the inhabitants sent a
+memorial to Queen Elizabeth, praying relief under a subsidy, wherein they style
+themselves <i>&ldquo;her majesty&rsquo;s poor decayed town of
+Liverpool.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I now fix my gaze upon this faded and dilapidated old guide-book, bearing
+every token of the ravages of near half a century, and read how this piece of
+antiquity enlarges like a modern upon previous antiquities, I am forcibly
+reminded that the world is indeed growing old. And when I turn to the second
+chapter, <i>&ldquo;On the increase of the town, and number of
+inhabitants,&rdquo;</i> and then skim over page after page throughout the
+volume, all filled with allusions to the immense grandeur of a place, which,
+since then, has more than quadrupled in population, opulence, and splendor, and
+whose present inhabitants must look back upon the period here spoken of with a
+swelling feeling of immeasurable superiority and pride, I am filled with a
+comical sadness at the vanity of all human exaltation. For the cope-stone of
+to-day is the corner-stone of tomorrow; and as St. Peter&rsquo;s church was
+built in great part of the ruins of old Rome, so in all our erections, however
+imposing, we but form quarries and supply ignoble materials for the grander
+domes of posterity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And even as this old guide-book boasts of the, to us, insignificant Liverpool
+of fifty years ago, the New York guidebooks are now vaunting of the magnitude
+of a town, whose future inhabitants, multitudinous as the pebbles on the beach,
+and girdled in with high walls and towers, flanking endless avenues of opulence
+and taste, will regard all our Broadways and Bowerys as but the paltry nucleus
+to their Nineveh. From far up the Hudson, beyond Harlem River, where the young
+saplings are now growing, that will overarch their lordly mansions with broad
+boughs, centuries old; they may send forth explorers to penetrate into the then
+obscure and smoky alleys of the Fifth Avenue and Fourteenth-street; and going
+still farther south, may exhume the present Doric Custom-house, and quote it as
+a proof that their high and mighty metropolis enjoyed a Hellenic antiquity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I am extremely loth to omit giving a specimen of the dignified style of this
+<i>&ldquo;Picture of Liverpool,&rdquo;</i> so different from the brief, pert,
+and unclerkly hand-books to Niagara and Buffalo of the present day, I shall now
+insert the chapter of antiquarian researches; especially as it is entertaining
+in itself, and affords much valuable, and perhaps rare information, which the
+reader may need, concerning the famous town, to which I made <i>my first
+voyage.</i> And I think that with regard to a matter, concerning which I myself
+am wholly ignorant, it is far better to quote my old friend verbatim, than to
+mince his substantial baron-of-beef of information into a flimsy ragout of my
+own; and so, pass it off as original. Yes, I will render unto my honored
+guide-book its due.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But how can the printer&rsquo;s art so dim and mellow down the pages into a
+soft sunset yellow; and to the reader&rsquo;s eye, shed over the type all the
+pleasant associations which the original carries to me!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No! by my father&rsquo;s sacred memory, and all sacred privacies of fond family
+reminiscences, I will not! I will <i>not</i> quote thee, old Morocco, before
+the cold face of the marble-hearted world; for your antiquities would only be
+skipped and dishonored by shallow-minded readers; and for me, I should be
+charged with swelling out my volume by plagiarizing from a guide-book-the most
+vulgar and ignominious of thefts!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap31"></a>CHAPTER XXXI.<br/>
+WITH HIS PROSY OLD GUIDE-BOOK, HE TAKES A PROSY STROLL THROUGH THE TOWN</h2>
+
+<p>
+When I left home, I took the green morocco guide-book along, supposing that
+from the great number of ships going to Liverpool, I would most probably ship
+on board of one of them, as the event itself proved.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Great was my boyish delight at the prospect of visiting a place, the infallible
+clew to all whose intricacies I held in my hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the passage out I studied its pages a good deal. In the first place, I
+grounded myself thoroughly in the history and antiquities of the town, as set
+forth in the chapter I intended to quote. Then I mastered the columns of
+statistics, touching the advance of population; and pored over them, as I used
+to do over my multiplication-table. For I was determined to make the whole
+subject my own; and not be content with a mere smattering of the thing, as is
+too much the custom with most students of guide-books. Then I perused one by
+one the elaborate descriptions of public edifices, and scrupulously compared
+the text with the corresponding engraving, to see whether they corroborated
+each other. For be it known that, including the map, there were no less than
+seventeen plates in the work. And by often examining them, I had so impressed
+every column and cornice in my mind, that I had no doubt of recognizing the
+originals in a moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In short, when I considered that my own father had used this very guide-book,
+and that thereby it had been thoroughly tested, and its fidelity proved beyond
+a peradventure; I could not but think that I was building myself up in an
+unerring knowledge of Liverpool; especially as I had familiarized myself with
+the map, and could turn sharp corners on it, with marvelous confidence and
+celerity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In imagination, as I lay in my berth on ship-board, I used to take pleasant
+afternoon rambles through the town; down St. James-street and up Great
+George&rsquo;s, stopping at various places of interest and attraction. I began
+to think I had been born in Liverpool, so familiar seemed all the features of
+the map. And though some of the streets there depicted were thickly involved,
+endlessly angular and crooked, like the map of Boston, in Massachusetts, yet, I
+made no doubt, that I could march through them in the darkest night, and even
+run for the most distant dock upon a pressing emergency.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dear delusion!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It never occurred to my boyish thoughts, that though a guide-book, fifty years
+old, might have done good service in its day, yet it would prove but a
+miserable cicerone to a modern. I little imagined that the Liverpool my father
+saw, was another Liverpool from that to which I, his son Wellingborough was
+sailing. No; these things never obtruded; so accustomed had I been to associate
+my old morocco guide-book with the town it described, that the bare thought of
+there being any discrepancy, never entered my mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While we lay in the Mersey, before entering the dock, I got out my guide-book
+to see how the map would compare with the identical place itself. But they bore
+not the slightest resemblance. However, thinks I, this is owing to my taking a
+horizontal view, instead of a bird&rsquo;s-eye survey. So, never mind old
+guide-book, <i>you,</i> at least, are all right.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But my faith received a severe shock that same evening, when the crew went
+ashore to supper, as I have previously related.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men stopped at a curious old tavern, near the Prince&rsquo;s Dock&rsquo;s
+walls; and having my guide-book in my pocket, I drew it forth to compare notes,
+when I found, that precisely upon the spot where I and my shipmates were
+standing, and a cherry-cheeked bar-maid was filling their glasses, my
+infallible old Morocco, in that very place, located a fort; adding, that it was
+well worth the intelligent stranger&rsquo;s while to visit it for the purpose
+of beholding the guard relieved in the evening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was a staggerer; for how could a tavern be mistaken for a castle? and this
+was about the hour mentioned for the guard to turn out; yet not a red coat was
+to be seen. But for all this, I could not, for one small discrepancy, condemn
+the old family servant who had so faithfully served my own father before me;
+and when I learned that this tavern went by the name of <i>&ldquo;The Old Fort
+Tavern;&rdquo;</i> and when I was told that many of the old stones were yet in
+the walls, I almost completely exonerated my guide-book from the
+half-insinuated charge of misleading me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day was Sunday, and I had it all to myself; and now, thought I, my
+guide-book and I shall have a famous ramble up street and down lane, even unto
+the furthest limits of this Liverpool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I rose bright and early; from head to foot performed my ablutions &ldquo;with
+Eastern scrupulosity,&rdquo; and I arrayed myself in my red shirt and
+shooting-jacket, and the sportsman&rsquo;s pantaloons; and crowned my entire
+man with the tarpaulin; so that from this curious combination of clothing, and
+particularly from my red shirt, I must have looked like a very strange compound
+indeed: three parts sportsman, and two soldier, to one of the sailor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My shipmates, of course, made merry at my appearance; but I heeded them not;
+and after breakfast, jumped ashore, full of brilliant anticipations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My gait was erect, and I was rather tall for my age; and that may have been the
+reason why, as I was rapidly walking along the dock, a drunken sailor passing,
+exclaimed, <i>&ldquo;Eyes right! quick step there!&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another fellow stopped me to know whether I was going fox-hunting; and one of
+the dock-police, stationed at the gates, after peeping out upon me from his
+sentry box, a snug little den, furnished with benches and newspapers, and hung
+round with storm jackets and oiled capes, issued forth in a great hurry,
+crossed my path as I was emerging into the street, and commanded me to
+<i>halt!</i> I obeyed; when scanning my appearance pertinaciously, he desired
+to know where I got that tarpaulin hat, not being able to account for the
+phenomenon of its roofing the head of a broken-down fox-hunter. But I pointed
+to my ship, which lay at no great distance; when remarking from my voice that I
+was a Yankee, this faithful functionary permitted me to pass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It must be known that the police stationed at the gates of the docks are
+extremely observant of strangers going out; as many thefts are perpetrated on
+board the ships; and if they chance to see any thing suspicious, they probe
+into it without mercy. Thus, the old men who buy <i>&ldquo;shakings,&rdquo;</i>
+and rubbish from vessels, must turn their bags wrong side out before the
+police, ere they are allowed to go outside the walls. And often they will
+search a suspicious looking fellow&rsquo;s clothes, even if he be a very thin
+man, with attenuated and almost imperceptible pockets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But where was I going?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I will tell. My intention was in the first place, to visit Riddough&rsquo;s
+Hotel, where my father had stopped, more than thirty years before: and then,
+with the map in my hand, follow him through all the town, according to the
+dotted lines in the diagram. For thus would I be performing a filial pilgrimage
+to spots which would be hallowed in my eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, when I found myself going down Old Hall-street toward Lord-street,
+where the hotel was situated, according to my authority; and when, taking out
+my map, I found that Old Hall-street was marked there, through its whole extent
+with my father&rsquo;s pen; a thousand fond, affectionate emotions rushed
+around my heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, in this very street, thought I, nay, on this very flagging my father
+walked. Then I almost wept, when I looked down on my sorry apparel, and marked
+how the people regarded me; the men staring at so grotesque a young stranger,
+and the old ladies, in beaver hats and ruffles, crossing the walk a little to
+shun me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How differently my father must have appeared; perhaps in a blue coat, buff
+vest, and Hessian boots. And little did he think, that a son of his would ever
+visit Liverpool as a poor friendless sailor-boy. But I was not born then: no,
+when he walked this flagging, I was not so much as thought of; I was not
+included in the census of the universe. My own father did not know me then; and
+had never seen, or heard, or so much as dreamed of me. And that thought had a
+touch of sadness to me; for if it had certainly been, that my own parent, at
+one time, never cast a thought upon me, how might it be with me hereafter?
+Poor, poor Wellingborough! thought I, miserable boy! you are indeed friendless
+and forlorn. Here you wander a stranger in a strange town, and the very thought
+of your father&rsquo;s having been here before you, but carries with it the
+reflection that, he then knew you not, nor cared for you one whit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But dispelling these dismal reflections as well as I could, I pushed on my way,
+till I got to Chapel-street, which I crossed; and then, going under a
+cloister-like arch of stone, whose gloom and narrowness delighted me, and
+filled my Yankee soul with romantic thoughts of old Abbeys and Minsters, I
+emerged into the fine quadrangle of the Merchants&rsquo; Exchange.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There, leaning against the colonnade, I took out my map, and traced my father
+right across Chapel-street, and actually through the very arch at my back, into
+the paved square where I stood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So vivid was now the impression of his having been here, and so narrow the
+passage from which he had emerged, that I felt like running on, and overtaking
+him around the Town Hall adjoining, at the head of Castle-street. But I soon
+checked myself, when remembering that he had gone whither no son&rsquo;s search
+could find him in this world. And then I thought of all that must have happened
+to him since he paced through that arch. What trials and troubles he had
+encountered; how he had been shaken by many storms of adversity, and at last
+died a bankrupt. I looked at my own sorry garb, and had much ado to keep from
+tears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I rallied, and gazed round at the sculptured stonework, and turned to my
+guide-book, and looked at the print of the spot. It was correct to a pillar;
+but wanted the central ornament of the quadrangle. This, however, was but a
+slight subsequent erection, which ought not to militate against the general
+character of my friend for comprehensiveness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ornament in question is a group of statuary in bronze, elevated upon a
+marble pedestal and basement, representing Lord Nelson expiring in the arms of
+Victory. One foot rests on a rolling foe, and the other on a cannon. Victory is
+dropping a wreath on the dying admiral&rsquo;s brow; while Death, under the
+similitude of a hideous skeleton, is insinuating his bony hand under the
+hero&rsquo;s robe, and groping after his heart. A very striking design, and
+true to the imagination; I never could look at Death without a shudder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At uniform intervals round the base of the pedestal, four naked figures in
+chains, somewhat larger than life, are seated in various attitudes of
+humiliation and despair. One has his leg recklessly thrown over his knee, and
+his head bowed over, as if he had given up all hope of ever feeling better.
+Another has his head buried in despondency, and no doubt looks mournfully out
+of his eyes, but as his face was averted at the time, I could not catch the
+expression. These woe-begone figures of captives are emblematic of
+Nelson&rsquo;s principal victories; but I never could look at their swarthy
+limbs and manacles, without being involuntarily reminded of four African slaves
+in the market-place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And my thoughts would revert to Virginia and Carolina; and also to the
+historical fact, that the African slave-trade once constituted the principal
+commerce of Liverpool; and that the prosperity of the town was once supposed to
+have been indissolubly linked to its prosecution. And I remembered that my
+father had often spoken to gentlemen visiting our house in New York, of the
+unhappiness that the discussion of the abolition of this trade had occasioned
+in Liverpool; that the struggle between sordid interest and humanity had made
+sad havoc at the fire-sides of the merchants; estranged sons from sires; and
+even separated husband from wife. And my thoughts reverted to my father&rsquo;s
+friend, the good and great Roscoe, the intrepid enemy of the trade; who in
+every way exerted his fine talents toward its suppression; writing a poem
+<i>(&ldquo;the Wrongs of Africa&rdquo;),</i> several pamphlets; and in his
+place in Parliament, he delivered a speech against it, which, as coming from a
+member for Liverpool, was supposed to have turned many votes, and had no small
+share in the triumph of sound policy and humanity that ensued.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How this group of statuary affected me, may be inferred from the fact, that I
+never went through Chapel-street without going through the little arch to look
+at it again. And there, night or day, I was sure to find Lord Nelson still
+falling back; Victory&rsquo;s wreath still hovering over his swordpoint; and
+Death grim and grasping as ever; while the four bronze captives still lamented
+their captivity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, as I lingered about the railing of the statuary, on the Sunday I have
+mentioned, I noticed several persons going in and out of an apartment, opening
+from the basement under the colonnade; and, advancing, I perceived that this
+was a news-room, full of files of papers. My love of literature prompted me to
+open the door and step in; but a glance at my soiled shooting-jacket prompted a
+dignified looking personage to step up and shut the door in my face. I
+deliberated a minute what I should do to him; and at last resolutely determined
+to let him alone, and pass on; which I did; going down Castle-street (so called
+from a castle which once stood there, said my guide-book), and turning down
+into Lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arrived at the foot of the latter street, I in vain looked round for the hotel.
+How serious a disappointment was this may well be imagined, when it is
+considered that I was all eagerness to behold the very house at which my father
+stopped; where he slept and dined, smoked his cigar, opened his letters, and
+read the papers. I inquired of some gentlemen and ladies where the missing
+hotel was; but they only stared and passed on; until I met a mechanic,
+apparently, who very civilly stopped to hear my questions and give me an
+answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Riddough&rsquo;s Hotel?&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;upon my word, I think I
+have heard of such a place; let me see&mdash;yes, yes&mdash;that was the hotel
+where my father broke his arm, helping to pull down the walls. My lad, you
+surely can&rsquo;t be inquiring for Riddough&rsquo;s Hotel! What do you want to
+find there?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh! nothing,&rdquo; I replied, &ldquo;I am much obliged for your
+information&rdquo;&mdash;and away I walked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, indeed, a new light broke in upon me concerning my guide-book; and all my
+previous dim suspicions were almost confirmed. It was nearly half a century
+behind the age! and no more fit to guide me about the town, than the map of
+Pompeii.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a sad, a solemn, and a most melancholy thought. The book on which I had
+so much relied; the book in the old morocco cover; the book with the cocked-hat
+corners; the book full of fine old family associations; the book with seventeen
+plates, executed in the highest style of art; this precious book was next to
+useless. Yes, the thing that had guided the father, could not guide the son.
+And I sat down on a shop step, and gave loose to meditation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, now, oh, Wellingborough, thought I, learn a lesson, and never forget it.
+This world, my boy, is a moving world; its Riddough&rsquo;s Hotels are forever
+being pulled down; it never stands still; and its sands are forever shifting.
+This very harbor of Liverpool is gradually filling up, they say; and who knows
+what your son (if you ever have one) may behold, when he comes to visit
+Liverpool, as long after you as you come after his grandfather. And,
+Wellingborough, as your father&rsquo;s guidebook is no guide for you, neither
+would yours (could you afford to buy a modern one to-day) be a true guide to
+those who come after you. Guide-books, Wellingborough, are the least reliable
+books in all literature; and nearly all literature, in one sense, is made up of
+guide-books. Old ones tell us the ways our fathers went, through the
+thoroughfares and courts of old; but how few of those former places can their
+posterity trace, amid avenues of modem erections; to how few is the old
+guide-book now a clew! Every age makes its own guidebooks, and the old ones are
+used for waste paper. But there is one Holy Guide-Book, Wellingborough, that
+will never lead you astray, if you but follow it aright; and some noble
+monuments that remain, though the pyramids crumble.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But though I rose from the door-step a sadder and a wiser boy, and though my
+guide-book had been stripped of its reputation for infallibility, I did not
+treat with contumely or disdain, those sacred pages which had once been a
+beacon to my sire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No.&mdash;Poor old guide-book, thought I, tenderly stroking its back, and
+smoothing the dog-ears with reverence; I will not use you with despite, old
+Morocco! and you will yet prove a trusty conductor through many old streets in
+the old parts of this town; even if you are at fault, now and then, concerning
+a Riddough&rsquo;s Hotel, or some other forgotten thing of the past. As I
+fondly glanced over the leaves, like one who loves more than he chides, my eye
+lighted upon a passage concerning <i>&ldquo;The Old Dock,&rdquo;</i> which much
+aroused my curiosity. I determined to see the place without delay: and walking
+on, in what I presumed to be the right direction, at last found myself before a
+spacious and splendid pile of sculptured brown stone; and entering the porch,
+perceived from incontrovertible tokens that it must be the Custom-house. After
+admiring it awhile, I took out my guide-book again; and what was my amazement
+at discovering that, according to its authority, I was entirely mistaken with
+regard to this Custom-house; for precisely where I stood, <i>&ldquo;The Old
+Dock&rdquo;</i> must be standing, and reading on concerning it, I met with this
+very apposite passage:&mdash;<i>&ldquo;The first idea that strikes the stranger
+in coming to this dock, is the singularity of so great a number of ships afloat
+in the very heart of the town, without discovering any connection with the
+sea.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, now, was a poser! Old Morocco confessed that there was a good deal of
+&ldquo;singularity&rdquo; about the thing; nor did he pretend to deny that it
+was, without question, amazing, that this fabulous dock should seem to have no
+<i>connection with the sea!</i> However, the same author went on to say, that
+the <i>&ldquo;astonished stranger must suspend his wonder for awhile, and turn
+to the left.&rdquo;</i> But, right or left, no place answering to the
+description was to be seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was too confounding altogether, and not to be easily accounted for, even
+by making ordinary allowances for the growth and general improvement of the
+town in the course of years. So, guide-book in hand, I accosted a policeman
+standing by, and begged him to tell me whether he was acquainted with any place
+in that neighborhood called the <i>&ldquo;Old Dock.&rdquo;</i> The man looked
+at me wonderingly at first, and then seeing I was apparently sane, and quite
+civil into the bargain, he whipped his well-polished boot with his rattan,
+pulled up his silver-laced coat-collar, and initiated me into a knowledge of
+the following facts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It seems that in this place originally stood the <i>&ldquo;pool,&rdquo;</i>
+from which the town borrows a part of its name, and which originally wound
+round the greater part of the old settlements; that this pool was made into the
+&ldquo;Old Dock,&rdquo; for the benefit of the shipping; but that, years ago,
+it had been filled up, and furnished the site for the Custom-house before me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I now eyed the spot with a feeling somewhat akin to the Eastern traveler
+standing on the brink of the Dead Sea. For here the doom of Gomorrah seemed
+reversed, and a lake had been converted into substantial stone and mortar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, well, Wellingborough, thought I, you had better put the book into your
+pocket, and carry it home to the Society of Antiquaries; it is several thousand
+leagues and odd furlongs behind the march of improvement. Smell its old morocco
+binding, Wellingborough; does it not smell somewhat mummy-ish? Does it not
+remind you of Cheops and the Catacombs? I tell you it was written before the
+lost books of Livy, and is cousin-german to that irrecoverably departed volume,
+entitled, <i>&ldquo;The Wars of the Lord&rdquo;</i> quoted by Moses in the
+Pentateuch. Put it up, Wellingborough, put it up, my dear friend; and hereafter
+follow your nose throughout Liverpool; it will stick to you through thick and
+thin: and be your ship&rsquo;s mainmast and St. George&rsquo;s spire your
+landmarks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No!&mdash;And again I rubbed its back softly, and gently adjusted a loose leaf:
+No, no, I&rsquo;ll not give you up yet. Forth, old Morocco! and lead me in
+sight of the venerable Abbey of Birkenhead; and let these eager eyes behold the
+mansion once occupied by the old earls of Derby!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the book discoursed of both places, and told how the Abbey was on the
+Cheshire shore, full in view from a point on the Lancashire side, covered over
+with ivy, and brilliant with moss! And how the house of the noble Derby&rsquo;s
+was now a common jail of the town; and how that circumstance was full of
+suggestions, and pregnant with wisdom!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, alas! I never saw the Abbey; at least none was in sight from the water:
+and as for the house of the earls, I never saw that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah me, and ten times alas! am I to visit old England in vain? in the land of
+Thomas-a-Becket and stout John of Gaunt, not to catch the least glimpse of
+priory or castle? Is there nothing in all the British empire but these smoky
+ranges of old shops and warehouses? is Liverpool but a brick-kiln? Why, no
+buildings here look so ancient as the old gable-pointed mansion of my maternal
+grandfather at home, whose bricks were brought from Holland long before the
+revolutionary war! Tis a deceit&mdash;a gull&mdash;a sham&mdash;a hoax! This
+boasted England is no older than the State of New York: if it is, show me the
+proofs&mdash;point out the vouchers. Where&rsquo;s the tower of Julius Caesar?
+Where&rsquo;s the Roman wall? Show me Stonehenge!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, Wellingborough, I remonstrated with myself, you are only in Liverpool; the
+old monuments lie to the north, south, east, and west of you; you are but a
+sailor-boy, and you can not expect to be a great tourist, and visit the
+antiquities, in that preposterous shooting-jacket of yours. Indeed, you can
+not, my boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+True, true&mdash;that&rsquo;s it. I am not the traveler my father was. I am
+only a common-carrier across the Atlantic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a weary day&rsquo;s walk, I at last arrived at the sign of the Baltimore
+Clipper to supper; and Handsome Mary poured me out a brimmer of tea, in which,
+for the time, I drowned all my melancholy.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap32"></a>CHAPTER XXXII.<br/>
+THE DOCKS</h2>
+
+<p>
+For more than six weeks, the ship Highlander lay in Prince&rsquo;s Dock; and
+during that time, besides making observations upon things immediately around
+me, I made sundry excursions to the neighboring docks, for I never tired of
+admiring them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Previous to this, having only seen the miserable wooden wharves, and slip-shod,
+shambling piers of New York, the sight of these mighty docks filled my young
+mind with wonder and delight. In New York, to be sure, I could not but be
+struck with the long line of shipping, and tangled thicket of masts along the
+East River; yet, my admiration had been much abated by those irregular,
+unsightly wharves, which, I am sure, are a reproach and disgrace to the city
+that tolerates them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whereas, in Liverpool, I beheld long China walls of masonry; vast piers of
+stone; and a succession of granite-rimmed docks, completely inclosed, and many
+of them communicating, which almost recalled to mind the great American chain
+of lakes: Ontario, Erie, St. Clair, Huron, Michigan, and Superior. The extent
+and solidity of these structures, seemed equal to what I had read of the old
+Pyramids of Egypt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Liverpool may justly claim to have originated the model of the &ldquo;Wet
+Dock,&rdquo;<a href="#fn1" name="fnref1" id="fnref1"><sup>[1]</sup></a> so
+called, of the present day; and every thing that is connected with its design,
+construction, regulation, and improvement. Even London was induced to copy
+after Liverpool, and Havre followed her example. In magnitude, cost, and
+durability, the docks of Liverpool, even at the present day surpass all others
+in the world.
+</p>
+
+<p class="footnote">
+<a name="fn1" id="fn1"></a> <a href="#fnref1">[1]</a>
+This term&mdash;<i>Wet Dock</i>&mdash;did not originate, (as has been
+erroneously opined by the otherwise learned Bardoldi); from the fact, that
+persons falling into one, never escaped without a soaking; but it is simply
+used, in order to distinguish these docks from the <i>Dry-Dock</i>, where the
+bottoms of ships are repaired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first dock built by the town was the <i>&ldquo;Old Dock,&rdquo;</i> alluded
+to in my Sunday stroll with my guide-book. This was erected in 1710, since
+which period has gradually arisen that long line of dock-masonry, now flanking
+the Liverpool side of the Mersey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For miles you may walk along that river-side, passing dock after dock, like a
+chain of immense fortresses:&mdash;Prince&rsquo;s, George&rsquo;s, Salt-House,
+Clarence, Brunswick, Trafalgar, King&rsquo;s, Queen&rsquo;s, and many more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a spirit of patriotic gratitude to those naval heroes, who by their valor
+did so much to protect the commerce of Britain, in which Liverpool held so
+large a stake; the town, long since, bestowed upon its more modern streets,
+certain illustrious names, that Broadway might be proud of:&mdash;Duncan,
+Nelson, Rodney, St. Vincent, Nile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But it is a pity, I think, that they had not bestowed these noble names upon
+their noble docks; so that they might have been as a rank and file of most fit
+monuments to perpetuate the names of the heroes, in connection with the
+commerce they defended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And how much better would such stirring monuments be; full of life and
+commotion; than hermit obelisks of Luxor, and idle towers of stone; which,
+useless to the world in themselves, vainly hope to eternize a name, by having
+it carved, solitary and alone, in their granite. Such monuments are cenotaphs
+indeed; founded far away from the true body of the fame of the hero; who, if he
+be truly a hero, must still be linked with the living interests of his race;
+for the true fame is something free, easy, social, and companionable. They are
+but tomb-stones, that commemorate his death, but celebrate not his life. It is
+well enough that over the inglorious and thrice miserable grave of a Dives,
+some vast marble column should be reared, recording the fact of his having
+lived and died; for such records are indispensable to preserve his shrunken
+memory among men; though that memory must soon crumble away with the marble,
+and mix with the stagnant oblivion of the mob. But to build such a pompous
+vanity over the remains of a hero, is a slur upon his fame, and an insult to
+his ghost. And more enduring monuments are built in the closet with the letters
+of the alphabet, than even Cheops himself could have founded, with all Egypt
+and Nubia for his quarry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the few docks mentioned above, occur the names of the <i>King&rsquo;s</i>
+and <i>Queens.</i> At the time, they often reminded me of the two principal
+streets in the village I came from in America, which streets once rejoiced in
+the same royal appellations. But they had been christened previous to the
+Declaration of Independence; and some years after, in a fever of freedom, they
+were abolished, at an enthusiastic town-meeting, where King George and his lady
+were solemnly declared unworthy of being immortalized by the village of
+L&mdash;. A country antiquary once told me, that a committee of two barbers
+were deputed to write and inform the distracted old gentleman of the fact.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the description of any one of these Liverpool docks will pretty much answer
+for all, I will here endeavor to give some account of Prince&rsquo;s Dock,
+where the Highlander rested after her passage across the Atlantic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This dock, of comparatively recent construction, is perhaps the largest of all,
+and is well known to American sailors, from the fact, that it is mostly
+frequented by the American shipping. Here lie the noble New York packets, which
+at home are found at the foot of Wall-street; and here lie the Mobile and
+Savannah cotton ships and traders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This dock was built like the others, mostly upon the bed of the river, the
+earth and rock having been laboriously scooped out, and solidified again as
+materials for the quays and piers. From the river, Prince&rsquo;s Dock is
+protected by a long pier of masonry, surmounted by a massive wall; and on the
+side next the town, it is bounded by similar walls, one of which runs along a
+thoroughfare. The whole space thus inclosed forms an oblong, and may, at a
+guess, be presumed to comprise about fifteen or twenty acres; but as I had not
+the rod of a surveyor when I took it in, I will not be certain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The area of the dock itself, exclusive of the inclosed quays surrounding it,
+may be estimated at, say, ten acres. Access to the interior from the streets is
+had through several gateways; so that, upon their being closed, the whole dock
+is shut up like a house. From the river, the entrance is through a water-gate,
+and ingress to ships is only to be had, when the level of the dock coincides
+with that of the river; that is, about the time of high tide, as the level of
+the dock is always at that mark. So that when it is low tide in the river, the
+keels of the ships inclosed by the quays are elevated more than twenty feet
+above those of the vessels in the stream. This, of course, produces a striking
+effect to a stranger, to see hundreds of immense ships floating high aloft in
+the heart of a mass of masonry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Prince&rsquo;s Dock is generally so filled with shipping, that the entrance of
+a new-comer is apt to occasion a universal stir among all the older occupants.
+The dock-masters, whose authority is declared by tin signs worn conspicuously
+over their hats, mount the poops and forecastles of the various vessels, and
+hail the surrounding strangers in all directions:&mdash; <i>&ldquo;Highlander
+ahoy! Cast off your bowline, and sheer alongside the
+Neptune!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Neptune ahoy! get out a stern-line, and sheer
+alongside the Trident!&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Trident ahoy! get out a bowline, and
+drop astern of the Undaunted!&rdquo;</i> And so it runs round like a shock of
+electricity; touch one, and you touch all. This kind of work irritates and
+exasperates the sailors to the last degree; but it is only one of the
+unavoidable inconveniences of inclosed docks, which are outweighed by
+innumerable advantages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just without the water-gate, is a basin, always connecting with the open river,
+through a narrow entrance between pierheads. This basin forms a sort of
+ante-chamber to the dock itself, where vessels lie waiting their turn to enter.
+During a storm, the necessity of this basin is obvious; for it would be
+impossible to <i>&ldquo;dock&rdquo;</i> a ship under full headway from a voyage
+across the ocean. From the turbulent waves, she first glides into the
+ante-chamber between the pier-heads and from thence into the docks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Concerning the cost of the docks, I can only state, that the <i>King&rsquo;s
+Dock,</i> comprehending but a comparatively small area, was completed at an
+expense of some &pound;20,000.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our old ship-keeper, a Liverpool man by birth, who had long followed the seas,
+related a curious story concerning this dock. One of the ships which carried
+over troops from England to Ireland in King William&rsquo;s war, in 1688,
+entered the King&rsquo;s Dock on the first day of its being opened in 1788,
+after an interval of just one century. She was a dark little brig, called the
+<i>Port-a-Ferry.</i> And probably, as her timbers must have been frequently
+renewed in the course of a hundred years, the name alone could have been all
+that was left of her at the time. A paved area, very wide, is included within
+the walls; and along the edge of the quays are ranges of iron sheds, intended
+as a temporary shelter for the goods unladed from the shipping. Nothing can
+exceed the bustle and activity displayed along these quays during the day;
+bales, crates, boxes, and cases are being tumbled about by thousands of
+laborers; trucks are coming and going; dock-masters are shouting; sailors of
+all nations are singing out at their ropes; and all this commotion is greatly
+increased by the resoundings from the lofty walls that hem in the din.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap33"></a>CHAPTER XXXIII.<br/>
+THE SALT-DROGHERS, AND GERMAN EMIGRANT SHIPS</h2>
+
+<p>
+Surrounded by its broad belt of masonry, each Liverpool dock is a walled town,
+full of life and commotion; or rather, it is a small archipelago, an epitome of
+the world, where all the nations of Christendom, and even those of Heathendom,
+are represented. For, in itself, each ship is an island, a floating colony of
+the tribe to which it belongs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here are brought together the remotest limits of the earth; and in the
+collective spars and timbers of these ships, all the forests of the globe are
+represented, as in a grand parliament of masts. Canada and New Zealand send
+their pines; America her live oak; India her teak; Norway her spruce; and the
+Right Honorable Mahogany, member for Honduras and Campeachy, is seen at his
+post by the wheel. Here, under the beneficent sway of the Genius of Commerce,
+all climes and countries embrace; and yard-arm touches yard-arm in brotherly
+love.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A Liverpool dock is a grand caravansary inn, and hotel, on the spacious and
+liberal plan of the <i>Astor House.</i> Here ships are lodged at a moderate
+charge, and payment is not demanded till the time of departure. Here they are
+comfortably housed and provided for; sheltered from all weathers and secured
+from all calamities. For I can hardly credit a story I have heard, that
+sometimes, in heavy gales, ships lying in the very middle of the docks have
+lost their top-gallant-masts. Whatever the toils and hardships encountered on
+the voyage, whether they come from Iceland or the coast of New Guinea, here
+their sufferings are ended, and they take their ease in their watery inn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I know not how many hours I spent in gazing at the shipping in Prince&rsquo;s
+Dock, and speculating concerning their past voyages and future prospects in
+life. Some had just arrived from the most distant ports, worn, battered, and
+disabled; others were all a-taunt-o&mdash;spruce, gay, and brilliant, in
+readiness for sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every day the Highlander had some new neighbor. A black brig from Glasgow, with
+its crew of sober Scotch caps, and its staid, thrifty-looking skipper, would be
+replaced by a jovial French hermaphrodite, its forecastle echoing with songs,
+and its quarter-deck elastic from much dancing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the other side, perhaps, a magnificent New York Liner, huge as a
+seventy-four, and suggesting the idea of a Mivart&rsquo;s or Delmonico&rsquo;s
+afloat, would give way to a Sidney emigrant ship, receiving on board its live
+freight of shepherds from the Grampians, ere long to be tending their flocks on
+the hills and downs of New Holland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was particularly pleased and tickled, with a multitude of little
+salt-droghers, rigged like sloops, and not much bigger than a pilot-boat, but
+with broad bows painted black, and carrying red sails, which looked as if they
+had been pickled and stained in a tan-yard. These little fellows were
+continually coming in with their cargoes for ships bound to America; and lying,
+five or six together, alongside of those lofty Yankee hulls, resembled a parcel
+of red ants about the carcass of a black buffalo.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When loaded, these comical little craft are about level with the water; and
+frequently, when blowing fresh in the river, I have seen them flying through
+the foam with nothing visible but the mast and sail, and a man at the tiller;
+their entire cargo being snugly secured under hatches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was diverting to observe the self-importance of the skipper of any of these
+diminutive vessels. He would give himself all the airs of an admiral on a
+three-decker&rsquo;s poop; and no doubt, thought quite as much of himself. And
+why not? What could Caesar want more? Though his craft was none of the largest,
+it was subject to <i>him;</i> and though his crew might only consist of
+himself; yet if he governed it well, he achieved a triumph, which the moralists
+of all ages have set above the victories of Alexander.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These craft have each a little cabin, the prettiest, charmingest, most
+delightful little dog-hole in the world; not much bigger than an old-fashioned
+alcove for a bed. It is lighted by little round glasses placed in the deck; so
+that to the insider, the ceiling is like a small firmament twinkling with
+astral radiations. For tall men, nevertheless, the place is but ill-adapted; a
+sitting, or recumbent position being indispensable to an occupancy of the
+premises. Yet small, low, and narrow as the cabin is, somehow, it affords
+accommodations to the skipper and his family. Often, I used to watch the tidy
+good-wife, seated at the open little scuttle, like a woman at a cottage door,
+engaged in knitting socks for her husband; or perhaps, cutting his hair, as he
+kneeled before her. And once, while marveling how a couple like this found room
+to turn in, below, I was amazed by a noisy irruption of cherry-cheeked young
+tars from the scuttle, whence they came rolling forth, like so many curly
+spaniels from a kennel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon one occasion, I had the curiosity to go on board a salt-drogher, and fall
+into conversation with its skipper, a bachelor, who kept house all alone. I
+found him a very sociable, comfortable old fellow, who had an eye to having
+things cozy around him. It was in the evening; and he invited me down into his
+sanctum to supper; and there we sat together like a couple in a box at an
+oyster-cellar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He, he,&rdquo; he chuckled, kneeling down before a fat, moist, little
+cask of beer, and holding a cocked-hat pitcher to the faucet&mdash;&ldquo;You
+see, Jack, I keep every thing down here; and nice times I have by myself. Just
+before going to bed, it ain&rsquo;t bad to take a nightcap, you know; eh!
+Jack?&mdash;here now, smack your lips over that, my boy&mdash;have a
+pipe?&mdash;but stop, let&rsquo;s to supper first.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So he went to a little locker, a fixture against the side, and groping in it
+awhile, and addressing it with&mdash;<i>&ldquo;What cheer here, what
+cheer?&rdquo;</i> at last produced a loaf, a small cheese, a bit of ham, and a
+jar of butter. And then placing a board on his lap, spread the table, the
+pitcher of beer in the center. &ldquo;Why that&rsquo;s but a two legged
+table,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;let&rsquo;s make it four.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So we divided the burthen, and supped merrily together on our knees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was an old ruby of a fellow, his cheeks toasted brown; and it did my soul
+good, to see the froth of the beer bubbling at his mouth, and sparkling on his
+nut-brown beard. He looked so like a great mug of ale, that I almost felt like
+taking him by the neck and pouring him out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now Jack,&rdquo; said he, when supper was over, &ldquo;now Jack, my boy,
+do you smoke?&mdash;Well then, load away.&rdquo; And he handed me a seal-skin
+pouch of tobacco and a pipe. We sat smoking together in this little sea-cabinet
+of his, till it began to look much like a state-room in Tophet; and
+notwithstanding my host&rsquo;s rubicund nose, I could hardly see him for the
+fog.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He, he, my boy,&rdquo; then said he&mdash;&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t never
+have any bugs here, I tell ye: I smokes &rsquo;em all out every night before
+going to bed.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And where may you sleep?&rdquo; said I, looking round, and seeing no
+sign of a bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sleep?&rdquo; says he, &ldquo;why I sleep in my jacket, that&rsquo;s the
+best counterpane; and I use my head for a pillow. He-he, funny, ain&rsquo;t
+it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very funny,&rdquo; says I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Have some more ale?&rdquo; says he; &ldquo;plenty more.&rdquo; &ldquo;No
+more, thank you,&rdquo; says I; &ldquo;I guess I&rsquo;ll go;&rdquo; for what
+with the tobacco-smoke and the ale, I began to feel like breathing fresh air.
+Besides, my conscience smote me for thus freely indulging in the pleasures of
+the table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, don&rsquo;t go,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t go, my boy;
+don&rsquo;t go out into the damp; take an old Christian&rsquo;s advice,&rdquo;
+laying his hand on my shoulder; &ldquo;it won&rsquo;t do. You see, by going out
+now, you&rsquo;ll shake off the ale, and get broad awake again; but if you stay
+here, you&rsquo;ll soon be dropping off for a nice little nap.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But notwithstanding these inducements, I shook my host&rsquo;s hand and
+departed. There was hardly any thing I witnessed in the docks that interested
+me more than the German emigrants who come on board the large New York ships
+several days before their sailing, to make every thing comfortable ere
+starting. Old men, tottering with age, and little infants in arms; laughing
+girls in bright-buttoned bodices, and astute, middle-aged men with pictured
+pipes in their mouths, would be seen mingling together in crowds of five, six,
+and seven or eight hundred in one ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every evening these countrymen of Luther and Melancthon gathered on the
+forecastle to sing and pray. And it was exalting to listen to their fine
+ringing anthems, reverberating among the crowded shipping, and rebounding from
+the lofty walls of the docks. Shut your eyes, and you would think you were in a
+cathedral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They keep up this custom at sea; and every night, in the dog-watch, sing the
+songs of Zion to the roll of the great ocean-organ: a pious custom of a devout
+race, who thus send over their hallelujahs before them, as they hie to the land
+of the stranger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And among these sober Germans, my country counts the most orderly and valuable
+of her foreign population. It is they who have swelled the census of her
+Northwestern States; and transferring their ploughs from the hills of
+Transylvania to the prairies of Wisconsin; and sowing the wheat of the Rhine on
+the banks of the Ohio, raise the grain, that, a hundred fold increased, may
+return to their kinsmen in Europe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There is something in the contemplation of the mode in which America has been
+settled, that, in a noble breast, should forever extinguish the prejudices of
+national dislikes. Settled by the people of all nations, all nations may claim
+her for their own. You can not spill a drop of American blood without spilling
+the blood of the whole world. Be he Englishman, Frenchman, German, Dane, or
+Scot; the European who scoffs at an American, calls his own brother
+<i>Raca,</i> and stands in danger of the judgment. We are not a narrow tribe of
+men, with a bigoted Hebrew nationality&mdash;whose blood has been debased in
+the attempt to ennoble it, by maintaining an exclusive succession among
+ourselves. No: our blood is as the flood of the Amazon, made up of a thousand
+noble currents all pouring into one. We are not a nation, so much as a world;
+for unless we may claim all the world for our sire, like Melchisedec, we are
+without father or mother.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For who was our father and our mother? Or can we point to any Romulus and Remus
+for our founders? Our ancestry is lost in the universal paternity; and Caesar
+and Alfred, St. Paul and Luther, and Homer and Shakespeare are as much ours as
+Washington, who is as much the world&rsquo;s as our own. We are the heirs of
+all time, and with all nations we divide our inheritance. On this Western
+Hemisphere all tribes and people are forming into one federated whole; and
+there is a future which shall see the estranged children of Adam restored as to
+the old hearthstone in Eden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other world beyond this, which was longed for by the devout before
+Columbus&rsquo; time, was found in the New; and the deep-sea-lead, that first
+struck these soundings, brought up the soil of Earth&rsquo;s Paradise. Not a
+Paradise then, or now; but to be made so, at God&rsquo;s good pleasure, and in
+the fullness and mellowness of time. The seed is sown, and the harvest must
+come; and our children&rsquo;s children, on the world&rsquo;s jubilee morning,
+shall all go with their sickles to the reaping. Then shall the curse of Babel
+be revoked, a new Pentecost come, and the language they shall speak shall be
+the language of Britain. Frenchmen, and Danes, and Scots; and the dwellers on
+the shores of the Mediterranean, and in the regions round about; Italians, and
+Indians, and Moors; there shall appear unto them cloven tongues as of fire.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap34"></a>CHAPTER XXXIV.<br/>
+THE IRRAWADDY</h2>
+
+<p>
+Among the various ships lying in Prince&rsquo;s Dock, none interested me more
+than the Irrawaddy, of Bombay, a <i>&ldquo;country ship,&rdquo;</i> which is
+the name bestowed by Europeans upon the large native vessels of India. Forty
+years ago, these merchantmen were nearly the largest in the world; and they
+still exceed the generality. They are built of the celebrated teak wood, the
+oak of the East, or in Eastern phrase, <i>&ldquo;the King of the
+Oaks.&rdquo;</i> The Irrawaddy had just arrived from Hindostan, with a cargo of
+cotton. She was manned by forty or fifty Lascars, the native seamen of India,
+who seemed to be immediately governed by a countryman of theirs of a higher
+caste. While his inferiors went about in strips of white linen, this dignitary
+was arrayed in a red army-coat, brilliant with gold lace, a cocked hat, and
+drawn sword. But the general effect was quite spoiled by his bare feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In discharging the cargo, his business seemed to consist in flagellating the
+crew with the flat of his saber, an exercise in which long practice had made
+him exceedingly expert. The poor fellows jumped away with the tackle-rope,
+elastic as cats.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One Sunday, I went aboard of the Irrawaddy, when this oriental usher accosted
+me at the gangway, with his sword at my throat. I gently pushed it aside,
+making a sign expressive of the pacific character of my motives in paying a
+visit to the ship. Whereupon he very considerately let me pass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I thought I was in Pegu, so strangely woody was the smell of the dark-colored
+timbers, whose odor was heightened by the rigging of <i>kayar,</i> or cocoa-nut
+fiber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Lascars were on the forecastle-deck. Among them were Malays, Mahrattas,
+Burmese, Siamese, and Cingalese. They were seated round &ldquo;kids&rdquo; full
+of rice, from which, according to their invariable custom, they helped
+themselves with one hand, the other being reserved for quite another purpose.
+They were chattering like magpies in Hindostanee, but I found that several of
+them could also speak very good English. They were a small-limbed, wiry, tawny
+set; and I was informed made excellent seamen, though ill adapted to stand the
+hardships of northern voyaging.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They told me that seven of their number had died on the passage from Bombay;
+two or three after crossing the Tropic of Cancer, and the rest met their fate
+in the Channel, where the ship had been tost about in violent seas, attended
+with cold rains, peculiar to that vicinity. Two more had been lost overboard
+from the flying-jib-boom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was condoling with a young English cabin-boy on board, upon the loss of these
+poor fellows, when he said it was their own fault; they would never wear
+monkey-jackets, but clung to their thin India robes, even in the bitterest
+weather. He talked about them much as a farmer would about the loss of so many
+sheep by the murrain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain of the vessel was an Englishman, as were also the three mates,
+master and boatswain. These officers lived astern in the cabin, where every
+Sunday they read the Church of England&rsquo;s prayers, while the heathen at
+the other end of the ship were left to their false gods and idols. And thus,
+with Christianity on the quarter-deck, and paganism on the forecastle, the
+Irrawaddy ploughed the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As if to symbolize this state of things, the <i>&ldquo;fancy piece&rdquo;</i>
+astern comprised, among numerous other carved decorations, a cross and a miter;
+while forward, on the bows, was a sort of devil for a figure-head&mdash;a
+dragon-shaped creature, with a fiery red mouth, and a switchy-looking tail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After her cargo was discharged, which was done &ldquo;to the sound of flutes
+and soft recorders&rdquo;&mdash;something as work is done in the navy to the
+music of the boatswain&rsquo;s pipe&mdash;the Lascars were set to
+<i>&ldquo;stripping the ship&rdquo;</i> that is, to sending down all her spars
+and ropes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this time, she lay alongside of us, and the Babel on board almost drowned
+our own voices. In nothing but their girdles, the Lascars hopped about aloft,
+chattering like so many monkeys; but, nevertheless, showing much dexterity and
+seamanship in their manner of doing their work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every Sunday, crowds of well-dressed people came down to the dock to see this
+singular ship; many of them perched themselves in the shrouds of the
+neighboring craft, much to the wrath of Captain Riga, who left strict orders
+with our old ship-keeper, to drive all strangers out of the Highlander&rsquo;s
+rigging. It was amusing at these times, to watch the old women with umbrellas,
+who stood on the quay staring at the Lascars, even when they desired to be
+private. These inquisitive old ladies seemed to regard the strange sailors as a
+species of wild animal, whom they might gaze at with as much impunity, as at
+leopards in the Zoological Gardens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One night I was returning to the ship, when just as I was passing through the
+Dock Gate, I noticed a white figure squatting against the wall outside. It
+proved to be one of the Lascars who was smoking, as the regulations of the
+docks prohibit his indulging this luxury on board his vessel. Struck with the
+curious fashion of his pipe, and the odor from it, I inquired what he was
+smoking; he replied <i>&ldquo;Joggerry,&rdquo;</i> which is a species of weed,
+used in place of tobacco.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Finding that he spoke good English, and was quite communicative, like most
+smokers, I sat down by <i>Dattabdool-mans, as</i> he called himself, and we
+fell into conversation. So instructive was his discourse, that when we parted,
+I had considerably added to my stock of knowledge. Indeed, it is a Godsend to
+fall in with a fellow like this. He knows things you never dreamed of; his
+experiences are like a man from the moon&mdash;wholly strange, a new
+revelation. If you want to learn romance, or gain an insight into things
+quaint, curious, and marvelous, drop your books of travel, and take a stroll
+along the docks of a great commercial port. Ten to one, you will encounter
+Crusoe himself among the crowds of mariners from all parts of the globe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this is no place for making mention of all the subjects upon which I and my
+Lascar friend mostly discoursed; I will only try to give his account of the
+<i>teakwood</i> and <i>kayar rope,</i> concerning which things I was curious,
+and sought information.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <i>&ldquo;sagoon&rdquo;</i> as he called the tree which produces the teak,
+grows in its greatest excellence among the mountains of Malabar, whence large
+quantities are sent to Bombay for shipbuilding. He also spoke of another kind
+of wood, the <i>&ldquo;sissor,&rdquo;</i> which supplies most of the
+<i>&ldquo;shin-logs,&rdquo;</i> or &ldquo;knees,&rdquo; and crooked timbers in
+the <i>country ships.</i> The sagoon grows to an immense size; sometimes there
+is fifty feet of trunk, three feet through, before a single bough is put forth.
+Its leaves are very large; and to convey some idea of them, my Lascar likened
+them to elephants&rsquo; ears. He said a purple dye was extracted from them,
+for the purpose of staining cottons and silks. The wood is specifically heavier
+than water; it is easily worked, and extremely strong and durable. But its
+chief merit lies in resisting the action of the salt water, and the attacks of
+insects; which resistance is caused by its containing a resinous oil called
+<i>&ldquo;poonja.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To my surprise, he informed me that the Irrawaddy was wholly built by the
+native shipwrights of India, who, he modestly asserted, surpassed the European
+artisans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The rigging, also, was of native manufacture. As the <i>kayar,</i> of which it
+is composed, is now getting into use both in England and America, as well for
+ropes and rigging as for mats and rugs, my Lascar friend&rsquo;s account of it,
+joined to my own observations, may not be uninteresting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In India, it is prepared very much in the same way as in Polynesia. The
+cocoa-nut is gathered while the husk is still green, and but partially ripe;
+and this husk is removed by striking the nut forcibly, with both hands, upon a
+sharp-pointed stake, planted uprightly in the ground. In this way a boy will
+strip nearly fifteen hundred in a day. But the <i>kayar</i> is not made from
+the husk, as might be supposed, but from the rind of the nut; which, after
+being long soaked in water, is beaten with mallets, and rubbed together into
+fibers. After this being dried in the sun, you may spin it, just like hemp, or
+any similar substance. The fiber thus produced makes very strong and durable
+ropes, extremely well adapted, from their lightness and durability, for the
+running rigging of a ship; while the same causes, united with its great
+strength and buoyancy, render it very suitable for large cables and hawsers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the elasticity of the <i>kayar</i> ill fits it for the shrouds and
+standing-rigging of a ship, which require to be comparatively firm. Hence, as
+the Irrawaddy&rsquo;s shrouds were all of this substance, the Lascar told me,
+they were continually setting up or slacking off her standing-rigging,
+according as the weather was cold or warm. And the loss of a foretopmast,
+between the tropics, in a squall, he attributed to this circumstance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a stay of about two weeks, the Irrawaddy had her heavy Indian spars
+replaced with Canadian pine, and her <i>kayar</i> shrouds with hempen ones. She
+then mustered her pagans, and hoisted sail for London.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap35"></a>CHAPTER XXXV.<br/>
+GALLIOTS, COAST-OF-GUINEA-MAN, AND FLOATING CHAPEL</h2>
+
+<p>
+Another very curious craft often seen in the Liverpool docks, is the Dutch
+galliot, an old-fashioned looking gentleman, with hollow waist, high prow and
+stern, and which, seen lying among crowds of tight Yankee traders, and pert
+French brigantines, always reminded me of a cocked hat among modish beavers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The construction of the galliot has not altered for centuries; and the northern
+European nations, Danes and Dutch, still sail the salt seas in this
+flat-bottomed salt-cellar of a ship; although, in addition to these, they have
+vessels of a more modern kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They seldom paint the galliot; but scrape and varnish all its planks and spars,
+so that all over it resembles the <i>&ldquo;bright side&rdquo;</i> or polished
+<i>streak,</i> usually banding round an American ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some of them are kept scrupulously neat and clean, and remind one of a
+well-scrubbed wooden platter, or an old oak table, upon which much wax and
+elbow vigor has been expended. Before the wind, they sail well; but on a
+bowline, owing to their broad hulls and flat bottoms, they make leeway at a sad
+rate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every day, some strange vessel entered Prince&rsquo;s Dock; and hardly would I
+gaze my fill at some outlandish craft from Surat or the Levant, ere a still
+more outlandish one would absorb my attention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among others, I remember, was a little brig from the Coast of Guinea. In
+appearance, she was the ideal of a slaver; low, black, clipper-built about the
+bows, and her decks in a state of most piratical disorder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She carried a long, rusty gun, on a swivel, amid-ships; and that gun was a
+curiosity in itself. It must have been some old veteran, condemned by the
+government, and sold for any thing it would fetch. It was an antique, covered
+with half-effaced inscriptions, crowns, anchors, eagles; and it had two handles
+near the trunnions, like those of a tureen. The knob on the breach was
+fashioned into a dolphin&rsquo;s head; and by a comical conceit, the touch-hole
+formed the orifice of a human ear; and a stout tympanum it must have had, to
+have withstood the concussions it had heard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The brig, heavily loaded, lay between two large ships in ballast; so that its
+deck was at least twenty feet below those of its neighbors. Thus shut in, its
+hatchways looked like the entrance to deep vaults or mines; especially as her
+men were wheeling out of her hold some kind of ore, which might have been gold
+ore, so scrupulous were they in evening the bushel measures, in which they
+transferred it to the quay; and so particular was the captain, a dark-skinned
+whiskerando, in a Maltese cap and tassel, in standing over the sailors, with
+his pencil and memorandum-book in hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crew were a buccaneering looking set; with hairy chests, purple shirts, and
+arms wildly tattooed. The mate had a wooden leg, and hobbled about with a
+crooked cane like a spiral staircase. There was a deal of swearing on board of
+this craft, which was rendered the more reprehensible when she came to moor
+alongside the Floating Chapel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was the hull of an old sloop-of-war, which had been converted into a
+mariner&rsquo;s church. A house had been built upon it, and a steeple took the
+place of a mast. There was a little balcony near the base of the steeple, some
+twenty feet from the water; where, on week-days, I used to see an old pensioner
+of a tar, sitting on a camp-stool, reading his Bible. On Sundays he hoisted the
+Bethel flag, and like the <i>muezzin</i> or cryer of prayers on the top of a
+Turkish mosque, would call the strolling sailors to their devotions; not
+officially, but on his own account; conjuring them not to make fools of
+themselves, but muster round the pulpit, as they did about the capstan on a
+man-of-war. This old worthy was the sexton. I attended the chapel several
+times, and found there a very orderly but small congregation. The first time I
+went, the chaplain was discoursing on future punishments, and making allusions
+to the Tartarean Lake; which, coupled with the pitchy smell of the old hull,
+summoned up the most forcible image of the thing which I ever experienced.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The floating chapels which are to be found in some of the docks, form one of
+the means which have been tried to induce the seamen visiting Liverpool to turn
+their thoughts toward serious things. But as very few of them ever think of
+entering these chapels, though they might pass them twenty times in the day,
+some of the clergy, of a Sunday, address them in the open air, from the corners
+of the quays, or wherever they can procure an audience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Whenever, in my Sunday strolls, I caught sight of one of these congregations, I
+always made a point of joining it; and would find myself surrounded by a motley
+crowd of seamen from all quarters of the globe, and women, and lumpers, and
+dock laborers of all sorts. Frequently the clergyman would be standing upon an
+old cask, arrayed in full canonicals, as a divine of the Church of England.
+Never have I heard religious discourses better adapted to an audience of men,
+who, like sailors, are chiefly, if not only, to be moved by the plainest of
+precepts, and demonstrations of the misery of sin, as conclusive and undeniable
+as those of Euclid. No mere rhetoric avails with such men; fine periods are
+vanity. You can not touch them with tropes. They need to be pressed home by
+plain facts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And such was generally the mode in which they were addressed by the clergy in
+question: who, taking familiar themes for their discourses, which were leveled
+right at the wants of their auditors, always succeeded in fastening their
+attention. In particular, the two great vices to which sailors are most
+addicted, and which they practice to the ruin of both body and soul; these
+things, were the most enlarged upon. And several times on the docks, I have
+seen a robed clergyman addressing a large audience of women collected from the
+notorious lanes and alleys in the neighborhood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Is not this as it ought to be? since the true calling of the reverend clergy is
+like their divine Master&rsquo;s;&mdash;not to bring the righteous, but sinners
+to repentance. Did some of them leave the converted and comfortable
+congregations, before whom they have ministered year after year; and plunge at
+once, like St. Paul, into the infected centers and hearts of vice: <i>then</i>
+indeed, would they find a strong enemy to cope with; and a victory gained over
+<i>him,</i> would entitle them to a conqueror&rsquo;s wreath. Better to save
+one sinner from an obvious vice that is destroying him, than to indoctrinate
+ten thousand saints. And as from every corner, in Catholic towns, the shrines
+of Holy Mary and the Child Jesus perpetually remind the commonest wayfarer of
+his heaven; even so should Protestant pulpits be founded in the market-places,
+and at street corners, where the men of God might be heard by all of His
+children.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap36"></a>CHAPTER XXXVI.<br/>
+THE OLD CHURCH OF ST. NICHOLAS, AND THE DEAD-HOUSE</h2>
+
+<p>
+The floating chapel recalls to mind the <i>&ldquo;Old Church,&rdquo;</i> well
+known to the seamen of many generations, who have visited Liverpool. It stands
+very near the docks, a venerable mass of brown stone, and by the town&rsquo;s
+people is called the Church of St. Nicholas. I believe it is the best preserved
+piece of antiquity in all Liverpool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before the town rose to any importance, it was the only place of worship on
+that side of the Mersey; and under the adjoining Parish of Walton was a
+<i>chapel-of-ease;</i> though from the straight backed pews, there could have
+been but little comfort taken in it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In old times, there stood in front of the church a statue of St. Nicholas, the
+patron of mariners; to which all pious sailors made offerings, to induce his
+saintship to grant them short and prosperous voyages. In the tower is a fine
+chime of bells; and I well remember my delight at first hearing them on the
+first Sunday morning after our arrival in the dock. It seemed to carry an
+admonition with it; something like the premonition conveyed to young
+Whittington by Bow Bells. <i>&ldquo;Wellingborough! Wellingborough! you must
+not forget to go to church, Wellingborough! Don&rsquo;t forget, Wellingborough!
+Wellingborough! don&rsquo;t forget.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thirty or forty years ago, these bells were rung upon the arrival of every
+Liverpool ship from a foreign voyage. How forcibly does this illustrate the
+increase of the commerce of the town! Were the same custom now observed, the
+bells would seldom have a chance to cease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What seemed the most remarkable about this venerable old church, and what
+seemed the most barbarous, and grated upon the veneration with which I regarded
+this time-hallowed structure, was the condition of the grave-yard surrounding
+it. From its close vicinity to the haunts of the swarms of laborers about the
+docks, it is crossed and re-crossed by thoroughfares in all directions; and the
+tomb-stones, not being erect, but horizontal (indeed, they form a complete
+flagging to the spot), multitudes are constantly walking over the dead; their
+heels erasing the death&rsquo;s-heads and crossbones, the last mementos of the
+departed. At noon, when the lumpers employed in loading and unloading the
+shipping, retire for an hour to snatch a dinner, many of them resort to the
+grave-yard; and seating themselves upon a tomb-stone use the adjoining one for
+a table. Often, I saw men stretched out in a drunken sleep upon these slabs;
+and once, removing a fellow&rsquo;s arm, read the following inscription, which,
+in a manner, was true to the life, if not to the death:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+HERE LYETH YE BODY OF<br/>
+TOBIAS DRINKER.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For two memorable circumstances connected with this church, I am indebted to my
+excellent friend, Morocco, who tells me that in 1588 the Earl of Derby, coming
+to his residence, and waiting for a passage to the Isle of Man, the corporation
+erected and adorned a sumptuous stall in the church for his reception. And
+moreover, that in the time of Cromwell&rsquo;s wars, when the place was taken
+by that mad nephew of King Charles, Prince Rupert, he converted the old church
+into a military prison and stable; when, no doubt, another <i>&ldquo;sumptuous
+stall&rdquo;</i> was erected for the benefit of the steed of some noble cavalry
+officer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the basement of the church is a Dead House, like the Morgue in Paris, where
+the bodies of the drowned are exposed until claimed by their friends, or till
+buried at the public charge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the multitudes employed about the shipping, this dead-house has always
+more or less occupants. Whenever I passed up Chapel-street, I used to see a
+crowd gazing through the grim iron grating of the door, upon the faces of the
+drowned within. And once, when the door was opened, I saw a sailor stretched
+out, stark and stiff, with the sleeve of his frock rolled up, and showing his
+name and date of birth tattooed upon his arm. It was a sight full of
+suggestions; he seemed his own headstone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was told that standing rewards are offered for the recovery of persons
+falling into the docks; so much, if restored to life, and a less amount if
+irrecoverably drowned. Lured by this, several horrid old men and women are
+constantly prying about the docks, searching after bodies. I observed them
+principally early in the morning, when they issued from their dens, on the same
+principle that the rag-rakers, and rubbish-pickers in the streets, sally out
+bright and early; for then, the night-harvest has ripened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There seems to be no calamity overtaking man, that can not be rendered
+merchantable. Undertakers, sextons, tomb-makers, and hearse-drivers, get their
+living from the dead; and in times of plague most thrive. And these miserable
+old men and women hunted after corpses to keep from going to the church-yard
+themselves; for they were the most wretched of starvelings.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap37"></a>CHAPTER XXXVII.<br/>
+WHAT REDBURN SAW IN LAUNCELOTT&rsquo;S-HEY </h2>
+
+<p>
+The dead-house reminds me of other sad things; for in the vicinity of the docks
+are many very painful sights.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In going to our boarding-house, the sign of the Baltimore Clipper, I generally
+passed through a narrow street called &ldquo;Launcelott&rsquo;s-Hey,&rdquo;
+lined with dingy, prison-like cotton warehouses. In this street, or rather
+alley, you seldom see any one but a truck-man, or some solitary old
+warehouse-keeper, haunting his smoky den like a ghost.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once, passing through this place, I heard a feeble wail, which seemed to come
+out of the earth. It was but a strip of crooked side-walk where I stood; the
+dingy wall was on every side, converting the mid-day into twilight; and not a
+soul was in sight. I started, and could almost have run, when I heard that
+dismal sound. It seemed the low, hopeless, endless wail of some one forever
+lost. At last I advanced to an opening which communicated downward with deep
+tiers of cellars beneath a crumbling old warehouse; and there, some fifteen
+feet below the walk, crouching in nameless squalor, with her head bowed over,
+was the figure of what had been a woman. Her blue arms folded to her livid
+bosom two shrunken things like children, that leaned toward her, one on each
+side. At first, I knew not whether they were alive or dead. They made no sign;
+they did not move or stir; but from the vault came that soul-sickening wail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made a noise with my foot, which, in the silence, echoed far and near; but
+there was no response. Louder still; when one of the children lifted its head,
+and cast upward a faint glance; then closed its eyes, and lay motionless. The
+woman also, now gazed up, and perceived me; but let fall her eye again. They
+were dumb and next to dead with want. How they had crawled into that den, I
+could not tell; but there they had crawled to die. At that moment I never
+thought of relieving them; for death was so stamped in their glazed and
+unimploring eyes, that I almost regarded them as already no more. I stood
+looking down on them, while my whole soul swelled within me; and I asked
+myself, What right had any body in the wide world to smile and be glad, when
+sights like this were to be seen? It was enough to turn the heart to gall; and
+make a man-hater of a Howard. For who were these ghosts that I saw? Were they
+not human beings? A woman and two girls? With eyes, and lips, and ears like any
+queen? with hearts which, though they did not bound with blood, yet beat with a
+dull, dead ache that was their life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, I walked on toward an open lot in the alley, hoping to meet there some
+ragged old women, whom I had daily noticed groping amid foul rubbish for little
+particles of dirty cotton, which they washed out and sold for a trifle.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I found them; and accosting one, I asked if she knew of the persons I had just
+left. She replied, that she did not; nor did she want to. I then asked another,
+a miserable, toothless old woman, with a tattered strip of coarse baling stuff
+round her body. Looking at me for an instant, she resumed her raking in the
+rubbish, and said that she knew who it was that I spoke of; but that she had no
+time to attend to beggars and their brats. Accosting still another, who seemed
+to know my errand, I asked if there was no place to which the woman could be
+taken. &ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; she replied, &ldquo;to the church-yard.&rdquo; I said
+she was alive, and not dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then she&rsquo;ll never die,&rdquo; was the rejoinder.
+&ldquo;She&rsquo;s been down there these three days, with nothing to
+eat;&mdash;that I know myself.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;She desarves it,&rdquo; said an old hag, who was just placing on her
+crooked shoulders her bag of pickings, and who was turning to totter off,
+&ldquo;that Betsy Jennings desarves it&mdash;was she ever married? tell me
+that.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Leaving Launcelott&rsquo;s-Hey, I turned into a more frequented street; and
+soon meeting a policeman, told him of the condition of the woman and the girls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s none of my business, Jack,&rdquo; said he. &ldquo;I
+don&rsquo;t belong to that street.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who does then?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I don&rsquo;t know. But what business is it of yours? Are you not a
+Yankee?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;but come, I will help you remove that woman,
+if you say so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There, now, Jack, go on board your ship and stick to it; and leave these
+matters to the town.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I accosted two more policemen, but with no better success; they would not even
+go with me to the place. The truth was, it was out of the way, in a silent,
+secluded spot; and the misery of the three outcasts, hiding away in the ground,
+did not obtrude upon any one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Returning to them, I again stamped to attract their attention; but this time,
+none of the three looked up, or even stirred. While I yet stood irresolute, a
+voice called to me from a high, iron-shuttered window in a loft over the way;
+and asked what I was about. I beckoned to the man, a sort of porter, to come
+down, which he did; when I pointed down into the vault.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;what of it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Can&rsquo;t we get them out?&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;haven&rsquo;t you
+some place in your warehouse where you can put them? have you nothing for them
+to eat?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You&rsquo;re crazy, boy,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;do you suppose, that
+Parkins and Wood want their warehouse turned into a hospital?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then went to my boarding-house, and told Handsome Mary of what I had seen;
+asking her if she could not do something to get the woman and girls removed; or
+if she could not do that, let me have some food for them. But though a kind
+person in the main, Mary replied that she gave away enough to beggars in her
+own street (which was true enough) without looking after the whole
+neighborhood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Going into the kitchen, I accosted the cook, a little shriveled-up old
+Welshwoman, with a saucy tongue, whom the sailors called <i>Brandy-Nan;</i> and
+begged her to give me some cold victuals, if she had nothing better, to take to
+the vault. But she broke out in a storm of swearing at the miserable occupants
+of the vault, and refused. I then stepped into the room where our dinner was
+being spread; and waiting till the girl had gone out, I snatched some bread and
+cheese from a stand, and thrusting it into the bosom of my frock, left the
+house. Hurrying to the lane, I dropped the food down into the vault. One of the
+girls caught at it convulsively, but fell back, apparently fainting; the sister
+pushed the other&rsquo;s arm aside, and took the bread in her hand; but with a
+weak uncertain grasp like an infant&rsquo;s. She placed it to her mouth; but
+letting it fall again, murmuring faintly something like &ldquo;water.&rdquo;
+The woman did not stir; her head was bowed over, just as I had first seen her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seeing how it was, I ran down toward the docks to a mean little sailor tavern,
+and begged for a pitcher; but the cross old man who kept it refused, unless I
+would pay for it. But I had no money. So as my boarding-house was some way off,
+and it would be lost time to run to the ship for my big iron pot; under the
+impulse of the moment, I hurried to one of the Boodle Hydrants, which I
+remembered having seen running near the scene of a still smoldering fire in an
+old rag house; and taking off a new tarpaulin hat, which had been loaned me
+that day, filled it with water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With this, I returned to Launcelott&rsquo;s-Hey; and with considerable
+difficulty, like getting down into a well, I contrived to descend with it into
+the vault; where there was hardly space enough left to let me stand. The two
+girls drank out of the hat together; looking up at me with an unalterable,
+idiotic expression, that almost made me faint. The woman spoke not a word, and
+did not stir. While the girls were breaking and eating the bread, I tried to
+lift the woman&rsquo;s head; but, feeble as she was, she seemed bent upon
+holding it down. Observing her arms still clasped upon her bosom, and that
+something seemed hidden under the rags there, a thought crossed my mind, which
+impelled me forcibly to withdraw her hands for a moment; when I caught a
+glimpse of a meager little babe&mdash;the lower part of its body thrust into an
+old bonnet. Its face was dazzlingly white, even in its squalor; but the closed
+eyes looked like balls of indigo. It must have been dead some hours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The woman refusing to speak, eat, or drink, I asked one of the girls who they
+were, and where they lived; but she only stared vacantly, muttering something
+that could not be understood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The air of the place was now getting too much for me; but I stood deliberating
+a moment, whether it was possible for me to drag them out of the vault. But if
+I did, what then? They would only perish in the street, and here they were at
+least protected from the rain; and more than that, might die in seclusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I crawled up into the street, and looking down upon them again, almost repented
+that I had brought them any food; for it would only tend to prolong their
+misery, without hope of any permanent relief: for die they must very soon; they
+were too far gone for any medicine to help them. I hardly know whether I ought
+to confess another thing that occurred to me as I stood there; but it was
+this&mdash;I felt an almost irresistible impulse to do them the last mercy, of
+in some way putting an end to their horrible lives; and I should almost have
+done so, I think, had I not been deterred by thoughts of the law. For I well
+knew that the law, which would let them perish of themselves without giving
+them one cup of water, would spend a thousand pounds, if necessary, in
+convicting him who should so much as offer to relieve them from their miserable
+existence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day, and the next, I passed the vault three times, and still met the
+same sight. The girls leaning up against the woman on each side, and the woman
+with her arms still folding the babe, and her head bowed. The first evening I
+did not see the bread that I had dropped down in the morning; but the second
+evening, the bread I had dropped that morning remained untouched. On the third
+morning the smell that came from the vault was such, that I accosted the same
+policeman I had accosted before, who was patrolling the same street, and told
+him that the persons I had spoken to him about were dead, and he had better
+have them removed. He looked as if he did not believe me, and added, that it
+was not his street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I arrived at the docks on my way to the ship, I entered the guard-house
+within the walls, and asked for one of the captains, to whom I told the story;
+but, from what he said, was led to infer that the Dock Police was distinct from
+that of the town, and this was not the right place to lodge my information.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could do no more that morning, being obliged to repair to the ship; but at
+twelve o&rsquo;clock, when I went to dinner, I hurried into
+Launcelott&rsquo;s-Hey, when I found that the vault was empty. In place of the
+women and children, a heap of quick-lime was glistening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not learn who had taken them away, or whither they had gone; but my
+prayer was answered&mdash;they were dead, departed, and at peace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But again I looked down into the vault, and in fancy beheld the pale, shrunken
+forms still crouching there. Ah! what are our creeds, and how do we hope to be
+saved? Tell me, oh Bible, that story of Lazarus again, that I may find comfort
+in my heart for the poor and forlorn. Surrounded as we are by the wants and
+woes of our fellowmen, and yet given to follow our own pleasures, regardless of
+their pains, are we not like people sitting up with a corpse, and making merry
+in the house of the dead?
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap38"></a>CHAPTER XXXVIII.<br/>
+THE DOCK-WALL BEGGARS</h2>
+
+<p>
+I might relate other things which befell me during the six weeks and more that
+I remained in Liverpool, often visiting the cellars, sinks, and hovels of the
+wretched lanes and courts near the river. But to tell of them, would only be to
+tell over again the story just told; so I return to the docks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old women described as picking dirty fragments of cotton in the empty lot,
+belong to the same class of beings who at all hours of the day are to be seen
+within the dock walls, raking over and over the heaps of rubbish carried ashore
+from the holds of the shipping.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As it is against the law to throw the least thing overboard, even a rope yarn;
+and as this law is very different from similar laws in New York, inasmuch as it
+is rigidly enforced by the dock-masters; and, moreover, as after discharging a
+ship&rsquo;s cargo, a great deal of dirt and worthless dunnage remains in the
+hold, the amount of rubbish accumulated in the appointed receptacles for
+depositing it within the walls is extremely large, and is constantly receiving
+new accessions from every vessel that unlades at the quays.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Standing over these noisome heaps, you will see scores of tattered wretches,
+armed with old rakes and picking-irons, turning over the dirt, and making as
+much of a rope-yarn as if it were a skein of silk. Their findings,
+nevertheless, are but small; for as it is one of the immemorial perquisites of
+the second mate of a merchant ship to collect, and sell on his own account, all
+the condemned &ldquo;old junk&rdquo; of the vessel to which he belongs, he
+generally takes good heed that in the buckets of rubbish carried ashore, there
+shall be as few rope-yarns as possible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the same way, the cook preserves all the odds and ends of pork-rinds and
+beef-fat, which he sells at considerable profit; upon a six months&rsquo;
+voyage frequently realizing thirty or forty dollars from the sale, and in large
+ships, even more than that. It may easily be imagined, then, how desperately
+driven to it must these rubbish-pickers be, to ransack heaps of refuse which
+have been previously gleaned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor must I omit to make mention of the singular beggary practiced in the
+streets frequented by sailors; and particularly to record the remarkable army
+of paupers that beset the docks at particular hours of the day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At twelve o&rsquo;clock the crews of hundreds and hundreds of ships issue in
+crowds from the dock gates to go to their dinner in the town. This hour is
+seized upon by multitudes of beggars to plant themselves against the outside of
+the walls, while others stand upon the curbstone to excite the charity of the
+seamen. The first time that I passed through this long lane of pauperism, it
+seemed hard to believe that such an array of misery could be furnished by any
+town in the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every variety of want and suffering here met the eye, and every vice showed
+here its victims. Nor were the marvelous and almost incredible shifts and
+stratagems of the professional beggars, wanting to finish this picture of all
+that is dishonorable to civilization and humanity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Old women, rather mummies, drying up with slow starving and age; young girls,
+incurably sick, who ought to have been in the hospital; sturdy men, with the
+gallows in their eyes, and a whining lie in their mouths; young boys,
+hollow-eyed and decrepit; and puny mothers, holding up puny babes in the glare
+of the sun, formed the main features of the scene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But these were diversified by instances of peculiar suffering, vice, or art in
+attracting charity, which, to me at least, who had never seen such things
+before, seemed to the last degree uncommon and monstrous.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I remember one cripple, a young man rather decently clad, who sat huddled up
+against the wall, holding a painted board on his knees. It was a picture
+intending to represent the man himself caught in the machinery of some factory,
+and whirled about among spindles and cogs, with his limbs mangled and bloody.
+This person said nothing, but sat silently exhibiting his board. Next him,
+leaning upright against the wall, was a tall, pallid man, with a white bandage
+round his brow, and his face cadaverous as a corpse. He, too, said nothing; but
+with one finger silently pointed down to the square of flagging at his feet,
+which was nicely swept, and stained blue, and bore this inscription in
+chalk:&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="poem">
+<i>&ldquo;I have had no food for three days;<br/>
+My wife and children are dying.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+
+<p>
+Further on lay a man with one sleeve of his ragged coat removed, showing an
+unsightly sore; and above it a label with some writing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In some places, for the distance of many rods, the whole line of flagging
+immediately at the base of the wall, would be completely covered with
+inscriptions, the beggars standing over them in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as you passed along these horrible records, in an hour&rsquo;s time
+destined to be obliterated by the feet of thousands and thousands of wayfarers,
+you were not left unassailed by the clamorous petitions of the more urgent
+applicants for charity. They beset you on every hand; catching you by the coat;
+hanging on, and following you along; and, <i>for Heaven&rsquo;s sake,</i> and
+<i>for God&rsquo;s sake,</i> and <i>for Christ&rsquo;s sake,</i> beseeching of
+you but <i>one ha&rsquo;penny.</i> If you so much as glanced your eye on one of
+them, even for an instant, it was perceived like lightning, and the person
+never left your side until you turned into another street, or satisfied his
+demands. Thus, at least, it was with the sailors; though I observed that the
+beggars treated the town&rsquo;s people differently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I can not say that the seamen did much to relieve the destitution which three
+times every day was presented to their view. Perhaps habit had made them
+callous; but the truth might have been that very few of them had much money to
+give. Yet the beggars must have had some inducement to infest the dock walls as
+they did.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As an example of the caprice of sailors, and their sympathy with suffering
+among members of their own calling, I must mention the case of an old man, who
+every day, and all day long, through sunshine and rain, occupied a particular
+corner, where crowds of tars were always passing. He was an uncommonly large,
+plethoric man, with a wooden leg, and dressed in the nautical garb; his face
+was red and round; he was continually merry; and with his wooden stump thrust
+forth, so as almost to trip up the careless wayfarer, he sat upon a great pile
+of monkey jackets, with a little depression in them between his knees, to
+receive the coppers thrown him. And plenty of pennies were tost into his
+poor-box by the sailors, who always exchanged a pleasant word with the old man,
+and passed on, generally regardless of the neighboring beggars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first morning I went ashore with my shipmates, some of them greeted him as
+an old acquaintance; for that corner he had occupied for many long years. He
+was an old man-of-war&rsquo;s man, who had lost his leg at the battle of
+Trafalgar; and singular to tell, he now exhibited his wooden one as a genuine
+specimen of the oak timbers of Nelson&rsquo;s ship, the Victory.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the paupers were several who wore old sailor hats and jackets, and
+claimed to be destitute tars; and on the strength of these pretensions demanded
+help from their brethren; but Jack would see through their disguise in a
+moment, and turn away, with no benediction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I daily passed through this lane of beggars, who thronged the docks as the
+Hebrew cripples did the Pool of Bethesda, and as I thought of my utter
+inability in any way to help them, I could not but offer up a prayer, that some
+angel might descend, and turn the waters of the docks into an elixir, that
+would heal all their woes, and make them, man and woman, healthy and whole as
+their ancestors, Adam and Eve, in the garden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Adam and Eve! If indeed ye are yet alive and in heaven, may it be no part of
+your immortality to look down upon the world ye have left. For as all these
+sufferers and cripples are as much your family as young Abel, so, to you, the
+sight of the world&rsquo;s woes would be a parental torment indeed.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap39"></a>CHAPTER XXXIX.<br/>
+THE BOOBLE-ALLEYS OF THE TOWN </h2>
+
+<p>
+The same sights that are to be met with along the dock walls at noon, in a less
+degree, though diversified with other scenes, are continually encountered in
+the narrow streets where the sailor boarding-houses are kept.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the evening, especially when the sailors are gathered in great numbers,
+these streets present a most singular spectacle, the entire population of the
+vicinity being seemingly turned into them. Hand-organs, fiddles, and cymbals,
+plied by strolling musicians, mix with the songs of the seamen, the babble of
+women and children, and the groaning and whining of beggars. From the various
+boarding-houses, each distinguished by gilded emblems outside&mdash;an anchor,
+a crown, a ship, a windlass, or a dolphin&mdash;proceeds the noise of revelry
+and dancing; and from the open casements lean young girls and old women,
+chattering and laughing with the crowds in the middle of the street. Every
+moment strange greetings are exchanged between old sailors who chance to
+stumble upon a shipmate, last seen in Calcutta or Savannah; and the invariable
+courtesy that takes place upon these occasions, is to go to the next
+spirit-vault, and drink each other&rsquo;s health.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are particular paupers who frequent particular sections of these streets,
+and who, I was told, resented the intrusion of mendicants from other parts of
+the town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Chief among them was a white-haired old man, stone-blind; who was led up and
+down through the long tumult by a woman holding a little saucer to receive
+contributions. This old man sang, or rather chanted, certain words in a
+peculiarly long-drawn, guttural manner, throwing back his head, and turning up
+his sightless eyeballs to the sky. His chant was a lamentation upon his
+infirmity; and at the time it produced the same effect upon me, that my first
+reading of Milton&rsquo;s Invocation to the Sun did, years afterward. I can not
+recall it all; but it was something like this, drawn out in an endless
+groan&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Here goes the blind old man; blind, blind, blind; no more will he see
+sun nor moon&mdash;no more see sun nor moon!&rdquo; And thus would he pass
+through the middle of the street; the woman going on in advance, holding his
+hand, and dragging him through all obstructions; now and then leaving him
+standing, while she went among the crowd soliciting coppers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But one of the most curious features of the scene is the number of sailor
+ballad-singers, who, after singing their verses, hand you a printed copy, and
+beg you to buy. One of these persons, dressed like a man-of-war&rsquo;s-man, I
+observed every day standing at a corner in the middle of the street. He had a
+full, noble voice, like a church-organ; and his notes rose high above the
+surrounding din. But the remarkable thing about this ballad-singer was one of
+his arms, which, while singing, he somehow swung vertically round and round in
+the air, as if it revolved on a pivot. The feat was unnaturally unaccountable;
+and he performed it with the view of attracting sympathy; since he said that in
+falling from a frigate&rsquo;s mast-head to the deck, he had met with an
+injury, which had resulted in making his wonderful arm what it was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I made the acquaintance of this man, and found him no common character. He was
+full of marvelous adventures, and abounded in terrific stories of pirates and
+sea murders, and all sorts of nautical enormities. He was a monomaniac upon
+these subjects; he was a Newgate Calendar of the robberies and assassinations
+of the day, happening in the sailor quarters of the town; and most of his
+ballads were upon kindred subjects. He composed many of his own verses, and had
+them printed for sale on his own account. To show how expeditious he was at
+this business, it may be mentioned, that one evening on leaving the dock to go
+to supper, I perceived a crowd gathered about the <i>Old Fort Tavern;</i> and
+mingling with the rest, I learned that a woman of the town had just been killed
+at the bar by a drunken Spanish sailor from Cadiz. The murderer was carried off
+by the police before my eyes, and the very next morning the ballad-singer with
+the miraculous arm, was singing the tragedy in front of the boarding-houses,
+and handing round printed copies of the song, which, of course, were eagerly
+bought up by the seamen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This passing allusion to the murder will convey some idea of the events which
+take place in the lowest and most abandoned neighborhoods frequented by sailors
+in Liverpool. The pestilent lanes and alleys which, in their vocabulary, go by
+the names of Rotten-row, Gibraltar-place, and Booble-alley, are putrid with
+vice and crime; to which, perhaps, the round globe does not furnish a parallel.
+The sooty and begrimed bricks of the very houses have a reeking, Sodomlike, and
+murderous look; and well may the shroud of coal-smoke, which hangs over this
+part of the town, more than any other, attempt to hide the enormities here
+practiced. These are the haunts from which sailors sometimes disappear forever;
+or issue in the morning, robbed naked, from the broken doorways. These are the
+haunts in which cursing, gambling, pickpocketing, and common iniquities, are
+virtues too lofty for the infected gorgons and hydras to practice. Propriety
+forbids that I should enter into details; but kidnappers, burkers, and
+resurrectionists are almost saints and angels to them. They seem leagued
+together, a company of miscreant misanthropes, bent upon doing all the malice
+to mankind in their power. With sulphur and brimstone they ought to be burned
+out of their arches like vermin.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap40"></a>CHAPTER XL.<br/>
+PLACARDS, BRASS-JEWELERS, TRUCK-HORSES, AND STEAMERS</h2>
+
+<p>
+As I wish to group together what fell under my observation concerning the
+Liverpool docks, and the scenes roundabout, I will try to throw into this
+chapter various minor things that I recall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The advertisements of pauperism chalked upon the flagging round the dock walls,
+are singularly accompanied by a multitude of quite different announcements,
+placarded upon the walls themselves. They are principally notices of the
+approaching departure of <i>&ldquo;superior, fast-sailing, coppered and
+copper-fastened ships,&rdquo;</i> for the United States, Canada, New South
+Wales, and other places. Interspersed with these, are the advertisements of
+Jewish clothesmen, informing the judicious seamen where he can procure of the
+best and the cheapest; together with ambiguous medical announcements of the
+tribe of quacks and empirics who prey upon all seafaring men. Not content with
+thus publicly giving notice of their whereabouts, these indefatigable Sangrados
+and pretended Samaritans hire a parcel of shabby workhouse-looking knaves,
+whose business consists in haunting the dock walls about meal times, and
+silently thrusting mysterious little billets&mdash;duodecimo editions of the
+larger advertisements&mdash;into the astonished hands of the tars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They do this, with such a mysterious hang-dog wink; such a sidelong air; such a
+villainous assumption of your necessities; that, at first, you are almost
+tempted to knock them down for their pains.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Conspicuous among the notices on the walls, are huge Italic inducements to all
+seamen disgusted with the merchant service, to accept a round bounty, and
+embark in her Majesty&rsquo;s navy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the British armed marine, in time of peace, they do not ship men for the
+general service, as in the American navy; but for particular ships, going upon
+particular cruises. Thus, the frigate Thetis may be announced as about to sail
+under the command of that fine old sailor, and noble father to his crew,
+<i>Lord George Flagstaff.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Similar announcements may be seen upon the walls concerning enlistments in the
+army. And never did auctioneer dilate with more rapture upon the charms of some
+country-seat put up for sale, than the authors of these placards do, upon the
+beauty and salubrity of the distant climes, for which the regiments wanting
+recruits are about to sail. Bright lawns, vine-clad hills, endless meadows of
+verdure, here make up the landscape; and adventurous young gentlemen, fond of
+travel, are informed, that here is a chance for them to see the world at their
+leisure, and be paid for enjoying themselves into the bargain. The regiments
+for India are promised plantations among valleys of palms; while to those
+destined for New Holland, a novel sphere of life and activity is opened; and
+the companies bound to Canada and Nova Scotia are lured by tales of summer
+suns, that ripen grapes in December. No word of war is breathed; hushed is the
+clang of arms in these announcements; and the sanguine recruit is almost
+tempted to expect that pruning-hooks, instead of swords, will be the weapons he
+will wield.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas! is not this the cruel stratagem of Bruce at Bannockburn, who decoyed to
+his war-pits by covering them over with green boughs? For instead of a farm at
+the blue base of the Himalayas, the Indian recruit encounters the keen saber of
+the Sikh; and instead of basking in sunny bowers, the Canadian soldier stands a
+shivering sentry upon the bleak ramparts of Quebec, a lofty mark for the bitter
+blasts from Baffin&rsquo;s Bay and Labrador. There, as his eye sweeps down the
+St. Lawrence, whose every billow is bound for the main that laves the shore of
+Old England; as he thinks of his long term of enlistment, which sells him to
+the army as Doctor Faust sold himself to the devil; how the poor fellow must
+groan in his grief, and call to mind the church-yard stile, and his Mary.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These army announcements are well fitted to draw recruits in Liverpool. Among
+the vast number of emigrants, who daily arrive from all parts of Britain to
+embark for the United States or the colonies, there are many young men, who,
+upon arriving at Liverpool, find themselves next to penniless; or, at least,
+with only enough money to carry them over the sea, without providing for future
+contingencies. How easily and naturally, then, may such youths be induced to
+enter upon the military life, which promises them a free passage to the most
+distant and flourishing colonies, and certain pay for doing nothing; besides
+holding out hopes of vineyards and farms, to be verified in the fullness of
+time. For in a moneyless youth, the decision to leave home at all, and embark
+upon a long voyage to reside in a remote clime, is a piece of adventurousness
+only one removed from the spirit that prompts the army recruit to enlist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I never passed these advertisements, surrounded by crowds of gaping emigrants,
+without thinking of rattraps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Besides the mysterious agents of the quacks, who privily thrust their little
+notes into your hands, folded up like a powder; there are another set of
+rascals prowling about the docks, chiefly at dusk; who make strange motions to
+you, and beckon you to one side, as if they had some state secret to disclose,
+intimately connected with the weal of the commonwealth. They nudge you with an
+elbow full of indefinite hints and intimations; they glitter upon you an eye
+like a Jew&rsquo;s or a pawnbroker&rsquo;s; they dog you like Italian
+assassins. But if the blue coat of a policeman chances to approach, how quickly
+they strive to look completely indifferent, as to the surrounding universe; how
+they saunter off, as if lazily wending their way to an affectionate wife and
+family.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first time one of these mysterious personages accosted me, I fancied him
+crazy, and hurried forward to avoid him. But arm in arm with my shadow, he
+followed after; till amazed at his conduct, I turned round and paused.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a little, shabby, old man, with a forlorn looking coat and hat; and his
+hand was fumbling in his vest pocket, as if to take out a card with his
+address. Seeing me stand still he made a sign toward a dark angle of the wall,
+near which we were; when taking him for a cunning foot-pad, I again wheeled
+about, and swiftly passed on. But though I did not look round, I <i>felt</i>
+him following me still; so once more I stopped. The fellow now assumed so
+mystic and admonitory an air, that I began to fancy he came to me on some
+warning errand; that perhaps a plot had been laid to blow up the Liverpool
+docks, and he was some Monteagle bent upon accomplishing my flight. I was
+determined to see what he was. With all my eyes about me, I followed him into
+the arch of a warehouse; when he gazed round furtively, and silently showing me
+a ring, whispered, &ldquo;You may have it for a shilling; it&rsquo;s pure
+gold&mdash;I found it in the gutter&mdash;hush! don&rsquo;t speak! give me the
+money, and it&rsquo;s yours.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My friend,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;I don&rsquo;t trade in these articles;
+I don&rsquo;t want your ring.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t you? Then take that,&rdquo; he whispered, in an intense
+hushed passion; and I fell flat from a blow on the chest, while this infamous
+jeweler made away with himself out of sight. This business transaction was
+conducted with a counting-house promptitude that astonished me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After that, I shunned these scoundrels like the leprosy: and the next time I
+was pertinaciously followed, I stopped, and in a loud voice, pointed out the
+man to the passers-by; upon which he absconded; rapidly turning up into sight a
+pair of obliquely worn and battered boot-heels. I could not help thinking that
+these sort of fellows, so given to running away upon emergencies, must furnish
+a good deal of work to the shoemakers; as they might, also, to the growers of
+hemp and gallows-joiners.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Belonging to a somewhat similar fraternity with these irritable merchants of
+brass jewelry just mentioned, are the peddlers of Sheffield razors, mostly
+boys, who are hourly driven out of the dock gates by the police; nevertheless,
+they contrive to saunter back, and board the vessels, going among the sailors
+and privately exhibiting their wares. Incited by the extreme cheapness of one
+of the razors, and the gilding on the case containing it, a shipmate of mine
+purchased it on the spot for a commercial equivalent of the price, in tobacco.
+On the following Sunday, he used that razor; and the result was a pair of
+tormented and tomahawked cheeks, that almost required a surgeon to dress them.
+In old times, by the way, it was not a bad thought, that suggested the
+propriety of a barber&rsquo;s practicing surgery in connection with the
+chin-harrowing vocation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another class of knaves, who practice upon the sailors in Liverpool, are the
+pawnbrokers, inhabiting little rookeries among the narrow lanes adjoining the
+dock. I was astonished at the multitude of gilded balls in these streets,
+emblematic of their calling. They were generally next neighbors to the gilded
+grapes over the spirit-vaults; and no doubt, mutually to facilitate business
+operations, some of these establishments have connecting doors inside, so as to
+play their customers into each other&rsquo;s hands. I often saw sailors in a
+state of intoxication rushing from a spirit-vault into a pawnbroker&rsquo;s;
+stripping off their boots, hats, jackets, and neckerchiefs, and sometimes even
+their pantaloons on the spot, and offering to pawn them for a song. Of course
+such applications were never refused. But though on shore, at Liverpool, poor
+Jack finds more sharks than at sea, he himself is by no means exempt from
+practices, that do not savor of a rigid morality; at least according to law. In
+tobacco smuggling he is an adept: and when cool and collected, often manages to
+evade the Customs completely, and land goodly packages of the weed, which owing
+to the immense duties upon it in England, commands a very high price.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as we came to anchor in the river, before reaching the dock, three
+Custom-house underlings boarded us, and coming down into the forecastle,
+ordered the men to produce all the tobacco they had. Accordingly several pounds
+were brought forth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Is that all?&rdquo; asked the officers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All,&rdquo; said the men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We will see,&rdquo; returned the others.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And without more ado, they emptied the chests right and left; tossed over the
+bunks and made a thorough search of the premises; but discovered nothing. The
+sailors were then given to understand, that while the ship lay in dock, the
+tobacco must remain in the cabin, under custody of the chief mate, who every
+morning would dole out to them one plug per head, as a security against their
+carrying it ashore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Very good,&rdquo; said the men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But several of them had secret places in the ship, from whence they daily drew
+pound after pound of tobacco, which they smuggled ashore in the manner
+following.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the crew went to meals, each man carried at least one plug in his pocket;
+<i>that</i> he had a right to; and as many more were hidden about his person as
+he dared. Among the great crowds pouring out of the dock-gates at such hours,
+of course these smugglers stood little chance of detection; although vigilant
+looking policemen were always standing by. And though these
+<i>&ldquo;Charlies&rdquo;</i> might suppose there were tobacco smugglers
+passing; yet to hit the right man among such a throng, would be as hard, as to
+harpoon a speckled porpoise, one of ten thousand darting under a ship&rsquo;s
+bows.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our forecastle was often visited by foreign sailors, who knowing we came from
+America, were anxious to purchase tobacco at a cheap rate; for in Liverpool it
+is about an American penny per pipe-full. Along the docks they sell an English
+pennyworth, put up in a little roll like confectioners&rsquo; mottoes, with
+poetical lines, or instructive little moral precepts printed in red on the
+back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among all the sights of the docks, the noble truck-horses are not the least
+striking to a stranger. They are large and powerful brutes, with such sleek and
+glossy coats, that they look as if brushed and put on by a valet every morning.
+They march with a slow and stately step, lifting their ponderous hoofs like
+royal Siam elephants. Thou shalt not lay stripes upon these Roman citizens; for
+their docility is such, they are guided without rein or lash; they go or come,
+halt or march on, at a whisper. So grave, dignified, gentlemanly, and courteous
+did these fine truck-horses look&mdash;so full of calm intelligence and
+sagacity, that often I endeavored to get into conversation with them, as they
+stood in contemplative attitudes while their loads were preparing. But all I
+could get from them was the mere recognition of a friendly neigh; though I
+would stake much upon it that, could I have spoken in their language, I would
+have derived from them a good deal of valuable information touching the docks,
+where they passed the whole of their dignified lives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are unknown worlds of knowledge in brutes; and whenever you mark a horse,
+or a dog, with a peculiarly mild, calm, deep-seated eye, be sure he is an
+Aristotle or a Kant, tranquilly speculating upon the mysteries in man. No
+philosophers so thoroughly comprehend us as dogs and horses. They see through
+us at a glance. And after all, what is a horse but a species of four-footed
+dumb man, in a leathern overall, who happens to live upon oats, and toils for
+his masters, half-requited or abused, like the biped hewers of wood and drawers
+of water? But there is a touch of divinity even in brutes, and a special halo
+about a horse, that should forever exempt him from indignities. As for those
+majestic, magisterial truck-horses of the docks, I would as soon think of
+striking a judge on the bench, as to lay violent hand upon their holy hides.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is wonderful what loads their majesties will condescend to draw. The truck
+is a large square platform, on four low wheels; and upon this the lumpers pile
+bale after bale of cotton, as if they were filling a large warehouse, and yet a
+procession of three of these horses will tranquilly walk away with the whole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The truckmen themselves are almost as singular a race as their animals. Like
+the Judiciary in England, they wear gowns,&mdash;not of the same cut and color
+though,&mdash;which reach below their knees; and from the racket they make on
+the pavements with their hob-nailed brogans, you would think they patronized
+the same shoemaker with their horses. I never could get any thing out of these
+truckmen. They are a reserved, sober-sided set, who, with all possible
+solemnity, march at the head of their animals; now and then gently advising
+them to sheer to the right or the left, in order to avoid some passing vehicle.
+Then spending so much of their lives in the high-bred company of their horses,
+seems to have mended their manners and improved their taste, besides imparting
+to them something of the dignity of their animals; but it has also given to
+them a sort of refined and uncomplaining aversion to human society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There are many strange stories told of the truck-horse. Among others is the
+following: There was a parrot, that from having long been suspended in its cage
+from a low window fronting a dock, had learned to converse pretty fluently in
+the language of the stevedores and truckmen. One day a truckman left his
+vehicle standing on the quay, with its back to the water. It was noon, when an
+interval of silence falls upon the docks; and Poll, seeing herself face to face
+with the horse, and having a mind for a chat, cried out to him, <i>&ldquo;Back!
+back! back!&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Backward went the horse, precipitating himself and truck into the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brunswick Dock, to the west of Prince&rsquo;s, is one of the most interesting
+to be seen. Here lie the various black steamers (so unlike the American boats,
+since they have to navigate the boisterous Narrow Seas) plying to all parts of
+the three kingdoms. Here you see vast quantities of produce, imported from
+starving Ireland; here you see the decks turned into pens for oxen and sheep;
+and often, side by side with these inclosures, Irish deck-passengers, thick as
+they can stand, seemingly penned in just like the cattle. It was the beginning
+of July when the Highlander arrived in port; and the Irish laborers were daily
+coming over by thousands, to help harvest the English crops.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One morning, going into the town, I heard a tramp, as of a drove of buffaloes,
+behind me; and turning round, beheld the entire middle of the street filled by
+a great crowd of these men, who had just emerged from Brunswick Dock gates,
+arrayed in long-tailed coats of hoddin-gray, corduroy knee-breeches, and shod
+with shoes that raised a mighty dust. Flourishing their Donnybrook shillelahs,
+they looked like an irruption of barbarians. They were marching straight out of
+town into the country; and perhaps out of consideration for the finances of the
+corporation, took the middle of the street, to save the side-walks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sing <i>Langolee, and the Lakes of Killarney,&rdquo;</i> cried one
+fellow, tossing his stick into the air, as he danced in his brogans at the head
+of the rabble. And so they went! capering on, merry as pipers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When I thought of the multitudes of Irish that annually land on the shores of
+the United States and Canada, and, to my surprise, witnessed the additional
+multitudes embarking from Liverpool to New Holland; and when, added to all
+this, I daily saw these hordes of laborers, descending, thick as locusts, upon
+the English corn-fields; I could not help marveling at the fertility of an
+island, which, though her crop of potatoes may fail, never yet failed in
+bringing her annual crop of men into the world.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap41"></a>CHAPTER XLI.<br/>
+REDBURN ROVES ABOUT HITHER AND THITHER</h2>
+
+<p>
+I do not know that any other traveler would think it worth while to mention
+such a thing; but the fact is, that during the summer months in Liverpool, the
+days are exceedingly lengthy; and the first evening I found myself walking in
+the twilight after nine o&rsquo;clock, I tried to recall my astronomical
+knowledge, in order to account satisfactorily for so curious a phenomenon. But
+the days in summer, and the nights in winter, are just as long in Liverpool as
+at Cape Horn; for the latitude of the two places very nearly corresponds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These Liverpool days, however, were a famous thing for me; who, thereby, was
+enabled after my day&rsquo;s work aboard the Highlander, to ramble about the
+town for several hours. After I had visited all the noted places I could
+discover, of those marked down upon my father&rsquo;s map, I began to extend my
+rovings indefinitely; forming myself into a committee of one, to investigate
+all accessible parts of the town; though so many years have elapsed, ere I have
+thought of bringing in my report.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was a great delight to me: for wherever I have been in the world, I have
+always taken a vast deal of lonely satisfaction in wandering about, up and
+down, among out-of-the-way streets and alleys, and speculating upon the
+strangers I have met. Thus, in Liverpool I used to pace along endless streets
+of dwelling-houses, looking at the names on the doors, admiring the pretty
+faces in the windows, and invoking a passing blessing upon the chubby children
+on the door-steps. I was stared at myself, to be sure: but what of that? We
+must give and take on such occasions. In truth, I and my shooting-jacket
+produced quite a sensation in Liverpool: and I have no doubt, that many a
+father of a family went home to his children with a curious story, about a
+wandering phenomenon they had encountered, traversing the side-walks that day.
+In the words of the old song, <i>&ldquo;I cared for nobody, no not I, and
+nobody cared for me.&rdquo;</i> I stared my fill with impunity, and took all
+stares myself in good part.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once I was standing in a large square, gaping at a splendid chariot drawn up at
+a portico. The glossy horses quivered with good-living, and so did the
+sumptuous calves of the gold-laced coachman and footmen in attendance. I was
+particularly struck with the red cheeks of these men: and the many evidences
+they furnished of their enjoying this meal with a wonderful relish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While thus standing, I all at once perceived, that the objects of my curiosity,
+were making me an object of their own; and that they were gazing at me, as if I
+were some unauthorized intruder upon the British soil. Truly, they had reason:
+for when I now think of the figure I must have cut in those days, I only marvel
+that, in my many strolls, my passport was not a thousand times demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nevertheless, I was only a forlorn looking mortal among tens of thousands of
+rags and tatters. For in some parts of the town, inhabited by laborers, and
+poor people generally; I used to crowd my way through masses of squalid men,
+women, and children, who at this evening hour, in those quarters of Liverpool,
+seem to empty themselves into the street, and live there for the time. I had
+never seen any thing like it in New York. Often, I witnessed some curious, and
+many very sad scenes; and especially I remembered encountering a pale, ragged
+man, rushing along frantically, and striving to throw off his wife and
+children, who clung to his arms and legs; and, in God&rsquo;s name, conjured
+him not to desert them. He seemed bent upon rushing down to the water, and
+drowning himself, in some despair, and craziness of wretchedness. In these
+haunts, beggary went on before me wherever I walked, and dogged me unceasingly
+at the heels. Poverty, poverty, poverty, in almost endless vistas: and want and
+woe staggered arm in arm along these miserable streets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here, I must not omit one thing, that struck me at the time. It was the
+absence of negroes; who in the large towns in the &ldquo;free states&rdquo; of
+America, almost always form a considerable portion of the destitute. But in
+these streets, not a negro was to be seen. All were whites; and with the
+exception of the Irish, were natives of the soil: even Englishmen; as much
+Englishmen, as the dukes in the House of Lords. This conveyed a strange
+feeling: and more than any thing else, reminded me that I was not in my own
+land. For <i>there,</i> such a being as a native beggar is almost unknown; and
+to be a born American citizen seems a guarantee against pauperism; and this,
+perhaps, springs from the virtue of a vote.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Speaking of negroes, recalls the looks of interest with which negro-sailors are
+regarded when they walk the Liverpool streets. In Liverpool indeed the negro
+steps with a prouder pace, and lifts his head like a man; for here, no such
+exaggerated feeling exists in respect to him, as in America. Three or four
+times, I encountered our black steward, dressed very handsomely, and walking
+arm in arm with a good-looking English woman. In New York, such a couple would
+have been mobbed in three minutes; and the steward would have been lucky to
+escape with whole limbs. Owing to the friendly reception extended to them, and
+the unwonted immunities they enjoy in Liverpool, the black cooks and stewards
+of American ships are very much attached to the place and like to make voyages
+to it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Being so young and inexperienced then, and unconsciously swayed in some degree
+by those local and social prejudices, that are the marring of most men, and
+from which, for the mass, there seems no possible escape; at first I was
+surprised that a colored man should be treated as he is in this town; but a
+little reflection showed that, after all, it was but recognizing his claims to
+humanity and normal equality; so that, in some things, we Americans leave to
+other countries the carrying out of the principle that stands at the head of
+our Declaration of Independence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During my evening strolls in the wealthier quarters, I was subject to a
+continual mortification. It was the humiliating fact, wholly unforeseen by me,
+that upon the whole, and barring the poverty and beggary, Liverpool, away from
+the docks, was very much such a place as New York. There were the same sort of
+streets pretty much; the same rows of houses with stone steps; the same kind of
+side-walks and curbs; and the same elbowing, heartless-looking crowd as ever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I came across the Leeds Canal, one afternoon; but, upon my word, no one could
+have told it from the Erie Canal at Albany. I went into St. John&rsquo;s Market
+on a Saturday night; and though it was strange enough to see that great roof
+supported by so many pillars, yet the most discriminating observer would not
+have been able to detect any difference between the articles exposed for sale,
+and the articles exhibited in Fulton Market, New York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I walked down Lord-street, peering into the jewelers&rsquo; shops; but I
+thought I was walking down a block in Broadway. I began to think that all this
+talk about travel was a humbug; and that he who lives in a nut-shell, lives in
+an epitome of the universe, and has but little to see beyond him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is true, that I often thought of London&rsquo;s being only seven or eight
+hours&rsquo; travel by railroad from where I was; and that <i>there,</i>
+surely, must be a world of wonders waiting my eyes: but more of London anon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sundays were the days upon which I made my longest explorations. I rose bright
+and early, with my whole plan of operations in my head. First walking into some
+dock hitherto unexamined, and then to breakfast. Then a walk through the more
+fashionable streets, to see the people going to church; and then I myself went
+to church, selecting the goodliest edifice, and the tallest Kentuckian of a
+spire I could find.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For I am an admirer of church architecture; and though, perhaps, the sums spent
+in erecting magnificent cathedrals might better go to the founding of
+charities, yet since these structures are built, those who disapprove of them
+in one sense, may as well have the benefit of them in another.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a most Christian thing, and a matter most sweet to dwell upon and simmer
+over in solitude, that any poor sinner may go to church wherever he pleases;
+and that even St. Peter&rsquo;s in Rome is open to him, as to a cardinal; that
+St. Paul&rsquo;s in London is not shut against him; and that the Broadway
+Tabernacle, in New York, opens all her broad aisles to him, and will not even
+have doors and thresholds to her pews, the better to allure him by an unbounded
+invitation. I say, this consideration of the hospitality and democracy in
+churches, is a most Christian and charming thought. It speaks whole volumes of
+folios, and Vatican libraries, for Christianity; it is more eloquent, and goes
+farther home than all the sermons of Massillon, Jeremy Taylor, Wesley, and
+Archbishop Tillotson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing daunted, therefore, by thinking of my being a stranger in the land;
+nothing daunted by the architectural superiority and costliness of any
+Liverpool church; or by the streams of silk dresses and fine broadcloth coats
+flowing into the aisles, I used humbly to present myself before the sexton, as
+a candidate for admission. He would stare a little, perhaps (one of them once
+hesitated), but in the end, what could he do but show me into a pew; not the
+most commodious of pews, to be sure; nor commandingly located; nor within very
+plain sight or hearing of the pulpit. No; it was remarkable, that there was
+always some confounded pillar or obstinate angle of the wall in the way; and I
+used to think, that the sextons of Liverpool must have held a secret meeting on
+my account, and resolved to apportion me the most inconvenient pew in the
+churches under their charge. However, they always gave me a seat of some sort
+or other; sometimes even on an oaken bench in the open air of the aisle, where
+I would sit, dividing the attention of the congregation between myself and the
+clergyman. The whole congregation seemed to know that I was a foreigner of
+distinction.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was sweet to hear the service read, the organ roll, the sermon
+preached&mdash;just as the same things were going on three thousand five
+hundred miles off, at home! But then, the prayer in behalf of her majesty the
+Queen, somewhat threw me back. Nevertheless, I joined in that prayer, and
+invoked for the lady the best wishes of a poor Yankee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How I loved to sit in the holy hush of those brown old monastic aisles,
+thinking of Harry the Eighth, and the Reformation! How I loved to go a roving
+with my eye, all along the sculptured walls and buttresses; winding in among
+the intricacies of the pendent ceiling, and wriggling my fancied way like a
+wood-worm. I could have sat there all the morning long, through noon, unto
+night. But at last the benediction would come; and appropriating my share of
+it, I would slowly move away, thinking how I should like to go home with some
+of the portly old gentlemen, with high-polished boots and Malacca canes, and
+take a seat at their cosy and comfortable dinner-tables. But, alas! there was
+no dinner for me except at the sign of the Baltimore Clipper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yet the Sunday dinners that Handsome Mary served up were not to be scorned. The
+roast beef of Old England abounded; and so did the immortal plum-puddings, and
+the unspeakably capital gooseberry pies. But to finish off with that abominable
+<i>&ldquo;swipes&rdquo;</i> almost spoiled all the rest: not that I myself
+patronized <i>&ldquo;swipes&rdquo;</i> but my shipmates did; and every cup I
+saw them drink, I could not choose but taste in imagination, and even then the
+flavor was bad.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On Sundays, at dinner-time, as, indeed, on every other day, it was curious to
+watch the proceedings at the sign of the Clipper. The servant girls were
+running about, mustering the various crews, whose dinners were spread, each in
+a separate apartment; and who were collectively known by the names of their
+ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where are the <i>Arethusas?&mdash;</i>Here&rsquo;s their beef been
+smoking this half-hour.&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;Fly, Betty, my dear, here come the
+<i>Splendids.&rdquo;&mdash;</i> &ldquo;Run, Molly, my love; get the
+salt-cellars for the <i>Highlanders</i> .&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;You Peggy,
+where&rsquo;s the <i>Siddons&rsquo; pickle-pat?&rdquo;&mdash;&ldquo;I</i> say,
+Judy, are you never coming with that pudding for the <i>Lord
+Nelsons?&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On week days, we did not fare quite so well as on Sundays; and once we came to
+dinner, and found two enormous bullock hearts smoking at each end of the
+Highlanders&rsquo; table. Jackson was indignant at the outrage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He always sat at the head of the table; and this time he squared himself on his
+bench, and erecting his knife and fork like flag-staffs, so as to include the
+two hearts between them, he called out for Danby, the boarding-house keeper;
+for although his wife Mary was in fact at the head of the establishment, yet
+Danby himself always came in for the fault-findings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Danby obsequiously appeared, and stood in the doorway, well knowing the
+philippics that were coming. But he was not prepared for the peroration of
+Jackson&rsquo;s address to him; which consisted of the two bullock hearts,
+snatched bodily off the dish, and flung at his head, by way of a recapitulation
+of the preceding arguments. The company then broke up in disgust, and dined
+elsewhere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though I almost invariably attended church on Sunday mornings, yet the rest of
+the day I spent on my travels; and it was on one of these afternoon strolls,
+that on passing through St. George&rsquo;s-square, I found myself among a large
+crowd, gathered near the base of George the Fourth&rsquo;s equestrian statue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The people were mostly mechanics and artisans in their holiday clothes; but
+mixed with them were a good many soldiers, in lean, lank, and dinnerless
+undresses, and sporting attenuated rattans. These troops belonged to the
+various regiments then in town. Police officers, also, were conspicuous in
+their uniforms. At first perfect silence and decorum prevailed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Addressing this orderly throng was a pale, hollow-eyed young man, in a
+snuff-colored surtout, who looked worn with much watching, or much toil, or too
+little food. His features were good, his whole air was respectable, and there
+was no mistaking the fact, that he was strongly in earnest in what he was
+saying.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his hand was a soiled, inflammatory-looking pamphlet, from which he
+frequently read; following up the quotations with nervous appeals to his
+hearers, a rolling of his eyes, and sometimes the most frantic gestures. I was
+not long within hearing of him, before I became aware that this youth was a
+Chartist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the crowd increased, and some commotion was raised, when I noticed
+the police officers augmenting in number; and by and by, they began to glide
+through the crowd, politely hinting at the propriety of dispersing. The first
+persons thus accosted were the soldiers, who accordingly sauntered off,
+switching their rattans, and admiring their high-polished shoes. It was plain
+that the Charter did not hang very heavy round their hearts. For the rest, they
+also gradually broke up; and at last I saw the speaker himself depart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I do not know why, but I thought he must be some despairing elder son,
+supporting by hard toil his mother and sisters; for of such many political
+desperadoes are made.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That same Sunday afternoon, I strolled toward the outskirts of the town, and
+attracted by the sight of two great Pompey&rsquo;s pillars, in the shape of
+black steeples, apparently rising directly from the soil, I approached them
+with much curiosity. But looking over a low parapet connecting them, what was
+my surprise to behold at my feet a smoky hollow in the ground, with rocky
+walls, and dark holes at one end, carrying out of view several lines of iron
+railways; while far beyond, straight out toward the open country, ran an
+endless railroad. Over the place, a handsome Moorish arch of stone was flung;
+and gradually, as I gazed upon it, and at the little side arches at the bottom
+of the hollow, there came over me an undefinable feeling, that I had previously
+seen the whole thing before. Yet how could that be? Certainly, I had never been
+in Liverpool before: but then, that Moorish arch! surely I remembered that very
+well. It was not till several months after reaching home in America, that my
+perplexity upon this matter was cleared away. In glancing over an old number of
+the Penny Magazine, there I saw a picture of the place to the life; and
+remembered having seen the same print years previous. It was a representation
+of the spot where the Manchester railroad enters the outskirts of the town.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap42"></a>CHAPTER XLII.<br/>
+HIS ADVENTURE WITH THE <i>CROSS</i> OLD GENTLEMAN</h2>
+
+<p>
+My adventure in the News-Room in the Exchange, which I have related in a
+previous chapter, reminds me of another, at the Lyceum, some days after, which
+may as well be put down here, before I forget it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was strolling down Bold-street, I think it was, when I was struck by the
+sight of a brown stone building, very large and handsome. The windows were
+open, and there, nicely seated, with their comfortable legs crossed over their
+comfortable knees, I beheld several sedate, happy-looking old gentlemen reading
+the magazines and papers, and one had a fine gilded volume in his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes, this must be the Lyceum, thought I; let me see. So I whipped out my
+guide-book, and opened it at the proper place; and sure enough, the building
+before me corresponded stone for stone. I stood awhile on the opposite side of
+the street, gazing at my picture, and then at its original; and often dwelling
+upon the pleasant gentlemen sitting at the open windows; till at last I felt an
+uncontrollable impulse to step in for a moment, and run over the news.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I&rsquo;m a poor, friendless sailor-boy, thought I, and they can not object;
+especially as I am from a foreign land, and strangers ought to be treated with
+courtesy. I turned the matter over again, as I walked across the way; and with
+just a small tapping of a misgiving at my heart, I at last scraped my feet
+clean against the curb-stone, and taking off my hat while I was yet in the open
+air, slowly sauntered in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I had not got far into that large and lofty room, filled with many
+agreeable sights, when a crabbed old gentleman lifted up his eye from the
+<i>London Times,</i> which words I saw boldly printed on the back of the large
+sheet in his hand, and looking at me as if I were a strange dog with a muddy
+hide, that had stolen out of the gutter into this fine apartment, he shook his
+silver-headed cane at me fiercely, till the spectacles fell off his nose.
+Almost at the same moment, up stepped a terribly cross man, who looked as if he
+had a mustard plaster on his back, that was continually exasperating him; who
+throwing down some papers which he had been filing, took me by my innocent
+shoulders, and then, putting his foot against the broad part of my pantaloons,
+wheeled me right out into the street, and dropped me on the walk, without so
+much as offering an apology for the affront. I sprang after him, but in vain;
+the door was closed upon me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These Englishmen have no manners, that&rsquo;s plain, thought I; and I trudged
+on down the street in a reverie.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap43"></a>CHAPTER XLIII.<br/>
+HE TAKES A DELIGHTFUL RAMBLE INTO THE COUNTRY; AND MAKES THE ACQUAINTANCE OF
+THREE ADORABLE CHARMERS </h2>
+
+<p>
+Who that dwells in America has not heard of the bright fields and green hedges
+of England, and longed to behold them? Even so had it been with me; and now
+that I was actually in England, I resolved not to go away without having a
+good, long look at the open fields.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On a Sunday morning I started, with a lunch in my pocket. It was a beautiful
+day in July; the air was sweet with the breath of buds and flowers, and there
+was a green splendor in the landscape that ravished me. Soon I gained an
+elevation commanding a wide sweep of view; and meadow and mead, and woodland
+and hedge, were all around me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ay, ay! this was old England, indeed! I had found it at last&mdash;there it was
+in the country! Hovering over the scene was a soft, dewy air, that seemed
+faintly tinged with the green of the grass; and I thought, as I breathed my
+breath, that perhaps I might be inhaling the very particles once respired by
+Rosamond the Fair.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On I trudged along the London road&mdash;smooth as an entry floor&mdash;and
+every white cottage I passed, embosomed in honeysuckles, seemed alive in the
+landscape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the day wore on; and at length the sun grew hot; and the long road became
+dusty. I thought that some shady place, in some shady field, would be very
+pleasant to repose in. So, coming to a charming little dale, undulating down to
+a hollow, arched over with foliage, I crossed over toward it; but paused by the
+road-side at a frightful announcement, nailed against an old tree, used as a
+gate-post&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p class="center">
+&ldquo;MAN-TRAPS AND SPRING-GUNS!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In America I had never heard of the like. What could it mean? They were not
+surely <i>cannibals,</i> that dwelt down in that beautiful little dale, and
+lived by catching men, like weasels and beavers in Canada!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A <i>man-trap!&rdquo;</i> It must be so. The announcement could bear but
+one meaning&mdash;that there was something near by, intended to catch human
+beings; some species of mechanism, that would suddenly fasten upon the unwary
+rover, and hold him by the leg like a dog; or, perhaps, devour him on the spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Incredible! In a Christian land, too! Did that sweet lady, Queen Victoria,
+permit such diabolical practices? Had her gracious majesty ever passed by this
+way, and seen the announcement?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And who put it there?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The proprietor, probably.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And what right had he to do so?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Why, he owned the soil.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And where are his title-deeds?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In his strong-box, I suppose.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus I stood wrapt in cogitations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You are a pretty fellow, Wellingborough, thought I to myself; you are a mighty
+traveler, indeed:&mdash;stopped on your travels by a <i>man-trap!</i> Do you
+think Mungo Park was so served in Africa? Do you think Ledyard was so entreated
+in Siberia? Upon my word, you will go home not very much wiser than when you
+set out; and the only excuse you can give, for not having seen more sights,
+will be <i>man-traps&mdash;mantraps, my masters!</i> that frightened you!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then, in my indignation, I fell back upon first principles. What right has
+this man to the soil he thus guards with dragons? What excessive effrontery, to
+lay sole claim to a solid piece of this planet, right down to the earth&rsquo;s
+axis, and, perhaps, straight through to the antipodes! For a moment I thought I
+would test his traps, and enter the forbidden Eden.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the grass grew so thickly, and seemed so full of sly things, that at last I
+thought best to pace off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next, I came to a hawthorn lane, leading down very prettily to a nice little
+church; a mossy little church; a beautiful little church; just such a church as
+I had always dreamed to be in England. The porch was viny as an arbor; the ivy
+was climbing about the tower; and the bees were humming about the hoary old
+head-stones along the walls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Any man-traps here? thought I&mdash;any spring-guns?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So I walked on, and entered the church, where I soon found a seat. No Indian,
+red as a deer, could have startled the simple people more. They gazed and they
+gazed; but as I was all attention to the sermon, and conducted myself with
+perfect propriety, they did not expel me, as at first I almost imagined they
+might.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Service over, I made my way through crowds of children, who stood staring at
+the marvelous stranger, and resumed my stroll along the London Road.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My next stop was at an inn, where under a tree sat a party of rustics, drinking
+ale at a table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good day,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good day; from Liverpool?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I guess so.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For London?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No; not this time. I merely come to see the country.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this, they gazed at each other; and I, at myself; having doubts whether I
+might not look something like a horse-thief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take a seat,&rdquo; said the landlord, a fat fellow, with his
+wife&rsquo;s apron on, I thought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And then, little by little, we got into a long talk: in the course of which, I
+told who I was, and where I was from. I found these rustics a good-natured,
+jolly set; and I have no doubt they found me quite a sociable youth. They
+treated me to ale; and I treated them to stories about America, concerning
+which, they manifested the utmost curiosity. One of them, however, was somewhat
+astonished that I had not made the acquaintance of a brother of his, who had
+resided somewhere on the banks of the Mississippi for several years past; but
+among twenty millions of people, I had never happened to meet him, at least to
+my knowledge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, leaving this party, I pursued my way, exhilarated by the lively
+conversation in which I had shared, and the pleasant sympathies exchanged: and
+perhaps, also, by the ale I had drunk:&mdash;fine old ale; yes, English ale,
+ale brewed in England! And I trod English soil; and breathed English air; and
+every blade of grass was an Englishman born. Smoky old Liverpool, with all its
+pitch and tar was now far behind; nothing in sight but open meadows and fields.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Come, Wellingborough, why not push on for London?&mdash; Hurra! what say you?
+let&rsquo;s have a peep at St. Paul&rsquo;s? Don&rsquo;t you want to see the
+queen? Have you no longing to behold the duke? Think of Westminster Abbey, and
+the Tunnel under the Thames! Think of Hyde Park, and the ladies!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But then, thought I again, with my hands wildly groping in my two vacuums of
+pockets&mdash;who&rsquo;s to pay the bill?&mdash;You can&rsquo;t beg your way,
+Wellingborough; that would never do; for you are your father&rsquo;s son,
+Wellingborough; and you must not disgrace your family in a foreign land; you
+must not turn pauper.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah! Ah! it was indeed too true; there was no St. Paul&rsquo;s or Westminster
+Abbey for me; that was flat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Well, well, up heart, you&rsquo;ll see it one of these days.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But think of it! here I am on the very road that leads to the
+Thames&mdash;think of <i>that!&mdash;</i>here I am&mdash;ay, treading in the
+wheel-tracks of coaches that are bound for the metropolis!&mdash;It was too
+bad; too bitterly bad. But I shoved my old hat over my brows, and walked on;
+till at last I came to a green bank, deliriously shaded by a fine old tree with
+broad branching arms, that stretched themselves over the road, like a hen
+gathering her brood under her wings. Down on the green grass I threw myself and
+there lay my head, like a last year&rsquo;s nut. People passed by, on foot and
+in carriages, and little thought that the sad youth under the tree was the
+great-nephew of a late senator in the American Congress.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, I started to my feet, as I heard a gruff voice behind me from the
+field, crying out&mdash;&ldquo;What are you doing there, you young
+rascal?&mdash;run away from the work&rsquo;us, have ye? Tramp, or I&rsquo;ll
+set Blucher on ye!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And who was Blucher? A cut-throat looking dog, with his black bull-muzzle
+thrust through a gap in the hedge. And his master? A sturdy farmer, with an
+alarming cudgel in his hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, are you going to start?&rdquo; he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Presently,&rdquo; said I, making off with great dispatch. When I had got
+a few yards into the middle of the highroad (which belonged as much to me as it
+did to the queen herself), I turned round, like a man on his own premises, and
+said&mdash; &ldquo;Stranger! if you ever visit America, just call at our house,
+and you&rsquo;ll always find there a dinner and a bed. Don&rsquo;t fail.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then walked on toward Liverpool, full of sad thoughts concerning the cold
+charities of the world, and the infamous reception given to hapless young
+travelers, in broken-down shooting-jackets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On, on I went, along the skirts of forbidden green fields; until reaching a
+cottage, before which I stood rooted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So sweet a place I had never seen: no palace in Persia could be pleasanter;
+there were flowers in the garden; and six red cheeks, like six moss-roses,
+hanging from the casement. At the embowered doorway, sat an old man,
+confidentially communing with his pipe: while a little child, sprawling on the
+ground, was playing with his shoestrings. A hale matron, but with rather a prim
+expression, was reading a journal by his side: and three charmers, three Peris,
+three Houris! were leaning out of the window close by.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ah! Wellingborough, don&rsquo;t you wish you could step in?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a heavy heart at his cheerful sigh, I was turning to go, when&mdash;is it
+possible? the old man called me back, and invited me in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, come,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;you look as if you had walked far;
+come, take a bowl of milk. Matilda, my dear&rdquo; (how my heart jumped),
+&ldquo;go fetch some from the dairy.&rdquo; And the white-handed angel did
+meekly obey, and handed <i>me&mdash;me,</i> the vagabond, a bowl of bubbling
+milk, which I could hardly drink down, for gazing at the dew on her lips.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As I live, I could have married that charmer on the spot!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was by far the most beautiful rosebud I had yet seen in England. But I
+endeavored to dissemble my ardent admiration; and in order to do away at once
+with any unfavorable impressions arising from the close scrutiny of my
+miserable shooting-jacket, which was now taking place, I declared myself a
+Yankee sailor from Liverpool, who was spending a Sunday in the country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And have you been to church to-day, young man?&rdquo; said the old lady,
+looking daggers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good madam, I have; the little church down yonder, you know&mdash;a most
+excellent sermon&mdash;I am much the better for it.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I wanted to mollify this severe looking old lady; for even my short experience
+of old ladies had convinced me that they are the hereditary enemies of all
+strange young men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I soon turned the conversation toward America, a theme which I knew would be
+interesting, and upon which I could be fluent and agreeable. I strove to talk
+in Addisonian English, and ere long could see very plainly that my polished
+phrases were making a surprising impression, though that miserable
+shooting-jacket of mine was a perpetual drawback to my claims to gentility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Spite of all my blandishments, however, the old lady stood her post like a
+sentry; and to my inexpressible chagrin, kept the three charmers in the
+background, though the old man frequently called upon them to advance. This
+fine specimen of an old Englishman seemed to be quite as free from ungenerous
+suspicions as his vinegary spouse was full of them. But I still lingered,
+snatching furtive glances at the young ladies, and vehemently talking to the
+old man about Illinois, and the river Ohio, and the fine farms in the Genesee
+country, where, in harvest time, the laborers went into the wheat fields a
+thousand strong.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Stick to it, Wellingborough, thought I; don&rsquo;t give the old lady time to
+think; stick to it, my boy, and an invitation to tea will reward you. At last
+it came, and the old lady abated her frowns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the most delightful of meals; the three charmers sat all on one side,
+and I opposite, between the old man and his wife. The middle charmer poured out
+the souchong, and handed me the buttered muffins; and such buttered muffins
+never were spread on the other side of the Atlantic. The butter had an aromatic
+flavor; by Jove, it was perfectly delicious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there they sat&mdash;the charmers, I mean&mdash;eating these buttered
+muffins in plain sight. I wished I was a buttered muffin myself. Every minute
+they grew handsomer and handsomer; and I could not help thinking what a fine
+thing it would be to carry home a beautiful English wife! how my friends would
+stare! a lady from England!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I might have been mistaken; but certainly I thought that Matilda, the one who
+had handed me the milk, sometimes looked rather benevolently in the direction
+where I sat. She certainly <i>did</i> look at my jacket; and I am constrained
+to think at my face. Could it be possible she had fallen in love at first
+sight? Oh, rapture! But oh, misery! that was out of the question; for what a
+looking suitor was Wellingborough?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length, the old lady glanced toward the door, and made some observations
+about its being yet a long walk to town. She handed me the buttered muffins,
+too, as if performing a final act of hospitality; and in other fidgety ways
+vaguely hinted her desire that I should decamp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slowly I rose, and murmured my thanks, and bowed, and tried to be off; but as
+quickly I turned, and bowed, and thanked, and lingered again and again. Oh,
+charmers! oh, Peris! thought I, must I go? Yes, Wellingborough, you must; so I
+made one desperate congee, and darted through the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I have never seen them since: no, nor heard of them; but to this day I live a
+bachelor on account of those ravishing charmers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the long twilight was waning deeper and deeper into the night, I entered the
+town; and, plodding my solitary way to the same old docks, I passed through the
+gates, and scrambled my way among tarry smells, across the tiers of ships
+between the quay and the Highlander. My only resource was my bunk; in I turned,
+and, wearied with my long stroll, was soon fast asleep, dreaming of red cheeks
+and roses.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap44"></a>CHAPTER XLIV.<br/>
+REDBURN INTRODUCES MASTER HARRY BOLTON TO THE FAVORABLE CONSIDERATION OF THE
+READER</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was the day following my Sunday stroll into the country, and when I had been
+in England four weeks or more, that I made the acquaintance of a handsome,
+accomplished, but unfortunate youth, young Harry Bolton. He was one of those
+small, but perfectly formed beings, with curling hair, and silken muscles, who
+seem to have been born in cocoons. His complexion was a mantling brunette,
+feminine as a girl&rsquo;s; his feet were small; his hands were white; and his
+eyes were large, black, and womanly; and, poetry aside, his voice was as the
+sound of a harp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But where, among the tarry docks, and smoky sailor-lanes and by-ways of a
+seaport, did I, a battered Yankee boy, encounter this courtly youth?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Several evenings I had noticed him in our street of boarding-houses, standing
+in the doorways, and silently regarding the animated scenes without. His
+beauty, dress, and manner struck me as so out of place in such a street, that I
+could not possibly divine what had transplanted this delicate exotic from the
+conservatories of some Regent-street to the untidy potato-patches of Liverpool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last I suddenly encountered him at the sign of the Baltimore Clipper. He was
+speaking to one of my shipmates concerning America; and from something that
+dropped, I was led to imagine that he contemplated a voyage to my country.
+Charmed with his appearance, and all eagerness to enjoy the society of this
+incontrovertible son of a gentleman&mdash;a kind of pleasure so long debarred
+me&mdash;I smoothed down the skirts of my jacket, and at once accosted him;
+declaring who I was, and that nothing would afford me greater delight than to
+be of the least service, in imparting any information concerning America that
+he needed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced from my face to my jacket, and from my jacket to my face, and at
+length, with a pleased but somewhat puzzled expression, begged me to accompany
+him on a walk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We rambled about St. George&rsquo;s Pier until nearly midnight; but before we
+parted, with uncommon frankness, he told me many strange things respecting his
+history.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+According to his own account, Harry Bolton was a native of Bury St. Edmunds, a
+borough of Suffolk, not very far from London, where he was early left an
+orphan, under the charge of an only aunt. Between his aunt and himself, his
+mother had divided her fortune; and young Harry thus fell heir to a portion of
+about five thousand pounds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Being of a roving mind, as he approached his majority he grew restless of the
+retirement of a country place; especially as he had no profession or business
+of any kind to engage his attention.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In vain did Bury, with all its fine old monastic attractions, lure him to abide
+on the beautiful banks of her Larke, and under the shadow of her stately and
+storied old Saxon tower.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By all my rare old historic associations, breathed Bury; by my Abbey-gate, that
+bears to this day the arms of Edward the Confessor; by my carved roof of the
+old church of St. Mary&rsquo;s, which escaped the low rage of the bigoted
+Puritans; by the royal ashes of Mary Tudor, that sleep in my midst; by my
+Norman ruins, and by all the old abbots of Bury, do not, oh Harry! abandon me.
+Where will you find shadier walks than under my lime-trees? where lovelier
+gardens than those within the old walls of my monastery, approached through my
+lordly Gate? Or if, oh Harry! indifferent to my historic mosses, and caring not
+for my annual verdure, thou must needs be lured by other tassels, and wouldst
+fain, like the Prodigal, squander thy patrimony, then, go not away from old
+Bury to do it. For here, on Angel-Hill, are my coffee and card-rooms, and
+billiard saloons, where you may lounge away your mornings, and empty your glass
+and your purse as you list.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In vain. Bury was no place for the adventurous Harry, who must needs hie to
+London, where in one winter, in the company of gambling sportsmen and dandies,
+he lost his last sovereign.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What now was to be done? His friends made interest for him in the requisite
+quarters, and Harry was soon embarked for Bombay, as a midshipman in the East
+India service; in which office he was known as a
+<i>&ldquo;guinea-pig,&rdquo;</i> a humorous appellation then bestowed upon the
+middies of the Company. And considering the perversity of his behavior, his
+delicate form, and soft complexion, and that gold guineas had been his bane,
+this appellation was not altogether, in poor Harry&rsquo;s case, inapplicable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He made one voyage, and returned; another, and returned; and then threw up his
+warrant in disgust. A few weeks&rsquo; dissipation in London, and again his
+purse was almost drained; when, like many prodigals, scorning to return home to
+his aunt, and amend&mdash;though she had often written him the kindest of
+letters to that effect&mdash;Harry resolved to precipitate himself upon the New
+World, and there carve out a fresh fortune. With this object in view, he packed
+his trunks, and took the first train for Liverpool. Arrived in that town, he at
+once betook himself to the docks, to examine the American shipping, when a new
+crotchet entered his brain, born of his old sea reminiscences. It was to assume
+duck browsers and tarpaulin, and gallantly cross the Atlantic as a sailor.
+There was a dash of romance in it; a taking abandonment; and scorn of fine
+coats, which exactly harmonized with his reckless contempt, at the time, for
+all past conventionalities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus determined, he exchanged his trunk for a mahogany chest; sold some of his
+superfluities; and moved his quarters to the sign of the Gold Anchor in
+Union-street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After making his acquaintance, and learning his intentions, I was all anxiety
+that Harry should accompany me home in the Highlander, a desire to which he
+warmly responded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor was I without strong hopes that he would succeed in an application to the
+captain; inasmuch as during our stay in the docks, three of our crew had left
+us, and their places would remain unsupplied till just upon the eve of our
+departure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here, it may as well be related, that owing to the heavy charges to which
+the American ships long staying in Liverpool are subjected, from the obligation
+to continue the wages of their seamen, when they have little or no work to
+employ them, and from the necessity of boarding them ashore, like lords, at
+their leisure, captains interested in the ownership of their vessels, are not
+at all indisposed to let their sailors abscond, if they please, and thus
+forfeit their money; for they well know that, when wanted, a new crew is easily
+to be procured, through the crimps of the port.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though he spake English with fluency, and from his long service in the vessels
+of New York, was almost an American to behold, yet Captain Riga was in fact a
+Russian by birth, though this was a fact that he strove to conceal. And though
+extravagant in his personal expenses, and even indulging in luxurious habits,
+costly as Oriental dissipation, yet Captain Riga was a niggard to others; as,
+indeed, was evinced in the magnificent stipend of three dollars, with which he
+requited my own valuable services. Therefore, as it was agreed between Harry
+and me, that he should offer to ship as a <i>&ldquo;boy,&rdquo;</i> at the same
+rate of compensation with myself, I made no doubt that, incited by the
+cheapness of the bargain, Captain Riga would gladly close with him; and thus,
+instead of paying sixteen dollars a month to a thorough-going tar, who would
+consume all his rations, buy up my young blade of Bury, at the rate of half a
+dollar a week; with the cheering prospect, that by the end of the voyage, his
+fastidious palate would be the means of leaving a handsome balance of salt beef
+and pork in the <i>harness-cask.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With part of the money obtained by the sale of a few of his velvet vests,
+Harry, by my advice, now rigged himself in a Guernsey frock and man-of-war
+browsers; and thus equipped, he made his appearance, one fine morning, on the
+quarterdeck of the Highlander, gallantly doffing his virgin tarpaulin before
+the redoubtable Riga.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner were his wishes made known, than I perceived in the captain&rsquo;s
+face that same bland, benevolent, and bewitchingly merry expression, that had
+so charmed, but deceived me, when, with Mr. Jones, I had first accosted him in
+the cabin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alas, Harry! thought I,&mdash;as I stood upon the forecastle looking astern
+where they stood,&mdash;that <i>&ldquo;gallant, gay deceiver&rdquo;</i> shall
+not altogether cajole you, if Wellingborough can help it. Rather than that
+should be the case, indeed, I would forfeit the pleasure of your society across
+the Atlantic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this interesting interview the captain expressed a sympathetic concern
+touching the sad necessities, which he took upon himself to presume must have
+driven Harry to sea; he confessed to a warm interest in his future welfare; and
+did not hesitate to declare that, in going to America, under such
+circumstances, to seek his fortune, he was acting a manly and spirited part;
+and that the voyage thither, as a sailor, would be an invigorating preparative
+to the landing upon a shore, where he must battle out his fortune with Fate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He engaged him at once; but was sorry to say, that he could not provide him a
+home on board till the day previous to the sailing of the ship; and during the
+interval, he could not honor any drafts upon the strength of his wages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However, glad enough to conclude the agreement upon any terms at all, my young
+blade of Bury expressed his satisfaction; and full of admiration at so urbane
+and gentlemanly a sea-captain, he came forward to receive my congratulations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Harry,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;be not deceived by the fascinating
+Riga&mdash;that gay Lothario of all inexperienced, sea-going youths, from the
+capital or the country; he has a Janus-face, Harry; and you will not know him
+when he gets you out of sight of land, and mouths his cast-off coats and
+browsers. For <i>then</i> he is another personage altogether, and adjusts his
+character to the shabbiness of his integuments. No more condolings and sympathy
+then; no more blarney; he will hold you a little better than his boots, and
+would no more think of addressing you than of invoking wooden Donald, the
+figure-head on our bows.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I further admonished my friend concerning our crew, particularly of the
+diabolical Jackson, and warned him to be cautious and wary. I told him, that
+unless he was somewhat accustomed to the rigging, and could furl a royal in a
+squall, he would be sure to subject himself to a sort of treatment from the
+sailors, in the last degree ignominious to any mortal who had ever crossed his
+legs under mahogany.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And I played the inquisitor, in cross-questioning Harry respecting the precise
+degree in which he was a practical sailor;&mdash;whether he had a giddy head;
+whether his arms could bear the weight of his body; whether, with but one hand
+on a shroud, a hundred feet aloft in a tempest, he felt he could look right to
+windward and beard it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To all this, and much more, Harry rejoined with the most off-hand and confident
+air; saying that in his <i>&ldquo;guinea-pig&rdquo;</i> days, he had often
+climbed the masts and handled the sails in a gentlemanly and amateur way; so he
+made no doubt that he would very soon prove an expert tumbler in the
+Highlander&rsquo;s rigging.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His levity of manner, and sanguine assurance, coupled with the constant sight
+of his most unseamanlike person&mdash;more suited to the Queen&rsquo;s
+drawing-room than a ship&rsquo;s forecastle-bred many misgivings in my mind.
+But after all, every one in this world has his own fate intrusted to himself;
+and though we may warn, and forewarn, and give sage advice, and indulge in many
+apprehensions touching our friends; yet our friends, for the most part, will
+<i>&ldquo;gang their ain gate;&rdquo;</i> and the most we can do is, to hope
+for the best. Still, I suggested to Harry, whether he had not best cross the
+sea as a steerage passenger, since he could procure enough money for that; but
+no, he was bent upon going as a sailor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I now had a comrade in my afternoon strolls, and Sunday excursions; and as
+Harry was a generous fellow, he shared with me his purse and his heart. He sold
+off several more of his fine vests and browsers, his silver-keyed flute and
+enameled guitar; and a portion of the money thus furnished was pleasantly spent
+in refreshing ourselves at the road-side inns in the vicinity of the town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Reclining side by side in some agreeable nook, we exchanged our experiences of
+the past. Harry enlarged upon the fascinations of a London life; described the
+curricle he used to drive in Hyde Park; gave me the measurement of Madame
+Vestris&rsquo; ankle; alluded to his first introduction at a club to the madcap
+Marquis of Waterford; told over the sums he had lost upon the turf on a Derby
+day; and made various but enigmatical allusions to a certain Lady Georgiana
+Theresa, the noble daughter of an anonymous earl.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Even in conversation, Harry was a prodigal; squandering his aristocratic
+narrations with a careless hand; and, perhaps, sometimes spending funds of
+reminiscences not his own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for me, I had only my poor old uncle the senator to fall back upon; and I
+used him upon all emergencies, like the knight in the game of chess; making him
+hop about, and stand stiffly up to the encounter, against all my fine
+comrade&rsquo;s array of dukes, lords, curricles, and countesses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In these long talks of ours, I frequently expressed the earnest desire I
+cherished, to make a visit to London; and related how strongly tempted I had
+been one Sunday, to walk the whole way, without a penny in my pocket. To this,
+Harry rejoined, that nothing would delight him more, than to show me the
+capital; and he even meaningly but mysteriously hinted at the possibility of
+his doing so, before many days had passed. But this seemed so idle a thought,
+that I only imputed it to my friend&rsquo;s good-natured, rattling disposition,
+which sometimes prompted him to out with any thing, that he thought would be
+agreeable. Besides, would this fine blade of Bury be seen, by his aristocratic
+acquaintances, walking down Oxford-street, say, arm in arm with the sleeve of
+my shooting-jacket? The thing was preposterous; and I began to think, that
+Harry, after all, was a little bit disposed to impose upon my Yankee credulity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Luckily, my Bury blade had no acquaintance in Liverpool, where, indeed, he was
+as much in a foreign land, as if he were already on the shores of Lake Erie; so
+that he strolled about with me in perfect abandonment; reckless of the cut of
+my shooting-jacket; and not caring one whit who might stare at so singular a
+couple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But once, crossing a square, faced on one side by a fashionable hotel, he made
+a rapid turn with me round a corner; and never stopped, till the square was a
+good block in our rear. The cause of this sudden retreat, was a remarkably
+elegant coat and pantaloons, standing upright on the hotel steps, and
+containing a young buck, tapping his teeth with an ivory-headed riding-whip.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who was he, Harry?&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My old chum, Lord Lovely,&rdquo; said Harry, with a careless air,
+&ldquo;and Heaven only knows what brings Lovely from London.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A lord?&rdquo; said I starting; &ldquo;then I must look at him
+again;&rdquo; for lords are very scarce in Liverpool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Unmindful of my companion&rsquo;s remonstrances, I ran back to the corner; and
+slowly promenaded past the upright coat and pantaloons on the steps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not much of a lord to behold; very thin and limber about the legs, with
+small feet like a doll&rsquo;s, and a small, glossy head like a seal&rsquo;s. I
+had seen just such looking lords standing in sentimental attitudes in front of
+Palmo&rsquo;s in Broadway.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However, he and I being mutual friends of Harry&rsquo;s, I thought something of
+accosting him, and taking counsel concerning what was best to be done for the
+young prodigal&rsquo;s welfare; but upon second thoughts I thought best not to
+intrude; especially, as just then my lord Lovely stepped to the open window of
+a flashing carriage which drew up; and throwing himself into an interesting
+posture, with the sole of one boot vertically exposed, so as to show the stamp
+on it&mdash;a coronet&mdash;fell into a sparkling conversation with a
+magnificent white satin hat, surmounted by a regal marabou feather, inside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I doubted not, this lady was nothing short of a peeress; and thought it would
+be one of the pleasantest and most charming things in the world, just to seat
+myself beside her, and order the coachman to take us a drive into the country.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, as upon further consideration, I imagined that the peeress might decline
+the honor of my company, since I had no formal card of introduction; I marched
+on, and rejoined my companion, whom I at once endeavored to draw out, touching
+Lord Lovely; but he only made mysterious answers; and turned off the
+conversation, by allusions to his visits to Ickworth in Suffolk, the
+magnificent seat of the Most Noble Marquis of Bristol, who had repeatedly
+assured Harry that he might consider Ickworth his home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, all these accounts of marquises and Ickworths, and Harry&rsquo;s having
+been hand in glove with so many lords and ladies, began to breed some
+suspicions concerning the rigid morality of my friend, as a teller of the
+truth. But, after all, thought I to myself, who can prove that Harry has
+fibbed? Certainly, his manners are polished, he has a mighty easy address; and
+there is nothing altogether impossible about his having consorted with the
+master of Ickworth, and the daughter of the anonymous earl. And what right has
+a poor Yankee, like me, to insinuate the slightest suspicion against what he
+says? What little money he has, he spends freely; he can not be a polite
+blackleg, for I am no pigeon to pluck; so <i>that</i> is out of the
+question;&mdash;perish such a thought, concerning my own bosom friend!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But though I drowned all my suspicions as well as I could, and ever cherished
+toward Harry a heart, loving and true; yet, spite of all this, I never could
+entirely digest some of his imperial reminiscences of high life. I was very
+sorry for this; as at times it made me feel ill at ease in his company; and
+made me hold back my whole soul from him; when, in its loneliness, it was
+yearning to throw itself into the unbounded bosom of some immaculate friend.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap45"></a>CHAPTER XLV.<br/>
+HARRY BOLTON KIDNAPS REDBURN, AND CARRIES HIM OFF TO LONDON</h2>
+
+<p>
+It might have been a week after our glimpse of Lord Lovely, that Harry, who had
+been expecting a letter, which, he told me, might possibly alter his plans, one
+afternoon came bounding on board the ship, and sprang down the hatchway into
+the <i>between-decks,</i> where, in perfect solitude, I was engaged picking
+oakum; at which business the mate had set me, for want of any thing better.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hey for London, Wellingborough!&rdquo; he cried. &ldquo;Off tomorrow!
+first train&mdash;be there the same night&mdash;come! I have money to rig you
+all out&mdash;drop that hangman&rsquo;s stuff there, and away! Pah! how it
+smells here! Come; up you jump!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I trembled with amazement and delight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+London? it could not be!&mdash;and Harry&mdash;how kind of him! he was then
+indeed what he seemed. But instantly I thought of all the circumstances of the
+case, and was eager to know what it was that had induced this sudden departure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In reply my friend told me, that he had received a remittance, and had hopes of
+recovering a considerable sum, lost in some way that he chose to conceal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But how am I to leave the ship, Harry?&rdquo; said I; &ldquo;they will
+not let me go, will they? You had better leave me behind, after all; I
+don&rsquo;t care very much about going; and besides, I have no money to share
+the expenses.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This I said, only pretending indifference, for my heart was jumping all the
+time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Tut! my Yankee bantam,&rdquo; said Harry; &ldquo;look here!&rdquo; and
+he showed me a handful of gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But they are <i>yours,</i> and not <i>mine,</i> Harry,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yours <i>and</i> mine, my sweet fellow,&rdquo; exclaimed Harry.
+&ldquo;Come, sink the ship, and let&rsquo;s go!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But you don&rsquo;t consider, if I quit the ship, they&rsquo;ll be
+sending a constable after me, won&rsquo;t they?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What! and do you think, then, they value your services so highly? Ha!
+ha!-Up, up, Wellingborough: I can&rsquo;t wait.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+True enough. I well knew that Captain Riga would not trouble himself much, if I
+<i>did</i> take French leave of him. So, without further thought of the matter,
+I told Harry to wait a few moments, till the ship&rsquo;s bell struck four; at
+which time I used to go to supper, and be free for the rest of the day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bell struck; and off we went. As we hurried across the quay, and along the
+dock walls, I asked Harry all about his intentions. He said, that go to London
+he must, and to Bury St. Edmunds; but that whether he should for any time
+remain at either place, he could not now tell; and it was by no means
+impossible, that in less than a week&rsquo;s time we would be back again in
+Liverpool, and ready for sea. But all he said was enveloped in a mystery that I
+did not much like; and I hardly know whether I have repeated correctly what he
+said at the time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arrived at the <i>Golden Anchor,</i> where Harry put up, he at once led me to
+his room, and began turning over the contents of his chest, to see what
+clothing he might have, that would fit me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though he was some years my senior, we were about the same size&mdash;if any
+thing, I was larger than he; so, with a little stretching, a shirt, vest, and
+pantaloons were soon found to suit. As for a coat and hat, those Harry ran out
+and bought without delay; returning with a loose, stylish sack-coat, and a sort
+of foraging cap, very neat, genteel, and unpretending.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+My friend himself soon doffed his Guernsey frock, and stood before me, arrayed
+in a perfectly plain suit, which he had bought on purpose that very morning. I
+asked him why he had gone to that unnecessary expense, when he had plenty of
+other clothes in his chest. But he only winked, and looked knowing. This,
+again, I did not like. But I strove to drown ugly thoughts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Till quite dark, we sat talking together; when, locking his chest, and charging
+his landlady to look after it well, till he called, or sent for it; Harry
+seized my arm, and we sallied into the street.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Pursuing our way through crowds of frolicking sailors and fiddlers, we turned
+into a street leading to the Exchange. There, under the shadow of the
+colonnade, Harry told me to stop, while he left me, and went to finish his
+toilet. Wondering what he meant, I stood to one side; and presently was joined
+by a stranger in whiskers and mustache.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It&rsquo;s <i>me&rdquo;</i> said the stranger; and who was <i>me</i> but
+Harry, who had thus metamorphosed himself? I asked him the reason; and in a
+faltering voice, which I tried to make humorous, expressed a hope that he was
+not going to turn gentleman forger.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He laughed, and assured me that it was only a precaution against being
+recognized by his own particular friends in London, that he had adopted this
+mode of disguising himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why afraid of your friends?&rdquo; asked I, in astonishment,
+&ldquo;and we are not in London yet.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pshaw! what a Yankee you are, Wellingborough. Can&rsquo;t you see very
+plainly that I have a plan in my head? And this disguise is only for a short
+time, you know. But I&rsquo;ll tell you all by and by.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I acquiesced, though not feeling at ease; and we walked on, till we came to a
+public house, in the vicinity of the place at which the cars are taken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We stopped there that night, and next day were off, whirled along through
+boundless landscapes of villages, and meadows, and parks: and over arching
+viaducts, and through wonderful tunnels; till, half delirious with excitement,
+I found myself dropped down in the evening among gas-lights, under a great roof
+in Euston Square.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+London at last, and in the West-End!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap46"></a>CHAPTER XLVI.<br/>
+A MYSTERIOUS NIGHT IN LONDON </h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No time to lose,&rdquo; said Harry, &ldquo;come along.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He called a cab: in an undertone mentioned the number of a house in some street
+to the driver; we jumped in, and were off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we rattled over the boisterous pavements, past splendid squares, churches,
+and shops, our cabman turning corners like a skater on the ice, and all the
+roar of London in my ears, and no end to the walls of brick and mortar; I
+thought New York a hamlet, and Liverpool a coal-hole, and myself somebody else:
+so unreal seemed every thing about me. My head was spinning round like a top,
+and my eyes ached with much gazing; particularly about the corners, owing to my
+darting them so rapidly, first this side, and then that, so as not to miss any
+thing; though, in truth, I missed much.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Stop,&rdquo; cried Harry, after a long while, putting his head out of
+the window, all at once&mdash;&ldquo;stop! do you hear, you deaf man? you have
+passed the house&mdash;No. 40 I told you&mdash;that&rsquo;s it&mdash;the high
+steps there, with the purple light!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cabman being paid, Harry adjusting his whiskers and mustache, and bidding
+me assume a lounging look, pushed his hat a little to one side, and then
+locking arms, we sauntered into the house; myself feeling not a little abashed;
+it was so long since I had been in any courtly society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was some semi-public place of opulent entertainment; and far surpassed any
+thing of the kind I had ever seen before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The floor was tesselated with snow-white, and russet-hued marbles; and echoed
+to the tread, as if all the Paris catacombs were underneath. I started with
+misgivings at that hollow, boding sound, which seemed sighing with a
+subterraneous despair, through all the magnificent spectacle around me; mocking
+it, where most it glared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The walls were painted so as to deceive the eye with interminable colonnades;
+and groups of columns of the finest Scagliola work of variegated
+marbles&mdash;emerald-green and gold, St. Pons veined with silver, Sienna with
+porphyry&mdash;supported a resplendent fresco ceiling, arched like a bower, and
+thickly clustering with mimic grapes. Through all the East of this foliage, you
+spied in a crimson dawn, Guide&rsquo;s ever youthful Apollo, driving forth the
+horses of the sun. From sculptured stalactites of vine-boughs, here and there
+pendent hung galaxies of gas lights, whose vivid glare was softened by pale,
+cream-colored, porcelain spheres, shedding over the place a serene, silver
+flood; as if every porcelain sphere were a moon; and this superb apartment was
+the moon-lit garden of Portia at Belmont; and the gentle lovers, Lorenzo and
+Jessica, lurked somewhere among the vines.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At numerous Moorish looking tables, supported by Caryatides of turbaned slaves,
+sat knots of gentlemanly men, with cut decanters and taper-waisted glasses,
+journals and cigars, before them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To and fro ran obsequious waiters, with spotless napkins thrown over their
+arms, and making a profound salaam, and hemming deferentially, whenever they
+uttered a word.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the further end of this brilliant apartment, was a rich mahogany turret-like
+structure, partly built into the wall, and communicating with rooms in the
+rear. Behind, was a very handsome florid old man, with snow-white hair and
+whiskers, and in a snow-white jacket&mdash;he looked like an almond tree in
+blossom&mdash;who seemed to be standing, a polite sentry over the scene before
+him; and it was he, who mostly ordered about the waiters; and with a silent
+salute, received the silver of the guests.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our entrance excited little or no notice; for every body present seemed
+exceedingly animated about concerns of their own; and a large group was
+gathered around one tall, military looking gentleman, who was reading some
+India war-news from the Times, and commenting on it, in a very loud voice,
+condemning, in toto, the entire campaign.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We seated ourselves apart from this group, and Harry, rapping on the table,
+called for wine; mentioning some curious foreign name.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The decanter, filled with a pale yellow wine, being placed before us, and my
+comrade having drunk a few glasses; he whispered me to remain where I was,
+while he withdrew for a moment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I saw him advance to the turret-like place, and exchange a confidential word
+with the almond tree there, who immediately looked very much surprised,&mdash;I
+thought, a little disconcerted,&mdash;and then disappeared with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While my friend was gone, I occupied myself with looking around me, and
+striving to appear as indifferent as possible, and as much used to all this
+splendor as if I had been born in it. But, to tell the truth, my head was
+almost dizzy with the strangeness of the sight, and the thought that I was
+really in London. What would my brother have said? What would Tom Legare, the
+treasurer of the Juvenile Temperance Society, have thought?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I almost began to fancy I had no friends and relatives living in a little
+village three thousand five hundred miles off, in America; for it was hard to
+unite such a humble reminiscence with the splendid animation of the London-like
+scene around me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And in the delirium of the moment, I began to indulge in foolish golden visions
+of the counts and countesses to whom Harry might introduce me; and every
+instant I expected to hear the waiters addressing some gentleman as
+<i>&ldquo;My Lord,&rdquo;</i> or <i>&ldquo;four Grace.&rdquo;</i> But if there
+were really any lords present, the waiters omitted their titles, at least in my
+hearing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mixed with these thoughts were confused visions of St. Paul&rsquo;s and the
+Strand, which I determined to visit the very next morning, before breakfast, or
+perish in the attempt. And I even longed for Harry&rsquo;s return, that we
+might immediately sally out into the street, and see some of the sights, before
+the shops were all closed for the night.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While I thus sat alone, I observed one of the waiters eying me a little
+impertinently, as I thought, and as if he saw something queer about me. So I
+tried to assume a careless and lordly air, and by way of helping the thing,
+threw one leg over the other, like a young Prince Esterhazy; but all the time I
+felt my face burning with embarrassment, and for the time, I must have looked
+very guilty of something. But spite of this, I kept looking boldly out of my
+eyes, and straight through my blushes, and observed that every now and then
+little parties were made up among the gentlemen, and they retired into the rear
+of the house, as if going to a private apartment. And I overheard one of them
+drop the word <i>Rouge;</i> but he could not have used rouge, for his face was
+exceedingly pale. Another said something about <i>Loo.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last Harry came back, his face rather flushed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come along, Redburn,&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So making no doubt we were off for a ramble, perhaps to Apsley House, in the
+Park, to get a sly peep at the old Duke before he retired for the night, for
+Harry had told me the Duke always went to bed early, I sprang up to follow him;
+but what was my disappointment and surprise, when he only led me into the
+passage, toward a staircase lighted by three marble Graces, unitedly holding a
+broad candelabra, like an elk&rsquo;s antlers, over the landing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We rambled up the long, winding slope of those aristocratic stairs, every step
+of which, covered with Turkey rugs, looked gorgeous as the hammer-cloth of the
+Lord Mayor&rsquo;s coach; and Harry hied straight to a rosewood door, which, on
+magical hinges, sprang softly open to his touch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As we entered the room, methought I was slowly sinking in some reluctant, sedgy
+sea; so thick and elastic the Persian carpeting, mimicking parterres of tulips,
+and roses, and jonquils, like a bower in Babylon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Long lounges lay carelessly disposed, whose fine damask was interwoven, like
+the Gobelin tapestry, with pictorial tales of tilt and tourney. And oriental
+ottomans, whose cunning warp and woof were wrought into plaited serpents,
+undulating beneath beds of leaves, from which, here and there, they flashed out
+sudden splendors of green scales and gold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the broad bay windows, as the hollows of King Charles&rsquo; oaks, were
+Laocoon-like chairs, in the antique taste, draped with heavy fringes of bullion
+and silk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The walls, covered with a sort of tartan-French paper, variegated with bars of
+velvet, were hung round with mythological oil-paintings, suspended by tasseled
+cords of twisted silver and blue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were such pictures as the high-priests, for a bribe, showed to Alexander
+in the innermost shrine of the white temple in the Libyan oasis: such pictures
+as the pontiff of the sun strove to hide from Cortez, when, sword in hand, he
+burst open the sanctorum of the pyramid-fane at Cholula: such pictures as you
+may still see, perhaps, in the central alcove of the excavated mansion of
+Pansa, in Pompeii&mdash;in that part of it called by Varro <i>the hollow of the
+house:</i> such pictures as Martial and Seutonius mention as being found in the
+private cabinet of the Emperor Tiberius: such pictures as are delineated on the
+bronze medals, to this day dug up on the ancient island of Capreas: such
+pictures as you might have beheld in an arched recess, leading from the left
+hand of the secret side-gallery of the temple of Aphrodite in Corinth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the principal pier was a marble bracket, sculptured in the semblance of a
+dragon&rsquo;s crest, and supporting a bust, most wonderful to behold. It was
+that of a bald-headed old man, with a mysteriously-wicked expression, and
+imposing silence by one thin finger over his lips. His marble mouth seemed
+tremulous with secrets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sit down, Wellingborough,&rdquo; said Harry; &ldquo;don&rsquo;t be
+frightened, we are at home.&mdash;Ring the bell, will you? But
+stop;&rdquo;&mdash; and advancing to the mysterious bust, he whispered
+something in its ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s a knowing mute, Wellingborough,&rdquo; said he; &ldquo;who
+stays in this one place all the time, while he is yet running of errands. But
+mind you don&rsquo;t breathe any secrets in his ear.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In obedience to a summons so singularly conveyed, to my amazement a servant
+almost instantly appeared, standing transfixed in the attitude of a bow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Cigars,&rdquo; said Harry. When they came, he drew up a small table into
+the middle of the room, and lighting his cigar, bade me follow his example, and
+make myself happy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Almost transported with such princely quarters, so undreamed of before, while
+leading my dog&rsquo;s life in the filthy forecastle of the Highlander, I
+twirled round a chair, and seated myself opposite my friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But all the time, I felt ill at heart; and was filled with an undercurrent of
+dismal forebodings. But I strove to dispel them; and turning to my companion,
+exclaimed, &ldquo;And pray, do you live here, Harry, in this Palace of
+Aladdin?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my soul,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;you have hit it:&mdash;you must
+have been here before! Aladdin&rsquo;s Palace! Why, Wellingborough, it goes by
+that very name.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he laughed strangely: and for the first time, I thought he had been
+quaffing too freely: yet, though he looked wildly from his eyes, his general
+carriage was firm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who are you looking at so hard, Wellingborough?&rdquo; said he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I am afraid, Harry,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;that when you left me just
+now, you must have been drinking something stronger than wine.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Hear him now,&rdquo; said Harry, turning round, as if addressing the
+bald-headed bust on the bracket,&mdash;&ldquo;a parson &rsquo;pon
+honor!&mdash;But remark you, Wellingborough, my boy, I must leave you again,
+and for a considerably longer time than before:&mdash;I may not be back again
+to-night.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What?&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Be still,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;hear me, I know the old duke here,
+and&mdash;&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who? not the Duke of Wellington,&rdquo; said I, wondering whether Harry
+was really going to include <i>him</i> too, in his long list of confidential
+friends and acquaintances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pooh!&rdquo; cried Harry, &ldquo;I mean the white-whiskered old man you
+saw below; they call him <i>the Duke:&mdash;he</i> keeps the house. I say, I
+know him well, and he knows <i>me;</i> and he knows what brings me here, also.
+Well; we have arranged every thing about you; you are to stay in this room, and
+sleep here tonight, and&mdash;and&mdash;&rdquo; continued he, speaking
+low&mdash;&ldquo;you must guard this letter&mdash;&rdquo; slipping a sealed one
+into my hand&mdash;&ldquo;and, if I am not back by morning, you must post right
+on to Bury, and leave the letter there;&mdash;here, take this
+paper&mdash;it&rsquo;s all set down here in black and white&mdash;where you are
+to go, and what you are to do. And after that&rsquo;s done&mdash;mind, this is
+all in case I don&rsquo;t return&mdash;then you may do what you please: stay
+here in London awhile, or go back to Liverpool. And here&rsquo;s enough to pay
+all your expenses.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this was a thunder stroke. I thought Harry was crazy. I held the purse in
+my motionless hand, and stared at him, till the tears almost started from my
+eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s the matter, Redburn?&rdquo; he cried, with a wild sort of
+laugh&mdash;&ldquo;you are not afraid of me, are you?&mdash;No, no! I believe
+in you, my boy, or you would not hold that purse in your hand; no, nor that
+letter.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What in heaven&rsquo;s name do you mean?&rdquo; at last I exclaimed,
+&ldquo;you don&rsquo;t really intend to desert me in this strange place, do
+you, Harry?&rdquo; and I snatched him by the hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pooh, pooh,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;let me go. I tell you, it&rsquo;s
+all right: do as I say: that&rsquo;s all. Promise me now, will you? Swear
+it!&mdash;no, no,&rdquo; he added, vehemently, as I conjured him to tell me
+more&mdash;&ldquo;no, I won&rsquo;t: I have nothing more to tell you&mdash;not
+a word. Will you swear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But one sentence more for your own sake, Harry: hear me!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a syllable! Will you swear?&mdash;you will not? then here, give me
+that purse:&mdash;there&mdash;there&mdash;take that&mdash;and that&mdash;and
+that;&mdash;that will pay your fare back to Liverpool; good-by to you: you are
+not my friend,&rdquo; and he wheeled round his back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I know not what flashed through my mind, but something suddenly impelled me;
+and grasping his hand, I swore to him what he demanded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immediately he ran to the bust, whispered a word, and the white-whiskered old
+man appeared: whom he clapped on the shoulder, and then introduced me as his
+friend&mdash;young Lord Stormont; and bade the almond tree look well to the
+comforts of his lordship, while he&mdash;Harry&mdash;was gone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The almond tree blandly bowed, and grimaced, with a peculiar expression, that I
+hated on the spot. After a few words more, he withdrew. Harry then shook my
+hand heartily, and without giving me a chance to say one word, seized his cap,
+and darted out of the room, saying, &ldquo;Leave not this room tonight; and
+remember the letter, and Bury!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I fell into a chair, and gazed round at the strange-looking walls and
+mysterious pictures, and up to the chandelier at the ceiling; then rose, and
+opened the door, and looked down the lighted passage; but only heard the hum
+from the roomful below, scattered voices, and a hushed ivory rattling from the
+closed apartments adjoining. I stepped back into the room, and a terrible
+revulsion came over me: I would have given the world had I been safe back in
+Liverpool, fast asleep in my old bunk in Prince&rsquo;s Dock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I shuddered at every footfall, and almost thought it must be some assassin
+pursuing me. The whole place seemed infected; and a strange thought came over
+me, that in the very damasks around, some eastern plague had been imported. And
+was that pale yellow wine, that I drank below, drugged? thought I. This must be
+some house whose foundations take hold on the pit. But these fearful reveries
+only enchanted me fast to my chair; so that, though I then wished to rush forth
+from the house, my limbs seemed manacled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While thus chained to my seat, something seemed suddenly flung open; a confused
+sound of imprecations, mixed with the ivory rattling, louder than before, burst
+upon my ear, and through the partly open door of the room where I was, I caught
+sight of a tall, frantic man, with clenched hands, wildly darting through the
+passage, toward the stairs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And all the while, Harry ran through my soul&mdash;in and out, at every door,
+that burst open to his vehement rush.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At that moment my whole acquaintance with him passed like lightning through my
+mind, till I asked myself why he had come here, to London, to do this
+thing?&mdash;why would not Liverpool have answered? and what did he want of me?
+But, every way, his conduct was unaccountable. From the hour he had accosted me
+on board the ship, his manner seemed gradually changed; and from the moment we
+had sprung into the cab, he had seemed almost another person from what he had
+seemed before.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what could I do? He was gone, that was certain;&mdash;would he ever come
+back? But he might still be somewhere in the house; and with a shudder, I
+thought of that ivory rattling, and was almost ready to dart forth, search
+every room, and save him. But that would be madness, and I had sworn not to do
+so. There seemed nothing left, but to await his return. Yet, if he did not
+return, what then? I took out the purse, and counted over the money, and looked
+at the letter and paper of memoranda.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though I vividly remember it all, I will not give the superscription of the
+letter, nor the contents of the paper. But after I had looked at them
+attentively, and considered that Harry could have no conceivable object in
+deceiving me, I thought to myself, Yes, he&rsquo;s in earnest; and here I
+am&mdash;yes, even in London! And here in this room will I stay, come what
+will. I will implicitly follow his directions, and so see out the last of this
+thing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But spite of these thoughts, and spite of the metropolitan magnificence around
+me, I was mysteriously alive to a dreadful feeling, which I had never before
+felt, except when penetrating into the lowest and most squalid haunts of sailor
+iniquity in Liverpool. All the mirrors and marbles around me seemed crawling
+over with lizards; and I thought to myself, that though gilded and golden, the
+serpent of vice is a serpent still.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was now grown very late; and faint with excitement, I threw myself upon a
+lounge; but for some time tossed about restless, in a sort of night-mare. Every
+few moments, spite of my oath, I was upon the point of starting up, and rushing
+into the street, to inquire where I was; but remembering Harry&rsquo;s
+injunctions, and my own ignorance of the town, and that it was now so late, I
+again tried to be composed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, I fell asleep, dreaming about Harry fighting a duel of dice-boxes with
+the military-looking man below; and the next thing I knew, was the glare of a
+light before my eyes, and Harry himself, very pale, stood before me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;The letter and paper,&rdquo; he cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I fumbled in my pockets, and handed them to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There! there! there! thus I tear you,&rdquo; he cried, wrenching the
+letter to pieces with both hands like a madman, and stamping upon the
+fragments. &ldquo;I am off for America; the game is up.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;For God&rsquo;s sake explain,&rdquo; said I, now utterly bewildered, and
+frightened. &ldquo;Tell me, Harry, what is it? You have not been
+gambling?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ha, ha,&rdquo; he deliriously laughed. &ldquo;Gambling? red and white,
+you mean?&mdash;cards?&mdash;dice?&mdash;the bones?&mdash;Ha,
+ha!&mdash;Gambling? gambling?&rdquo; he ground out between his
+teeth&mdash;&ldquo;what two devilish, stiletto-sounding syllables they
+are!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Wellingborough,&rdquo; he added, marching up to me slowly, but with his
+eyes blazing into mine&mdash;&ldquo;Wellingborough&rdquo;&mdash;and fumbling in
+his breast-pocket, he drew forth a dirk&mdash;&ldquo;Here, Wellingborough, take
+it&mdash;take it, I say&mdash;are you stupid?&mdash;there,
+there&rdquo;&mdash;and he pushed it into my hands. &ldquo;Keep it away from
+me&mdash;keep it out of my sight&mdash;I don&rsquo;t want it near me, while I
+feel as I do. They serve suicides scurvily here, Wellingborough; they
+don&rsquo;t bury them decently. See that bell-rope! By Heaven, it&rsquo;s an
+invitation to hang myself"&mdash;and seizing it by the gilded handle at the
+end, he twitched it down from the wall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;In God&rsquo;s name, what ails you?&rdquo; I cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Nothing, oh nothing,&rdquo; said Harry, now assuming a treacherous,
+tropical calmness&mdash;&ldquo;nothing, Redburn; nothing in the world.
+I&rsquo;m the serenest of men.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But give me that dirk,&rdquo; he suddenly cried&mdash;&ldquo;let me have
+it, I say. Oh! I don&rsquo;t mean to murder myself&mdash;I&rsquo;m past that
+now&mdash;give it me&rdquo;&mdash;and snatching it from my hand, he flung down
+an empty purse, and with a terrific stab, nailed it fast with the dirk to the
+table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There now,&rdquo; he cried, &ldquo;there&rsquo;s something for the old
+duke to see to-morrow morning; that&rsquo;s about all that&rsquo;s left of
+me&mdash; that&rsquo;s my skeleton, Wellingborough. But come, don&rsquo;t be
+downhearted; there&rsquo;s a little more gold yet in Golconda; I have a guinea
+or two left. Don&rsquo;t stare so, my boy; we shall be in Liverpool to-morrow
+night; we start in the morning&rdquo;&mdash;and turning his back, he began to
+whistle very fiercely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And this, then,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;is your showing me London, is it,
+Harry? I did not think this; but tell me your secret, whatever it is, and I
+will not regret not seeing the town.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He turned round upon me like lightning, and cried, &ldquo;Red-burn! you must
+swear another oath, and instantly.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And why?&rdquo; said I, in alarm, &ldquo;what more would you have me
+swear?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never to question me again about this infernal trip to London!&rdquo; he
+shouted, with the foam at his lips&mdash;&ldquo;never to breathe it!
+swear!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I certainly shall not trouble you, Harry, with questions, if you do not
+desire it,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;but there&rsquo;s no need of swearing.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Swear it, I say, as you love me, Redburn,&rdquo; he added, imploringly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, then, I solemnly do. Now lie down, and let us forget ourselves as
+soon as we can; for me, you have made me the most miserable dog alive.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And what am I?&rdquo; cried Harry; &ldquo;but pardon me, Redburn, I did
+not mean to offend; if you knew all&mdash;but no, no!&mdash;never mind, never
+mind!&rdquo; And he ran to the bust, and whispered in its ear. A waiter came.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Brandy,&rdquo; whispered Harry, with clenched teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Are you not going to sleep, then?&rdquo; said I, more and more alarmed
+at his wildness, and fearful of the effects of his drinking still more, in such
+a mood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No sleep for me! sleep if <i>you</i> can&mdash;I mean to sit up with a
+decanter!&mdash;let me see&rdquo;&mdash;looking at the ormolu clock on the
+mantel&mdash;&ldquo;it&rsquo;s only two hours to morning.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The waiter, looking very sleepy, and with a green shade on his brow, appeared
+with the decanter and glasses on a salver, and was told to leave it and depart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seeing that Harry was not to be moved, I once more threw myself on the lounge.
+I did not sleep; but, like a somnambulist, only dozed now and then; starting
+from my dreams; while Harry sat, with his hat on, at the table; the brandy
+before him; from which he occasionally poured into his glass. Instead of
+exciting him, however, to my amazement, the spirits seemed to soothe him down;
+and, ere long, he was comparatively calm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, just as I had fallen into a deep sleep, I was wakened by his shaking
+me, and saying our cab was at the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look! it is broad day,&rdquo; said he, brushing aside the heavy hangings
+of the window.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We left the room; and passing through the now silent and deserted hall of
+pillars, which, at this hour, reeked as with blended roses and cigar-stumps
+decayed; a dumb waiter; rubbing his eyes, flung open the street door; we sprang
+into the cab; and soon found ourselves whirled along northward by railroad,
+toward Prince&rsquo;s Dock and the Highlander.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap47"></a>CHAPTER XLVII.<br/>
+HOMEWARD BOUND</h2>
+
+<p>
+Once more in Liverpool; and wending my way through the same old streets to the
+sign of the Golden Anchor; I could scarcely credit the events of the last
+thirty-six hours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So unforeseen had been our departure in the first place; so rapid our journey;
+so unaccountable the conduct of Harry; and so sudden our return; that all
+united to overwhelm me. That I had been at all in London seemed impossible; and
+that I had been there, and come away little the wiser, was almost distracting
+to one who, like me, had so longed to behold that metropolis of marvels.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked hard at Harry as he walked in silence at my side; I stared at the
+houses we passed; I thought of the cab, the gas lighted hall in the Palace of
+Aladdin, the pictures, the letter, the oath, the dirk; the mysterious place
+where all these mysteries had occurred; and then, was almost ready to conclude,
+that the pale yellow wine had been drugged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for Harry, stuffing his false whiskers and mustache into his pocket, he now
+led the way to the boarding-house; and saluting the landlady, was shown to his
+room; where we immediately shifted our clothes, appearing once more in our
+sailor habiliments.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, what do you propose to do now, Harry?&rdquo; said I, with a heavy
+heart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why, visit your Yankee land in the Highlander, of course&mdash;what
+else?" he replied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And is it to be a visit, or a long stay?&rdquo; asked I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That&rsquo;s as it may turn out,&rdquo; said Harry; &ldquo;but I have
+now more than ever resolved upon the sea. There is nothing like the sea for a
+fellow like me, Redburn; a desperate man can not get any further than the
+wharf, you know; and the next step must be a long jump. But come, let&rsquo;s
+see what they have to eat here, and then for a cigar and a stroll. I feel
+better already. Never say die, is my motto.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We went to supper; after that, sallied out; and walking along the quay of
+Prince&rsquo;s Dock, heard that the ship Highlander had that morning been
+advertised to sail in two days&rsquo; time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good!&rdquo; exclaimed Harry; and I was glad enough myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although I had now been absent from the ship a full forty-eight hours, and
+intended to return to her, yet I did not anticipate being called to any severe
+account for it from the officers; for several of our men had absented
+themselves longer than I had, and upon their return, little or nothing was said
+to them. Indeed, in some cases, the mate seemed to know nothing about it.
+During the whole time we lay in Liverpool, the discipline of the ship was
+altogether relaxed; and I could hardly believe they were the same officers who
+were so dictatorial at sea. The reason of this was, that we had nothing
+important to do; and although the captain might now legally refuse to receive
+me on board, yet I was not afraid of that, as I was as stout a lad for my
+years, and worked as cheap, as any one he could engage to take my place on the
+homeward passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next morning we made our appearance on board before the rest of the crew; and
+the mate perceiving me, said with an oath, &ldquo;Well, sir, you have thought
+best to return then, have you? Captain Riga and I were flattering ourselves
+that you had made a run of it for good.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, thought I, the captain, who seems to affect to know nothing of the
+proceedings of the sailors, has been aware of my absence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But turn to, sir, turn to,&rdquo; added the mate; &ldquo;here! aloft
+there, and free that pennant; it&rsquo;s foul of the
+backstay&mdash;jump!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain coming on board soon after, looked very benevolently at Harry; but,
+as usual, pretended not to take the slightest notice of myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We were all now very busy in getting things ready for sea. The cargo had been
+already stowed in the hold by the stevedores and lumpers from shore; but it
+became the crew&rsquo;s business to clear away the <i>between-decks,</i>
+extending from the cabin bulkhead to the forecastle, for the reception of about
+five hundred emigrants, some of whose boxes were already littering the decks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To provide for their wants, a far larger supply of water was needed than upon
+the outward-bound passage. Accordingly, besides the usual number of casks on
+deck, rows of immense tierces were lashed amid-ships, all along the
+<i>between-decks,</i> forming a sort of aisle on each side, furnishing access
+to four rows of bunks,&mdash;three tiers, one above another,&mdash;against the
+ship&rsquo;s sides; two tiers being placed over the tierces of water in the
+middle. These bunks were rapidly knocked together with coarse planks. They
+looked more like dog-kennels than any thing else; especially as the place was
+so gloomy and dark; no light coming down except through the fore and after
+hatchways, both of which were covered with little houses called
+<i>&ldquo;booby-hatches.&rdquo;</i> Upon the main-hatches, which were well
+calked and covered over with heavy tarpaulins, the
+<i>&ldquo;passengers-galley&rdquo;</i> was solidly lashed down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This <i>galley</i> was a large open stove, or iron range&mdash;made expressly
+for emigrant ships, wholly unprotected from the weather, and where alone the
+emigrants are permitted to cook their food while at sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After two days&rsquo; work, every thing was in readiness; most of the emigrants
+on board; and in the evening we worked the ship close into the outlet of
+Prince&rsquo;s Dock, with the bow against the water-gate, to go out with the
+tide in the morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the morning, the bustle and confusion about us was indescribable. Added to
+the ordinary clamor of the docks, was the hurrying to and fro of our five
+hundred emigrants, the last of whom, with their baggage, were now coming on
+board; the appearance of the cabin passengers, following porters with their
+trunks; the loud orders of the dock-masters, ordering the various ships behind
+us to preserve their order of going out; the leave-takings, and
+good-by&rsquo;s, and God-bless-you&rsquo;s, between the emigrants and their
+friends; and the cheers of the surrounding ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this time we lay in such a way, that no one could board us except by the
+bowsprit, which overhung the quay. Staggering along that bowsprit, now came a
+one-eyed <i>crimp</i> leading a drunken tar by the collar, who had been shipped
+to sail with us the day previous. It has been stated before, that two or three
+of our men had left us for good, while in port. When the crimp had got this man
+and another safely lodged in a bunk below, he returned on shore; and going to a
+miserable cab, pulled out still another apparently drunken fellow, who proved
+completely helpless. However, the ship now swinging her broadside more toward
+the quay, this stupefied sailor, with a Scotch cap pulled down over his closed
+eyes, only revealing a sallow Portuguese complexion, was lowered on board by a
+rope under his arms, and passed forward by the crew, who put him likewise into
+a bunk in the forecastle, the crimp himself carefully tucking him in, and
+bidding the bystanders not to disturb him till the ship was away from the land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This done, the confusion increased, as we now glided out of the dock. Hats and
+handkerchiefs were waved; hurrahs were exchanged; and tears were shed; and the
+last thing I saw, as we shot into the stream, was a policeman collaring a boy,
+and walking him off to the guard-house.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A steam-tug, the <i>Goliath,</i> now took us by the arm, and gallanted us down
+the river past the fort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The scene was most striking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owing to a strong breeze, which had been blowing up the river for four days
+past, holding wind-bound in the various docks a multitude of ships for all
+parts of the world; there was now under weigh, a vast fleet of merchantmen, all
+steering broad out to sea. The white sails glistened in the clear morning air
+like a great Eastern encampment of sultans; and from many a forecastle, came
+the deep mellow old song <i>Ho-o-he-yo, cheerily men!</i> as the crews called
+their anchors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wind was fair; the weather mild; the sea most smooth; and the poor
+emigrants were in high spirits at so auspicious a beginning of their voyage.
+They were reclining all over the decks, talking of soon seeing America, and
+relating how the agent had told them, that twenty days would be an uncommonly
+long voyage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here it must be mentioned, that owing to the great number of ships sailing to
+the Yankee ports from Liverpool, the competition among them in obtaining
+emigrant passengers, who as a cargo are much more remunerative than crates and
+bales, is exceedingly great; so much so, that some of the agents they employ,
+do not scruple to deceive the poor applicants for passage, with all manner of
+fables concerning the short space of time, in which their ships make the run
+across the ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This often induces the emigrants to provide a much smaller stock of provisions
+than they otherwise would; the effect of which sometimes proves to be in the
+last degree lamentable; as will be seen further on. And though benevolent
+societies have been long organized in Liverpool, for the purpose of keeping
+offices, where the emigrants can obtain reliable information and advice,
+concerning their best mode of embarkation, and other matters interesting to
+them; and though the English authorities have imposed a law, providing that
+every captain of an emigrant ship bound for any port of America shall see to
+it, that each passenger is provided with rations of food for sixty days; yet,
+all this has not deterred mercenary ship-masters and unprincipled agents from
+practicing the grossest deception; nor exempted the emigrants themselves, from
+the very sufferings intended to be averted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner had we fairly gained the expanse of the Irish Sea, and, one by one,
+lost sight of our thousand consorts, than the weather changed into the most
+miserable cold, wet, and cheerless days and nights imaginable. The wind was
+tempestuous, and dead in our teeth; and the hearts of the emigrants fell.
+Nearly all of them had now hied below, to escape the uncomfortable and perilous
+decks: and from the two <i>&ldquo;booby-hatches&rdquo;</i> came the steady hum
+of a subterranean wailing and weeping. That irresistible wrestler,
+sea-sickness, had overthrown the stoutest of their number, and the women and
+children were embracing and sobbing in all the agonies of the poor
+emigrant&rsquo;s first storm at sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bad enough is it at such times with ladies and gentlemen in the cabin, who have
+nice little state-rooms; and plenty of privacy; and stewards to run for them at
+a word, and put pillows under their heads, and tenderly inquire how they are
+getting along, and mix them a posset: and even then, in the abandonment of this
+soul and body subduing malady, such ladies and gentlemen will often give up
+life itself as unendurable, and put up the most pressing petitions for a speedy
+annihilation; all of which, however, only arises from their intense anxiety to
+preserve their valuable lives.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How, then, with the friendless emigrants, stowed away like bales of cotton, and
+packed like slaves in a slave-ship; confined in a place that, during storm
+time, must be closed against both light and air; who can do no cooking, nor
+warm so much as a cup of water; for the drenching seas would instantly flood
+their fire in their exposed galley on deck? How, then, with these men, and
+women, and children, to whom a first voyage, under the most advantageous
+circumstances, must come just as hard as to the Honorable De Lancey Fitz
+Clarence, lady, daughter, and seventeen servants.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor is this all: for in some of these ships, as in the case of the Highlander,
+the emigrant passengers are cut off from the most indispensable conveniences of
+a civilized dwelling. This forces them in storm time to such extremities, that
+no wonder fevers and plagues are the result. We had not been at sea one week,
+when to hold your head down the fore hatchway was like holding it down a
+suddenly opened cesspool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But still more than this. Such is the aristocracy maintained on board some of
+these ships, that the most arbitrary measures are enforced, to prevent the
+emigrants from intruding upon the most holy precincts of the quarter-deck, the
+only completely open space on ship-board. Consequently&mdash;even in fine
+weather&mdash;when they come up from below, they are crowded in the waist of
+the ship, and jammed among the boats, casks, and spars; abused by the seamen,
+and sometimes cuffed by the officers, for unavoidably standing in the way of
+working the vessel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cabin-passengers of the Highlander numbered some fifteen in all; and to
+protect this detachment of gentility from the barbarian incursions of the
+<i>&ldquo;wild Irish&rdquo;</i> emigrants, ropes were passed athwart-ships, by
+the main-mast, from side to side: which defined the boundary line between those
+who had paid three pounds passage-money, from those who had paid twenty
+guineas. And the cabin-passengers themselves were the most urgent in having
+this regulation maintained.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lucky would it be for the pretensions of some parvenus, whose souls are
+deposited at their banker&rsquo;s, and whose bodies but serve to carry about
+purses, knit of poor men&rsquo;s heartstrings, if thus easily they could
+precisely define, ashore, the difference between them and the rest of humanity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But, I, Redburn, am a poor fellow, who have hardly ever known what it is to
+have five silver dollars in my pocket at one time; so, no doubt, this
+circumstance has something to do with my slight and harmless indignation at
+these things.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap48"></a>CHAPTER XLVIII.<br/>
+A LIVING CORPSE</h2>
+
+<p>
+It was destined that our departure from the English strand, should be marked by
+a tragical event, akin to the sudden end of the suicide, which had so strongly
+impressed me on quitting the American shore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of the three newly shipped men, who in a state of intoxication had been brought
+on board at the dock gates, two were able to be engaged at their duties, in
+four or five hours after quitting the pier. But the third man yet lay in his
+bunk, in the self-same posture in which his limbs had been adjusted by the
+crimp, who had deposited him there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His name was down on the ship&rsquo;s papers as Miguel Saveda, and for Miguel
+Saveda the chief mate at last came forward, shouting down the
+forecastle-scuttle, and commanding his instant presence on deck. But the
+sailors answered for their new comrade; giving the mate to understand that
+Miguel was still fast locked in his trance, and could not obey him; when,
+muttering his usual imprecation, the mate retired to the quarterdeck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was in the first dog-watch, from four to six in the evening. At about
+three bells, in the next watch, Max the Dutchman, who, like most old seamen,
+was something of a physician in cases of drunkenness, recommended that
+Miguel&rsquo;s clothing should be removed, in order that he should lie more
+comfortably. But Jackson, who would seldom let any thing be done in the
+forecastle that was not proposed by himself, capriciously forbade this
+proceeding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the sailor still lay out of sight in his bunk, which was in the extreme
+angle of the forecastle, behind the <i>bowsprit-bitts</i>&mdash;two stout
+timbers rooted in the ship&rsquo;s keel. An hour or two afterward, some of the
+men observed a strange odor in the forecastle, which was attributed to the
+presence of some dead rat among the hollow spaces in the side planks; for some
+days before, the forecastle had been smoked out, to extirpate the vermin
+overrunning her. At midnight, the larboard watch, to which I belonged, turned
+out; and instantly as every man waked, he exclaimed at the now intolerable
+smell, supposed to be heightened by the shaking up the bilge-water, from the
+ship&rsquo;s rolling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Blast that rat!&rdquo; cried the Greenlander.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s blasted already,&rdquo; said Jackson, who in his drawers had
+crossed over to the bunk of Miguel. &ldquo;It&rsquo;s a water-rat, shipmates,
+that&rsquo;s dead; and here he is&rdquo;&mdash;and with that, he dragged forth
+the sailor&rsquo;s arm, exclaiming, &ldquo;Dead as a timber-head!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this the men rushed toward the bunk, Max with the light, which he held to
+the man&rsquo;s face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, he&rsquo;s not dead,&rdquo; he cried, as the yellow flame wavered
+for a moment at the seaman&rsquo;s motionless mouth. But hardly had the words
+escaped, when, to the silent horror of all, two threads of greenish fire, like
+a forked tongue, darted out between the lips; and in a moment, the cadaverous
+face was crawled over by a swarm of wormlike flames.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lamp dropped from the hand of Max, and went out; while covered all over
+with spires and sparkles of flame, that faintly crackled in the silence, the
+uncovered parts of the body burned before us, precisely like phosphorescent
+shark in a midnight sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The eyes were open and fixed; the mouth was curled like a scroll, and every
+lean feature firm as in life; while the whole face, now wound in curls of soft
+blue flame, wore an aspect of grim defiance, and eternal death. Prometheus,
+blasted by fire on the rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One arm, its red shirt-sleeve rolled up, exposed the man&rsquo;s name, tattooed
+in vermilion, near the hollow of the middle joint; and as if there was
+something peculiar in the painted flesh, every vibrating letter burned so
+white, that you might read the flaming name in the flickering ground of blue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where&rsquo;s that d&mdash;d Miguel?&rdquo; was now shouted down among
+us from the scuttle by the mate, who had just come on deck, and was determined
+to have every man up that belonged to his watch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;He&rsquo;s gone to the harbor where they never weigh anchor,&rdquo;
+coughed Jackson. &ldquo;Come you down, sir, and look.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thinking that Jackson intended to beard him, the mate sprang down in a rage;
+but recoiled at the burning body as if he had been shot by a bullet. &ldquo;My
+God!&rdquo; he cried, and stood holding fast to the ladder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take hold of it,&rdquo; said Jackson, at last, to the Greenlander;
+&ldquo;it must go overboard. Don&rsquo;t stand shaking there, like a dog; take
+hold of it, I say! But stop&rdquo;&mdash;and smothering it all in the blankets,
+he pulled it partly out of the bunk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few minutes more, and it fell with a bubble among the phosphorescent sparkles
+of the damp night sea, leaving a coruscating wake as it sank.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This event thrilled me through and through with unspeakable horror; nor did the
+conversation of the watch during the next four hours on deck at all serve to
+soothe me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what most astonished me, and seemed most incredible, was the infernal
+opinion of Jackson, that the man had been actually dead when brought on board
+the ship; and that knowingly, and merely for the sake of the month&rsquo;s
+advance, paid into his hand upon the strength of the bill he presented, the
+body-snatching crimp had knowingly shipped a corpse on board of the Highlander,
+under the pretense of its being a live body in a drunken trance. And I heard
+Jackson say, that he had known of such things having been done before. But that
+a really dead body ever burned in that manner, I can not even yet believe. But
+the sailors seemed familiar with such things; or at least with the stories of
+such things having happened to others.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For me, who at that age had never so much as happened to hear of a case like
+this, of animal combustion, in the horrid mood that came over me, I almost
+thought the burning body was a premonition of the hell of the Calvinists, and
+that Miguel&rsquo;s earthly end was a foretaste of his eternal condemnation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immediately after the burial, an iron pot of red coals was placed in the bunk,
+and in it two handfuls of coffee were roasted. This done, the bunk was nailed
+up, and was never opened again during the voyage; and strict orders were given
+to the crew not to divulge what had taken place to the emigrants; but to this,
+they needed no commands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the event, no one sailor but Jackson would stay alone in the forecastle,
+by night or by noon; and no more would they laugh or sing, or in any way make
+merry there, but kept all their pleasantries for the watches on deck. All but
+Jackson: who, while the rest would be sitting silently smoking on their chests,
+or in their bunks, would look toward the fatal spot, and cough, and laugh, and
+invoke the dead man with incredible scoffs and jeers. He froze my blood, and
+made my soul stand still.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap49"></a>CHAPTER XLIX.<br/>
+CARLO</h2>
+
+<p>
+There was on board our ship, among the emigrant passengers, a rich-cheeked,
+chestnut-haired Italian boy, arrayed in a faded, olive-hued velvet jacket, and
+tattered trowsers rolled up to his knee. He was not above fifteen years of age;
+but in the twilight pensiveness of his full morning eyes, there seemed to sleep
+experiences so sad and various, that his days must have seemed to him years. It
+was not an eye like Harry&rsquo;s tho&rsquo; Harry&rsquo;s was large and
+womanly. It shone with a soft and spiritual radiance, like a moist star in a
+tropic sky; and spoke of humility, deep-seated thoughtfulness, yet a careless
+endurance of all the ills of life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The head was if any thing small; and heaped with thick clusters of tendril
+curls, half overhanging the brows and delicate ears, it somehow reminded you of
+a classic vase, piled up with Falernian foliage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the knee downward, the naked leg was beautiful to behold as any
+lady&rsquo;s arm; so soft and rounded, with infantile ease and grace. His whole
+figure was free, fine, and indolent; he was such a boy as might have ripened
+into life in a Neapolitan vineyard; such a boy as gipsies steal in infancy;
+such a boy as Murillo often painted, when he went among the poor and outcast,
+for subjects wherewith to captivate the eyes of rank and wealth; such a boy, as
+only Andalusian beggars are, full of poetry, gushing from every rent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Carlo was his name; a poor and friendless son of earth, who had no sire; and on
+life&rsquo;s ocean was swept along, as spoon-drift in a gale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some months previous, he had landed in Prince&rsquo;s Dock, with his
+hand-organ, from a Messina vessel; and had walked the streets of Liverpool,
+playing the sunny airs of southern climes, among the northern fog and drizzle.
+And now, having laid by enough to pay his passage over the Atlantic, he had
+again embarked, to seek his fortunes in America.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+From the first, Harry took to the boy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Carlo,&rdquo; said Harry, &ldquo;how did you succeed in England?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was reclining upon an old sail spread on the long-boat; and throwing back
+his soiled but tasseled cap, and caressing one leg like a child, he looked up,
+and said in his broken English&mdash;that seemed like mixing the potent wine of
+Oporto with some delicious syrup:&mdash;said he, &ldquo;Ah! I succeed very
+well!&mdash;for I have tunes for the young and the old, the gay and the sad. I
+have marches for military young men, and love-airs for the ladies, and solemn
+sounds for the aged. I never draw a crowd, but I know from their faces what
+airs will best please them; I never stop before a house, but I judge from its
+portico for what tune they will soonest toss me some silver. And I ever play
+sad airs to the merry, and merry airs to the sad; and most always the rich best
+fancy the sad, and the poor the merry.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But do you not sometimes meet with cross and crabbed old men,&rdquo;
+said Harry, &ldquo;who would much rather have your room than your music?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, sometimes,&rdquo; said Carlo, playing with his foot,
+&ldquo;sometimes I do.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And then, knowing the value of quiet to unquiet men, I suppose you never
+leave them under a shilling?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No,&rdquo; continued the boy, &ldquo;I love my organ as I do myself, for
+it is my only friend, poor organ! it sings to me when I am sad, and cheers me;
+and I never play before a house, on purpose to be paid for leaving off, not I;
+would I, poor organ?&rdquo;&mdash; looking down the hatchway where it was.
+&ldquo;No, that I never have done, and never will do, though I starve; for when
+people drive me away, I do not think my organ is to blame, but they themselves
+are to blame; for such people&rsquo;s musical pipes are cracked, and grown
+rusted, that no more music can be breathed into their souls.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, Carlo; no music like yours, perhaps,&rdquo; said Harry, with a
+laugh.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah! there&rsquo;s the mistake. Though my organ is as full of melody, as
+a hive is of bees; yet no organ can make music in unmusical breasts; no more
+than my native winds can, when they breathe upon a harp without chords.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next day was a serene and delightful one; and in the evening when the vessel
+was just rippling along impelled by a gentle yet steady breeze, and the poor
+emigrants, relieved from their late sufferings, were gathered on deck; Carlo
+suddenly started up from his lazy reclinings; went below, and, assisted by the
+emigrants, returned with his organ.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, music is a holy thing, and its instruments, however humble, are to be
+loved and revered. Whatever has made, or does make, or may make music, should
+be held sacred as the golden bridle-bit of the Shah of Persia&rsquo;s horse,
+and the golden hammer, with which his hoofs are shod. Musical instruments
+should be like the silver tongs, with which the high-priests tended the Jewish
+altars&mdash;never to be touched by a hand profane. Who would bruise the
+poorest reed of Pan, though plucked from a beggar&rsquo;s hedge, would insult
+the melodious god himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And there is no humble thing with music in it, not a fife, not a negro-fiddle,
+that is not to be reverenced as much as the grandest architectural organ that
+ever rolled its flood-tide of harmony down a cathedral nave. For even a
+Jew&rsquo;s-harp may be so played, as to awaken all the fairies that are in us,
+and make them dance in our souls, as on a moon-lit sward of violets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But what subtle power is this, residing in but a bit of steel, which might have
+made a tenpenny nail, that so enters, without knocking, into our inmost beings,
+and shows us all hidden things?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not in a spirit of foolish speculation altogether, in no merely transcendental
+mood, did the glorious Greek of old fancy the human soul to be essentially a
+harmony. And if we grant that theory of Paracelsus and Campanella, that every
+man has four souls within him; then can we account for those banded sounds with
+silver links, those quartettes of melody, that sometimes sit and sing within
+us, as if our souls were baronial halls, and our music were made by the hoarest
+old harpers of Wales.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But look! here is poor Carlo&rsquo;s organ; and while the silent crowd
+surrounds him, there he stands, looking mildly but inquiringly about him; his
+right hand pulling and twitching the ivory knobs at one end of his instrument.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Behold the organ!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Surely, if much virtue lurk in the old fiddles of Cremona, and if their melody
+be in proportion to their antiquity, what divine ravishments may we not
+anticipate from this venerable, embrowned old organ, which might almost have
+played the Dead March in Saul, when King Saul himself was buried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A fine old organ! carved into fantastic old towers, and turrets, and belfries;
+its architecture seems somewhat of the Gothic, monastic order; in front, it
+looks like the West-Front of York Minster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What sculptured arches, leading into mysterious intricacies!&mdash;what
+mullioned windows, that seem as if they must look into chapels flooded with
+devotional sunsets!&mdash;what flying buttresses, and gable-ends, and niches
+with saints!&mdash;But stop! &rsquo;tis a Moorish iniquity; for here, as I
+live, is a Saracenic arch; which, for aught I know, may lead into some interior
+Alhambra.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ay, it does; for as Carlo now turns his hand, I hear the gush of the Fountain
+of Lions, as he plays some thronged Italian air&mdash;a mixed and liquid sea of
+sound, that dashes its spray in my face.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Play on, play on, Italian boy! what though the notes be broken, here&rsquo;s
+that within that mends them. Turn hither your pensive, morning eyes; and while
+I list to the organs twain&mdash; one yours, one mine&mdash;let me gaze fathoms
+down into thy fathomless eye;&mdash;&rsquo;tis good as gazing down into the
+great South Sea, and seeing the dazzling rays of the dolphins there.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Play on, play on! for to every note come trooping, now, triumphant standards,
+armies marching&mdash;all the pomp of sound. Methinks I am Xerxes, the nucleus
+of the martial neigh of all the Persian studs. Like gilded damask-flies, thick
+clustering on some lofty bough, my satraps swarm around me.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But now the pageant passes, and I droop; while Carlo taps his ivory knobs; and
+plays some flute-like saraband&mdash;soft, dulcet, dropping sounds, like silver
+cans in bubbling brooks. And now a clanging, martial air, as if ten thousand
+brazen trumpets, forged from spurs and swordhilts, called North, and South, and
+East, to rush to West!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again&mdash;what blasted heath is this?&mdash;what goblin sounds of
+Macbeth&rsquo;s witches?&mdash;Beethoven&rsquo;s Spirit Waltz! the muster-call
+of sprites and specters. Now come, hands joined, Medusa, Hecate, she of Endor,
+and all the Blocksberg&rsquo;s, demons dire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once more the ivory knobs are tapped; and long-drawn, golden sounds are
+heard&mdash;some ode to Cleopatra; slowly loom, and solemnly expand, vast,
+rounding orbs of beauty; and before me float innumerable queens, deep dipped in
+silver gauzes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All this could Carlo do&mdash;make, unmake me; build me up; to pieces take me;
+and join me limb to limb. He is the architect of domes of sound, and bowers of
+song.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And all is done with that old organ! Reverenced, then, be all street organs;
+more melody is at the beck of my Italian boy, than lurks in squadrons of
+Parisian orchestras.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But look! Carlo has that to feast the eye as well as ear; and the same wondrous
+magic in me, magnifies them into grandeur; though every figure greatly needs
+the artist&rsquo;s repairing hand, and sadly needs a dusting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His York Minster&rsquo;s West-Front opens; and like the gates of Milton&rsquo;s
+heaven, it turns on golden hinges.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+What have we here? The inner palace of the Great Mogul? Group and gilded
+columns, in confidential clusters; fixed fountains; canopies and lounges; and
+lords and dames in silk and spangles.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The organ plays a stately march; and presto! wide open arches; and out come,
+two and two, with nodding plumes, in crimson turbans, a troop of martial men;
+with jingling scimiters, they pace the hall; salute, pass on, and disappear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, ground and lofty tumblers; jet black Nubian slaves. They fling themselves
+on poles; stand on their heads; and downward vanish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And now a dance and masquerade of figures, reeling from the side-doors, among
+the knights and dames. Some sultan leads a sultaness; some emperor, a queen;
+and jeweled sword-hilts of carpet knights fling back the glances tossed by
+coquettes of countesses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On this, the curtain drops; and there the poor old organ stands, begrimed, and
+black, and rickety.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, tell me, Carlo, if at street corners, for a single penny, I may thus
+transport myself in dreams Elysian, who so rich as I? Not he who owns a
+million.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And Carlo! ill betide the voice that ever greets thee, my Italian boy, with
+aught but kindness; cursed the slave who ever drives thy wondrous box of sights
+and sounds forth from a lordling&rsquo;s door!
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap50"></a>CHAPTER L.<br/>
+HARRY BOLTON AT SEA</h2>
+
+<p>
+As yet I have said nothing about how my friend, Harry, got along as a sailor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Poor Harry! a feeling of sadness, never to be comforted, comes over me, even
+now when I think of you. For this voyage that you went, but carried you part of
+the way to that ocean grave, which has buried you up with your secrets, and
+whither no mourning pilgrimage can be made.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But why this gloom at the thought of the dead? And why should we not be glad?
+Is it, that we ever think of them as departed from all joy? Is it, that we
+believe that indeed they are dead? They revisit us not, the departed; their
+voices no more ring in the air; summer may come, but it is winter with them;
+and even in our own limbs we feel not the sap that every spring renews the
+green life of the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Harry! you live over again, as I recall your image before me. I see you,
+plain and palpable as in life; and can make your existence obvious to others.
+Is he, then, dead, of whom this may be said?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Harry! you are mixed with a thousand strange forms, the centaurs of fancy;
+half real and human, half wild and grotesque. Divine imaginings, like gods,
+come down to the groves of our Thessalies, and there, in the embrace of wild,
+dryad reminiscences, beget the beings that astonish the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Harry! though your image now roams in my Thessaly groves, it is the same as
+of old; and among the droves of mixed beings and centaurs, you show like a
+zebra, banding with elks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And indeed, in his striped Guernsey frock, dark glossy skin and hair, Harry
+Bolton, mingling with the Highlander&rsquo;s crew, looked not unlike the soft,
+silken quadruped-creole, that, pursued by wild Bushmen, bounds through
+Caffrarian woods.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How they hunted you, Harry, my zebra! those ocean barbarians, those
+unimpressible, uncivilized sailors of ours! How they pursued you from bowsprit
+to mainmast, and started you out of your every retreat!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before the day of our sailing, it was known to the seamen that the girlish
+youth, whom they daily saw near the sign of the Clipper in Union-street, would
+form one of their homeward-bound crew. Accordingly, they cast upon him many a
+critical glance; but were not long in concluding that Harry would prove no very
+great accession to their strength; that the hoist of so tender an arm would not
+tell many hundred-weight on the maintop-sail halyards. Therefore they disliked
+him before they became acquainted with him; and such dislikes, as every one
+knows, are the most inveterate, and liable to increase. But even sailors are
+not blind to the sacredness that hallows a stranger; and for a time, abstaining
+from rudeness, they only maintained toward my friend a cold and unsympathizing
+civility.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for Harry, at first the novelty of the scene filled up his mind; and the
+thought of being bound for a distant land, carried with it, as with every one,
+a buoyant feeling of undefinable expectation. And though his money was now gone
+again, all but a sovereign or two, yet that troubled him but little, in the
+first flush of being at sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But I was surprised, that one who had certainly seen much of life, should
+evince such an incredible ignorance of what was wholly inadmissible in a person
+situated as he was. But perhaps his familiarity with lofty life, only the less
+qualified him for understanding the other extreme. Will you believe me, this
+Bury blade once came on deck in a brocaded dressing-gown, embroidered slippers,
+and tasseled smoking-cap, to stand his morning watch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as I beheld him thus arrayed, a suspicion, which had previously crossed
+my mind, again recurred, and I almost vowed to myself that, spite his
+protestations, Harry Bolton never could have been at sea before, even as a
+<i>Guinea-pig</i> in an Indiaman; for the slightest acquaintance with the
+sea-life and sailors, should have prevented him, it would seem, from enacting
+this folly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Who&rsquo;s that Chinese mandarin?&rdquo; cried the mate, who had made
+voyages to Canton. &ldquo;Look you, my fine fellow, douse that mainsail now,
+and furl it in a trice.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sir?&rdquo; said Harry, starting back. &ldquo;Is not this the morning
+watch, and is not mine a morning gown?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But though, in my refined friend&rsquo;s estimation, nothing could be more
+appropriate; in the mate&rsquo;s, it was the most monstrous of incongruities;
+and the offensive gown and cap were removed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;It is too bad!&rdquo; exclaimed Harry to me; &ldquo;I meant to lounge
+away the watch in that gown until coffee time;&mdash;and I suppose your
+Hottentot of a mate won&rsquo;t permit a gentleman to smoke his Turkish pipe of
+a morning; but by gad, I&rsquo;ll wear straps to my pantaloons to spite
+him!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oh! that was the rock on which you split, poor Harry! Incensed at the want of
+polite refinement in the mates and crew, Harry, in a pet and pique, only
+determined to provoke them the more; and the storm of indignation he raised
+very soon overwhelmed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors took a special spite to his chest, a large mahogany one, which he
+had had made to order at a furniture warehouse. It was ornamented with brass
+screw-heads, and other devices; and was well filled with those articles of the
+wardrobe in which Harry had sported through a London season; for the various
+vests and pantaloons he had sold in Liverpool, when in want of money, had not
+materially lessened his extensive stock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was curious to listen to the various hints and opinings thrown out by the
+sailors at the occasional glimpses they had of this collection of silks,
+velvets, broadcloths, and satins. I do not know exactly what they thought Harry
+had been; but they seemed unanimous in believing that, by abandoning his
+country, Harry had left more room for the gamblers. Jackson even asked him to
+lift up the lower hem of his browsers, to test the color of his calves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is a noteworthy circumstance, that whenever a slender made youth, of easy
+manners and polite address happens to form one of a ship&rsquo;s company, the
+sailors almost invariably impute his sea-going to an irresistible necessity of
+decamping from terra-firma in order to evade the constables.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These white-fingered gentry must be light-fingered too, they say to themselves,
+or they would not be after putting their hands into our tar. What else can
+bring them to sea?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Cogent and conclusive this; and thus Harry, from the very beginning, was put
+down for a very equivocal character.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sometimes, however, they only made sport of his appearance; especially one
+evening, when his monkey jacket being wet through, he was obliged to mount one
+of his swallow-tailed coats. They said he carried two mizzen-peaks at his
+stern; declared he was a broken-down quill-driver, or a footman to a Portuguese
+running barber, or some old maid&rsquo;s tobacco-boy. As for the captain, it
+had become all the same to Harry as if there were no gentlemanly and
+complaisant Captain Riga on board. For to his no small astonishment,&mdash;but
+just as I had predicted,&mdash;Captain Riga never noticed him now, but left the
+business of indoctrinating him into the little experiences of a
+greenhorn&rsquo;s career solely in the hands of his officers and crew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the worst was to come. For the first few days, whenever there was any
+running aloft to be done, I noticed that Harry was indefatigable in coiling
+away the slack of the rigging about decks; ignoring the fact that his shipmates
+were springing into the shrouds. And when all hands of the watch would be
+engaged <i>clewing up a t&rsquo;-gallant-sail,</i> that is, pulling the proper
+ropes on deck that wrapped the sail up on the yard aloft, Harry would always
+manage to get near the <i>belaying-pin, so</i> that when the time came for two
+of us to spring into the rigging, he would be inordinately fidgety in making
+fast the <i>clew-lines,</i> and would be so absorbed in that occupation, and
+would so elaborate the hitchings round the pin, that it was quite impossible
+for him, after doing so much, to mount over the bulwarks before his comrades
+had got there. However, after securing the clew-lines beyond a possibility of
+their getting loose, Harry would always make a feint of starting in a
+prodigious hurry for the shrouds; but suddenly looking up, and seeing others in
+advance, would retreat, apparently quite chagrined that he had been cut off
+from the opportunity of signalizing his activity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this I was surprised, and spoke to my friend; when the alarming fact was
+confessed, that he had made a private trial of it, and it never would do: <i>he
+could not go aloft;</i> his nerves would not hear of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Then, Harry,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;better you had never been born. Do
+you know what it is that you are coming to? Did you not tell me that you made
+no doubt you would acquit yourself well in the rigging? Did you not say that
+you had been two voyages to Bombay? Harry, you were mad to ship. But you only
+imagine it: try again; and my word for it, you will very soon find yourself as
+much at home among the spars as a bird in a tree.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he could not be induced to try it over again; the fact was, <i>his nerves
+could not stand it;</i> in the course of his courtly career, he had drunk too
+much strong Mocha coffee and gunpowder tea, and had smoked altogether too many
+Havannas.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, as I had repeatedly warned him, the mate singled him out one morning,
+and commanded him to mount to the main-truck, and unreeve the short signal
+halyards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Sir?&rdquo; said Harry, aghast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Away you go!&rdquo; said the mate, snatching a whip&rsquo;s end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t strike me!&rdquo; screamed Harry, drawing himself up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Take that, and along with you,&rdquo; cried the mate, laying the rope
+once across his back, but lightly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;By heaven!&rdquo; cried Harry, wincing&mdash;not with the blow, but the
+insult: and then making a dash at the mate, who, holding out his long arm, kept
+him lazily at bay, and laughed at him, till, had I not feared a broken head, I
+should infallibly have pitched my boy&rsquo;s bulk into the officer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Captain Riga!&rdquo; cried Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t call upon <i>him&rdquo;</i> said the mate; &ldquo;he&rsquo;s
+asleep, and won&rsquo;t wake up till we strike Yankee soundings again. Up you
+go!&rdquo; he added, flourishing the rope&rsquo;s end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Harry looked round among the grinning tars with a glance of terrible
+indignation and agony; and then settling his eye on me, and seeing there no
+hope, but even an admonition of obedience, as his only resource, he made one
+bound into the rigging, and was up at the main-top in a trice. I thought a few
+more springs would take him to the truck, and was a little fearful that in his
+desperation he might then jump overboard; for I had heard of delirious
+greenhorns doing such things at sea, and being lost forever. But no; he stopped
+short, and looked down from the top. Fatal glance! it unstrung his every fiber;
+and I saw him reel, and clutch the shrouds, till the mate shouted out for him
+not to squeeze the tar out of the ropes. &ldquo;Up you go, sir.&rdquo; But
+Harry said nothing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;You Max,&rdquo; cried the mate to the Dutch sailor, &ldquo;spring after
+him, and help him; you understand?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Max went up the rigging hand over hand, and brought his red head with a bump
+against the base of Harry&rsquo;s back. Needs must when the devil drives; and
+higher and higher, with Max bumping him at every step, went my unfortunate
+friend. At last he gained the royal yard, and the thin signal halyards&mdash;,
+hardly bigger than common twine&mdash;were flying in the wind.
+&ldquo;Unreeve!&rdquo; cried the mate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I saw Harry&rsquo;s arm stretched out&mdash;his legs seemed shaking in the
+rigging, even to us, down on deck; and at last, thank heaven! the deed was
+done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He came down pale as death, with bloodshot eyes, and every limb quivering. From
+that moment he never put foot in rattlin; never mounted above the bulwarks; and
+for the residue of the voyage, at least, became an altered person.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the time, he went to the mate&mdash;since he could not get speech of the
+captain&mdash;and conjured him to intercede with Riga, that his name might be
+stricken off from the list of the ship&rsquo;s company, so that he might make
+the voyage as a steerage passenger; for which privilege, he bound himself to
+pay, as soon as he could dispose of some things of his in New York, over and
+above the ordinary passage-money. But the mate gave him a blunt denial; and a
+look of wonder at his effrontery. Once a sailor on board a ship, and
+<i>always</i> a sailor for that voyage, at least; for within so brief a period,
+no officer can bear to associate on terms of any thing like equality with a
+person whom he has ordered about at his pleasure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Harry then told the mate solemnly, that he might do what he pleased, but go
+aloft again he <i>could</i> not, and <i>would</i> not. He would do any thing
+else but that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This affair sealed Harry&rsquo;s fate on board of the Highlander; the crew now
+reckoned him fair play for their worst jibes and jeers, and he led a miserable
+life indeed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Few landsmen can imagine the depressing and self-humiliating effects of finding
+one&rsquo;s self, for the first time, at the beck of illiterate sea-tyrants,
+with no opportunity of exhibiting any trait about you, but your ignorance of
+every thing connected with the sea-life that you lead, and the duties you are
+constantly called upon to perform. In such a sphere, and under such
+circumstances, Isaac Newton and Lord Bacon would be sea-clowns and bumpkins;
+and Napoleon Bonaparte be cuffed and kicked without remorse. In more than one
+instance I have seen the truth of this; and Harry, poor Harry, proved no
+exception. And from the circumstances which exempted me from experiencing the
+bitterest of these evils, I only the more felt for one who, from a strange
+constitutional nervousness, before unknown even to himself, was become as a
+hunted hare to the merciless crew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But how was it that Harry Bolton, who spite of his effeminacy of appearance,
+had evinced, in our London trip, such unmistakable flashes of a spirit not
+easily tamed&mdash;how was it, that he could now yield himself up to the almost
+passive reception of contumely and contempt? Perhaps his spirit, for the time,
+had been broken. But I will not undertake to explain; we are curious creatures,
+as every one knows; and there are passages in the lives of all men, so out of
+keeping with the common tenor of their ways, and so seemingly contradictory of
+themselves, that only He who made us can expound them.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap51"></a>CHAPTER LI.<br/>
+THE EMIGRANTS</h2>
+
+<p>
+After the first miserable weather we experienced at sea, we had intervals of
+foul and fair, mostly the former, however, attended with head winds, till at
+last, after a three days&rsquo; fog and rain, the sun rose cheerily one
+morning, and showed us Cape Clear. Thank heaven, we were out of the weather
+emphatically called <i>&ldquo;Channel weather,&rdquo;</i> and the last we
+should see of the eastern hemisphere was now in plain sight, and all the rest
+was broad ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Land ho!</i> was cried, as the dark purple headland grew out of the north.
+At the cry, the Irish emigrants came rushing up the hatchway, thinking America
+itself was at hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where is it?&rdquo; cried one of them, running out a little way on the
+bowsprit. &ldquo;Is <i>that</i> it?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Aye, it doesn&rsquo;t look much like <i>ould</i> Ireland, does
+it?&rdquo; said Jackson.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Not a bit, honey:&mdash;and how long before we get there?
+to-night?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing could exceed the disappointment and grief of the emigrants, when they
+were at last informed, that the land to the north was their own native island,
+which, after leaving three or four weeks previous in a steamboat for Liverpool,
+was now close to them again; and that, after newly voyaging so many days from
+the Mersey, the Highlander was only bringing them in view of the original home
+whence they started.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were the most simple people I had ever seen. They seemed to have no
+adequate idea of distances; and to them, America must have seemed as a place
+just over a river. Every morning some of them came on deck, to see how much
+nearer we were: and one old man would stand for hours together, looking
+straight off from the bows, as if he expected to see New York city every
+minute, when, perhaps, we were yet two thousand miles distant, and steering,
+moreover, against a head wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The only thing that ever diverted this poor old man from his earnest search for
+land, was the occasional appearance of porpoises under the bows; when he would
+cry out at the top of his voice&mdash;&ldquo;Look, look, ye divils! look at the
+great pigs of the sea!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, the emigrants began to think, that the ship had played them false; and
+that she was bound for the East Indies, or some other remote place; and one
+night, Jackson set a report going among them, that Riga purposed taking them to
+Barbary, and selling them all for slaves; but though some of the old women
+almost believed it, and a great weeping ensued among the children, yet the men
+knew better than to believe such a ridiculous tale.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of all the emigrants, my Italian boy Carlo, seemed most at his ease. He would
+lie all day in a dreamy mood, sunning himself in the long boat, and gazing out
+on the sea. At night, he would bring up his organ, and play for several hours;
+much to the delight of his fellow voyagers, who blessed him and his organ again
+and again; and paid him for his music by furnishing him his meals. Sometimes,
+the steward would come forward, when it happened to be very much of a
+moonlight, with a message from the cabin, for Carlo to repair to the
+quarterdeck, and entertain the gentlemen and ladies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a fiddler on board, as will presently be seen; and sometimes, by
+urgent entreaties, he was induced to unite his music with Carlo&rsquo;s, for
+the benefit of the cabin occupants; but this was only twice or thrice: for this
+fiddler deemed himself considerably elevated above the other
+steerage-passengers; and did not much fancy the idea of fiddling to strangers;
+and thus wear out his elbow, while persons, entirely unknown to him, and in
+whose welfare he felt not the slightest interest, were curveting about in
+famous high spirits. So for the most part, the gentlemen and ladies were fain
+to dance as well as they could to my little Italian&rsquo;s organ.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was the most accommodating organ in the world; for it could play any tune
+that was called for; Carlo pulling in and out the ivory knobs at one side, and
+so manufacturing melody at pleasure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+True, some censorious gentlemen cabin-passengers protested, that such or such
+an air, was not precisely according to Handel or Mozart; and some ladies, whom
+I overheard talking about throwing their nosegays to Malibran at Covent Garden,
+assured the attentive Captain Riga, that Carlo&rsquo;s organ was a most
+wretched affair, and made a horrible din.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Yes, ladies,&rdquo; said the captain, bowing, &ldquo;by your leave, I
+think Carlo&rsquo;s organ must have lost its mother, for it squeals like a pig
+running after its dam.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Harry was incensed at these criticisms; and yet these cabin-people were all
+ready enough to dance to poor Carlo&rsquo;s music.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Carlo&rdquo;&mdash;said I, one night, as he was marching forward from
+the quarter-deck, after one of these sea-quadrilles, which took place during my
+watch on deck:&mdash;&ldquo;Carlo&rdquo;&mdash;said I, &ldquo;what do the
+gentlemen and ladies give you for playing?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Look!&rdquo;&mdash;and he showed me three copper medals of Britannia and
+her shield&mdash;three English pennies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, whenever we discover a dislike in us, toward any one, we should ever be a
+little suspicious of ourselves. It may be, therefore, that the natural
+antipathy with which almost all seamen and steerage-passengers, regard the
+inmates of the cabin, was one cause at least, of my not feeling very charitably
+disposed toward them, myself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Yes: that might have been; but nevertheless, I will let nature have her own way
+for once; and here declare roundly, that, however it was, I cherished a feeling
+toward these cabin-passengers, akin to contempt. Not because they happened to
+be cabin-passengers: not at all: but only because they seemed the most finical,
+miserly, mean men and women, that ever stepped over the Atlantic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of them was an old fellow in a robust looking coat, with broad skirts; he
+had a nose like a bottle of port-wine; and would stand for a whole hour, with
+his legs straddling apart, and his hands deep down in his breeches pockets, as
+if he had two mints at work there, coining guineas. He was an abominable
+looking old fellow, with cold, fat, jelly-like eyes; and avarice,
+heartlessness, and sensuality stamped all over him. He seemed all the time
+going through some process of mental arithmetic; doing sums with dollars and
+cents: his very mouth, wrinkled and drawn up at the corners, looked like a
+purse. When he dies, his skull ought to be turned into a savings box, with the
+till-hole between his teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another of the cabin inmates, was a middle-aged Londoner, in a comical
+Cockney-cut coat, with a pair of semicircular tails: so that he looked as if he
+were sitting in a swing. He wore a spotted neckerchief; a short, little,
+fiery-red vest; and striped pants, very thin in the calf, but very full about
+the waist. There was nothing describable about him but his dress; for he had
+such a meaningless face, I can not remember it; though I have a vague
+impression, that it looked at the time, as if its owner was laboring under the
+mumps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then there were two or three buckish looking young fellows, among the rest; who
+were all the time playing at cards on the poop, under the lee of the
+<i>spanker;</i> or smoking cigars on the taffrail; or sat quizzing the emigrant
+women with opera-glasses, leveled through the windows of the upper cabin. These
+sparks frequently called for the steward to help them to brandy and water, and
+talked about going on to Washington, to see Niagara Falls.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was also an old gentleman, who had brought with him three or four heavy
+files of the <i>London Times,</i> and other papers; and he spent all his hours
+in reading them, on the shady side of the deck, with one leg crossed over the
+other; and without crossed legs, he never read at all. That was indispensable
+to the proper understanding of what he studied. He growled terribly, when
+disturbed by the sailors, who now and then were obliged to move him to get at
+the ropes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for the ladies, I have nothing to say concerning them; for ladies are like
+creeds; if you can not speak well of them, say nothing.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap52"></a>CHAPTER LII.<br/>
+THE EMIGRANTS&rsquo; KITCHEN</h2>
+
+<p>
+I have made some mention of the &ldquo;galley,&rdquo; or great stove for the
+steerage passengers, which was planted over the main hatches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the outward-bound passage, there were so few occupants of the steerage,
+that they had abundant room to do their cooking at this galley. But it was
+otherwise now; for we had four or five hundred in the steerage; and all their
+cooking was to be done by one fire; a pretty large one, to be sure, but,
+nevertheless, small enough, considering the number to be accommodated, and the
+fact that the fire was only to be kindled at certain hours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For the emigrants in these ships are under a sort of martial-law; and in all
+their affairs are regulated by the despotic ordinances of the captain. And
+though it is evident, that to a certain extent this is necessary, and even
+indispensable; yet, as at sea no appeal lies beyond the captain, he too often
+makes unscrupulous use of his power. And as for going to law with him at the
+end of the voyage, you might as well go to law with the Czar of Russia.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At making the fire, the emigrants take turns; as it is often very disagreeable
+work, owing to the pitching of the ship, and the heaving of the spray over the
+uncovered &ldquo;galley.&rdquo; Whenever I had the morning watch, from four to
+eight, I was sure to see some poor fellow crawling up from below about
+daybreak, and go to groping over the deck after bits of rope-yarn, or tarred
+canvas, for kindling-stuff. And no sooner would the fire be fairly made, than
+up came the old women, and men, and children; each armed with an iron pot or
+saucepan; and invariably a great tumult ensued, as to whose turn to cook came
+next; sometimes the more quarrelsome would fight, and upset each other&rsquo;s
+pots and pans.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Once, an English lad came up with a little coffee-pot, which he managed to
+crowd in between two pans. This done, he went below. Soon after a great
+strapping Irishman, in knee-breeches and bare calves, made his appearance; and
+eying the row of things on the fire, asked whose coffee-pot that was; upon
+being told, he removed it, and put his own in its place; saying something about
+that individual place belonging to him; and with that, he turned aside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not long after, the boy came along again; and seeing his pot removed, made a
+violent exclamation, and replaced it; which the Irishman no sooner perceived,
+than he rushed at him, with his fists doubled. The boy snatched up the boiling
+coffee, and spirted its contents all about the fellow&rsquo;s bare legs; which
+incontinently began to dance involuntary hornpipes and fandangoes, as a
+preliminary to giving chase to the boy, who by this time, however, had
+decamped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many similar scenes occurred every day; nor did a single day pass, but scores
+of the poor people got no chance whatever to do their cooking.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was bad enough; but it was a still more miserable thing, to see these poor
+emigrants wrangling and fighting together for the want of the most ordinary
+accommodations. But thus it is, that the very hardships to which such beings
+are subjected, instead of uniting them, only tends, by imbittering their
+tempers, to set them against each other; and thus they themselves drive the
+strongest rivet into the chain, by which their social superiors hold them
+subject.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was with a most reluctant hand, that every evening in the second dog-watch,
+at the mate&rsquo;s command, I would march up to the fire, and giving notice to
+the assembled crowd, that the time was come to extinguish it, would dash it out
+with my bucket of salt water; though many, who had long waited for a chance to
+cook, had now to go away disappointed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The staple food of the Irish emigrants was oatmeal and water, boiled into what
+is sometimes called <i>mush;</i> by the Dutch is known as <i>supaan;</i> by
+sailors <i>burgoo;</i> by the New Englanders <i>hasty-pudding;</i> in which
+hasty-pudding, by the way, the poet Barlow found the materials for a sort of
+epic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Some of the steerage passengers, however, were provided with sea-biscuit, and
+other perennial food, that was eatable all the year round, fire or no fire.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were several, moreover, who seemed better to do in the world than the
+rest; who were well furnished with hams, cheese, Bologna sausages, Dutch
+herrings, alewives, and other delicacies adapted to the contingencies of a
+voyager in the steerage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a little old Englishman on board, who had been a grocer ashore, whose
+greasy trunks seemed all pantries; and he was constantly using himself for a
+cupboard, by transferring their contents into his own interior. He was a little
+light of head, I always thought. He particularly doated on his long strings of
+sausages; and would sometimes take them out, and play with them, wreathing them
+round him, like an Indian juggler with charmed snakes. What with this
+diversion, and eating his cheese, and helping himself from an inexhaustible
+junk bottle, and smoking his pipe, and meditating, this crack-pated grocer made
+time jog along with him at a tolerably easy pace.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But by far the most considerable man in the steerage, in point of pecuniary
+circumstances at least, was a slender little pale-faced English tailor, who it
+seemed had engaged a passage for himself and wife in some imaginary section of
+the ship, called the <i>second cabin,</i> which was feigned to combine the
+comforts of the first cabin with the cheapness of the steerage. But it turned
+out that this second cabin was comprised in the after part of the steerage
+itself, with nothing intervening but a name. So to his no small disgust, he
+found himself herding with the rabble; and his complaints to the captain were
+unheeded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This luckless tailor was tormented the whole voyage by his wife, who was young
+and handsome; just such a beauty as farmers&rsquo;-boys fall in love with; she
+had bright eyes, and red cheeks, and looked plump and happy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She was a sad coquette; and did not turn away, as she was bound to do, from the
+dandy glances of the cabin bucks, who ogled her through their double-barreled
+opera glasses. This enraged the tailor past telling; he would remonstrate with
+his wife, and scold her; and lay his matrimonial commands upon her, to go below
+instantly, out of sight. But the lady was not to be tyrannized over; and so she
+told him. Meantime, the bucks would be still framing her in their lenses,
+mightily enjoying the fun. The last resources of the poor tailor would be, to
+start up, and make a dash at the rogues, with clenched fists; but upon getting
+as far as the mainmast, the mate would accost him from over the rope that
+divided them, and beg leave to communicate the fact, that he could come no
+further. This unfortunate tailor was also a fiddler; and when fairly baited
+into desperation, would rush for his instrument, and try to get rid of his
+wrath by playing the most savage, remorseless airs he could think of.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While thus employed, perhaps his wife would accost him&mdash;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Billy, my dear;&rdquo; and lay her soft hand on his shoulder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But Billy, he only fiddled harder.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Billy, my love!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bow went faster and faster.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Come, now, Billy, my dear little fellow, let&rsquo;s make it all
+up;&rdquo; and she bent over his knees, looking bewitchingly up at him, with
+her irresistible eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Down went fiddle and bow; and the couple would sit together for an hour or two,
+as pleasant and affectionate as possible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the next day, the chances were, that the old feud would be renewed, which
+was certain to be the case at the first glimpse of an opera-glass from the
+cabin.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap53"></a>CHAPTER LIII.<br/>
+THE HORATII AND CURIATII</h2>
+
+<p>
+With a slight alteration, I might begin this chapter after the manner of Livy,
+in the 24th section of his first book:&mdash;&ldquo;It <i>happened, that in
+each family were three twin brothers, between whom there was little disparity
+in point of age or of strength.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the steerage passengers of the Highlander, were two women from Armagh, in
+Ireland, widows and sisters, who had each three twin sons, born, as they said,
+on the same day.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were ten years old. Each three of these six cousins were as like as the
+mutually reflected figures in a kaleidoscope; and like the forms seen in a
+kaleidoscope, together, as well as separately, they seemed to form a complete
+figure. But, though besides this fraternal likeness, all six boys bore a strong
+cousin-german resemblance to each other; yet, the O&rsquo;Briens were in
+disposition quite the reverse of the O&rsquo;Regans. The former were a timid,
+silent trio, who used to revolve around their mother&rsquo;s waist, and seldom
+quit the maternal orbit; whereas, the O&rsquo;Regans were &ldquo;broths of
+boys,&rdquo; full of mischief and fun, and given to all manner of devilment,
+like the tails of the comets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Early every morning, Mrs. O&rsquo;Regan emerged from the steerage, driving her
+spirited twins before her, like a riotous herd of young steers; and made her
+way to the capacious deck-tub, full of salt water, pumped up from the sea, for
+the purpose of washing down the ship. Three splashes, and the three boys were
+ducking and diving together in the brine; their mother engaged in
+<i>shampooing</i> them, though it was haphazard sort of work enough; a rub
+here, and a scrub there, as she could manage to fasten on a stray limb.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pat, ye divil, hould still while I wash ye. Ah! but it&rsquo;s you,
+Teddy, you rogue. Arrah, now, Mike, ye spalpeen, don&rsquo;t be mixing your
+legs up with Pat&rsquo;s.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little rascals, leaping and scrambling with delight, enjoyed the sport
+mightily; while this indefatigable, but merry matron, manipulated them all
+over, as if it were a matter of conscience.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meanwhile, Mrs. O&rsquo;Brien would be standing on the boatswain&rsquo;s
+locker&mdash;or rope and tar-pot pantry in the vessel&rsquo;s bows&mdash;with a
+large old quarto Bible, black with age, laid before her between the
+knight-heads, and reading aloud to her three meek little lambs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors took much pleasure in the deck-tub performances of the
+O&rsquo;Regans, and greatly admired them always for their archness and
+activity; but the tranquil O&rsquo;Briens they did not fancy so much. More
+especially they disliked the grave matron herself; hooded in rusty black; and
+they had a bitter grudge against her book. To that, and the incantations
+muttered over it, they ascribed the head winds that haunted us; and Blunt, our
+Irish cockney, really believed that Mrs. O&rsquo;Brien purposely came on deck
+every morning, in order to secure a foul wind for the next ensuing twenty-four
+hours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, upon her coming forward one morning, Max the Dutchman accosted her,
+saying he was sorry for it, but if she went between the knight-heads again with
+her book, the crew would throw it overboard for her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, although contrasted in character, there existed a great warmth of
+affection between the two families of twins, which upon this occasion was
+curiously manifested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Notwithstanding the rebuke and threat of the sailor, the widow silently
+occupied her old place; and with her children clustering round her, began her
+low, muttered reading, standing right in the extreme bows of the ship, and
+slightly leaning over them, as if addressing the multitudinous waves from a
+floating pulpit. Presently Max came behind her, snatched the book from her
+hands, and threw it overboard. The widow gave a wail, and her boys set up a
+cry. Their cousins, then ducking in the water close by, at once saw the cause
+of the cry; and springing from the tub, like so many dogs, seized Max by the
+legs, biting and striking at him: which, the before timid little O&rsquo;Briens
+no sooner perceived, than they, too, threw themselves on the enemy, and the
+amazed seaman found himself baited like a bull by all six boys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here it gives me joy to record one good thing on the part of the mate. He
+saw the fray, and its beginning; and rushing forward, told Max that he would
+harm the boys at his peril; while he cheered them on, as if rejoiced at their
+giving the fellow such a tussle. At last Max, sorely scratched, bit, pinched,
+and every way aggravated, though of course without a serious bruise, cried out
+&ldquo;enough!&rdquo; and the assailants were ordered to quit him; but though
+the three O&rsquo;Briens obeyed, the three O&rsquo;Regans hung on to him like
+leeches, and had to be dragged off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;There now, you rascal,&rdquo; cried the mate, &ldquo;throw overboard
+another Bible, and I&rsquo;ll send you after it without a bowline.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This event gave additional celebrity to the twins throughout the vessel. That
+morning all six were invited to the quarter-deck, and reviewed by the
+cabin-passengers, the ladies manifesting particular interest in them, as they
+always do concerning twins, which some of them show in public parks and
+gardens, by stopping to look at them, and questioning their nurses.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And were you all born at one time?&rdquo; asked an old lady, letting her
+eye run in wonder along the even file of white heads.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Indeed, an&rsquo; we were,&rdquo; said Teddy; &ldquo;wasn&rsquo;t we,
+mother?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many more questions were asked and answered, when a collection was taken up for
+their benefit among these magnanimous cabin-passengers, which resulted in
+starting all six boys in the world with a penny apiece.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I never could look at these little fellows without an inexplicable feeling
+coming over me; and though there was nothing so very remarkable or
+unprecedented about them, except the singular coincidence of two sisters
+simultaneously making the world such a generous present; yet, the mere fact of
+there being twins always seemed curious; in fact, to me at least, all twins are
+prodigies; and still I hardly know why this should be; for all of us in our own
+persons furnish numerous examples of the same phenomenon. Are not our thumbs
+twins? A regular Castor and Pollux? And all of our fingers? Are not our arms,
+hands, legs, feet, eyes, ears, all twins; born at one birth, and as much alike
+as they possibly can be?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Can it be, that the Greek grammarians invented their dual number for the
+particular benefit of twins?
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap54"></a>CHAPTER LIV.<br/>
+SOME SUPERIOR OLD NAIL-ROD AND <i>PIG-TAIL</i></h2>
+
+<p>
+It has been mentioned how advantageously my shipmates disposed of their tobacco
+in Liverpool; but it is to be related how those nefarious commercial
+speculations of theirs reduced them to sad extremities in the end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+True to their improvident character, and seduced by the high prices paid for
+the weed in England, they had there sold off by far the greater portion of what
+tobacco they had; even inducing the mate to surrender the portion he had
+secured under lock and key by command of the Custom-house officers. So that
+when the crew were about two weeks out, on the homeward-bound passage, it
+became sorrowfully evident that tobacco was at a premium.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, one of the favorite pursuits of sailors during a dogwatch below at sea is
+cards; and though they do not understand whist, cribbage, and games of that
+kidney, yet they are adepts at what is called
+<i>&ldquo;High-low-Jack-and-the-game,&rdquo;</i> which name, indeed, has a
+Jackish and nautical flavor. Their stakes are generally so many plugs of
+tobacco, which, like rouleaux of guineas, are piled on their chests when they
+play. Judge, then, the wicked zest with which the Highlander&rsquo;s crew now
+shuffled and dealt the pack; and how the interest curiously and invertedly
+increased, as the stakes necessarily became less and less; and finally resolved
+themselves into <i>&ldquo;chaws.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So absorbed, at last, did they become at this business, that some of them,
+after being hard at work during a nightwatch on deck, would rob themselves of
+rest below, in order to have a brush at the cards. And as it is very difficult
+sleeping in the presence of gamblers; especially if they chance to be sailors,
+whose conversation at all times is apt to be boisterous; these fellows would
+often be driven out of the forecastle by those who desired to rest. They were
+obliged to repair on deck, and make a card-table of it; and invariably, in such
+cases, there was a great deal of contention, a great many ungentlemanly charges
+of nigging and cheating; and, now and then, a few parenthetical blows were
+exchanged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this was not so much to be wondered at, seeing they could see but very
+little, being provided with no light but that of a midnight sky; and the cards,
+from long wear and rough usage, having become exceedingly torn and tarry, so
+much so, that several members of the four suits might have seceded from their
+respective clans, and formed into a fifth tribe, under the name of
+<i>&ldquo;Tar-spots.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every day the tobacco grew scarcer and scarcer; till at last it became
+necessary to adopt the greatest possible economy in its use. The modicum
+constituting an ordinary <i>&ldquo;chaw,&rdquo;</i> was made to last a whole
+day; and at night, permission being had from the cook, this self-same
+<i>&ldquo;chaw&rdquo;</i> was placed in the oven of the stove, and there dried;
+so as to do duty in a pipe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the end not a plug was to be had; and deprived of a solace and a stimulus,
+on which sailors so much rely while at sea, the crew became absent, moody, and
+sadly tormented with the hypos. They were something like opium-smokers,
+suddenly cut off from their drug. They would sit on their chests, forlorn and
+moping; with a steadfast sadness, eying the forecastle lamp, at which they had
+lighted so many a pleasant pipe. With touching eloquence they recalled those
+happier evenings&mdash;the time of smoke and vapor; when, after a whole
+day&rsquo;s delectable <i>&ldquo;chawing,&rdquo;</i> they beguiled themselves
+with their genial, and most companionable puffs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One night, when they seemed more than usually cast down and disconsolate,
+Blunt, the Irish cockney, started up suddenly with an idea in his
+head&mdash;&ldquo;Boys, let&rsquo;s search under the bunks!&rdquo; Bless you,
+Blunt! what a happy conceit! Forthwith, the chests were dragged out; the dark
+places explored; and two sticks of <i>nail-rod</i> tobacco, and several old
+<i>&ldquo;chaws,&rdquo;</i> thrown aside by sailors on some previous voyage,
+were their cheering reward. They were impartially divided by Jackson, who, upon
+this occasion, acquitted himself to the satisfaction of all.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their mode of dividing this tobacco was the rather curious one generally
+adopted by sailors, when the highest possible degree of impartiality is
+desirable. I will describe it, recommending its earnest consideration to all
+heirs, who may hereafter divide an inheritance; for if they adopted this
+nautical method, that universally slanderous aphorism of Lavater would be
+forever rendered nugatory&mdash;&ldquo;Expect <i>not to understand any man till
+you have divided with him an inheritance.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <i>nail-rods</i> they cut as evenly as possible into as many parts as there
+were men to be supplied; and this operation having been performed in the
+presence of all, Jackson, placing the tobacco before him, his face to the wall,
+and back to the company, struck one of the bits of weed with his knife, crying
+out, &ldquo;Whose is this?&rdquo; Whereupon a respondent, previously pitched
+upon, replied, at a venture, from the opposite corner of the forecastle,
+&ldquo;Blunt&rsquo;s;&rdquo; and to Blunt it went; and so on, in like manner,
+till all were served.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I put it to you, lawyers&mdash;shade of Blackstone, I invoke you&mdash;if a
+more impartial procedure could be imagined than this?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the nail-rods and last-voyage <i>&ldquo;chaws&rdquo;</i> were soon gone,
+and then, after a short interval of comparative gayety, the men again drooped,
+and relapsed into gloom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They soon hit upon an ingenious device, however&mdash;but not altogether new
+among seamen&mdash;to allay the severity of the depression under which they
+languished. Ropes were unstranded, and the yarns picked apart; and, cut up into
+small bits, were used as a substitute for the weed. Old ropes were preferred;
+especially those which had long lain in the hold, and had contracted an
+epicurean dampness, making still richer their ancient, cheese-like flavor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the middle of most large ropes, there is a straight, central part, round
+which the exterior strands are twisted. When in picking oakum, upon various
+occasions, I have chanced, among the old junk used at such times, to light upon
+a fragment of this species of rope, I have ever taken, I know not what kind of
+strange, nutty delight in untwisting it slowly, and gradually coming upon its
+deftly hidden and aromatic <i>&ldquo;heart;&rdquo;</i> for so this central
+piece is denominated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It is generally of a rich, tawny, Indian hue, somewhat inclined to luster; is
+exceedingly agreeable to the touch; diffuses a pungent odor, as of an old dusty
+bottle of Port, newly opened above ground; and, altogether, is an object which
+no man, who enjoys his dinners, could refrain from hanging over, and caressing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nor is this delectable morsel of <i>old junk</i> wanting in many interesting,
+mournful, and tragic suggestions. Who can say in what gales it may have been;
+in what remote seas it may have sailed? How many stout masts of seventy-fours
+and frigates it may have staid in the tempest? How deep it may have lain, as a
+hawser, at the bottom of strange harbors? What outlandish fish may have nibbled
+at it in the water, and what un-catalogued sea-fowl may have pecked at it, when
+forming part of a lofty stay or a shroud?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, this particular part of the rope, this nice little &ldquo;cut&rdquo; it
+was, that among the sailors was the most eagerly sought after. And getting hold
+of a foot or two of old cable, they would cut into it lovingly, to see whether
+it had any <i>&ldquo;tenderloin.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For my own part, nevertheless, I can not say that this tit-bit was at all an
+agreeable one in the mouth; however pleasant to the sight of an antiquary, or
+to the nose of an epicure in nautical fragrancies. Indeed, though possibly I
+might have been mistaken, I thought it had rather an astringent, acrid taste;
+probably induced by the tar, with which the flavor of all ropes is more or less
+vitiated. But the sailors seemed to like it, and at any rate nibbled at it with
+great gusto. They converted one pocket of their trowsers into a junk-shop, and
+when solicited by a shipmate for a <i>&ldquo;chaw,&rdquo;</i> would produce a
+small coil of rope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another device adopted to alleviate their hardships, was the substitution of
+dried tea-leaves, in place of tobacco, for their pipes. No one has ever supped
+in a forecastle at sea, without having been struck by the prodigious residuum
+of tea-leaves, or cabbage stalks, in his tin-pot of bohea. There was no lack of
+material to supply every pipe-bowl among us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I had almost forgotten to relate the most noteworthy thing in this matter;
+namely, that notwithstanding the general scarcity of the genuine weed, Jackson
+was provided with a supply; nor did it give out, until very shortly previous to
+our arrival in port.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the lowest depths of despair at the loss of their precious solace, when the
+sailors would be seated inconsolable as the Babylonish captives, Jackson would
+sit cross-legged in his bunk, which was an upper one, and enveloped in a cloud
+of tobacco smoke, would look down upon the mourners below, with a sardonic grin
+at their forlornness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He recalled to mind their folly in selling for filthy lucre, their supplies of
+the weed; he painted their stupidity; he enlarged upon the sufferings they had
+brought upon themselves; he exaggerated those sufferings, and every way
+derided, reproached, twitted, and hooted at them. No one dared to return his
+scurrilous animadversions, nor did any presume to ask him to relieve their
+necessities out of his fullness. On the contrary, as has been just related,
+they divided with him the <i>nail-rods</i> they found.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The extraordinary dominion of this one miserable Jackson, over twelve or
+fourteen strong, healthy tars, is a riddle, whose solution must be left to the
+philosophers.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap55"></a>CHAPTER LV.<br/>
+DRAWING NIGH TO THE LAST SCENE IN JACKSON&rsquo;S CAREER</h2>
+
+<p>
+The closing allusion to Jackson in the chapter preceding, reminds me of a
+circumstance&mdash;which, perhaps, should have been mentioned before&mdash;that
+after we had been at sea about ten days, he pronounced himself too unwell to do
+duty, and accordingly went below to his bunk. And here, with the exception of a
+few brief intervals of sunning himself in fine weather, he remained on his
+back, or seated cross-legged, during the remainder of the homeward-bound
+passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brooding there, in his infernal gloom, though nothing but a castaway sailor in
+canvas trowsers, this man was still a picture, worthy to be painted by the
+dark, moody hand of Salvator. In any of that master&rsquo;s lowering
+sea-pieces, representing the desolate crags of Calabria, with a midnight
+shipwreck in the distance, this Jackson&rsquo;s would have been the face to
+paint for the doomed vessel&rsquo;s figurehead, seamed and blasted by
+lightning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Though the more sneaking and cowardly of my shipmates whispered among
+themselves, that Jackson, sure of his wages, whether on duty or off, was only
+feigning indisposition, nevertheless it was plain that, from his excesses in
+Liverpool, the malady which had long fastened its fangs in his flesh, was now
+gnawing into his vitals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His cheek became thinner and yellower, and the bones projected like those of a
+skull. His snaky eyes rolled in red sockets; nor could he lift his hand without
+a violent tremor; while his racking cough many a time startled us from sleep.
+Yet still in his tremulous grasp he swayed his scepter, and ruled us all like a
+tyrant to the last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The weaker and weaker he grew, the more outrageous became his treatment of the
+crew. The prospect of the speedy and unshunable death now before him, seemed to
+exasperate his misanthropic soul into madness; and as if he had indeed sold it
+to Satan, he seemed determined to die with a curse between his teeth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I can never think of him, even now, reclining in his bunk, and with short
+breaths panting out his maledictions, but I am reminded of that misanthrope
+upon the throne of the world&mdash;the diabolical Tiberius at Caprese; who even
+in his self-exile, imbittered by bodily pangs, and unspeakable mental terrors
+only known to the damned on earth, yet did not give over his blasphemies but
+endeavored to drag down with him to his own perdition, all who came within the
+evil spell of his power. And though Tiberius came in the succession of the
+Caesars, and though unmatchable Tacitus has embalmed his carrion, yet do I
+account this Yankee Jackson full as dignified a personage as he, and as well
+meriting his lofty gallows in history; even though he was a nameless vagabond
+without an epitaph, and none, but I, narrate what he was. For there is no
+dignity in wickedness, whether in purple or rags; and hell is a democracy of
+devils, where all are equals. There, Nero howls side by side with his own
+malefactors. If Napoleon were truly but a martial murderer, I pay him no more
+homage than I would a felon. Though Milton&rsquo;s Satan dilutes our abhorrence
+with admiration, it is only because he is not a genuine being, but something
+altered from a genuine original. We gather not from the four gospels alone, any
+high-raised fancies concerning this Satan; we only know him from thence as the
+personification of the essence of evil, which, who but pickpockets and burglars
+will admire? But this takes not from the merit of our high-priest of poetry; it
+only enhances it, that with such unmitigated evil for his material, he should
+build up his most goodly structure. But in historically canonizing on earth the
+condemned below, and lifting up and lauding the illustrious damned, we do but
+make examples of wickedness; and call upon ambition to do some great iniquity,
+and be sure of fame.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap56"></a>CHAPTER LVI.<br/>
+UNDER THE LEE OF THE LONG-BOAT, REDBURN AND HARRY HOLD CONFIDENTIAL
+COMMUNION</h2>
+
+<p>
+A sweet thing is a song; and though the Hebrew captives hung their harps on the
+willows, that they could not sing the melodies of Palestine before the haughty
+beards of the Babylonians; yet, to themselves, those melodies of other times
+and a distant land were as sweet as the June dew on Hermon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And poor Harry was as the Hebrews. He, too, had been carried away captive,
+though his chief captor and foe was himself; and he, too, many a night, was
+called upon to sing for those who through the day had insulted and derided him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His voice was just the voice to proceed from a small, silken person like his;
+it was gentle and liquid, and meandered and tinkled through the words of a
+song, like a musical brook that winds and wantons by pied and pansied margins.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>I</i> can&rsquo;t sing to-night&rdquo;&mdash;sadly said Harry to the
+Dutchman, who with his watchmates requested him to while away the middle watch
+with his melody&mdash;&ldquo;I can&rsquo;t sing to-night. But,
+Wellingborough,&rdquo; he whispered,&mdash;and I stooped my ear,&mdash;
+&ldquo;come <i>you</i> with me under the lee of the long-boat, and there
+I&rsquo;ll hum you an air.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was <i>The Banks of the Blue Moselle.</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Poor, poor Harry! and a thousand times friendless and forlorn! To be singing
+that thing, which was only meant to be warbled by falling fountains in gardens,
+or in elegant alcoves in drawing-rooms,&mdash;to be singing it
+<i>here&mdash;here,</i> as I live, under the tarry lee of our long-boat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he sang, and sang, as I watched the waves, and peopled them all with
+sprites, and cried <i>&ldquo;chassez!&rdquo; &ldquo;hands across!&rdquo;</i> to
+the multitudinous quadrilles, all danced on the moonlit, musical floor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But though it went so hard with my friend to sing his songs to this ruffian
+crew, whom he hated, even in his dreams, till the foam flew from his mouth
+while he slept; yet at last I prevailed upon him to master his feelings, and
+make them subservient to his interests. For so delighted, even with the rudest
+minstrelsy, are sailors, that I well knew Harry possessed a spell over them,
+which, for the time at least, they could not resist; and it might induce them
+to treat with more deference the being who was capable of yielding them such
+delight. Carlo&rsquo;s organ they did not so much care for; but the voice of my
+Bury blade was an accordion in their ears.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So one night, on the windlass, he sat and sang; and from the ribald jests so
+common to sailors, the men slid into silence at every verse. Hushed, and more
+hushed they grew, till at last Harry sat among them like Orpheus among the
+charmed leopards and tigers. Harmless now the fangs with which they were wont
+to tear my zebra, and backward curled in velvet paws; and fixed their once
+glaring eyes in fascinated and fascinating brilliancy. Ay, still and hissingly
+all, for a time, they relinquished their prey.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, during the voyage, the treatment of the crew threw Harry more and more
+upon myself for companionship; and few can keep constant company with another,
+without revealing some, at least, of their secrets; for all of us yearn for
+sympathy, even if we do not for love; and to be intellectually alone is a thing
+only tolerable to genius, whose cherisher and inspirer is solitude.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But though my friend became more communicative concerning his past career than
+ever he had been before, yet he did not make plain many things in his hitherto
+but partly divulged history, which I was very curious to know; and especially
+he never made the remotest allusion to aught connected with our trip to London;
+while the oath of secrecy by which he had bound me held my curiosity on that
+point a captive. However, as it was, Harry made many very interesting
+disclosures; and if he did not gratify me more in that respect, he atoned for
+it in a measure, by dwelling upon the future, and the prospects, such as they
+were, which the future held out to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He confessed that he had no money but a few shillings left from the expenses of
+our return from London; that only by selling some more of his clothing, could
+he pay for his first week&rsquo;s board in New York; and that he was altogether
+without any regular profession or business, upon which, by his own exertions,
+he could securely rely for support. And yet, he told me that he was determined
+never again to return to England; and that somewhere in America he must work
+out his temporal felicity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have forgotten England,&rdquo; he said, &ldquo;and never more mean to
+think of it; so tell me, Wellingborough, what am I to do in America?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a puzzling question, and full of grief to me, who, young though I was,
+had been well rubbed, curried, and ground down to fine powder in the hopper of
+an evil fortune, and who therefore could sympathize with one in similar
+circumstances. For though we may look grave and behave kindly and considerately
+to a friend in calamity; yet, if we have never actually experienced something
+like the woe that weighs him down, we can not with the best grace proffer our
+sympathy. And perhaps there is no true sympathy but between equals; and it may
+be, that we should distrust that man&rsquo;s sincerity, who stoops to condole
+with us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So Harry and I, two friendless wanderers, beguiled many a long watch by talking
+over our common affairs. But inefficient, as a benefactor, as I certainly was;
+still, being an American, and returning to my home; even as he was a stranger,
+and hurrying from his; therefore, I stood toward him in the attitude of the
+prospective doer of the honors of my country; I accounted him the
+nation&rsquo;s guest. Hence, I esteemed it more befitting, that I should rather
+talk with him, than he with me: that <i>his</i> prospects and plans should
+engage our attention, in preference to my own.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, seeing that Harry was so brave a songster, and could sing such bewitching
+airs: I suggested whether his musical talents could not be turned to account.
+The thought struck him most favorably&mdash;&ldquo;Gad, my boy, you have hit
+it, you have,&rdquo; and then he went on to mention, that in some places in
+England, it was customary for two or three young men of highly respectable
+families, of undoubted antiquity, but unfortunately in lamentably decayed
+circumstances, and thread-bare coats&mdash;it was customary for two or three
+young gentlemen, so situated, to obtain their livelihood by their voices:
+coining their silvery songs into silvery shillings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They wandered from door to door, and rang the bell&mdash;Are <i>the ladies and
+gentlemen in?</i> Seeing them at least gentlemanly looking, if not sumptuously
+appareled, the servant generally admitted them at once; and when the people
+entered to greet them, their spokesman would rise with a gentle bow, and a
+smile, and say, <i>We come, ladies and gentlemen, to sing you a song: we are
+singers, at your service.</i> And so, without waiting reply, forth they burst
+into song; and having most mellifluous voices, enchanted and transported all
+auditors; so much so, that at the conclusion of the entertainment, they very
+seldom failed to be well recompensed, and departed with an invitation to return
+again, and make the occupants of that dwelling once more delighted and happy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Could not something of this kind now, be done in New York?&rdquo; said
+Harry, &ldquo;or are there no parlors with ladies in them, there?&rdquo; he
+anxiously added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Again I assured him, as I had often done before, that New York was a civilized
+and enlightened town; with a large population, fine streets, fine houses, nay,
+plenty of omnibuses; and that for the most part, he would almost think himself
+in England; so similar to England, in essentials, was this outlandish America
+that haunted him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I could not but be struck&mdash;and had I not been, from my birth, as it were,
+a cosmopolite&mdash;I had been amazed at his skepticism with regard to the
+civilization of my native land. A greater patriot than myself might have
+resented his insinuations. He seemed to think that we Yankees lived in wigwams,
+and wore bear-skins. After all, Harry was a spice of a Cockney, and had shut up
+his Christendom in London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having then assured him, that I could see no reason, why he should not play the
+troubadour in New York, as well as elsewhere; he suddenly popped upon me the
+question, whether I would not join him in the enterprise; as it would be quite
+out of the question to go alone on such a business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Said I, &ldquo;My dear Bury, I have no more voice for a ditty, than a dumb man
+has for an oration. Sing? Such Macadamized lungs have I, that I think myself
+well off, that I can talk; let alone nightingaling.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So that plan was quashed; and by-and-by Harry began to give up the idea of
+singing himself into a livelihood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No, I won&rsquo;t sing for my mutton,&rdquo; said he&mdash;&ldquo;what
+would Lady Georgiana say?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;If I could see her ladyship once, I might tell you, Harry,&rdquo;
+returned I, who did not exactly doubt him, but felt ill at ease for my bosom
+friend&rsquo;s conscience, when he alluded to his various noble and right
+honorable friends and relations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But surely, Bury, my friend, you must write a clerkly hand, among your
+other accomplishments; and <i>that</i> at least, will be sure to help
+you.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I <i>do</i> write a hand,&rdquo; he gladly rejoined&mdash;&ldquo;there,
+look at the implement!&mdash;do you not think, that such a hand as <i>that</i>
+might dot an <i>i,</i> or cross a <i>t,</i> with a touching grace and
+tenderness?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, but it did betoken a most excellent penmanship. It was small; and the
+fingers were long and thin; the knuckles softly rounded; the nails
+hemispherical at the base; and the smooth palm furnishing few characters for an
+Egyptian fortune-teller to read. It was not as the sturdy farmer&rsquo;s hand
+of Cincinnatus, who followed the plough and guided the state; but it was as the
+perfumed hand of Petronius Arbiter, that elegant young buck of a Roman, who
+once cut great Seneca dead in the forum.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His hand alone, would have entitled my Bury blade to the suffrages of that
+Eastern potentate, who complimented Lord Byron upon his feline fingers,
+declaring that they furnished indubitable evidence of his noble birth. And so
+it did: for Lord Byron was as all the rest of us&mdash;the son of a <i>man.</i>
+And so are the dainty-handed, and wee-footed half-cast paupers in Lima; who, if
+their hands and feet were entitled to consideration, would constitute the
+oligarchy of all Peru.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Folly and foolishness! to think that a gentleman is known by his finger-nails,
+like Nebuchadnezzar, when his grew long in the pasture: or that the badge of
+nobility is to be found in the smallness of the foot, when even a fish has no
+foot at all!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dandies! amputate yourselves, if you will; but know, and be assured, oh,
+democrats, that, like a pyramid, a great man stands on a broad base. It is only
+the brittle porcelain pagoda, that tottles on a toe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But though Harry&rsquo;s hand was lady-like looking, and had once been white as
+the queen&rsquo;s cambric handkerchief, and free from a stain as the reputation
+of Diana; yet, his late pulling and hauling of halyards and clew-lines, and his
+occasional dabbling in tar-pots and slush-shoes, had somewhat subtracted from
+its original daintiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Often he ruefully eyed it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oh! hand! thought Harry, ah, hand! what have you come to? Is it seemly, that
+you should be polluted with pitch, when you once handed countesses to their
+coaches? Is <i>this</i> the hand I kissed to the divine Georgiana? with which I
+pledged Lady Blessington, and ratified my bond to Lord Lovely? <i>This</i> the
+hand that Georgiana clasped to her bosom, when she vowed she was
+mine?&mdash;Out of sight, recreant and apostate!&mdash;deep
+down&mdash;disappear in this foul monkey-jacket pocket where I thrust you!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After many long conversations, it was at last pretty well decided, that upon
+our arrival at New York, some means should be taken among my few friends there,
+to get Harry a place in a mercantile house, where he might flourish his pen,
+and gently exercise his delicate digits, by traversing some soft foolscap; in
+the same way that slim, pallid ladies are gently drawn through a park for an
+airing.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap57"></a>CHAPTER LVII.<br/>
+ALMOST A FAMINE</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mammy! mammy! come and see the sailors eating out of little troughs,
+just like our pigs at home.&rdquo; Thus exclaimed one of the steerage children,
+who at dinner-time was peeping down into the forecastle, where the crew were
+assembled, helping themselves from the &ldquo;kids,&rdquo; which, indeed,
+resemble hog-troughs not a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Pigs, is it?&rdquo; coughed Jackson, from his bunk, where he sat
+presiding over the banquet, but not partaking, like a devil who had lost his
+appetite by chewing sulphur.&mdash;&ldquo;Pigs, is it?&mdash;and the day is
+close by, ye spalpeens, when you&rsquo;ll want to be after taking a sup at our
+troughs!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This malicious prophecy proved true.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As day followed day without glimpse of shore or reef, and head winds drove the
+ship back, as hounds a deer; the improvidence and shortsightedness of the
+passengers in the steerage, with regard to their outfits for the voyage, began
+to be followed by the inevitable results.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many of them at last went aft to the mate, saying that they had nothing to eat,
+their provisions were expended, and they must be supplied from the ship&rsquo;s
+stores, or starve.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was told to the captain, who was obliged to issue a ukase from the cabin,
+that every steerage passenger, whose destitution was demonstrable, should be
+given one sea-biscuit and two potatoes a day; a sort of substitute for a muffin
+and a brace of poached eggs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this scanty ration was quite insufficient to satisfy their hunger: hardly
+enough to satisfy the necessities of a healthy adult. The consequence was, that
+all day long, and all through the night, scores of the emigrants went about the
+decks, seeking what they might devour. They plundered the chicken-coop; and
+disguising the fowls, cooked them at the public galley. They made inroads upon
+the pig-pen in the boat, and carried off a promising young shoat: <i>him</i>
+they devoured raw, not venturing to make an incognito of his carcass; they
+prowled about the cook&rsquo;s caboose, till he threatened them with a ladle of
+scalding water; they waylaid the steward on his regular excursions from the
+cook to the cabin; they hung round the forecastle, to rob the bread-barge; they
+beset the sailors, like beggars in the streets, craving a mouthful in the name
+of the Church.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length, to such excesses were they driven, that the Grand Russian, Captain
+Riga, issued another ukase, and to this effect: Whatsoever emigrant is found
+guilty of stealing, the same shall be tied into the rigging and flogged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this, there were secret movements in the steerage, which almost alarmed me
+for the safety of the ship; but nothing serious took place, after all; and they
+even acquiesced in, or did not resent, a singular punishment which the captain
+caused to be inflicted upon a culprit of their clan, as a substitute for a
+flogging. For no doubt he thought that such rigorous discipline as <i>that</i>
+might exasperate five hundred emigrants into an insurrection.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A head was fitted to one of the large deck-tubs&mdash;the half of a cask; and
+into this head a hole was cut; also, two smaller holes in the bottom of the
+tub. The head&mdash;divided in the middle, across the diameter of the
+orifice&mdash;was now fitted round the culprit&rsquo;s neck; and he was
+forthwith coopered up into the tub, which rested on his shoulders, while his
+legs protruded through the holes in the bottom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a burden to carry; but the man could walk with it; and so ridiculous was
+his appearance, that spite of the indignity, he himself laughed with the rest
+at the figure he cut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, Pat, my boy,&rdquo; said the mate, &ldquo;fill that big wooden
+belly of yours, if you can.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Compassionating his situation, our old &ldquo;doctor&rdquo; used to give him
+alms of food, placing it upon the cask-head before him; till at last, when the
+time for deliverance came, Pat protested against mercy, and would fain have
+continued playing Diogenes in the tub for the rest of this starving voyage.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap58"></a>CHAPTER LVIII.<br/>
+THOUGH THE HIGHLANDER PUTS INTO NO HARBOR AS YET; SHE HERE AND THERE LEAVES
+MANY OF HER PASSENGERS BEHIND</h2>
+
+<p>
+Although fast-sailing ships, blest with prosperous breezes, have frequently
+made the run across the Atlantic in eighteen days; yet, it is not uncommon for
+other vessels to be forty, or fifty, and even sixty, seventy, eighty, and
+ninety days, in making the same passage. Though in the latter cases, some
+signal calamity or incapacity must occasion so great a detention. It is also
+true, that generally the passage out from America is shorter than the return;
+which is to be ascribed to the prevalence of westerly winds.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We had been outside of Cape Clear upward of twenty days, still harassed by
+head-winds, though with pleasant weather upon the whole, when we were visited
+by a succession of rain storms, which lasted the greater part of a week.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the interval, the emigrants were obliged to remain below; but this was
+nothing strange to some of them; who, not recovering, while at sea, from their
+first attack of seasickness, seldom or never made their appearance on deck,
+during the entire passage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the week, now in question, fire was only once made in the public galley.
+This occasioned a good deal of domestic work to be done in the steerage, which
+otherwise would have been done in the open air. When the lulls of the
+rain-storms would intervene, some unusually cleanly emigrant would climb to the
+deck, with a bucket of slops, to toss into the sea. No experience seemed
+sufficient to instruct some of these ignorant people in the simplest, and most
+elemental principles of ocean-life. Spite of all lectures on the subject,
+several would continue to shun the leeward side of the vessel, with their
+slops. One morning, when it was blowing very fresh, a simple fellow pitched
+over a gallon or two of something to windward. Instantly it flew back in his
+face; and also, in the face of the chief mate, who happened to be standing by
+at the time. The offender was collared, and shaken on the spot; and ironically
+commanded, never, for the future, to throw any thing to windward at sea, but
+fine ashes and scalding hot water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the frequent <i>hard blows</i> we experienced, the hatchways on the
+steerage were, at intervals, hermetically closed; sealing down in their noisome
+den, those scores of human beings. It was something to be marveled at, that the
+shocking fate, which, but a short time ago, overtook the poor passengers in a
+Liverpool steamer in the Channel, during similar stormy weather, and under
+similar treatment, did not overtake some of the emigrants of the Highlander.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nevertheless, it was, beyond question, this noisome confinement in so close,
+unventilated, and crowded a den: joined to the deprivation of sufficient food,
+from which many were suffering; which, helped by their personal uncleanliness,
+brought on a malignant fever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first report was, that two persons were affected. No sooner was it known,
+than the mate promptly repaired to the medicine-chest in the cabin: and with
+the remedies deemed suitable, descended into the steerage. But the medicines
+proved of no avail; the invalids rapidly grew worse; and two more of the
+emigrants became infected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this, the captain himself went to see them; and returning, sought out a
+certain alleged physician among the cabin-passengers; begging him to wait upon
+the sufferers; hinting that, thereby, he might prevent the disease from
+extending into the cabin itself. But this person denied being a physician; and
+from fear of contagion&mdash;though he did not confess that to be the
+motive&mdash;refused even to enter the steerage. The cases increased: the
+utmost alarm spread through the ship: and scenes ensued, over which, for the
+most part, a veil must be drawn; for such is the fastidiousness of some
+readers, that, many times, they must lose the most striking incidents in a
+narrative like mine.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many of the panic-stricken emigrants would fain now have domiciled on deck; but
+being so scantily clothed, the wretched weather&mdash;wet, cold, and
+tempestuous&mdash;drove the best part of them again below. Yet any other human
+beings, perhaps, would rather have faced the most outrageous storm, than
+continued to breathe the pestilent air of the steerage. But some of these poor
+people must have been so used to the most abasing calamities, that the
+atmosphere of a lazar-house almost seemed their natural air.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first four cases happened to be in adjoining bunks; and the emigrants who
+slept in the farther part of the steerage, threw up a barricade in front of
+those bunks; so as to cut off communication. But this was no sooner reported to
+the captain, than he ordered it to be thrown down; since it could be of no
+possible benefit; but would only make still worse, what was already direful
+enough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not till after a good deal of mingled threatening and coaxing, that the
+mate succeeded in getting the sailors below, to accomplish the captain&rsquo;s
+order.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sight that greeted us, upon entering, was wretched indeed. It was like
+entering a crowded jail. From the rows of rude bunks, hundreds of meager,
+begrimed faces were turned upon us; while seated upon the chests, were scores
+of unshaven men, smoking tea-leaves, and creating a suffocating vapor. But this
+vapor was better than the native air of the place, which from almost
+unbelievable causes, was fetid in the extreme. In every corner, the females
+were huddled together, weeping and lamenting; children were asking bread from
+their mothers, who had none to give; and old men, seated upon the floor, were
+leaning back against the heads of the water-casks, with closed eyes and
+fetching their breath with a gasp.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At one end of the place was seen the barricade, hiding the invalids;
+while&mdash;notwithstanding the crowd&mdash;in front of it was a clear area,
+which the fear of contagion had left open.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;That bulkhead must come down,&rdquo; cried the mate, in a voice that
+rose above the din. &ldquo;Take hold of it, boys.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But hardly had we touched the chests composing it, when a crowd of pale-faced,
+infuriated men rushed up; and with terrific howls, swore they would slay us, if
+we did not desist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Haul it down!&rdquo; roared the mate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the sailors fell back, murmuring something about merchant seamen having no
+pensions in case of being maimed, and they had not shipped to fight fifty to
+one. Further efforts were made by the mate, who at last had recourse to
+entreaty; but it would not do; and we were obliged to depart, without achieving
+our object.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+About four o&rsquo;clock that morning, the first four died. They were all men;
+and the scenes which ensued were frantic in the extreme. Certainly, the
+bottomless profound of the sea, over which we were sailing, concealed nothing
+more frightful.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Orders were at once passed to bury the dead. But this was unnecessary. By their
+own countrymen, they were torn from the clasp of their wives, rolled in their
+own bedding, with ballast-stones, and with hurried rites, were dropped into the
+ocean.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this time, ten more men had caught the disease; and with a degree of
+devotion worthy all praise, the mate attended them with his medicines; but the
+captain did not again go down to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was all-important now that the steerage should be purified; and had it not
+been for the rains and squalls, which would have made it madness to turn such a
+number of women and children upon the wet and unsheltered decks, the steerage
+passengers would have been ordered above, and their den have been given a
+thorough cleansing. But, for the present, this was out of the question. The
+sailors peremptorily refused to go among the defilements to remove them; and so
+besotted were the greater part of the emigrants themselves, that though the
+necessity of the case was forcibly painted to them, they would not lift a hand
+to assist in what seemed their own salvation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The panic in the cabin was now very great; and for fear of contagion to
+themselves, the cabin passengers would fain have made a prisoner of the
+captain, to prevent him from going forward beyond the mainmast. Their clamors
+at last induced him to tell the two mates, that for the present they must sleep
+and take their meals elsewhere than in their old quarters, which communicated
+with the cabin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On land, a pestilence is fearful enough; but there, many can flee from an
+infected city; whereas, in a ship, you are locked and bolted in the very
+hospital itself. Nor is there any possibility of escape from it; and in so
+small and crowded a place, no precaution can effectually guard against
+contagion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Horrible as the sights of the steerage now were, the cabin, perhaps, presented
+a scene equally despairing. Many, who had seldom prayed before, now implored
+the merciful heavens, night and day, for fair winds and fine weather. Trunks
+were opened for Bibles; and at last, even prayer-meetings were held over the
+very table across which the loud jest had been so often heard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strange, though almost universal, that the seemingly nearer prospect of that
+death which any body at any time may die, should produce these spasmodic
+devotions, when an everlasting Asiatic Cholera is forever thinning our ranks;
+and die by death we all must at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the second day, seven died, one of whom was the little tailor; on the third,
+four; on the fourth, six, of whom one was the Greenland sailor, and another, a
+woman in the cabin, whose death, however, was afterward supposed to have been
+purely induced by her fears. These last deaths brought the panic to its height;
+and sailors, officers, cabin-passengers, and emigrants&mdash;all looked upon
+each other like lepers. All but the only true leper among us&mdash;the mariner
+Jackson, who seemed elated with the thought, that for <i>him&mdash;</i>already
+in the deadly clutches of another disease&mdash;no danger was to be apprehended
+from a fever which only swept off the comparatively healthy. Thus, in the midst
+of the despair of the healthful, this incurable invalid was not cast down; not,
+at least, by the same considerations that appalled the rest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And still, beneath a gray, gloomy sky, the doomed craft beat on; now on this
+tack, now on that; battling against hostile blasts, and drenched in rain and
+spray; scarcely making an inch of progress toward her port.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the sixth morning, the weather merged into a gale, to which we stripped our
+ship to a storm-stay-sail. In ten hours&rsquo; time, the waves ran in
+mountains; and the Highlander rose and fell like some vast buoy on the water.
+Shrieks and lamentations were driven to leeward, and drowned in the roar of the
+wind among the cordage; while we gave to the gale the blackened bodies of five
+more of the dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But as the dying departed, the places of two of them were filled in the rolls
+of humanity, by the birth of two infants, whom the plague, panic, and gale had
+hurried into the world before their time. The first cry of one of these
+infants, was almost simultaneous with the splash of its father&rsquo;s body in
+the sea. Thus we come and we go. But, surrounded by death, both mothers and
+babes survived.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At midnight, the wind went down; leaving a long, rolling sea; and, for the
+first time in a week, a clear, starry sky.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the first morning-watch, I sat with Harry on the windlass, watching the
+billows; which, seen in the night, seemed real hills, upon which fortresses
+might have been built; and real valleys, in which villages, and groves, and
+gardens, might have nestled. It was like a landscape in Switzerland; for down
+into those dark, purple glens, often tumbled the white foam of the wave-crests,
+like avalanches; while the seething and boiling that ensued, seemed the
+swallowing up of human beings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By the afternoon of the next day this heavy sea subsided; and we bore down on
+the waves, with all our canvas set; stun&rsquo;-sails alow and aloft; and our
+best steersman at the helm; the captain himself at his elbow;&mdash;bowling
+along, with a fair, cheering breeze over the taffrail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The decks were cleared, and swabbed bone-dry; and then, all the emigrants who
+were not invalids, poured themselves out on deck, snuffing the delightful air,
+spreading their damp bedding in the sun, and regaling themselves with the
+generous charity of the captain, who of late had seen fit to increase their
+allowance of food. A detachment of them now joined a band of the crew, who
+proceeding into the steerage, with buckets and brooms, gave it a thorough
+cleansing, sending on deck, I know not how many bucketsful of defilements. It
+was more like cleaning out a stable, than a retreat for men and women. This day
+we buried three; the next day one, and then the pestilence left us, with seven
+convalescent; who, placed near the opening of the hatchway, soon rallied under
+the skillful treatment, and even tender care of the mate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But even under this favorable turn of affairs, much apprehension was still
+entertained, lest in crossing the Grand Banks of Newfoundland, the fogs, so
+generally encountered there, might bring on a return of the fever. But, to the
+joy of all hands, our fair wind still held on; and we made a rapid run across
+these dreaded shoals, and southward steered for New York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Our days were now fair and mild, and though the wind abated, yet we still ran
+our course over a pleasant sea. The steerage-passengers&mdash;at least by far
+the greater number&mdash;wore a still, subdued aspect, though a little cheered
+by the genial air, and the hopeful thought of soon reaching their port. But
+those who had lost fathers, husbands, wives, or children, needed no crape, to
+reveal to others, who they were. Hard and bitter indeed was their lot; for with
+the poor and desolate, grief is no indulgence of mere sentiment, however
+sincere, but a gnawing reality, that eats into their vital beings; they have no
+kind condolers, and bland physicians, and troops of sympathizing friends; and
+they must toil, though to-morrow be the burial, and their pallbearers throw
+down the hammer to lift up the coffin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+How, then, with these emigrants, who, three thousand miles from home, suddenly
+found themselves deprived of brothers and husbands, with but a few pounds, or
+perhaps but a few shillings, to buy food in a strange land?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As for the passengers in the cabin, who now so jocund as they? drawing nigh,
+with their long purses and goodly portmanteaus to the promised land, without
+fear of fate. One and all were generous and gay, the jelly-eyed old gentleman,
+before spoken of, gave a shilling to the steward.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lady who had died, was an elderly person, an American, returning from a
+visit to an only brother in London. She had no friend or relative on board,
+hence, as there is little mourning for a stranger dying among strangers, her
+memory had been buried with her body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the thing most worthy of note among these now light-hearted people in
+feathers, was the gay way in which some of them bantered others, upon the panic
+into which nearly all had been thrown.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And since, if the extremest fear of a crowd in a panic of peril, proves
+grounded on causes sufficient, they must then indeed come to
+perish;&mdash;therefore it is, that at such times they must make up their minds
+either to die, or else survive to be taunted by their fellow-men with their
+fear. For except in extraordinary instances of exposure, there are few living
+men, who, at bottom, are not very slow to admit that any other living men have
+ever been very much nearer death than themselves. Accordingly, <i>craven</i> is
+the phrase too often applied to any one who, with however good reason, has been
+appalled at the prospect of sudden death, and yet lived to escape it. Though,
+should he have perished in conformity with his fears, not a syllable of
+<i>craven</i> would you hear. This is the language of one, who more than once
+has beheld the scenes, whence these principles have been deduced. The subject
+invites much subtle speculation; for in every being&rsquo;s ideas of death, and
+his behavior when it suddenly menaces him, lies the best index to his life and
+his faith. Though the Christian era had not then begun, Socrates died the death
+of the Christian; and though Hume was not a Christian in theory, yet he, too,
+died the death of the Christian,&mdash;humble, composed, without bravado; and
+though the most skeptical of philosophical skeptics, yet full of that firm,
+creedless faith, that embraces the spheres. Seneca died dictating to posterity;
+Petronius lightly discoursing of essences and love-songs; and Addison, calling
+upon Christendom to behold how calmly a Christian could die; but not even the
+last of these three, perhaps, died the best death of the Christian.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cabin passenger who had used to read prayers while the rest kneeled against
+the transoms and settees, was one of the merry young sparks, who had occasioned
+such agonies of jealousy to the poor tailor, now no more. In his rakish vest,
+and dangling watch-chain, this same youth, with all the awfulness of fear, had
+led the earnest petitions of his companions; supplicating mercy, where before
+he had never solicited the slightest favor. More than once had he been seen
+thus engaged by the observant steersman at the helm: who looked through the
+little glass in the cabin bulk-head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But this youth was an April man; the storm had departed; and now he shone in
+the sun, none braver than he.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of his jovial companions ironically advised him to enter into holy orders
+upon his arrival in New York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Why so?&rdquo; said the other, &ldquo;have I such an orotund
+voice?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No;&rdquo; profanely returned his friend&mdash;&ldquo;but you are a
+coward&mdash;just the man to be a parson, and pray.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+However this narrative of the circumstances attending the fever among the
+emigrants on the Highland may appear; and though these things happened so long
+ago; yet just such events, nevertheless, are perhaps taking place to-day. But
+the only account you obtain of such events, is generally contained in a
+newspaper paragraph, under the shipping-head. <i>There</i> is the obituary of
+the destitute dead, who die on the sea. They die, like the billows that break
+on the shore, and no more are heard or seen. But in the events, thus merely
+initialized in the catalogue of passing occurrences, and but glanced at by the
+readers of news, who are more taken up with paragraphs of fuller flavor; what a
+world of life and death, what a world of humanity and its woes, lies shrunk
+into a three-worded sentence!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+You see no plague-ship driving through a stormy sea; you hear no groans of
+despair; you see no corpses thrown over the bulwarks; you mark not the wringing
+hands and torn hair of widows and orphans:&mdash;all is a blank. And one of
+these blanks I have but filled up, in recounting the details of the
+Highlander&rsquo;s calamity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Besides that natural tendency, which hurries into oblivion the last woes of the
+poor; other causes combine to suppress the detailed circumstances of disasters
+like these. Such things, if widely known, operate unfavorably to the ship, and
+make her a bad name; and to avoid detention at quarantine, a captain will state
+the case in the most palliating light, and strive to hush it up, as much as he
+can.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In no better place than this, perhaps, can a few words be said, concerning
+emigrant ships in general.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Let us waive that agitated national topic, as to whether such multitudes of
+foreign poor should be landed on our American shores; let us waive it, with the
+one only thought, that if they can get here, they have God&rsquo;s right to
+come; though they bring all Ireland and her miseries with them. For the whole
+world is the patrimony of the whole world; there is no telling who does not own
+a stone in the Great Wall of China. But we waive all this; and will only
+consider, how best the emigrants can come hither, since come they do, and come
+they must and will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Of late, a law has been passed in Congress, restricting ships to a certain
+number of emigrants, according to a certain rate. If this law were enforced,
+much good might be done; and so also might much good be done, were the English
+law likewise enforced, concerning the fixed supply of food for every emigrant
+embarking from Liverpool. But it is hardly to be believed, that either of these
+laws is observed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in all respects, no legislation, even nominally, reaches the hard lot of
+the emigrant. What ordinance makes it obligatory upon the captain of a ship, to
+supply the steerage-passengers with decent lodgings, and give them light and
+air in that foul den, where they are immured, during a long voyage across the
+Atlantic? What ordinance necessitates him to place the <i>galley,</i> or
+steerage-passengers&rsquo; stove, in a dry place of shelter, where the
+emigrants can do their cooking during a storm, or wet weather? What ordinance
+obliges him to give them more room on deck, and let them have an occasional run
+fore and aft?&mdash;There is no law concerning these things. And if there was,
+who but some Howard in office would see it enforced? and how seldom is there a
+Howard in office!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We talk of the Turks, and abhor the cannibals; but may not some of <i>them,</i>
+go to heaven, before some of <i>us?</i> We may have civilized bodies and yet
+barbarous souls. We are blind to the real sights of this world; deaf to its
+voice; and dead to its death. And not till we know, that one grief outweighs
+ten thousand joys, will we become what Christianity is striving to make us.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap59"></a>CHAPTER LIX.<br/>
+THE LAST END OF JACKSON</h2>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Off Cape Cod!&rdquo; said the steward, coming forward from the
+quarter-deck, where the captain had just been taking his noon observation;
+sweeping the vast horizon with his quadrant, like a dandy circumnavigating the
+dress-circle of an amphitheater with his glass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Off Cape Cod!</i> and in the shore-bloom that came to us&mdash; even from
+that desert of sand-hillocks&mdash;methought I could almost distinguish the
+fragrance of the rose-bush my sisters and I had planted, in our far inland
+garden at home. Delicious odors are those of our mother Earth; which like a
+flower-pot set with a thousand shrubs, greets the eager voyager from afar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The breeze was stiff, and so drove us along that we turned over two broad, blue
+furrows from our bows, as we plowed the watery prairie. By night it was a
+reef-topsail-breeze; but so impatient was the captain to make his port before a
+shift of wind overtook us, that even yet we carried a main-topgallant-sail,
+though the light mast sprung like a switch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the second dog-watch, however, the breeze became such, that at last the
+order was given to douse the top-gallant-sail, and clap a reef into all three
+top-sails.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While the men were settling away the halyards on deck, and before they had
+begun to haul out the reef-tackles, to the surprise of several, Jackson came up
+from the forecastle, and, for the first time in four weeks or more, took hold
+of a rope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like most seamen, who during the greater part of a voyage, have been off duty
+from sickness, he was, perhaps, desirous, just previous to entering port, of
+reminding the captain of his existence, and also that he expected his wages;
+but, alas! his wages proved the wages of sin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At no time could he better signalize his disposition to work, than upon an
+occasion like the present; which generally attracts every soul on deck, from
+the captain to the child in the steerage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His aspect was damp and death-like; the blue hollows of his eyes were like
+vaults full of snakes; and issuing so unexpectedly from his dark tomb in the
+forecastle, he looked like a man raised from the dead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before the sailors had made fast the reef-tackle, Jackson was tottering up the
+rigging; thus getting the start of them, and securing his place at the extreme
+weather-end of the topsail-yard&mdash;which in reefing is accounted the post of
+honor. For it was one of the characteristics of this man, that though when on
+duty he would shy away from mere dull work in a calm, yet in tempest-time he
+always claimed the van, and would yield it to none; and this, perhaps, was one
+cause of his unbounded dominion over the men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Soon, we were all strung along the main-topsail-yard; the ship rearing and
+plunging under us, like a runaway steed; each man gripping his reef-point, and
+sideways leaning, dragging the sail over toward Jackson, whose business it was
+to confine the reef corner to the yard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His hat and shoes were off; and he rode the yard-arm end, leaning backward to
+the gale, and pulling at the earing-rope, like a bridle. At all times, this is
+a moment of frantic exertion with sailors, whose spirits seem then to partake
+of the commotion of the elements, as they hang in the gale, between heaven and
+earth; and <i>then</i> it is, too, that they are the most profane.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Haul out to windward!&rdquo; coughed Jackson, with a blasphemous cry,
+and he threw himself back with a violent strain upon the bridle in his hand.
+But the wild words were hardly out of his mouth, when his hands dropped to his
+side, and the bellying sail was spattered with a torrent of blood from his
+lungs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the man next him stretched out his arm to save, Jackson fell headlong from
+the yard, and with a long seethe, plunged like a diver into the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was when the ship had rolled to windward, which, with the long projection of
+the yard-arm over the side, made him strike far out upon the water. His fall
+was seen by the whole upward-gazing crowd on deck, some of whom were spotted
+with the blood that trickled from the sail, while they raised a spontaneous
+cry, so shrill and wild, that a blind man might have known something deadly had
+happened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Clutching our reef-points, we hung over the stick, and gazed down to the one
+white, bubbling spot, which had closed over the head of our shipmate; but the
+next minute it was brewed into the common yeast of the waves, and Jackson never
+arose. We waited a few minutes, expecting an order to descend, haul back the
+fore-yard, and man the boat; but instead of that, the next sound that greeted
+us was, &ldquo;Bear a hand, and reef away, men!&rdquo; from the mate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, upon reflection, it would have been idle to attempt to save Jackson;
+for besides that he must have been dead, ere he struck the sea&mdash;and if he
+had not been dead then, the first immersion must have driven his soul from his
+lacerated lungs&mdash;our jolly-boat would have taken full fifteen minutes to
+launch into the waves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And here it should be said, that the thoughtless security in which too many
+sea-captains indulge, would, in case of some sudden disaster befalling the
+Highlander, have let us all drop into our graves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like most merchant ships, we had but two boats: the longboat and the
+jolly-boat. The long boat, by far the largest and stoutest of the two, was
+permanently bolted down to the deck, by iron bars attached to its sides. It was
+almost as much of a fixture as the vessel&rsquo;s keel. It was filled with
+pigs, fowls, firewood, and coals. Over this the jolly-boat was capsized without
+a <i>thole-pin</i> in the gunwales; its bottom bleaching and cracking in the
+sun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Judge, then, what promise of salvation for us, had we shipwrecked; yet in this
+state, one merchant ship out of three, keeps its boats. To be sure, no vessel
+full of emigrants, by any possible precautions, could in case of a fatal
+disaster at sea, hope to save the tenth part of the souls on board; yet
+provision should certainly be made for a handful of survivors, to carry home
+the tidings of her loss; for even in the worst of the calamities that befell
+patient Job, some <i>one</i> at least of his servants escaped to report it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a way that I never could fully account for, the sailors, in my hearing at
+least, and Harry&rsquo;s, never made the slightest allusion to the departed
+Jackson. One and all they seemed tacitly to unite in hushing up his memory
+among them. Whether it was, that the severity of the bondage under which this
+man held every one of them, did really corrode in their secret hearts, that
+they thought to repress the recollection of a thing so degrading, I can not
+determine; but certain it was, that <i>his</i> death was <i>their</i>
+deliverance; which they celebrated by an elevation of spirits, unknown before.
+Doubtless, this was to be in part imputed, however, to their now drawing near
+to their port.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap60"></a>CHAPTER LX.<br/>
+HOME AT LAST</h2>
+
+<p>
+Next day was Sunday; and the mid-day sun shone upon a glassy sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the uproar of the breeze and the gale, this profound, pervading calm
+seemed suited to the tranquil spirit of a day, which, in godly towns, makes
+quiet vistas of the most tumultuous thoroughfares.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ship lay gently rolling in the soft, subdued ocean swell; while all around
+were faint white spots; and nearer to, broad, milky patches, betokening the
+vicinity of scores of ships, all bound to one common port, and tranced in one
+common calm. Here the long, devious wakes from Europe, Africa, India, and Peru
+converged to a line, which braided them all in one.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Full before us quivered and danced, in the noon-day heat and mid-air, the green
+heights of New Jersey; and by an optical delusion, the blue sea seemed to flow
+under them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors whistled and whistled for a wind; the impatient cabin-passengers
+were arrayed in their best; and the emigrants clustered around the bows, with
+eyes intent upon the long-sought land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But leaning over, in a reverie, against the side, my Carlo gazed down into the
+calm, violet sea, as if it were an eye that answered his own; and turning to
+Harry, said, &ldquo;This America&rsquo;s skies must be down in the sea; for,
+looking down in this water, I behold what, in Italy, we also behold overhead.
+Ah! after all, I find my Italy somewhere, wherever I go. I even found it in
+rainy Liverpool.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently, up came a dainty breeze, wafting to us a white wing from the
+shore&mdash;the pilot-boat! Soon a monkey-jacket mounted the side, and was
+beset by the captain and cabin people for news. And out of bottomless pockets
+came bundles of newspapers, which were eagerly caught by the throng.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain now abdicated in the pilot&rsquo;s favor, who proved to be a tiger
+of a fellow, keeping us hard at work, pulling and hauling the braces, and
+trimming the ship, to catch the least <i>cat&rsquo;s-paw</i> of wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When, among sea-worn people, a strange man from shore suddenly stands among
+them, with the smell of the land in his beard, it conveys a realization of the
+vicinity of the green grass, that not even the distant sight of the shore
+itself can transcend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The steerage was now as a bedlam; trunks and chests were locked and tied round
+with ropes; and a general washing and rinsing of faces and hands was beheld.
+While this was going on, forth came an order from the quarter-deck, for every
+bed, blanket, bolster, and bundle of straw in the steerage to be committed to
+the deep.&mdash;A command that was received by the emigrants with dismay, and
+then with wrath. But they were assured, that this was indispensable to the
+getting rid of an otherwise long detention of some weeks at the quarantine.
+They therefore reluctantly complied; and overboard went pallet and pillow.
+Following them, went old pots and pans, bottles and baskets. So, all around,
+the sea was strewn with stuffed bed-ticks, that limberly floated on the
+waves&mdash;couches for all mermaids who were not fastidious. Numberless things
+of this sort, tossed overboard from emigrant ships nearing the harbor of New
+York, drift in through the Narrows, and are deposited on the shores of Staten
+Island; along whose eastern beach I have often walked, and speculated upon the
+broken jugs, torn pillows, and dilapidated baskets at my feet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A second order was now passed for the emigrants to muster their forces, and
+give the steerage a final, thorough cleaning with sand and water. And to this
+they were incited by the same warning which had induced them to make an
+offering to Neptune of their bedding. The place was then fumigated, and dried
+with pans of coals from the galley; so that by evening, no stranger would have
+imagined, from her appearance, that the Highlander had made otherwise than a
+tidy and prosperous voyage. Thus, some sea-captains take good heed that
+benevolent citizens shall not get a glimpse of the true condition of the
+steerage while at sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That night it again fell calm; but next morning, though the wind was somewhat
+against us, we set sail for the Narrows; and making short tacks, at last ran
+through, almost bringing our jib-boom over one of the forts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An early shower had refreshed the woods and fields, that glowed with a glorious
+green; and to our salted lungs, the land breeze was spiced with aromas. The
+steerage passengers almost neighed with delight, like horses brought back to
+spring pastures; and every eye and ear in the Highlander was full of the glad
+sights and sounds of the shore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No more did we think of the gale and the plague; nor turn our eyes upward to
+the stains of blood, still visible on the topsail, whence Jackson had fallen;
+but we fixed our gaze on the orchards and meads, and like thirsty men, drank in
+all their dew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the Staten Island side, a white staff displayed a pale yellow flag, denoting
+the habitation of the quarantine officer; for as if to symbolize the yellow
+fever itself, and strike a panic and premonition of the black vomit into every
+beholder, all quarantines all over the world, taint the air with the streamings
+of their fever-flag.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But though the long rows of white-washed hospitals on the hill side were now in
+plain sight, and though scores of ships were here lying at anchor, yet no boat
+came off to us; and to our surprise and delight, on we sailed, past a spot
+which every one had dreaded. How it was that they thus let us pass without
+boarding us, we never could learn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now rose the city from out the bay, and one by one, her spires pierced the
+blue; while thick and more thick, ships, brigs, schooners, and sail boats,
+thronged around. We saw the Hartz Forest of masts and black rigging stretching
+along the East River; and northward, up the stately old Hudson, covered with
+white sloop-sails like fleets of swans, we caught a far glimpse of the purple
+Palisades.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Oh! he who has never been afar, let him once go from home, to know what home
+is. For as you draw nigh again to your old native river, he seems to pour
+through you with all his tides, and in your enthusiasm, you swear to build
+altars like mile-stones, along both his sacred banks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Like the Czar of all the Russias, and Siberia to boot, Captain Riga, telescope
+in hand, stood on the poop, pointing out to the passengers, Governor&rsquo;s
+Island, Castle Garden, and the Battery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And <i>that&rdquo;</i> said he, pointing out a vast black hull which,
+like a shark, showed tiers of teeth, <i>&ldquo;that,</i> ladies, is a
+line-of-battle-ship, the North Carolina.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Oh, dear!&rdquo;&mdash;and &ldquo;Oh my!&rdquo;&mdash;ejaculated the
+ladies, and&mdash; &ldquo;Lord, save us,&rdquo; responded an old gentleman, who
+was a member of the Peace Society.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hurra! hurra! and ten thousand times hurra! down goes our old anchor, fathoms
+down into the free and independent Yankee mud, one handful of which was now
+worth a broad manor in England.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Whitehall boats were around us, and soon, our cabin passengers were all
+off, gay as crickets, and bound for a late dinner at the Astor House; where, no
+doubt, they fired off a salute of champagne corks in honor of their own
+arrival. Only a very few of the steerage passengers, however, could afford to
+pay the high price the watermen demanded for carrying them ashore; so most of
+them remained with us till morning. But nothing could restrain our Italian boy,
+Carlo, who, promising the watermen to pay them with his music, was triumphantly
+rowed ashore, seated in the stern of the boat, his organ before him, and
+something like &ldquo;Hail Columbia!&rdquo; his tune. We gave him three
+rapturous cheers, and we never saw Carlo again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Harry and I passed the greater part of the night walking the deck, and gazing
+at the thousand lights of the city.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At sunrise, we <i>warped</i> into a berth at the foot of Wall-street, and
+knotted our old ship, stem and stern, to the pier. But that knotting of
+<i>her,</i> was the unknotting of the bonds of the sailors, among whom, it is a
+maxim, that the ship once fast to the wharf, they are free. So with a rush and
+a shout, they bounded ashore, followed by the tumultuous crowd of emigrants,
+whose friends, day-laborers and housemaids, stood ready to embrace them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But in silent gratitude at the end of a voyage, almost equally uncongenial to
+both of us, and so bitter to one, Harry and I sat on a chest in the forecastle.
+And now, the ship that we had loathed, grew lovely in our eyes, which lingered
+over every familiar old timber; for the scene of suffering is a scene of joy
+when the suffering is past; and the silent reminiscence of hardships departed,
+is sweeter than the presence of delight.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap61"></a>CHAPTER LXI.<br/>
+REDBURN AND HARRY, ARM IN ARM, IN HARBOR</h2>
+
+<p>
+There we sat in that tarry old den, the only inhabitants of the deserted old
+ship, but the mate and the rats.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, Harry went to his chest, and drawing out a few shillings, proposed
+that we should go ashore, and return with a supper, to eat in the forecastle.
+Little else that was eatable being for sale in the paltry shops along the
+wharves, we bought several pies, some doughnuts, and a bottle of ginger-pop,
+and thus supplied we made merry. For to us, whose very mouths were become
+pickled and puckered, with the continual flavor of briny beef, those pies and
+doughnuts were most delicious. And as for the ginger-pop, why, that ginger-pop
+was divine! I have reverenced ginger-pop ever since.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We kept late hours that night; for, delightful certainty! placed beyond all
+doubt&mdash;like royal landsmen, we were masters of the watches of the night,
+and no <i>starb-o-leens ahoy!</i> would annoy us again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;All night in! think of <i>that,</i> Harry, my friend!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ay, Wellingborough, it&rsquo;s enough to keep me awake forever, to think
+I may now sleep as long as I please.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We turned out bright and early, and then prepared for the shore, first
+stripping to the waist, for a toilet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I shall never get these confounded tar-stains out of my fingers,&rdquo;
+cried Harry, rubbing them hard with a bit of oakum, steeped in strong suds.
+&ldquo;No! they will <i>not</i> come out, and I&rsquo;m ruined for life. Look
+at my hand once, Wellingborough!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was indeed a sad sight. Every finger nail, like mine, was dyed of a rich,
+russet hue; looking something like bits of fine tortoise shell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Never mind, Harry,&rdquo; said I&mdash;&ldquo;You know the ladies of the
+east steep the tips of their fingers in some golden dye.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And by Plutus,&rdquo; cried Harry&mdash;&ldquo;I&rsquo;d steep mine up
+to the armpits in gold; since you talk about <i>that.</i> But never mind,
+I&rsquo;ll swear I&rsquo;m just from Persia, my boy.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We now arrayed ourselves in our best, and sallied ashore; and, at once, I
+piloted Harry to the sign of a Turkey Cock in Fulton-street, kept by one
+Sweeny, a place famous for cheap Souchong, and capital buckwheat cakes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, gentlemen, what will you have?&rdquo;&mdash;said a waiter, as we
+seated ourselves at a table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;<i>Gentlemen!</i>&rdquo; whispered Harry to
+me&mdash;&ldquo;<i>gentlemen!</i>&mdash;hear him!&mdash;I say now, Redburn,
+they didn&rsquo;t talk to us that way on board the old Highlander. By heaven, I
+begin to feel my straps again:&mdash;Coffee and hot rolls,&rdquo; he added
+aloud, crossing his legs like a lord, &ldquo;and fellow&mdash;come
+back&mdash;bring us a venison-steak.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Haven&rsquo;t got it, gentlemen.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ham and eggs,&rdquo; suggested I, whose mouth was watering at the
+recollection of that particular dish, which I had tasted at the sign of the
+Turkey Cock before. So ham and eggs it was; and royal coffee, and imperial
+toast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But the butter!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Harry, did you ever taste such butter as this before?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Don&rsquo;t say a word,&rdquo;&mdash;said Harry, spreading his tenth
+slice of toast &ldquo;I&rsquo;m going to turn dairyman, and keep within the
+blessed savor of butter, so long as I live.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We made a breakfast, never to be forgotten; paid our bill with a flourish, and
+sallied into the street, like two goodly galleons of gold, bound from Acapulco
+to Old Spain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now,&rdquo; said Harry, &ldquo;lead on; and let&rsquo;s see something of
+these United States of yours. I&rsquo;m ready to pace from Maine to Florida;
+ford the Great Lakes; and jump the River Ohio, if it comes in the way. Here,
+take my arm;&mdash;lead on.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was the miraculous change, that had now come over him. It reminded me of
+his manner, when we had started for London, from the sign of the Golden Anchor,
+in Liverpool.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was, indeed, in most wonderful spirits; at which I could not help marveling;
+considering the cavity in his pockets; and that he was a stranger in the land.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By noon he had selected his boarding-house, a private establishment, where they
+did not charge much for their board, and where the landlady&rsquo;s
+butcher&rsquo;s bill was not very large.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here, at last, I left him to get his chest from the ship; while I turned up
+town to see my old friend Mr. Jones, and learn what had happened during my
+absence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With one hand, Mr. Jones shook mine most cordially; and with the other, gave me
+some letters, which I eagerly devoured. Their purport compelled my departure
+homeward; and I at once sought out Harry to inform him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Strange, but even the few hours&rsquo; absence which had intervened; during
+which, Harry had been left to himself, to stare at strange streets, and strange
+faces, had wrought a marked change in his countenance. He was a creature of the
+suddenest impulses. Left to himself, the strange streets seemed now to have
+reminded him of his friendless condition; and I found him with a very sad eye;
+and his right hand groping in his pocket.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Where am I going to dine, this day week?&rdquo;&mdash;he slowly said.
+&ldquo;What&rsquo;s to be done, Wellingborough?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And when I told him that the next afternoon I must leave him; he looked
+downhearted enough. But I cheered him as well as I could; though needing a
+little cheering myself; even though I <i>had</i> got home again. But no more
+about that.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, there was a young man of my acquaintance in the city, much my senior, by
+the name of Goodwell; and a good natured fellow he was; who had of late been
+engaged as a clerk in a large forwarding house in South-street; and it occurred
+to me, that he was just the man to befriend Harry, and procure him a place. So
+I mentioned the thing to my comrade; and we called upon Goodwell.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I saw that he was impressed by the handsome exterior of my friend; and in
+private, making known the case, he faithfully promised to do his best for him;
+though the times, he said, were quite dull.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That evening, Goodwell, Harry, and I, perambulated the streets, three
+abreast:&mdash;Goodwell spending his money freely at the oyster-saloons; Harry
+full of allusions to the London Clubhouses: and myself contributing a small
+quota to the general entertainment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next morning, we proceeded to business.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, I did not expect to draw much of a salary from the ship; so as to retire
+for life on the profits of <i>my first voyage;</i> but nevertheless, I thought
+that a dollar or two might be coming. For dollars are valuable things; and
+should not be overlooked, when they are owing. Therefore, as the second morning
+after our arrival, had been set apart for paying off the crew, Harry and I made
+our appearance on ship-board, with the rest. We were told to enter the cabin;
+and once again I found myself, after an interval of four months, and more,
+surrounded by its mahogany and maple.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seated in a sumptuous arm-chair, behind a lustrous, inlaid desk, sat Captain
+Riga, arrayed in his City Hotel suit, looking magisterial as the Lord High
+Admiral of England. Hat in hand, the sailors stood deferentially in a
+semicircle before him, while the captain held the ship-papers in his hand, and
+one by one called their names; and in mellow bank notes&mdash;beautiful
+sight!&mdash;paid them their wages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Most of them had less than ten, a few twenty, and two, thirty dollars coming to
+them; while the old cook, whose piety proved profitable in restraining him from
+the expensive excesses of most seafaring men, and who had taken no pay in
+advance, had the goodly round sum of seventy dollars as his due.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seven ten dollar bills! each of which, as I calculated at the time, was worth
+precisely one hundred dimes, which were equal to one thousand cents, which were
+again subdivisible into fractions. So that he now stepped into a fortune of
+seventy thousand American <i>&ldquo;mitts.&rdquo;</i> Only seventy dollars,
+after all; but then, it has always seemed to me, that stating amounts in
+sounding fractional sums, conveys a much fuller notion of their magnitude, than
+by disguising their immensity in such aggregations of value, as doubloons,
+sovereigns, and dollars. Who would not rather be worth 125,000 francs in Paris,
+than only &pound;5000 in London, though the intrinsic value of the two sums, in
+round numbers, is pretty much the same.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With a scrape of the foot, and such a bow as only a negro can make, the old
+cook marched off with his fortune; and I have no doubt at once invested it in a
+grand, underground oyster-cellar.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The other sailors, after counting their cash very carefully, and seeing all was
+right, and not a bank-note was dog-eared, in which case they would have
+demanded another: for they are not to be taken in and cheated, your sailors,
+and they know their rights, too; at least, when they are at liberty, after the
+voyage is concluded:&mdash; the sailors also salaamed, and withdrew, leaving
+Harry and me face to face with the Paymaster-general of the Forces.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+We stood awhile, looking as polite as possible, and expecting every moment to
+hear our names called, but not a word did we hear; while the captain, throwing
+aside his accounts, lighted a very fragrant cigar, took up the morning
+paper&mdash;I think it was the Herald&mdash;threw his leg over one arm of the
+chair, and plunged into the latest intelligence from all parts of the world.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I looked at Harry, and he looked at me; and then we both looked at this
+incomprehensible captain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last Harry hemmed, and I scraped my foot to increase the disturbance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Paymaster-general looked up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, where do you come from? Who are <i>you,</i> pray? and what do you
+want? Steward, show these young gentlemen out.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I want my money,&rdquo; said Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;My wages are due,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain laughed. Oh! he was exceedingly merry; and taking a long
+inspiration of smoke, removed his cigar, and sat sideways looking at us,
+letting the vapor slowly wriggle and spiralize out of his mouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Upon my soul, young gentlemen, you astonish me. Are your names down in
+the City Directory? have you any letters of introduction, young
+gentlemen?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Captain Riga!&rdquo; cried Harry, enraged at his
+impudence&mdash;&ldquo;I tell you what it is, Captain Riga; this won&rsquo;t
+do&mdash;where&rsquo;s the rhino?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Captain Riga,&rdquo; added I, &ldquo;do you not remember, that about
+four months ago, my friend Mr. Jones and myself had an interview with you in
+this very cabin; when it was agreed that I was to go out in your ship, and
+receive three dollars per month for my services? Well, Captain Riga, I have
+gone out with you, and returned; and now, sir, I&rsquo;ll thank you for my
+pay.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Ah, yes, I remember,&rdquo; said the captain. <i>&ldquo;Mr. Jones!</i>
+Ha! ha! I remember Mr. Jones: a very gentlemanly gentleman; and
+stop&mdash;<i>you,</i> too, are the son of a wealthy French importer;
+and&mdash;let me think&mdash;was not your great-uncle a barber?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No!&rdquo; thundered I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, well, young gentleman, really I beg your pardon. Steward, chairs
+for the young gentlemen&mdash;be seated, young gentlemen. And now, let me
+see,&rdquo; turning over his accounts&mdash; &ldquo;Hum, hum!&mdash;yes, here
+it is: Wellingborough Redburn, at three dollars a month. Say four months,
+that&rsquo;s twelve dollars; less three dollars advanced in
+Liverpool&mdash;that makes it nine dollars; less three hammers and two scrapers
+lost overboard&mdash; that brings it to four dollars and a quarter. I owe you
+four dollars and a quarter, I believe, young gentleman?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;So it seems, sir,&rdquo; said I, with staring eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And now let me see what you owe me, and then well be able to square the
+yards, Monsieur Redburn.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Owe <i>him!</i> thought I&mdash;what do I owe him but a grudge, but I concealed
+my resentment; and presently he said, &ldquo;By running away from the ship in
+Liverpool, you forfeited your wages, which amount to twelve dollars; and as
+there has been advanced to you, in money, hammers, and scrapers, seven dollars
+and seventy-five cents, you are therefore indebted to me in precisely that sum.
+Now, young gentleman, I&rsquo;ll thank you for the money;&rdquo; and he
+extended his open palm across the desk.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Shall I pitch into him?&rdquo; whispered Harry.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I was thunderstruck at this most unforeseen announcement of the state of my
+account with Captain Riga; and I began to understand why it was that he had
+till now ignored my absence from the ship, when Harry and I were in London. But
+a single minute&rsquo;s consideration showed that I could not help myself; so,
+telling him that he was at liberty to begin his suit, for I was a bankrupt, and
+could not pay him, I turned to go.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, here was this man actually turning a poor lad adrift without a copper,
+after he had been slaving aboard his ship for more than four mortal months. But
+Captain Riga was a bachelor of expensive habits, and had run up large wine
+bills at the City Hotel. He could not afford to be munificent. Peace to his
+dinners.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Mr. Bolton, I believe,&rdquo; said the captain, now blandly bowing
+toward Harry. &ldquo;Mr. Bolton, <i>you</i> also shipped for three dollars per
+month: and you had one month&rsquo;s advance in Liverpool; and from dock to
+dock we have been about a month and a half; so I owe you just one dollar and a
+half, Mr. Bolton; and here it is;&rdquo; handing him six two-shilling pieces.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And this,&rdquo; said Harry, throwing himself into a tragical attitude,
+<i>&ldquo;this</i> is the reward of my long and faithful services!&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, disdainfully flinging the silver on the desk, he exclaimed, &ldquo;There,
+Captain Riga, you may keep your tin! It has been in <i>your</i> purse, and it
+would give me the itch to retain it. Good morning, sir.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Good morning, young gentlemen; pray, call again,&rdquo; said the
+captain, coolly bagging the coins. His politeness, while in port, was
+invincible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Quitting the cabin, I remonstrated with Harry upon his recklessness in
+disdaining his wages, small though they were; I begged to remind him of his
+situation; and hinted that every penny he could get might prove precious to
+him. But he only cried <i>Pshaw!</i> and that was the last of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Going forward, we found the sailors congregated on the forecastle-deck, engaged
+in some earnest discussion; while several carts on the wharf, loaded with their
+chests, were just in the act of driving off, destined for the boarding-houses
+uptown. By the looks of our shipmates, I saw very plainly that they must have
+some mischief under weigh; and so it turned out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Now, though Captain Riga had not been guilty of any particular outrage against
+the sailors; yet, by a thousand small meannesses&mdash;such as indirectly
+causing their allowance of bread and beef to be diminished, without betraying
+any appearance of having any inclination that way, and without speaking to the
+sailors on the subject&mdash;by this, and kindred actions, I say, he had
+contracted the cordial dislike of the whole ship&rsquo;s company; and long
+since they had bestowed upon him a name unmentionably expressive of their
+contempt.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The voyage was now concluded; and it appeared that the subject being debated by
+the assembly on the forecastle was, how best they might give a united and
+valedictory expression of the sentiments they entertained toward their late
+lord and master. Some emphatic symbol of those sentiments was desired; some
+unmistakable token, which should forcibly impress Captain Riga with the justest
+possible notion of their feelings.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was like a meeting of the members of some mercantile company, upon the eve
+of a prosperous dissolution of the concern; when the subordinates, actuated by
+the purest gratitude toward their president, or chief, proceed to vote him a
+silver pitcher, in token of their respect. It was something like this, I
+repeat&mdash;but with a material difference, as will be seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last, the precise manner in which the thing should be done being agreed
+upon, Blunt, the &ldquo;Irish cockney,&rdquo; was deputed to summon the
+captain. He knocked at the cabin-door, and politely requested the steward to
+inform Captain Riga, that some gentlemen were on the pier-head, earnestly
+seeking him; whereupon he joined his comrades.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a few moments the captain sallied from the cabin, and found the
+<i>gentlemen</i> alluded to, strung along the top of the bulwarks, on the side
+next to the wharf. Upon his appearance, the row suddenly wheeled about,
+presenting their backs; and making a motion, which was a polite salute to every
+thing before them, but an abominable insult to all who happened to be in their
+rear, they gave three cheers, and at one bound, cleared the ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+True to his imperturbable politeness while in port, Captain Riga only lifted
+his hat, smiled very blandly, and slowly returned into his cabin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Wishing to see the last movements of this remarkable crew, who were so clever
+ashore and so craven afloat, Harry and I followed them along the wharf, till
+they stopped at a sailor retreat, poetically denominated &ldquo;The
+Flashes.&rdquo; And here they all came to anchor before the bar; and the
+landlord, a lantern-jawed landlord, bestirred himself behind it, among his
+villainous old bottles and decanters. He well knew, from their looks, that his
+customers were &ldquo;flush,&rdquo; and would spend their money freely, as,
+indeed, is the case with most seamen, recently paid off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a touching scene.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Well, maties,&rdquo; said one of them, at last&mdash;&ldquo;I spose we
+shan&rsquo;t see each other again:&mdash;come, let&rsquo;s splice the
+main-brace all round, and drink to <i>the last voyage!&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Upon this, the landlord danced down his glasses, on the bar, uncorked his
+decanters, and deferentially pushed them over toward the sailors, as much as to
+say&mdash;<i>&ldquo;Honorable gentlemen, it is not for me to allowance your
+liquor;&mdash;help yourselves, your honors.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+And so they did; each glass a bumper; and standing in a row, tossed them all
+off; shook hands all round, three times three; and then disappeared in couples,
+through the several doorways; for <i>&ldquo;The Flashes&rdquo;</i> was on a
+corner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+If to every one, life be made up of farewells and greetings, and a
+<i>&ldquo;Good-by, God bless you,&rdquo;</i> is heard for every <i>&ldquo;How
+d&rsquo;ye do, welcome, my boy&rdquo;&mdash;</i>then, of all men, sailors shake
+the most hands, and wave the most hats. They are here and then they are there;
+ever shifting themselves, they shift among the shifting: and like rootless
+sea-weed, are tossed to and fro.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As, after shaking our hands, our shipmates departed, Harry and I stood on the
+corner awhile, till we saw the last man disappear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;They are gone,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Thank heaven!&rdquo; said Harry.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div class="chapter">
+
+<h2><a name="chap62"></a>CHAPTER LXII.<br/>
+THE LAST THAT WAS EVER HEARD OF HARRY BOLTON</h2>
+
+<p>
+That same afternoon, I took my comrade down to the Battery; and we sat on one
+of the benches, under the summer shade of the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was a quiet, beautiful scene; full of promenading ladies and gentlemen; and
+through the foliage, so fresh and bright, we looked out over the bay, varied
+with glancing ships; and then, we looked down to our boots; and thought what a
+fine world it would be, if we only had a little money to enjoy it. But
+that&rsquo;s the everlasting rub&mdash;oh, who can cure an empty pocket?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;I have no doubt, Goodwell will take care of you, Harry,&rdquo; said I,
+&ldquo;he&rsquo;s a fine, good-hearted fellow; and will do his best for you, I
+know.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;No doubt of it,&rdquo; said Harry, looking hopeless.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I need not tell you, Harry, how sorry I am to leave you so
+soon.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;And I am sorry enough myself,&rdquo; said Harry, looking very sincere.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;But I will be soon back again, I doubt not,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Perhaps so,&rdquo; said Harry, shaking his head. &ldquo;How far is it
+off?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Only a hundred and eighty miles,&rdquo; said I.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;A hundred and eighty miles!&rdquo; said Harry, drawing the words out
+like an endless ribbon. &ldquo;Why, I couldn&rsquo;t walk that in a
+month.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Now, my dear friend,&rdquo; said I, &ldquo;take my advice, and while I
+am gone, keep up a stout heart; never despair, and all will be well.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But notwithstanding all I could say to encourage him, Harry felt so bad, that
+nothing would do, but a rush to a neighboring bar, where we both gulped down a
+glass of ginger-pop; after which we felt better.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He accompanied me to the steamboat, that was to carry me homeward; he stuck
+close to my side, till she was about to put off; then, standing on the wharf,
+he shook me by the hand, till we almost counteracted the play of the paddles;
+and at last, with a mutual jerk at the arm-pits, we parted. I never saw Harry
+again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I pass over the reception I met with at home; how I plunged into embraces, long
+and loving:&mdash;I pass over this; and will conclude <i>my first voyage</i> by
+relating all I know of what overtook Harry Bolton.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Circumstances beyond my control, detained me at home for several weeks; during
+which, I wrote to my friend, without receiving an answer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I then wrote to young Goodwell, who returned me the following letter, now
+spread before me.
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+<i>&ldquo;Dear Redburn&mdash;Your poor friend, Harry, I can not find any where.
+After you left, he called upon me several times, and we walked out together;
+and my interest in him increased every day. But you don&rsquo;t know how dull
+are the times here, and what multitudes of young men, well qualified, are
+seeking employment in counting-houses. I did my best; but could not get Harry a
+place. However, I cheered him. But he grew more and more melancholy, and at
+last told me, that he had sold all his clothes but those on his back to pay his
+board. I offered to loan him a few dollars, but he would not receive them. I
+called upon him two or three times after this, but he was not in; at last, his
+landlady told me that he had permanently left her house the very day before.
+Upon my questioning her closely, as to where he had gone, she answered, that
+she did not know, but from certain hints that had dropped from our poor friend,
+she feared he had gone on a whaling voyage. I at once went to the offices in
+South-street, where men are shipped for the Nantucket whalers, and made
+inquiries among them; but without success. And this,</i> I <i>am heartily
+grieved to say, is all I know of our friend. I can not believe that his
+melancholy could bring him to the insanity of throwing himself away in a
+whaler; and I still think, that he must be somewhere in the city. You must come
+down yourself, and help me seek him out.&rdquo;</i>
+</p>
+
+<p class="p2">
+This letter gave me a dreadful shock. Remembering our adventure in London, and
+his conduct there; remembering how liable he was to yield to the most sudden,
+crazy, and contrary impulses; and that, as a friendless, penniless foreigner in
+New York, he must have had the most terrible incitements to committing violence
+upon himself; I shuddered to think, that even now, while I thought of him, he
+might no more be living. So strong was this impression at the time, that I
+quickly glanced over the papers to see if there were any accounts of suicides,
+or drowned persons floating in the harbor of New York.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+I now made all the haste I could to the seaport, but though I sought him all
+over, no tidings whatever could be heard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To relieve my anxiety, Goodwell endeavored to assure me, that Harry must indeed
+have departed on a whaling voyage. But remembering his bitter experience on
+board of the Highlander, and more than all, his nervousness about going aloft,
+it seemed next to impossible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last I was forced to give him up.
+</p>
+
+<hr />
+
+<p>
+Years after this, I found myself a sailor in the Pacific, on board of a whaler.
+One day at sea, we spoke another whaler, and the boat&rsquo;s crew that boarded
+our vessel, came forward among us to have a little sea-chat, as is always
+customary upon such occasions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among the strangers was an Englishman, who had shipped in his vessel at Callao,
+for the cruise. In the course of conversation, he made allusion to the fact,
+that he had now been in the Pacific several years, and that the good craft
+Huntress of Nantucket had had the honor of originally bringing him round upon
+that side of the globe. I asked him why he had abandoned her; he answered that
+she was the most unlucky of ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;We had hardly been out three months,&rdquo; said he, &ldquo;when on the
+Brazil banks we lost a boat&rsquo;s crew, chasing a whale after sundown; and
+next day lost a poor little fellow, a countryman of mine, who had never entered
+the boats; he fell over the side, and was jammed between the ship, and a whale,
+while we were cutting the fish in. Poor fellow, he had a hard time of it, from
+the beginning; he was a gentleman&rsquo;s son, and when you could coax him to
+it, he sang like a bird.&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;What was his name?&rdquo; said I, trembling with expectation;
+&ldquo;what kind of eyes did he have? what was the color of his hair?&rdquo;
+</p>
+
+<p>
+&ldquo;Harry Bolton was not your brother?&rdquo; cried the stranger, starting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<i>Harry Bolton!</i> it was even he!
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But yet, I, Wellingborough Redburn, chance to survive, after having passed
+through far more perilous scenes than any narrated in this, <i>My First
+Voyage</i>&mdash;which here I end.
+</p>
+
+</div><!--end chapter-->
+
+<div style='display:block;margin-top:4em'>*** END OF THE PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK REDBURN: HIS FIRST VOYAGE ***</div>
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