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	<title>The Sea &#8211; The Kipling Society</title>
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		<title>A Flight of Fact</title>
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					<description><![CDATA[<strong>page 1 of 4 </strong> <b>H.M.S.</b> <i>Gardenia</i> (we will take her name from the Herbaceous Border which belonged to the sloops, though she was a destroyer by profession) came quietly back to her berth some ... <a title="A Flight of Fact" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-flight-of-fact.htm" aria-label="Read more about A Flight of Fact">Read more</a>]]></description>
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<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 1 of 4<br />
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<p><b>H.M.S.</b> <i>Gardenia</i> (we will take her name from the Herbaceous Border which belonged to the sloops, though she was a destroyer by profession) came quietly back to her berth some time after midnight, and disturbed half-a-dozen of her sisters as she settled down. They all talked about it next morning, especially <i>Phlox</i> and <i>Stephanotis</i>, her left- and right-hand neighbours in the big basin on the east coast of England, that was crowded with destroyers.But the soul of the <i>Gardenia</i>—Lieutenant-in-Command H.R. Duckett—was lifted far above insults. What he had done during his last trip had been well done. Vastly more important—<i>Gardenia</i> was in for a boiler-clean, which meant four days’ leave for her commanding officer.</p>
<p>“Where did you get that fender from, you dockyard burglar?” <i>Stephanotis</i> clamoured over his rail, for <i>Gardenia</i> was wearing a large coir-matting fender, evidently fresh from store, over her rail. It creaked with newness. “You common thief of the beach, where did you find that new fender?”</p>
<p>The only craft that a destroyer will, sometimes, not steal equipment from is a destroyer; which accounts for the purity of her morals and the loftiness of her conversation, and her curiosity in respect to stolen fillings.</p>
<p>Duckett, unmoved, went below, to return with a valise which he carried on to His Majesty’s quarter-deck, and, atop of a suit of rat-catcher clothes, crammed into it a pair of ancient pigskin gaiters.</p>
<p>Here <i>Phlox</i>, assisted by her Dandy Dinmont, Dinah, who had been trained to howl at certain notes in her master’s voice, gave a spirited and imaginary account of <i>Gardenia’s</i> return the night before, which was compared to that of an ambulance with a lady-driver. Duckett retaliated by slipping on to his head for one coquettish instant a gravy-coloured soft cloth cap. It was the last straw. <i>Phlox</i> and <i>Stephanotis</i>, who had no hope of any leave for the present, pronounced it an offence, only to be wiped out by drinks.</p>
<p>“All things considered,” said Duckett, “I don’t care if I <i>do</i>. Come along!” and, the hour being what it was, he gave the necessary orders through the wardroom’s tiny skylight. The captains came. <i>Phlox</i>—Lieutenant-Commander Jerry Marlett, a large and weather-beaten person, docked himself in the arm-chair by the ward-room stove with his cherished Dinah in his arms. Great possessions and much land, inherited from an uncle, had removed him from the Navy on the eve of war. Three days after the declaration of it he was back again, and had been very busy ever since. <i>Stephanotis</i>—Lieutenant-in-Command Augustus Holwell Rayne, <i>alias</i> “The Damper,” because of his pessimism, spread himself out on the settee. He was small and agile, but of gloomy outlook, which a D.S.O. earned, he said, quite by mistake could not lighten. “Horse” Duckett, Gardenia’s skipper, was a reversion to the primitive Marryat type—a predatory, astute, resourceful pirate, too well known to all His Majesty’s dockyards, a man of easily injured innocence who could always prove an alibi, and in whose ship, if his torpedo-coxswain had ever allowed any one to look there, several sorts of missing Government property might have been found. His ambition was to raise pigs (animals he only knew as bacon) in Shropshire (a county he had never seen) after the war, so he waged his war with zeal to bring that happy day nearer. He sat in the arm-chair by the door, whence he controlled the operations of “Crippen,” the wardroom steward, late of Bolitho’s Travelling Circus and Swings, who had taken to the high seas to avoid the attentions of the Police ashore.</p>
<p>As usual, Duckett’s character had been blackened by My Lords of the Admiralty, and he was in the midst of a hot campaign against them. An able-seaman’s widowed mother had sent a ham to her son, whose name was E. R. Davids. Unfortunately, Engineroom-Artificer E. Davies, who swore that he had both a mother and expectations of hams from her, came across the ham first, and, misreading its address, had had it boiled for, and at once eaten by, the Engineers’ mess. E. R. Davids, a vindictive soul, wrote to his mother, who, it seems, wrote to the Admiralty, who, according to Duckett, wrote to him daily every day for a month to know what had become of E. R. Davids’ ham. In the meantime the guilty Engineroom-Artificer E. Davies had been transferred to a sloop off the Irish coast.</p>
<p>“An’ what the dooce <i>am</i> I to do?” Duckett asked his guests plaintively.</p>
<p>“Apply for leave to go to Ireland with a stomach-pump and heave the ham out of Davies,” Jerry suggested promptly.</p>
<p>“That’s rather a wheeze,” said Duckett. “I <i>had</i> thought of marrying Davids’ mother to settle the case. Anyhow, it was all Crippen’s fault for not steering the ham into the wardroom when it came aboard. Don’t let it occur again, Crippen. Hams are going to be very scarce.”</p>
<p>“Well, now you’ve got all that off your chest”—Jerry Marlett lowered his voice—“suppose you tell us about what happened—the night before last.”</p>
<p>The talk became professional. Duckett produced certain evidence—still damp—in support of the claims that he had sent in concerning the fate of a German submarine, and gave a chain of facts and figures and bearings that the others duly noted.</p>
<p>“And how did your Acting Sub do?” asked Jerry at last.</p>
<p>“Oh, very fair, but I didn’t tell him so, of course. They’re hard enough to hold at the best of times, these makee-do officers. Have you noticed that they are always above their job—always thinkin’ round the corner when they’re thinkin’ at al!? On our way back, this young merchant o’ mine—when I’d almost made up my mind to tell him he wasn’t as big tripes as he looked—told me his one dream in life was to fly. Fly! He flew alright by the time I’d done with him, but—imagine one’s Sub <i>tellin’</i> one a thing like that! ‘It must be <i>so</i> interestin’ to fly,’ he said. The whole North Sea one blooming burgoo of what-come-nexts, an’ this pup complainin’ of lack of interest in it! Fly! Fly! When I was a Sub-Lootenant——”</p>
<p>He turned pathetically towards The Damper, who had known him in that rank in the Mediterranean.</p>
<p>“There wasn’t much flyin’ in our day,” said The Damper mournfully. “But I can’t remember anything else we didn’t do.”</p>
<p>“Quite so; but we had some decency knocked into us. The new breed wouldn’t know decency if they met it on a dungfork. <i>That’s</i> what I mean.”</p>
<p>“When <i>I</i> was Actin’ Sub,” Jerry opened thoughtfully, “in the <i>Polycarp</i>—the pious <i>Polycarp</i>—Nineteen-O-Seven, I got nine cuts of the best from the Senior Sub for occupyin’ the bathroom ten seconds too long. Twenty minutes later, just when the welts were beginnin’ to come up, y’ know, I was sent off in the gig with a Corporal o’ Marines an’ a private to fetch the Headman of All the Pelungas aboard. He was wanted for slavery, or barratry, or bigamy or something.”</p>
<p>“All the Pelungas?” Duckett repeated with interest. “’Odd you should mention that part of the world. What are the Pelungas like?”</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 2<br />
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<p>“Very nice. Hundreds of islands and millions of coral reefs with atolls an’ lagoons an’ palm-trees, an’ all the population scullin’ round in outrigger canoes between ’em like a permanent regatta. Filthy navigation, though. <i>Polycarp</i> had to lie five miles out on account of the reefs (even then our navigator was tearin’ his hair), an’ I had an hour’s steerin’ on hot, hard thwarts. Talk o’ tortures! <i>You</i> know. We landed in a white lather at the boat-steps of the Headman’s island. The Headman wasn’t takin’ any at first. He’d drawn up his whole army—three hundred strong, with old Martini rifles an’ a couple of ancestral seven-pounders—in front of his fort. <i>We</i> didn’t know anything about his domestic arrangements. We just dropped in among ’em, so to say. Then my Corporal of Marines—the fattest man in the Service bar one—fell down the landin’ steps. The Headman had a Prime Minister—about as fat as my Corporal—and he helped him up. Well, <i>that</i> broke the ice a bit. The Prime Minister was a statesman. He poured oil on the crisis, while the Headman cursed me and the Navy and the British Government, and I kept wrigglin’ in my white ducks to keep ’em from drawin’ tight on me. <i>You</i> know how it feels! I remember I told the Headman the <i>Polycarp</i> ’ud blow him an’ his island out of the water if he didn’t come along quick. She could have done it in a week or two; but we were scrubbin’ hammocks at the time. I forgot that little fact for the minute. I was a bit hot—all over. The Prime Minister soothed us down again, an’ by and by the Headman said he’d pay us a state call—as a favour. I didn’t care what he called it s’long as he came. So I lay about a quarter of a mile off-shore in the gig, in case the seven-pounders pooped off—I knew the Martinis couldn’t hit us at that range—and I waited for him till he shoved off in his State barge—forty rowers a side. Would you believe it, he wanted to take precedence of the White Ensign on the way to the ship? I had to fall him in behind the gig and bring him alongside properly. I was so sore I could hardly get aboard at the finish.”</p>
<p>“What happened to the Headman? “said The Damper.</p>
<p>“Nothing. He was acquitted or condemned—I forget which—but he was a perfect gentleman. We used to go sailing with him and his people—dancing with ’em on the beach and all that sort of thing. <i>I</i> don’t want to meet a nicer community than the Pelungaloos. They aren’t used to white men—but they’re first-class learners.”</p>
<p>“Yes, they <i>do</i> seem a cheery crowd,” Duckett commented.</p>
<p>“Where have <i>you</i> come across them?” said Jerry.</p>
<p>“Nowhere; but this Acting Sub of mine has got a cousin who’s been flying down there.”</p>
<p>“Flying in All the Pelungas? “Jerry cried. “That’s impossible!”</p>
<p>“In these days? Where’s your bright lexicon of youth? Nothing’s impossible anywhere now,” Duckett replied. “All the best people fly.”</p>
<p>“Count me out,” Jerry grunted. “We went up once, Dinah, little dog, and it made us both very sick, didn’t it? When did it all happen, Horse?”</p>
<p>“Some time last year. This chap, my Sub’s cousin—a man called Baxter—went adrift among All the Pelungas in his machine and failed to connect with his ship. He was reported missing for months. Then he turned up again. That’s all.”</p>
<p>“He was called Baxter?” said The Damper. “Hold on a shake! I wonder if he’s ‘Beloo’ Baxter, by any chance. There was a chap of that name about five years ago on the China Station. He had himself tattooed al! over, regardless, in Rangoon. Then he got as good as engaged to a woman in Hongkong—rich woman too. But the Pusser of his ship gave him away. He had a regular cinema of frogs and dragonflies up his legs. And that was only the beginnin’ of the show. So she broke off the engagement, and he half-killed the Pusser, and then he became a Buddhist, or something.”</p>
<p>“That couldn’t have been this Baxter, or my Sub would have told me,” said Duckett. “My Sub’s a morbid-minded young animal.”</p>
<p>“<i>Maskee</i> your Sub’s mind!” said Jerry.</p>
<p>“What was this Baxter man—plain or coloured—doin’ in All <i>my</i> Pelungas?”</p>
<p>“As far as I can make out,” said Duckett, “Lootenant Baxter was flyin’ in those parts—with an observer—out of a ship.”</p>
<p>“Yes, but what <i>for</i>?” Jerry insisted. “And what ship?”</p>
<p>“He was flyin’ for exercise, I suppose, an’ his ship was the <i>Cormorang</i>. D’you feel wiser? An’ he flew, an’ he flew, an’ he flew till, between him an’ his observer and the low visibility and Providence and all that sort of thing, he lost his ship—just like some other people I know. Then he flapped about huntin’ for’ her till dusk among the Pelungas, an’ then he effected a landin’ on the water.”</p>
<p>“A nasty wet business—landin’ that way; Dinah. <i>We</i> know,” said Jerry into the keen little cocked ear in his lap.</p>
<p>“Then he taxied about in the dark till he taxied on to a coral-reef and couldn’t get the machine off. Coral ain’t like mud, is it?” The question was to Jerry, but the insult was addressed to The Damper, who had lately spent eighteen hours on a soft and tenacious shoal off the East Coast. The Damper launched a kick at his host from where he lay along the settee.</p>
<p>“Then,” Duckett went on, “this Baxterman got busy with his wireless and S O S’ed like winkie till the tide came and floated the old bus off the reef, and they taxied over to another island in the dark.”</p>
<p>“Thousands of Islands in All the Pelungas,” Jerry murmured. “Likewise reefs—hairy ones. What about the reefs?”</p>
<p>“Oh, they kept on hittin’ reefs in the dark, till it occurred to them to fire their signal lights to see ’em by. So they went blazin’ an’ stinkin’ and taxyin’ up and down the reefs till they found a gap in one of ’em and they taxied bung on to an uninhabited island.”</p>
<p>“That must have been good for the machine,” was Jerry’s comment.</p>
<p>“I don’t deny it. I’m only tellin’ you what my Sub told me. Baxter wrote it all home to his people, and the letters have been passed round the family. Well, then, o’ course, it rained. It rained all the rest of the night, up to the afternoon of the next day. (It always does when you’re in a hole.) They tried to start their engine in the intervals of climbin’ palm-trees for coco-nuts. They’d only a few biscuits and some water with ’em.”</p>
<p>“’Don’t like climbin’ palm-trees. It scrapes you raw,” The Damper moaned.</p>
<p>“An’ when they weren’t climbin’ or crankin’ their engine, they tried to get into touch with the natives on the next nearest island. But the natives weren’t havin’ any. They took to the bush.”</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 3<br />
</strong></p>
<p>“Ah!” said Jerry sympathetically. “That aeroplane was too much for ’em. Otherwise, they’re the most cosy, confidential lot <i>I</i> ever met. Well, what happened?”</p>
<p>“Baxter sweated away at his engine till she started up again. Then he flew round lookin’ for his ship some more till his petrol ran out. Then he landed close to <i>another</i> uninhabited island and tried to taxi up to it.”</p>
<p>“Why was he so keen on <i>un</i>inhabited islands? I wish I’d been there. <i>I’d</i> ha’ shown him round the town,” said Jerry.</p>
<p>“I don’t know his reasons, but that was what he wrote home to his people,” Duckett went on. “Not havin’ any power by that time, his machine blew on to another reef and there they were! No grub, no petrol, and plenty of sharks! So they snugged her down. I don’t know how one snugs down an aeroplane,” Duckett admitted, “but Baxter took the necessary steps to reduce the sail-area, and cut the spanker-boom out of the tail-tassels or whatever it is they do on an aeroplane when they want her to be quiet. Anyhow, they more or less secured the bus to that reef so they thought she wouldn’t fetch adrift; and they tried to coax a canoe over that happened to be passing. Nothin’ doin’ <i>there</i>! ‘Canoe made one bunk of it.”</p>
<p>“He tickled ’em the wrong way,” Jerry sighed. “There’s a song they sing when they’re fishing.” He began to hum dolefully.</p>
<p>“I expect Baxter didn’t know that tune,” Duckett interrupted. “He an’ his observer cursed the canoe a good deal, an’ then they went in for swimmin’ stunts all among the sharks, until they fetched up on the <i>next</i> island when they came to it—it took ’em an hour to swim there—but the minute they landed the natives all left. ’Seems to me,” said Duckett thoughtfully, “Baxter and his observer must have spread a pretty healthy panic scullin’ about All the Pelungas in their shirts.”</p>
<p>“But why shirts?” said Jerry. “Those waters are perfectly warm.”</p>
<p>“If you come to that, why <i>not</i> shirts?” Duckett retorted. “A shirt’s a badge of civilization——”</p>
<p>“<i>Maskee</i> your shirts. What happened after that?” said The Damper.</p>
<p>“They went to sleep. They were tired by that time—oddly enough. The natives on <i>that</i> island had left everything standing when they bunked—fires lighted, chickens runnin’ about, and so forth. Baxter slept in one of the huts. About midnight some of the bold boys stole back again. Baxter heard ’em talkin’ just outside, and as he didn’t want his face trod on, he said ‘Salaam.’ That cleared the island for the second time. The natives jumped three foot into the air and shoved off.”</p>
<p>“Good Lord!” said Jerry impatiently. “<i>I’d</i> have had ’em eating out of my hand in ten seconds. ‘Salaam’ isn’t the word to use at all. What he ought to have said——”</p>
<p>“Well, anyhow, he didn’t,” Duckett replied. “He and his observer had their sleep out an’ they woke in the mornin’ with ragin’ appetites and a strong sense of decency. The first thing they annexed was some native loin-cloths off a bush. Baxter wrote all this home to his people, you know. I expect he was well brought up.”</p>
<p>“If he was ‘Beloo’ Baxter no one would notice——” The Damper began.</p>
<p>“He wasn’t. He was just a simple, virtuous Naval Officer—like me. He an’ his observer navigated the island in full dress in search of the natives, but they’d gone and taken the canoe with ’em. Baxter was so depressed at their lack of confidence that he killed a chicken an’ plucked it and drew it (I bet neither of you know how to draw fowls) an’ boiled it and ate it all at once.”</p>
<p>“Didn’t he feed his observer?” The Damper asked. “I’ve a little brother what’s an observer up in the air. I’d hate to think he——”</p>
<p>“The observer was kept busy wavin’ his shirt on the beach in order to attract the attention of local fishin’ craft. That was what <i>he</i> was for. After breakfast Baxter joined him an’ the two of ’em waved shirts for two hours on the beach. An’ that’s the sort of thing my Sub prefers to servin’ with me!—<i>Me!</i> After a bit, the Pelungaloos decided that they must be harmless lunatics, and one canoe stood pretty close in, an’ they swam out to her. But here’s a curious thing! Baxter wrote his people that, when the canoe came, his observer hadn’t any shirt at all. ’Expect he’d expended it wavin’ for succour. But Baxter’s shirt was all right. He went out of his way to tell his people so. An’ my Sub couldn’t see the humour of it one little bit. How does it strike you?”</p>
<p>“Perfectly simple,” said Jerry. “Lootenant Baxter as executive officer in charge took his subordinate’s shirt owin’ to the exigencies of the Service. I’d ha’ done the same. Pro-ceed.”</p>
<p>“There’s worse to follow. As soon as they got aboard the canoe and the natives found they didn’t bite, they cottoned to ’em no end. ’Gave ’em grub and dry loin-cloths and betel-nut to chew. What’s betel-nut like, Jerry?”</p>
<p>“Grateful an’ comfortin’. Warms you all through and makes you spit pink. It’s nonintoxicating.”</p>
<p>“Oh! I’ve never tried it. Well then, there was Baxter spittin’ pink in a loin-cloth an’ a canoeful of Pelungaloo fishermen, with his shirt dryin’ in the breeze. ’Got that? Well, then his aeroplane, which he thought he had secured to the reef of the next island, began to drift out to sea. That boy had to keep his eyes open, I tell you. He wanted the natives to go in and makee-catchee the machine, and there was a big palaver about it. They naturally didn’t care to compromise themselves with strange idols, but after a bit they lined up a dozen canoes—no, eleven, to be precise—Baxter was awfully precise in his letters to his people—an’ tailed on to the aeroplane an’ towed it to an island.”</p>
<p>“Excellent,” said Jerry Marlett, the complete Lieutenant-Commander. “I was gettin’ worried about His Majesty’s property. Baxter must have had a way with him. A loin-cloth ain’t uniform, but it’s dashed comfortable. An’ how did All my Pelungaloos treat ’em?”</p>
<p>“We-ell!” said Duckett, “Baxter was writin’ home to his people, so I expect he toned things down a bit, but, readin’ between the lines, it looks as if—an’ <i>that’s</i> why my Sub wants to take up flyin’, of course!—it looks as if, from then on, they had what you might call Garden-of-Eden picnics for weeks an’ weeks. The natives put ’em under a guard o’ sorts just for the look of the thing, while the news was sent to the Headman, but as far as I can make out from my Sub’s reminiscences of Baxter’s letters, their guard consisted of the entire male and female population goin’ in swimmin’ with ’em twice a day. At night they had concerts—native songs <i>versus</i> music-hall—in alternate what d’you call ’em? Anti-somethings. ’Phone, ain’t it?”</p>
<p>“They <i>are</i> a musical race! I’m glad he struck that side of their nature,” Jerry murmured.</p>
<p>“I’m envious,” Duckett protested. “Why should the Flyin’ Corps get all the plums? But Baxter didn’t forget His Majesty’s aeroplane. He got ’em to tow it to his island o’ delights, and in the evenings he an’ his observer, between the musical turns, used to give the women electric shocks off the wireless. And, one time, he told his observer to show ’em his false teeth, and when he took ’em out the people all bolted.”</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 4<br />
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<p>“But that’s in Rider Haggard. It’s in <i>King Solomon’s Mines</i>,” The Damper remarked.</p>
<p>“P’raps that’s what put it into Baxter’s head then,” said Duckett. “Or else,” he suggested warily, “Baxter wanted to crab his observer’s chances with some lady.”</p>
<p>“Then he was a fool,” The Damper snarled. “It might have worked the other way. It generally does.”</p>
<p>“Well, one can’t foresee everything,” said Duckett. “Anyhow, Baxter didn’t complain. They lived there for weeks and weeks, singin’ songs together and bathin’ an’—oh, yes!— gamblin’. Baxter made a set of dice too. He doesn’t seem to have neglected much. He said it was just to pass the time away, but I wonder what he threw for. I wish I knew him. His letters to his people are too colourless. What a life he must have led! Women, dice and song, an’ your pay rollin’ up behind you in perfect safety with no exertion on your part.”</p>
<p>“There’s a dance they dance on moonlight nights,” said Jerry, “with just a few banana leaves—— Never mind. Go ahead!”</p>
<p>“All things bright and beautiful—fineesh,” Duckett mourned. “Presently the Headman of All the Pelungas came along——”</p>
<p>“’My friend? I hope it was. A first-class sportsman,” said Jerry.</p>
<p>“Baxter didn’t say. Anyhow, he turned up and they were taken over to the capital island till they could be sent back to their own ship. The Headman did ’em up to the nines in every respect while they were with him (Baxter’s quite enthusiastic over it, even in writin’ to his own people), but, o’ course, there’s nothing like first love, is there? They must have felt partin’ with their first loves. <i>I</i> always do. And then they were put into the full uniform of All the Pelungaloo Army. What’s that like, Jerry? You’ve seen it.”</p>
<p>“It’s a cross between a macaw an’ a rainbow-ended mandrill. Very tasty.”</p>
<p>“Just as they were gettin’ used to that, and they’d taught the Headman and his Court to sing: ‘Hello! Hello! Who’s your lady friend?’ they were embarked on a dirty common sailin’ craft an’ taken over the ocean and returned to the <i>Cormorang</i>, which, o’ course, had reported ’em missing and dead months before. They had one final kick-up before returnin’ to duty. You see, they’d both grown torpedo-beards in the Pelungas, and they were both in Pelungaloo uniform. Consequently, when they went aboard the <i>Cormorang</i> they weren’t recognized till they were half-way down to their cabins.”</p>
<p>“And then?” both Captains asked at once.</p>
<p>“That’s where Baxter breaks off—even though he’s writin’ to his own people. He’s so apologetic to ’em for havin’ gone missin’ and worried ’em, an’ he’s so sinful proud of havin’ taught the Headman music-hall songs, that he only said that they had ‘some reception aboard the <i>Cormorang</i>.’ It lasted till midnight.”</p>
<p>“It is possible. What about their machine?” said Jerry.</p>
<p>“The <i>Cormorang</i> ran down to the Pelungas and retrieved it all right. But <i>I</i> should have liked to have seen that reception. There is nothing I’d ha’ liked better than to have seen that reception. And it isn’t as if I hadn’t seen a reception or two either.”</p>
<p>“The leaf-signal is made, sir,” said the Quartermaster at the door.</p>
<p>“Twelve-twenty-four train,” Duckett muttered. “Can do.” He rose, adding, “I’m going to scratch the backs of swine for the next three days. G’wout!”</p>
<p>The well-trained servant was already fleeting along the edge of the basin with his valise. <i>Stephanotis</i> and <i>Phlox</i> returned to their own ships, loudly expressing envy and hatred. Duckett paused for a moment at his gangway rail to beckon to his torpedo-coxswain, a Mr. Wilkins, a peace-time sailor of mild and mildewed aspect who had followed Duckett’s shady fortunes for some years.</p>
<p>“Wilkins,” he whispered, “where <i>did</i> we get that new starboard fender of ours from?”</p>
<p>“Orf the dredger, sir. She was asleep when we came in,” said Wilkins through lips that scarcely seemed to move. “But our port one come orf the water-boat. We ’ad to over’aul our moorin’s in the skiff last night, sir, and we—er—found it on ’er.”</p>
<p>“Well, well, Wilkins. Keep the home fires burning,” and Lieutenant-in-Command H.R. Duckett sped after his servant in the direction of the railway-station. But not so fast that he could outrun a melody played aboard the <i>Phlox</i> on a concertina to which manly voices bore the burden:</p>
<table border="0" align="center">
<tbody>
<tr>
<td><em>When the enterprisin’ burglar ain’t aburglin’—ain’t aburglin’,</em><br />
<em>When the cut-throat is not occupied with crime—’pied with crime.</em><br />
<em>He loves to hear the little brook agurglin’——</em></td>
</tr>
</tbody>
</table>
<p>Moved, Heaven knows whether by conscience or kindliness, Lieutenant Duckett smiled at the policeman on the Dockyard gates.</p>
</div>
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		<title>A Matter of Fact</title>
		<link>https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-matter-of-fact.htm</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[wa_admin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 11 May 2021 08:46:18 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://ks-demo3.web/tale/a-matter-of-fact/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong>page 1 of 4 </strong> <b>ONCE</b> a priest, always a priest; once a mason, always a mason; but once a journalist, always and for ever a journalist.There were three of us, all newspaper men, the ... <a title="A Matter of Fact" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-matter-of-fact.htm" aria-label="Read more about A Matter of Fact">Read more</a>]]></description>
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<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 1 of 4<br />
</strong></p>
<p><b>ONCE</b> a priest, always a priest; once a mason, always a mason; but once a journalist, always and for ever a journalist.There were three of us, all newspaper men, the only passengers on a little tramp steamer that ran where her owners told her to go. She had once been in the Bilbao iron ore business, had been lent to the Spanish Government for service at Manilla; and was ending her days in the Cape Town coolie-trade, with occasional trips to Madagascar and even as far as England. We found her going to Southampton in ballast, and shipped in her because the fares were nominal. There was Keller, of an American paper, on his way back to the States from palace executions in Madagascar; there was a burly half-Dutchman, called Zuyland, who owned and edited a paper up country near Johannesburg; and there was myself, who had solemnly put away all journalism, vowing to forget that I had ever known the difference between an imprint and a stereo advertisement.</p>
<p>Ten minutes after Keller spoke to me, as the <i>Rathmines</i> cleared Cape Town, I had forgotten the aloofness I desired to feign, and was in heated discussion on the immorality of expanding telegrams beyond a certain fixed point. Then Zuyland came out of his cabin, and we were all at home instantly, because we were men of the same profession needing no introduction. We annexed the boat formally, broke open the passengers’ bath-room door—on the Manilla lines the Dons do not wash—cleaned out the orange-peel and cigar-ends at the bottom of the bath, hired a Lascar to shave us throughout the voyage, and then asked each other’s names.</p>
<p>Three ordinary men would have quarrelled through sheer boredom before they reached Southampton. We, by virtue of our craft, were anything but ordinary men. A large percentage of the tales of the world, the thirty-nine that cannot be told to ladies and the one that can, are common property coming of a common stock. We told them all, as a matter of form, with all their local and specific variants which are surprising. Then came, in the intervals of steady card-play, more personal histories of adventure and things seen and suffered: panics among white folk, when the blind terror ran from man to man on the Brooklyn Bridge, and the people crushed each other to death they knew not why; fires, and faces that opened and shut their mouths horribly at red-hot window frames; wrecks in frost and snow, reported from the sleet-sheathed rescue-tug at the risk of frostbite; long rides after diamond thieves; skirmishes on the veldt and in municipal committees with the Boers; glimpses of lazy tangled Cape politics and the mule-rule in the Transvaal; card-tales, horse-tales, woman-tales, by the score and the half hundred; till the first mate, who had seen more than us all put together, but lacked words to clothe his tales with, sat open-mouthed far into the dawn.</p>
<p>When the tales were done we picked up cards till a curious hand or a chance remark made one or other of us say, ‘That reminds me of a man who—or a business which—’ and the anecdotes would continue while the <i>Rathmines</i> kicked her way northward through the warm water.</p>
<p>In the morning of one specially warm night we three were sitting immediately in front of the wheel-house, where an old Swedish boatswain whom we called ‘Frithiof the Dane’ was at the wheel, pretending that he could not hear our stories. Once or twice Frithiof spun the spokes curiously, and Keller lifted his head from a long chair to ask,<br />
‘What is it? Can’t you get any steerage-way on her?’</p>
<p>‘There is a feel in the water,’ said Frithiof, ‘that I cannot understand. I think that we run downhills or somethings. She steers bad this morning.’</p>
<p>Nobody seems to know the laws that govern the pulse of the big waters. Sometimes even a lands-man can tell that the solid ocean is atilt, and that the ship is working herself up a long unseen slope; and sometimes the captain says, when neither full steam nor fair wind justifies the length of a day’s run, that the ship is sagging downhill; but how these ups and downs come about has not yet been settled authoritatively.</p>
<p>‘No, it is a following sea,’ said Frithiof; ‘and with a following sea you shall not get good steerage-way.’</p>
<p>The sea was as smooth as a duck-pond, except for a regular oily swell. As I looked over the side to see where it might be following us from, the sun rose in a perfectly clear sky and struck the water with its light so sharply that it seemed as though the sea should clang like a burnished gong. The wake of the screw and the little white streak cut by the log-line hanging over the stern were the only marks on the water as far as eye could reach.</p>
<p>Keller rolled out of his chair and went aft to get a pine-apple from the ripening stock that was hung inside the after awning.</p>
<p>‘Frithiof, the log-line has got tired of swimming. It’s coming home,’ he drawled.</p>
<p>‘What?’ said Frithiof, his voice jumping several octaves.</p>
<p>‘Coming home,’ Keller repeated, leaning over the stern. I ran to his side and saw the log-line, which till then had been drawn tense over the stern railing, slacken, loop, and come up off the port quarter. Frithiof called up the speaking-tube to the bridge, and the bridge answered, ‘Yes, nine knots.’ Then Frithiof spoke again, and the answer was, ‘What do you want of the skipper?’ and Frithiof bellowed, ‘Call him up.’</p>
<p>By this time Zuyland, Keller, and myself had caught something of Frithiof’s excitement, for any emotion on shipboard is most contagious. The captain ran out of his cabin, spoke to Frithiof, looked at the log-line, jumped on the bridge, and in a minute we felt the steamer swing round as Frithiof turned her.</p>
<p>‘’Going back to Cape Town?’ said Keller.</p>
<p>Frithiof did not answer, but tore away at the wheel. Then he beckoned us three to help, and we held the wheel down till the <i>Rathmines</i> answered it, and we found ourselves looking into the white of our own wake, with the still oily sea tearing past our bows, though we were not going more than half steam ahead.</p>
<p>The captain stretched out his arm from the bridge and shouted. A minute later I would have given a great deal to have shouted too, for one-half of the sea seemed to shoulder itself above the other half, and came on in the shape of a hill. There was neither crest, comb, nor curl-over to it; nothing but black water with little waves chasing each other about the flanks. I saw it stream past and on a level with the <i>Rathmines</i>; bow-plates before the steamer hove up her bulk to rise, and I argued that this would be the last of all earthly voyages for me. Then we lifted for ever and ever and ever, till I heard Keller saying in my ear, ‘The bowels of the deep, good Lord!’ and the <i>Rathmines</i> stood poised, her screw racing and drumming on the slope of a hollow that stretched downwards for a good half-mile.</p>
<p>We went down that hollow, nose under for the most part, and the air smelt wet and muddy, like that of an emptied aquarium. There was a second hill to climb; I saw that much: but the water came aboard and carried me aft till it jammed me against the wheel-house door, and before I could catch breath or clear my eyes again we were rolling to and fro in torn water, with the scuppers pouring like eaves in a thunderstorm.</p>
<p>‘There were three waves,’ said Keller; ‘and the stokehold’s flooded.’</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 2</strong></p>
<p>The firemen were on deck waiting, apparently, to be drowned. The engineer came and dragged them below, and the crew, gasping, began to work the clumsy Board of Trade pump. That showed nothing serious, and when I understood that the <i>Rathmines</i> was really on the water, and not beneath it, I asked what had happened.</p>
<p>‘The captain says it was a blow-up under the sea—a volcano,’ said Keller.</p>
<p>‘It hasn’t warmed anything,’ I said. I was feeling bitterly cold, and cold was almost unknown in those waters. I went below to change my clothes, and when I came up everything was wiped out in clinging white fog.</p>
<p>‘Are there going to be any more surprises?’ said Keller to the captain.</p>
<p>‘I don’t know. Be thankful you’re alive, gentlemen. That’s a tidal wave thrown up by a volcano. Probably the bottom of the sea has been lifted a few feet somewhere or other. I can’t quite understand this cold spell. Our sea-thermometer says the surface water is 44º, and it should be 68º at least.’</p>
<p>‘It’s abominable,’ said Keller, shivering. ‘But hadn’t you better attend to the fog-horn? It seems to me that I heard something.’</p>
<p>‘Heard! Good heavens!’ said the captain from the bridge, ‘ I should think you did.’ He pulled the string of our fog-horn, which was a weak one. It sputtered and choked, because the stokehold was full of water and the fires were halfdrowned, and at last gave out a moan. It was answered from the fog by one of the most appalling steam-sirens I have ever heard. Keller turned as white as I did, for the fog, the cold fog, was upon us, and any man may be forgiven for fearing a death he cannot see.</p>
<p>‘Give her steam there!’ said the captain to the engine-room. ‘Steam for the whistle, if we have to go dead slow.’</p>
<p>We bellowed again, and the damp dripped off the awnings on to the deck as we listened for the reply. It seemed to be astern this time, but much nearer than before.</p>
<p>‘The <i>Pembroke Castle</i> on us!’ said Keller; and then, viciously, ‘Well, thank God, we shall sink her too.’</p>
<p>‘It’s a side-wheel steamer,’ I whispered. ‘Can’t you hear the paddles?’</p>
<p>This time we whistled and roared till the steam gave out, and the answer nearly deafened us. There was a sound of frantic threshing in the water, apparently about fifty yards away, and something shot past in the whiteness that looked as though it were gray and red.</p>
<p>‘The <i>Pembroke Castle</i> bottom up,’ said Keller, who, being a journalist, always sought for explanations. ‘That’s the colours of a Castle liner. We’re in for a big thing.’</p>
<p>‘The sea is bewitched,’ said Frithiof from the wheel-house. ‘There are <i>two</i> steamers!’</p>
<p>Another siren sounded on our bow, and the little steamer rolled in the wash of something that had passed unseen.</p>
<p>‘We’re evidently in the middle of a fleet,’ said Keller quietly. ‘If one doesn’t run us down, the other will. Phew! What in creation is that?’</p>
<p>I sniffed, for there was a poisonous rank smell in the cold air—a smell that I had smelt before.</p>
<p>‘If I was on land I should say that it was an alligator. It smells like musk,’ I answered.</p>
<p>‘Not ten thousand alligators could make that smell,’ said Zuyland; ‘I have smelt them.’</p>
<p>‘Bewitched! Bewitched!’ said Frithiof. ‘The sea she is turned upside down, and we are walking along the bottom.’</p>
<p>Again the <i>Rathmines</i> rolled in the wash of some unseen ship, and a silver-gray wave broke over the bow, leaving on the deck a sheet of sediment-the gray broth that has its place in the fathomless deeps of the sea. A sprinkling of the wave fell on my face, and it was so cold that it stung as boiling water stings. The dead and most untouched deep water of the sea had been heaved to the top by the submarine volcano—the chill still water that kills all life and smells of desolation and emptiness. We did not need either the blinding fog or that indescribable smell of musk to make us unhappy—we were shivering with cold and wretchedness where we stood.</p>
<p>‘The hot air on the cold water makes this fog,’ said the captain; ‘it ought to clear in a little time.’</p>
<p>‘Whistle, oh! whistle, and let’s get out of it,’ said Keller.</p>
<p>The captain whistled again, and far and far astern the invisible twin steam-sirens answered us. Their blasting shriek grew louder, till at last it seemed to tear out of the fog just above our quarter, and I cowered while the <i>Rathmines</i> plunged bows under on a double swell that crossed.</p>
<p>‘No more,’ said Frithiof, ‘it is not good any more. Let us get away, in the name of God.’</p>
<p>‘Now if a torpedo-boat with a <i>City of Paris</i> siren went mad and broke her moorings and hired a friend to help her, it’s just conceivable that we might be carried as we are now. Otherwise this thing is——’</p>
<p>The last words died on Keller’s lips, his eyes began to start from his head, and his jaw fell. Some six or seven feet above the port bulwarks, framed in fog, and as utterly unsupported as the full moon, hung a Face. It was not human, and it certainly was not animal, for it did not belong to this earth as known to man. The mouth was open, revealing a ridiculously tiny tongue—as absurd as the tongue of an elephant; there were tense wrinkles of white skin at the angles of the drawn lips, white feelers like those of a barbel sprung from the lower jaw, and there was no sign of teeth within the mouth. But the horror of the face lay in the eyes, for those were sightless—white, in sockets as white as scraped bone, and blind. Yet for all this the face, wrinkled as the mask of a lion is drawn in Assyrian sculpture, was alive with rage and terror. One long white feeler touched our bulwarks. Then the face disappeared with the swiftness of a blindworm popping into its burrow, and the next thing that I remember is my own voice in my own ears, saying gravely to the mainmast, ‘But the air-bladder ought to have been forced out of its mouth, you know.’</p>
<p>Keller came up to me, ashy white. He put his hand into his pocket, took a cigar, bit it, dropped it, thrust his shaking thumb into his mouth and mumbled, ‘The giant gooseberry and the raining frogs! Gimme a light-gimme a light! Say, gimme a light.’ A little bead of blood dropped from his thumb joint.</p>
<p>I respected the motive, though the manifestation was absurd. ‘Stop, you’ll bite your thumb off,’ I said, and Keller laughed brokenly as he picked up his cigar. Only Zuyland, leaning over the port bulwarks, seemed self-possessed. He declared later that he was very sick.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 3<br />
</strong></p>
<p>‘We’ve seen it,’ he said, turning round. ‘That is it.’</p>
<p>‘What?’ said Keller, chewing the unlighted cigar.</p>
<p>As he spoke the fog was blown into shreds, and we saw the sea, gray with mud, rolling on every side of us and empty of all life. Then in one spot it bubbled and became like the pot of ointment that the Bible speaks of. From that wideringed trouble a Thing came up—a gray and red Thing with a neck—a Thing that bellowed and writhed in pain. Frithiof drew in his breath and held it till the red letters of the ship’s name, woven across his jersey, straggled and opened out as though they had been type badly set. Then he said with a little cluck in his throat, ‘Ah me! It is blind. <i>Hur illa</i>! That thing is blind,’ and a murmur of pity went through us all, for we could see that the thing on the water was blind and in pain. Something had gashed and cut the great sides cruelly and the blood was spurting out. The gray ooze of the undermost sea lay in the monstrous wrinkles of the back, and poured away in sluices. The blind white head flung back and battered the wounds, and the body in its torment rose clear of the red and gray waves till we saw a pair of quivering shoulders streaked with weed and rough with shells, but as white in the clear spaces as the hairless, maneless, blind, toothless head. Afterwards, came a dot on the horizon and the sound of a shrill scream, and it was as though a shuttle shot all across the sea in one breath, and a second head and neck tore through the levels, driving a whispering wall of water to right and left. The two Things met—the one untouched and the other in its death-throe—male and female, we said, the female coming to the male. She circled round him bellowing, and laid her neck across the curve of his great turtle-back, and he disappeared under water for an instant, but flung up again, grunting in agony while the blood ran. Once the entire head and neck shot clear of the water and stiffened, and I heard Keller saying, as though he was watching a street accident, ‘Give him air. For God’s sake, give him air.’ Then the death-struggle began, with crampings and twistings and jerkings of the white bulk to and fro, till our little steamer rolled again, and each gray wave coated her plates with the gray slime. The sun was clear, there was no wind, and we watched, the whole crew, stokers and all, in wonder and pity, but chiefly pity. The Thing was so helpless, and, save for his mate, so alone. No human eye should have beheld him; it was monstrous and indecent to exhibit him there in trade waters between atlas degrees of latitude. He had been spewed up, mangled and dying, from his rest on the sea-floor, where he might have lived till the Judgment Day, and we saw the tides of his life go from him as an angry tide goes out across rocks in the teeth of a landward gale. His mate lay rocking on the water a little distance off, bellowing continually, and the smell of musk came down upon the ship making us cough.</p>
<p>At last the battle for life ended in a batter of coloured seas. We saw the writhing neck fall like a flail, the carcase turn sideways, showing the glint of a white belly and the inset of a gigantic hind leg or flipper. Then all sank, and sea boiled over it, while the mate swam round and round, darting her head in every direction. Though we might have feared that she would attack the steamer, no power on earth could have drawn any one of us from our places that hour. We watched, holding our breaths. The mate paused in her search; we could hear the wash beating along her sides; reared her neck as high as she could reach, blind and lonely in all that loneliness of the sea, and sent one desperate bellow booming across the swells as an oyster-shell skips across a pond. Then she made off to the westward, the sun shining on the white head and the wake behind it, till nothing was left to see but a little pin point of silver on the horizon. We stood on our course again; and the <i>Rathmines</i>, coated with the sea-sediment from bow to stern, looked like a ship made gray with terror.</p>
<div align="center">
<h2><b>.     .     .     .     .</b></h2>
</div>
<p>‘We must pool our notes,’ was the first coherent remark from Keller. ‘w’e’re three trained journalists—we hold absolutely the biggest scoop on record. Start fair.’</p>
<p>I objected to this. Nothing is gained by collaboration in journalism when all deal with the same facts, so we went to work each according to his own lights. Keller triple-headed his account, talked about our ‘gallant captain,’ and wound up with an allusion to American enterprise in that it was a citizen of Dayton, Ohio, that had seen the sea-serpent. This sort of thing would have discredited the Creation, much more a mere sea tale, but as a specimen of the picture-writing of a half civilised people it was very interesting. Zuyland took a heavy column and a half, giving approximate lengths and breadths, and the whole list of the crew whom he had sworn on oath to testify to his facts. There was nothing fantastic or flamboyant in Zuyland. I wrote three-quarters of a leaded bourgeois column, roughly speaking, and refrained from putting any journalese into it for reasons that had begun to appear to me.</p>
<p>Keller was insolent with joy. He was going to cable from Southampton to the New York <i>World</i>, mail his account to America on the same day, paralyse London with his three columns of loosely knitted headlines, and generally efface the earth. ‘You’ll see how I work a big scoop when I get it,’ he said.</p>
<p>‘Is this your first visit to England?’ I asked.</p>
<p>‘Yes,’ said he. ‘You don’t seem to appreciate the beauty of our scoop. It’s pyramidal—the death of the sea-serpent! Good heavens alive, man, it’s the biggest thing ever vouchsafed to a paper!’</p>
<p>‘Curious to think that it will never appear in any paper, isn’t it?’ I said.</p>
<p>Zuyland was near me, and he nodded quickly.</p>
<p>‘What do you mean?’ said Keller. ‘If you’re enough of a Britisher to throw this thing away, I shan’t. I thought you were a newspaperman.’</p>
<p>‘I am. That’s why I know. Don’t be an ass, Keller. Remember, I’m seven hundred years your senior, and what your grandchildren may learn five hundred years hence, I learned from my grandfathers about five hundred years ago. You won’t do it, because you can’t.’</p>
<p>This conversation was held in open sea, where everything seems possible, some hundred miles from Southampton. We passed the Needles Light at dawn, and the lifting day showed the stucco villas on the green and the awful orderliness of England—line upon line, wall upon wall, solid stone dock and monolithic pier. We waited an hour in the Customs shed, and there was ample time for the effect to soak in.</p>
<p>‘Now, Keller, you face the music. The <i>Havel</i> goes out to-day. Mail by her, and I’ll take you to the telegraph-office,’ I said.</p>
<p>I heard Keller gasp as the influence of the land closed about him, cowing him as they say Newmarket Heath cows a young horse unused to open courses.</p>
<p>‘I want to retouch my stuff. Suppose we wait till we get to London?’ he said.</p>
<p>Zuyland, by the way, had torn up his account and thrown it overboard that morning early. His reasons were my reasons.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 4<br />
</strong></p>
<p>In the train Keller began to revise his copy, and every time that he looked at the trim little fields, the red villas, and the embankments of the line, the blue pencil plunged remorselessly through the slips. He appeared to have dredged the dictionary for adjectives. I could think of none that he had not used. Yet he was a perfectly sound poker-player and never showed more cards than were sufficient to take the pool.</p>
<p>‘Aren’t you going to leave him a single bellow?’ I asked sympathetically. ‘Remember, everything goes in the States, from a trouser-button to a double-eagle.’</p>
<p>‘That’s just the curse of it,’ said Keller below his breath. ‘We’ve played ’em for suckers so often that when it comes to the golden truth—I’d like to try this on a London paper. You have first call there, though.’</p>
<p>‘Not in the least. I’m not touching the thing in our papers. I shall be happy to leave ’em all to you; but surely you’ll cable it home?’</p>
<p>‘No. Not if I can make the scoop here and see the Britishers sit up.’</p>
<p>‘You won’t do it with three columns of slushy headline, believe me. They don’t sit up as quickly as some people.’</p>
<p>‘I’m beginning to think that too. Does <i>nothing</i> make any difference in this country?’ he said, looking out of the window. ‘How old is that farmhouse?’</p>
<p>‘New. It can’t be more than two hundred years at the most.’</p>
<p>‘Um. Fields, too?’</p>
<p>‘That hedge there must have been clipped for about eighty years.’</p>
<p>‘Labour cheap—eh?’</p>
<p>‘Pretty much. Well, I suppose you’d like to try the <i>Times</i>, wouldn’t you?’</p>
<p>‘No,’ said Keller, looking at Winchester Cathedral. ‘’Might as well try to electrify a haystack. And to think that the <i>World</i> would take three columns and ask for more—with illustrations too! It’s sickening.’</p>
<p>‘But the <i>Times</i> might,’ I began.</p>
<p>Keller flung his paper across the carriage, and it opened in its austere majesty of solid type—opened with the crackle of an encyclopædia.</p>
<p>‘Might! You <i>might</i> work your way through the bow-plates of a cruiser. Look at that first page!’</p>
<p>‘It strikes you that way, does it?’ I said. ‘Then I’d recommend you to try a light and frivolous journal.’</p>
<p>‘With a thing like this of mine—of ours? It’s sacred history!’</p>
<p>I showed him a paper which I conceived would be after his own heart, in that it was modelled on American lines.</p>
<p>‘That’s homey,’ he said, ‘but it’s not the real thing. Now, I should like one of these fat old <i>Times</i> columns. Probably there’d be a bishop in the office, though.’</p>
<p>When we reached London Keller disappeared in the direction of the Strand. What his experiences may have been I cannot tell, but it seems that he invaded the office of an evening paper. at 11.45 a.m. (I told him English editors were most idle at that hour), and mentioned my name as that of a witness to the truth of his story.</p>
<p>‘I was nearly fired out,’ he said furiously at lunch. ‘As soon as I mentioned you, the old man said that I was to tell you that they didn’t want any more of your practical jokes, and that you knew the hours to call if you had anything to sell, and that they’d see you condemned before they helped to puff one of your infernal yarns in advance. Say, what record do you hold for truth in this country, anyway?’</p>
<p>‘A beauty. You ran up against it, that’s all. Why don’t you leave the English papers alone and cable to New York? Everything goes over there.’</p>
<p>‘Can’t you see that’s just why?’ he repeated.</p>
<p>‘I saw it a long time ago. You don’t intend to cable, then?’</p>
<p>‘Yes, I do,’ he answered, in the over-emphatic voice of one who does not know his own mind.</p>
<p>That afternoon I walked him abroad and about, over the streets that run between the pavements like channels of grooved and tongued lava, over the bridges that are made of enduring stone, through subways floored and sided with yard-thick concrete, between houses that are never rebuilt, and by river-steps hewn, to the eye, from the living rock. A black fog chased us into Westminster Abbey, and, standing there in the darkness, I could hear the wings of the dead centuries circling round the head of Litchfield A. Keller, journalist, of Dayton, Ohio, U.S.A., whose mission it was to make the Britishers sit up.</p>
<p>He stumbled gasping into the thick gloom, and the roar of the traffic came to his bewildered ears.</p>
<p>‘Let’s go to the telegraph-office and cable,’ I said. ‘Can’t you hear the New York <i>World</i> crying for news of the great sea-serpent, blind, white, and smelling of musk, stricken to death by a submarine volcano, and assisted by his loving wife to die in mid-ocean, as visualised by an American citizen, the breezy, newsy, brainy news paper man of Dayton, Ohio? ’Rah for the Buckeye State. Step lively! Both gates! Szz! Boom! Aah!’ Keller was a Princeton man, and he seemed to need encouragement.</p>
<p>‘You’ve got me on your own ground,’ said he, tugging at his overcoat pocket. He pulled out his copy, with the cable forms—for he had written out his telegram—and put them all into my hand, groaning, ‘I pass. If I hadn’t come to your cursed country—1f I’d sent it off at Southampton—If I ever get you west of the Alleghannies, if——’</p>
<p>‘Never mind, Keller. It isn’t your fault. It’s the fault of your country. If you had been seven hundred years older you’d have done what I am going to do.’</p>
<p>‘What are you going to do?’</p>
<p>‘Tell it as a lie.’</p>
<p>‘Fiction?’ This with the full-blooded disgust of a journalist for the illegitimate branch of the profession.</p>
<p>‘You can call it that if you like. I shall call it a lie.’</p>
<p>And a lie it has become; for Truth is a naked lady, and if by accident she is drawn up from the bottom of the sea, it behoves a gentleman either to give her a print petticoat or to turn his face to the wall and vow that he did not see.</p>
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		<title>A Menagerie Aboard</title>
		<link>https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-menagerie-aboard.htm</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[wa_admin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 27 May 2021 16:20:01 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://ks-demo3.web/tale/a-menagerie-aboard/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong>[a short tale]</strong> <b>IT</b> was pyjama time on the <i>Madura</i> in the Bay of Bengal, and the incense of the very early morning cigar went up to the stainless skies. Every one knows pyjama time—the ... <a title="A Menagerie Aboard" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-menagerie-aboard.htm" aria-label="Read more about A Menagerie Aboard">Read more</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="leftmargin">
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>[a short tale]</strong></p>
<p><b>IT</b> was pyjama time on the <i>Madura</i> in the Bay of Bengal, and the incense of the very early morning cigar went up to the stainless skies. Every one knows pyjama time—the long hour that follows the removal of the beds from the saloon skylight and the consumption of <i>chota hazri</i>. Most men know, too, that the choicest stories of many seas may be picked up then—from the long-winded histories of the Colonial sheep-master to the crisp anecdotes of the Californian; from tales of battle, murder and sudden death told by the Burmah-retumed subaltern, to the bland drivel of the globe-trotter. The Captain, taste-fully attired in pale pink, sat up on the signal-gun and tossed the husk of a banana overboard.</p>
<p>“It looked in through my cabin-window,” said he, “and scared me nearly into a fit.” We had just been talking about a monkey who appeared to a man in an omnibus, and haunted him till he cut his own throat. The apparition, amid howls of incredulity, was said to have been the result of excessive tea-drinking. The Captain’s apparition promised to be better.</p>
<p>“It was a menagerie—a whole turnout, lock, stock, and barrel, from the big bear to the little hippopotamus; and you can guess the size of it from the fact that they paid us a thousand pounds in freight only. We got them all accommodated somewhere forward among the deck passengers, and they whooped up terribly all along the ship for two or three days. Among other things, such as panthers and leopards, there were sixteen giraffes, and we moored ’em fore and aft as securely as might be; but you can’t get a purchase on a giraffe somehow. He slopes back too much from the bows to the stem. We were running up the Red Sea, I think, and the menagerie fairly quiet. One night I went to my cabin not feeling well. About midnight I was waked by something breathing on my face. I was quite cahn and collected, for I had got it into my head that it was one of the panthers, or at least the bear; and I reached back to the rack behind me for a revolver. Then the head began to slide against my cabin—all across it—and I said to myself: ‘It’s the big python.’ But I looked into its eyes—they were beautiful eyes—and saw it was one of the giraffes. Tell you, though, a giraffe has the eyes of a sorrowful nun, and this creature was just brimming over with liquid tenderness. The seven-foot neck rather spoilt the effect, but I’ll always recollect those eyes.”</p>
<p>“Say, did you kiss the critter?” demanded the orchid-hunter en route to Siam.</p>
<p>“No; I remembered that it was dam valuable, and I didn’t want to lose freight on it. I was afraid it would break its neck drawing its head out of my window—I had a big deck cabin, of course—so I shoved it out softly like a hen, and the head slid out, with those Mary Magdalene eyes following me to the last. Then I heard the quartermaster calling on heaven and earth for his lost giraffe, and then the row began all up and down the decks. The giraffe had sense enough to duck its head to avoid the awnings—we were awned from bow to stem—but it clattered about like a sick cow, the quartermaster jumping after it, and it swinging its long neck like a flail. ‘Catch it, and hold it!’ said the quartermaster. ‘Catch a typhoon,’ said I. ‘She’s going overboard.’ The spotted fool had heaved one foot over the stem railings and was trying to get the other to follow. It was so happy at getting its head into the open I thought it would have crowed—I don’t know whether giraffes crow, but it heaved up its neck for all the world like a crowing cock. ‘Come back to your stable,’ yelled the quartermaster, grabbing hold of the brute’s tail.</p>
<p>“I was nearly helpless with laughing, though I knew if the concern went over it would be no laughing matter for me. Well, by good luck she came round—the quartermaster was a strong man at a rope’s end. First of all she slewed her neck round, and I could see those tender, loving eyes under the stars sort of saying: ‘Cruel man! What are you doing to my tail?’ Then the foot came on board, and she humped herself up under the awning, looking ready to cry with disappointment. The funniest thing was she didn’t make any noise—a pig would ha’ roused the ship in no time—only every time she dropped her foot on the deck it was like firing a revolver, the hoofs clicked so. We headed her towards the bows, back to her moorings—just like a policeman showing a short-sighted old woman over a crossing. The quartermaster sweated and panted and swore, but she never said anything—only whacked her old head despsiringly against the awning and the funnel case. Her feet woke up the whole ship, and by the time we had her fairly moored fore and aft the population in their night-gear were giving us advice. Then we took up a yard or two in all the moorings and turned in. No other animal got loose that voyage, though the old lady looked at me most repmachfully every time I came that way, and ‘You’ve blasted my young and tender innocence’ was the expression of her eyes. It was all the quartermaster’s fault for hauling her tail. I wonder she didn’t kick him open. Well, of course, that isn’t much of a yarn, but I remember once, in the city of Venice, we had a Malayan tapir loose on Hm deck, and we had to lasso him. It was this way”:</p>
<p>“<i>Guzl thyar hai,</i>” said the steward, and I fled down the companion and missed the tale of be tapir.</p>
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		<title>A Naval Mutiny</title>
		<link>https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-naval-mutiny.htm</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[wa_admin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Wed, 12 May 2021 10:35:50 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://ks-demo3.web/tale/a-naval-mutiny/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<em>(The Kipling Society presents here Kipling’s work as he</em> <em>wrote it, but wishes to alert readers that the text below</em> <em>contains some derogatory and/or offensive language)</em> &#160; <strong>page 1 of 4 </strong> <b>WHAT</b> bronchitis had ... <a title="A Naval Mutiny" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-naval-mutiny.htm" aria-label="Read more about A Naval Mutiny">Read more</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-size: 14px; font-family: times new roman, times, georgia, serif;"><em>(The Kipling Society presents here Kipling’s work as he</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 14px; font-family: times new roman, times, georgia, serif;"><em>wrote it, but wishes to alert readers that the text below</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 14px; font-family: times new roman, times, georgia, serif;"><em>contains some derogatory and/or offensive language)</em></span></div>
<p>&nbsp;</p>
<div id="leftmargin">
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 1 of 4<br />
</strong></p>
<p><b>WHAT</b> bronchitis had spared of him came, by medical advice, to Stephano’s Island, that gem of sub-tropical seas, set at a height above the Line where parrots do not breed.Yet there were undoubtedly three of them, squawking through the cedars. He asked a young lady, who knew the Island by descent, how this came. ‘Two are ours,’ she replied. ‘We used to feed them in the veranda, but they got away, and set up housekeeping and had a baby.’</p>
<p>‘What does a baby parrot look like?’</p>
<p>‘Oh, just like a little Jew baby. I expect there will be some more soon.’ She smiled prophetically.</p>
<div align="center">
<h2><b>.     .     .     .     .</b></h2>
</div>
<p>He watched H.M.S. <i>Florealia</i> work her way into the harbour. She moored, and sent a gig ashore. The bull-terrier, who is <i>de facto</i> Chief Superintendent of the Island Police, was explaining Port Regulations to the dog in charge of a Florida lumber schooner at the quay. His Policeman stood beside him. The gig, after landing her officer, lay off. The Policeman said in a clear voice to the dog ‘Come on, then, Polly! Pretty Polly! Come on, Polly, Polly, Polly!’ The gig’s crew seemed to grind their teeth a little as man and dog moved off. The invalid exchanged a few sentences with the Policeman and limped along the front street to the far and shallow end of the harbour, where Randolph’s boat-repairing yard stands, just off the main road, near the mangrove clump by the poinsettias. A small mongrel fox-terrier pup, recovering from distemper, lay in the path of two men, who wanted to haul in a forty-foot craft, known to have been in the West India trade for a century, and now needing a new barrel to her steering-wheel.</p>
<p>‘Let Lil lay,’ Mr. Randolph called. ‘Bring the boat in broadside, and run a plank to her.’ Then he greeted the visitor. ‘Mornin’, Mr. Heatleigh. How’s the cough? Our climate suitin’ you? That’s fine. Lil’s fine too. The milk’s helpin’ her. You ain’t the only one of her admirers. Winter Vergil’s fetchin’ her milk now. He ought to be here.’</p>
<p>‘Winter Vergil! What the—who’s he?’</p>
<p>‘He hasn’t been around the last week. He’s had trouble.’ Mr. Randolph laughed softly. ‘He’s a Navy Bo’sun—any age you please. He took his pension on the Island when I was a boy. ’Married on the Island too—a widow out of Cornwall Parish. That ’ud make her a Gallop or a Mewett. Hold a minute! It <i>was</i> Mewett. Her first man was a Gallop. He left her five acres of good onion-ground, that a Hotel wanted for golf-development. So-o, <i>that</i> way, an’ Vergil havin’ saved, he has his house an’ garden handy to the Dockyard. ’No more keepin’ Daddy away from there than land-crabs off a dead nigger. I’m expectin’ him any time now.’</p>
<p>Mr. Heatleigh unbuttoned his light coat, for the sun was beginning to work deliciously. Behind the old boat lay a scarlet hydroplane crowded with nickel fitments and reeking of new enamels.</p>
<p>‘That’s Rembrandt Casalis’s latest,’ Mr. Randolph explained. ‘He’s Glucose Utilities—wuth fifteen million they say. But no boatman. He took her alongside a wharf last week. That don’t worry me. His estate can pay my repair-bills. I’m doo to deliver her back this morning. . . . Now! Now! Don’t get movin’ jest as you’re come. Set in the shed awhile. Vergil’s bound to be along with Lil’s milk. Lay-to an’ meet him. I’d not go, ’lest I had to. But Lil ’ll keep you company.’</p>
<p>He splashed out to the hydroplane, which he woke to outrageous howlings, and departed in one splitting crack. The dead-water-rubbish swirled in under the mangrove-stems as the sound of her flight up-harbour faded. Mr. Heatleigh watched the two hands on the West Indiaman. They laid a gang-plank up to her counter, bore away the rusty scarred wheel-barrel, and went elsewhere. Lil slept, and along the white coral road behind passed a procession of horse-drawn vehicles; for another tripper-steamer had arrived, and her passengers were being dealt out to the various hotels. An old, spare, clean-shaven man, in spotless tussore silk, stepped off the road into the yard. He bore left-handedly (his right was bandaged) a sealed bottle of sterilised milk. Lil ran to him, and he asked where her master might be. Mr. Heatleigh told him, and they exchanged names. Mr. Vergil rummaged a clean saucer out of the shed, but found he could not pour single-handed. Mr. Heatleigh helped him.</p>
<p>‘She may be worth seventy-five cents,’ Mr. Vergil observed as Lil lapped. ‘She’s cost more’n four dollars a week the last six weeks. Well, she’s Randolph’s dam’ dog, anyhow.’</p>
<p>‘’Not fond of dogs?’ Mr. Heatleigh asked.</p>
<p>‘Not of any pets you might say, just now.’</p>
<p>Mr. Heatleigh glanced at the neatly-bandaged hand and nodded.</p>
<p>‘No—not dogs,’ said Mr. Vergil.. ‘Parrots. The medical officer at the Dockyard said it was more like the works of vulshures.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t know much about parrots.’</p>
<p>‘You get to know about most things in the Navy—sooner or later. Burst-a-Frog, you do!’</p>
<p>‘Mr. Randolph told me you had been in the Ser—Navy.’</p>
<p>‘Boy and man—forty odd years. I took my pension here in Nineteen Ten when Jacky’s dam’ first silly <i>Dreadnought</i> came in. All this so-called noo Navy has hove up since my time. I was boy, for example, in the old Black Fleet—<i>Warrior</i>, <i>Minotaur</i>, <i>Hercules</i>, an’ those. In the Hungry Six too, if that means anything. . . . Are ye going away?’ Mr. Heatleigh had moved out from the shed.</p>
<p>‘Oh no! I was only thinking of bringing my—sitting up there for a bit.’ Mr. Heatleigh turned towards the boat, but seemed to wait for Mr. Vergil to precede him up the gang-plank. The old man ran up it and dropped inboard little less nimbly than Mr. Heatleigh, who followed. They settled themselves at the stern, by the wheel. All forward of her mast was the naked hold of black rock-hard timbers. Mr. Vergil’s glance, under frosty eyebrows, swept his companion’s long visage as a searchlight sweeps a half-guessed foreshore. ‘’Tourist?’ he demanded suddenly.</p>
<p>‘Yes, for a bit. I’ve got a motor-boat at Southampton.’</p>
<p>‘‘Don’t believe in ’em—never did. This beats ’em all!’</p>
<p>He pointed to the bleached and cracked mast. There was silence while the two sunned themselves. Mr. Heatleigh joined hands across one knee to help lift a rather stiff leg, as he lolled against the low stern-rail. The action drew his coat-cuff more than half-way up his wrist, which was tattooed. Mr. Vergil, backed against the sun, dug out his pipe-bowl. A breath of warmed cedar came across a patch of gladioli. ‘Think o’ Southampton Water now! ‘ said Mr. Vergil. ‘Thick—<i>an</i>’ cold!’</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 2</strong></p>
<p>The three parrots screamed and whirled across the tip of the harbour. Mr. Vergil shook his bandaged hand at them.</p>
<p>‘How did it happen?’ Mr. Heatleigh asked.</p>
<p>‘’Obligin’ a friend. ’No surer way.’</p>
<p>‘How?—If you don’t mind.’ But there was command in the voice.</p>
<p>Once more Mr. Vergil’s eyes raked the lean figure. ‘It’s due,’ he said, ‘to the Navy keepin’ pets. Battleships an’ armoured cruisers carry bears till they start huggin’ senior ranks. Smaller craft, monkeys and parrots where allowed. There was a man in the old <i>Audacious</i>—Go-ood Lord, an’ how she steered!—kep’ chameleons in the engine-room, but they interfered with the movin’ parts. Parrots are best. People pay high for well-spoken parrots.’</p>
<p>‘Who teaches ’em?’</p>
<p>‘Parrots are like women. They pick up where they shouldn’t. I’ve heard it’s the tone that attracts ’em. Now we’ve two cruisers—sloops I call ’em—on the Station. One’s <i>Bulleana</i>, and t’other’s the <i>Florealia</i>. Both of ’em stinkin’ with parrots. Every dam’ kind o’ green—an’ those pink-tailed greys like we used to get on the West Coast. Go-ood Lord! Burst-a-Frog! When was I in the Bight last? An’ what in? <i>Theseus</i>—<i>St. George</i>, was it? Benin Expedition, was it? When we found those four hundred sovereigns and the four dozen champagne left in the King’s Royal Canoe? An’ no one noticed the cash till after! . . . But parrots. There’s a man called Mowlsey, a sort of Dockyard makee-do on the Stores side. He came to see me, knowin’ Mrs. Vergil had a parrot. My house is handy to the Dockyard, because that way I can gratify my tastes. What I mean is what I’ve worked at forty years is good enough for me to stay by. That bein’ so, I am often asked to bear a hand at delicate jobs.’</p>
<p>‘Quite so,’ said Mr. Heatleigh, still further extending himself to toast his lizard-like stomach. His coat-cuff was well above the wrist now.</p>
<p>‘An’—that evenin’ I’m speakin’ of—this Mowlsey wanted me for special dooties. Owin’ to approachin’ target-practice for both ships, all Squadron parrots was to be handed in to the Riggin’ Loft. There would be an O.C. Parrots, authorised to charge per diem for food an’ maintenance. On return of Squadron, parrots would be returned to respective owners. He showed me the Orders—typed; an’ Mrs. Vergil havin’ a parrot, an’ Mowlsey saying I had the requisite prestige, made me take on. The Riggin’ Loft ain’t a bad place, too, to sit in. Go-ood Lord! I remember when it used to be chock-a-block with spars, an’ now—who’d know a stuns’le-boom from a wash-pole if they was crucified on ’em?’</p>
<p>‘Why do they send parrots ashore for target-practice?’</p>
<p>‘On account of the concussion strikin’ ’em dumb. They don’t like it themselves either. We had a big dog-baboon in the old <i>Penelope</i> (she with that stern) never could stummick big gun-practice even with black powder. He used to betake himself to the Head an’ gnash his teeth against all an’ sundry. Now that was a noosance—because the Head——’</p>
<p>Mr. Heatleigh coughed. ‘Bronchitis,’ he explained swiftly. ‘Car—go ahead.’</p>
<p>‘My instructions was to prepare to receive parrots at five bells. I daresay they told you in your passenger-steamer comin’ out what time <i>that</i> is aboardship.’</p>
<p>‘It’s on the back of the passenger-list, I think,’ Mr. Heatleigh answered meekly.</p>
<p>Mr. Vergil drew an impatient breath and went on.</p>
<p>‘There was a bin full of parrot-rations inside. I put it down to Dockyard waste as usual. I had no notion what it’ud mean for me. Now a Riggin’ Loft, I may tell you, is mostly windows, an’ along beneath ’em was spare awnin’-stretchers and sailin’-boat spars stacked on booms. I shifted some to make a shelving for the cages. I didn’t see myself squattin’ on the deck to attend to ’em. ’Takes too long to get up again, these days. (Go-ood Lord! Burst-a-Frog! An’ I was an upper-yard-man for six years—leadin’ hand, fore cross-trees, in the <i>Resistance</i>.) While I was busy, it sounded like our Marines landing in Crete—an’ how long ago was <i>that</i>, now? They marched up from the boat-steps, <i>Bulleanas</i> leadin’, <i>Florealias</i> in the rear, each man swingin’ a cage to keep his bird quiet. When they halted an’ the motion ceased they all began to rejoice—the birds, I mean—at findin’ themselves together. A Petty Officer wraps his hands round my ear an’ megaphones: “Look sharp, Daddy. ’Tain’t a cargo that’ll keep.”</p>
<p>‘Nor was it. I could only walk backwards, semaphorin’ <i>Bulleanas</i> to stack cages to port, an’ <i>Florealias</i> to starboard o’ the Loft. They marched in an’ stacked accordin’—forty-three <i>Bulleana</i> birds, an’ twenty-nine <i>Florealias</i>, makin’ seventy-two in all.’</p>
<p>‘Why didn’t you say a hundred?’ Mr. Heatleigh asked.</p>
<p>‘Because there weren’t that many. The landin’ parties then proceeded to the far doors, an’, turnin’ port or starboard, accordin’ to their ships, navigated back again along outside the premises to say good-bye. Seventy-two birds, and seventy-two lower-deck ratin’s leanin’ through the windows, tellin’ ’em to be good an’ true till they returned. An’ <i>that</i> had to be done in dumb-crambo too! A Petty Officer towed me into the offing before we could communicate. But he only said:—“Gawd help you, Daddy!” an’ marched ’em aboard again. That broke the birds’ hearts . . . <i>Do?</i> If you can’t do anything, don’t make yourself a laughing-stock. I hung on an’ off outside waitin’ for a lull in the typhoon. Go-ood Lord-Burst-a-Frog! How many have I seen of ’em? But, look you—’wasn’t any typhoon scuppered the <i>Serpent</i>! She was overgunned forrard, an’ couldn’t shake her head clear of a ripple. Sister-ship to <i>Viper</i> an’ <i>Cobra</i>, was she? No! No! They were destroyers. But all unlucky sampans! . . . An about my parrots. I went into the Loft an’ said:—“Hush!” like Mrs. Vergil. They detailed a coverin’-party to keep up the fire, but most of ’em slued their heads round, and took stock of me—sizin’ me up, the same as the watches do their Warrants and Bo’suns before the ship’s shaken down. I took stock o’ them, to spot the funny-men an’ trouble makers for the ensuin’ commission. Burst-a-Frog! How often have I done that! The screechers didn’t worry me. Most men can’t live, let alone work, unless they’re chewin’ the rag. It was the noocleus—the on-the-knee parties—that I wanted to identify. Why? If a man knows one job properly, don’t matter what it is, he ought to know ’em all. For example. I had spent twenty odd years headin’ off bad hats layin’ to aggravate me; <i>and</i> liars and sea-lawyers tryin’ to trip me on Admiralty Regulations; not to mention the usual cheap muckin’s, eatin’ into the wind. An’ there they was—every man I’d ever logged or got twisted at seven bells—<i>all</i> there, metamorfused into those dam’ birds, an’ o’ course, havin’ been Navy trained, talkin’ lowerdeck.’</p>
<p>As Mr. Vergil paused, Mr. Heatleigh nodded with apparent understanding.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 3<br />
</strong></p>
<p>‘There was a pink-tail grey—a West Coast ju-ju-wallah—squatting on the floor of his cage. I’d ha’ put <i>him</i> in the bowse on his general tally if he’d been a regular ratin’. He waited till me eye travelled past him, as I was lookin’ ’em over. Then he called me It out of his belly, ventriloquial. Now there was an upper-yard-man in—now which one of those old bitch-cruisers was it? No! No! <i>Resistance</i>—five masts. Yes,—who had the very same gift, and other men got the blame. Jemmy Reader was his name—a sour dog with a broken mouth. I said to him, the bird I mean: “The anchor ain’t fairly stowed yet; so I didn’t hear you. But I won’t forget it, Jemmy.” And Burst-a-Frog! I hadn’t thought of Jemmy Reader in thirty odd years.</p>
<p>‘An’ there was a sulphur-crested cockatoo, swearin’ like poison. He reminded me o’ someone I couldn’t fit, but I saw he was good for trouble. One way an’ another, I spotted half-a-dozen proper jokers, an’ a dozen, maybe, that ’ud follow ’em if things went well. The rest was ord’nary seamen, ready to haul with any crowd that promised a kick-up. (I’d seen it <i>all</i> before, when I had to know seven hundred men by name and station within the first week. ’Never allowed meself or anyone else any longer.)</p>
<p>‘Then Mrs. Vergil came down with me luncheon. We had to go a long way outside the Loft to talk. They weren’t ladies’ birds. But she said, quick as cordite:—“Our Polly’s cage-cover’s the thing.” And I said:—“The heart of her husband shall safely trust in her. Send it down now. One of ’em’s overdue for it already.” She sent it, an’ my Presentation Whistle which they had presented to me on leaving the <i>Raleigh</i>. Burst-a-Frog! She <i>was</i> a ship. Ten knots on a bowline, comin’ out o’ Simonstown, draggin’ her blasted screw.’</p>
<p>‘What did you want your Call for?’ Once more Mr. Vergil’s eyes pierced Mr. Heatleigh through at the question.</p>
<p>‘If the game was workin’ out on lower-deck lines, how could I do without it? Next time that cockatoo-bird began cursin’ me, I piped down. It fetched him up with a round turn. He squatted an’ said, “Lord love a Duck!” He hadn’t Jemmy’s guts. An’ just <i>that</i>, mark you, hove him up in my mind for the man which he’d been. It was Number Three at the port six-pounder—she hadn’t much else—in the old <i>Polyphemus</i>—ram, that broke the boom at Berehaven—how long back? He was a beefy beggar, with a greasy lollopin’ lovelock on his forehead—but I can’t remember his tally. There were some other duplicates o’ men I had known, but Jemmy and the Polyphemus bird were the ringleaders. Bye and bye those green screechers cooled off a bit—creakin’ an’ mutterin’ like hens on a hot day; an’ I did a caulk by the open door, where the boat-rollers are. Then Jemmy sprung it on me, an’ I heard what I haven’t in a long day! “Hand-of-a-Mess for biscuits!” They feed ’em on French rolls in the so-called New Navy; but it used to be, when a boy heard that, he sculled off an’ drew what was on issue for his mess, or got kicked. An’ just then I <i>was</i> a boy bringin’ a boat alongside the old <i>Squirrel</i> training-brig in slow time. (Dreamin’ I mean.) So I was halfway down the Loft ’fore I woke, an’ they all scoffed at me! Jemmy leadin’. But there was somethin’ at the back o’ the noise (you can always tell), an’ while I was rubbin’ my eyes open, I saw the bin o’ parrot-food. Seven bells in the afternoon-watch, it was, an’ what they wanted, an’ what by Admiralty Regulations, d’ye see, they were entitled to, was their food-pans refillin’. <i>That’s</i> where Jemmy showed his cunnin’! Lots o’ food was still unexpended, but they were within their rights; an’ he had disrated me to Hand-of-a-Mess in his birdshop!’</p>
<p>‘What did you do?’</p>
<p>‘Nothin’. It was a lower-deck try-on. ’Question was should I treat ’em as birds or blue jackets. I gave ’em the benefit o’ the doubt. Navy-pattern they was, an’ Navy tack they should get. I filled pans and renewed water where requisite, an’ they mocked me. They mocked me all the time. That took me through the first dog-watch. Jemmy waited till I had finished, an’ then he called me It again. (Jemmy Reader out on a weather-earrin’ to the life!) An’ that started Polyphemus. I dowsed Jemmy’s glim with our Polly s cage-cover. That short-circuited the quiff bird too; provin’ they was workin’ off the same lead. I carried on cleanin’ their cages, with a putty-knife. It gratified ’em highly to see me Captain of the Head as well as Mess Boy. Jemmy o’ course couldn’t see, but Polyphemus told him, an’ he said what he shouldn’t in the dark. He had guts. I give him that. I then locked up the Loft and went home.</p>
<p>‘Mrs. Vergil said that I had done well, but I knew that, so far, it had only been ranging on the target. Mut’ny an’ conspiracy was their game, an’ the question was how they’d work it. Go-ood Lord-Burst-a-Frog! I’ve seen three years’ continuous mut’ny, slave-dhowing in the Red Sea, under single awnin’s, with “Looney Dick” in the old <i>Petruchio</i> corvette—the one that dropped her bottom out off The Minicoys. By the end of the commission, all Officers not under open arrest was demandin’ court-martials, an’ the lower-deck was prowlin’ murder.’</p>
<p>‘How did it finish?’ Mr. Heatleigh asked.</p>
<p>‘Navy-fashion. We came home. When our cockroaches had died—off Gozo that would be—Dick piped all hands to look at a kit-bag full of evidence, in the waist, under the Ensign. “There’s enough bile an’ spite an’ perjury there,” he says, “to scupper all hands—an’ me first. If you want it taken home, say so.” We didn’t. “Then we’ll give it Christian burial,” he says. We did; our Doctor actin’ Chaplain. . . . But about my parrots. I went back to ’em at sunrise—you could have heard ’em off the Bahamas since dawn—but that was the bird in ’em. I gave them room to swing till it crossed my mind they were mockin’ me again. (The nastiest rux I ever saw, when a boy, began with “All hands to skylark.” <i>I</i> don’t hold with it.) When I took our Polly’s cage-cover off Jemmy, he didn’t call me anything. He sat an’ scoffed at me. I couldn’t tell what traverse he was workin’ till he cocked one eye up—Jemmy Reader workin’ some dirty game to the life!—an’ there, in the roof, was a little green beggar skimmin’ up an’ down. He’d broke out of his cage. Next minute, there was another promenadin’ along a spar, looking back at me like a Gosport lady to see how I took it. I shut doors an’ windows before they had made up their minds to run. Then I inspected cages. They’d been busy since light unpickin’ the wire granny-knots this so-called Noo Navy had tied ’em in with. At sea, o’ course, there was nowhere to break out to, an’ they knew it. Ashore, they had me pawled as responsible for ’em if run or dead. An’ <i>that</i> was why Jemmy had scoffed. They’d been actin’ under his orders.’</p>
<p>‘But couldn’t it have been Polyphemus?’ Mr. Heatleigh suggested.</p>
<p>‘He may have passed on Jemmy’s orders, but he hadn’t Jemmy’s mind. All I heard out of <i>him</i> was mockin’s an’ curses. Any way, I couldn’t round up those common greens, hoppin’ out their cages by dozens, an’ when you can’t exercise authority—don’t. So I slipped out o’ the door, and listened outside. ’Reg’lar lower-deck palaver. Jemmy damned ’em all for bitchin’ the evolution. The first deserters ought to ha’ run as units, d’ye see, instead o’ waitin’ to make up a boatload. Polyphemus damned back at Jemmy like a Chatham matey, an’ the rest made noises because they liked listenin’-in to themselves. If it wasn’t for chin-wagging, there’d be serious trouble in lots of families. But I thought it was time this was being put a stop to. So I went to the house for a pair o’ scissors.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t quite see what——’</p>
<p>‘I told you that that gunner in the <i>Polyphemus</i> had a quiff an’ fancied himself the whole watch an’ a half till—Go-ood Lord, how it all came back watchin’ those poultry—he was run round to the barber an’ Dartmoor-clipped for wearin’ oily and indecent appendages. It tamed him. Only I <i>can’t</i> remember his name.’</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 4<br />
</strong></p>
<p>Mr. Vergil wrinkled his brows, and it seemed as though Mr. Heatleigh did the like. But there was no result.</p>
<p>‘When I went to ’em again, there must ha’ been twenty small greens loose. But they couldn’t break out o’ the ship, so I disregarded ’em, an’ struck at the root o’ the matter. I tried to get Polyphemus to let me scratch his head—the sweep! He bit like a bloodhound on the snap of the scissors.’ Mr. Vergil waved his right hand. ‘I had to drag an’ scrag him ’fore I offed it—his quiff—crest, I mean. An’ then—Go-ood Lord-Burst-a-Frog!—he keeled over on his side in a dead faint like a Christian! The barberin’ had worked livin’ wonders with—with the man he was, but, even so, I was surprised at that pore bald fowl! “That’s for you, you yellow dog,” I said. “The rest’s for Jemmy Reader.” Jemmy hadn’t missed a stroke of my operations. He knew what was comin’. He turned on his back like a shark, an’ began to fight tooth an’ nail. It must ha’ meant as much to him as pigtails used to—his tail, I mean.</p>
<p>‘I said:—“Jemmy, there’s never been more than one Bo’sun in any ship I’ve served in. Dead or alive, you’re for disratin’, so you can say what you please. It won’t go in the report.”’</p>
<p>‘And did he?’</p>
<p>‘Yes—oh yes! But I didn’t log it against him, the charge being strictly mut’ny. I got him at last—torn to ribbons twice over—an’ I sheared off his red tail-feathers level with his bare behind. He’d been askin’ for it the whole Commission.’</p>
<p>‘And what did he do?’</p>
<p>‘He stopped. I’ve never heard anyone chat much after disratin’. They can’t manage the voice, dye see? He tried to squat, but his backstays were carried away. Then he climbed up the wires to his ring, like an old, old man; an’ there he sat bobbin’ an’ balancin’, all down by the head like a collier-brig. Pore beggar!’</p>
<p>Mr. Heatleigh echoed him. ‘And that finished the business?’ he said.</p>
<p>‘I had struck at the root of the matter,’ Mr. Vergil replied simply. ‘There was only those common greens flyin’ loose. When they found I didn’t notice ’em, they began going back to their cages, two an’ three together for company’s sake, an’ arguin’ about it. I hurried ’em up by throwin’ my cap (the Loft was gettin’ warmish through bein’ shut up), an’ ’fore sundown they were all back, an’ I fastened up behind ’em with the same spun-yarn tricks as their silly owners had. Don’t <i>anyone</i> teach <i>anything</i> in this Noo Navy nowadays?’</p>
<p>‘What about Jemmy and Polyphemus?’ Mr. Heatleigh asked.</p>
<p>‘Jemmy was busy gettin’ used to his new trim, an’ Polyphemus squatted, croakin’ like a frog an’ sayin’, “Lord love a Duck!” No guts! That’s how it was till the Squadron returned.’</p>
<p>‘But wasn’t there some sort of fuss then between ships? A Policeman on the wharf told me—and the <i>Florealia’s</i> gig——’</p>
<p>‘They’ve been rubbin’ it in to ’em on the Island; that’s why. Yes. The banzai-parties came ashore, all hats and hosannas like a taxpayers’ treat. The Petty Officer checked my seventy-two cages—one bird per cage—an’ that finished my watch. But, then he gave the party time to talk to their sweethearts instead o’ marchin’ off at once. Some oily-wad of a <i>Bulleana</i> struck up about not having got his proper bird. I heard a P.O. say:—“Settle it among yourselves.” (Democratic, I suppose he thought it.) The man naturally started across the Loft to do so. He met a <i>Florealia</i> with the same complaint. They began settlin’ it. That let everything go by the run. They were holdin’ up their cages, and lookin’ at ’em in the light like glasses o’ port. Wonderful thing—the eye o’ Love! Yes, they began settlin’ in pairs.’</p>
<p>‘But what about Jemmy Reader and Polyphemus?’</p>
<p>‘There was a good deal o’ talk over them too. A torpedo-midwife, or some such ratin’, sculled about lookin’ for the beggar who had cut off his poor Josie’s tail. (It never hit me till then that Jemmy might have been a lady.) He fell foul of Polyphemus (the owner, I mean) moaning over his quiff; an’, not bein’ shipmates, they began settlin’ too. Then such as had drawn their proper true-loves naturally cut in for their ship or mess. I’ve seen worse ruxes in my time, but a quicker breeze-up—never! <i>As</i> usual there was something behind it. I heard one of the ships had been dished out pre-war cordite for target practice, and so her shooting was like the old <i>Superb’s</i> at Alexandria, till we touched off the magazine. The other ship had stood by condoling with five-flag hoists. So both parties landed more or less horstile. When the noise was gettin’ noticeable outside, a P.O. says to me:—“They won’t listen to us, Daddy. They say we ain’t impartial!” I said:—“God knows what you <i>ain’t</i>. But I know what you <i>are</i>! You’re less use than ten mines in a Portuguee pig-knot. Close doors an’ windows, an’ let me take charge.” So they did, an’ what with the noise bein’ bottled up inside, an’ the Loft gettin’ red-hot, an’ no one interferin’, which was what I recommended, the lower-deck broke away from the clinch, and began to pick up bashed cage-work an’ argue.</p>
<p>‘Then I piped “Clear Lower Deck,” an’ I told ’em how I’d disrated Jemmy an’ Polyphemus for doin’ what they did. (Jemmy <i>was</i> a lady, after all. He laid an egg next day aboard ship, an’ his owner sent me a kodak picture.) That took their minds off. I told ’em how I’d sweated in the Loft, guardin’ their treasures for ’em, an’ they had no right to complain if the poor little lonely beggars had mixed hammicks in their absence. When I had ’em laughing, I told ’em they was all gas an’ gaspers an’ hair-oil, like the rest of the so-called Noo Navy, an’ they were marched off. Otherwise—even if some fool wouldn’t ha’ sent for the Marines, and spilled some silly mess into the papers—those two ships ’ud ha’ been sortin’ parrots out of each other the rest of the commission. You know what <i>that</i> means in the way of ruxes ashore! As it is, they are actin’ as a unit when they’re chipped about “pretty Pollies” all over the Island. The worse they’ll do now is to kill a Policeman or two. An’, if I may say so, my handlin’ of ’em—birds <i>an</i>’ lower-deck—shows what comes of a man knowing his profession, Sir Richard.’</p>
<p>Mr. Heatleigh’s countenance and bearing changed as they expanded. He held out his hand. Mr. Vergil rose to his feet and shook it. The two beamed on each other.</p>
<p>‘I can testify to that, Vergil, since my first commission. You knew me all along?’</p>
<p>‘I thought it was you, sir, when you signalled me to go into this boat ahead of you. But I wasn’t certain till I saw that bit of work I put on you.’ Mr. Vergil pointed to the bared wrist, where the still deep blue foul-anchor showed under red hairs.</p>
<p>‘In the foretop of the <i>Resistance</i>, off Port Royal,’ Mr. Heatleigh said.</p>
<p>Mr. Vergil nodded and smiled. ‘It’s held,’ said he. ‘But—what’s happened to your proper tally, Sir Richard?’</p>
<p>‘That was because better men than me died in the War. I inherited, you see.’</p>
<p>‘Meanin’ you’re a Lord now?’</p>
<p>The other nodded. Then he slapped his knee. ‘’Got it at last,’ he cried. ‘That <i>Polyphemus</i> gunner! It was Harris—Chatty, <i>not</i> Bugs. He was with me in the <i>Comus</i> and <i>Euryalus</i> after. Nov 20, 2002;Used to lend money.’</p>
<p>‘That’s him,’ Mr. Vergil cried. ‘I always thought he was a bit of a Jew. Who commanded the <i>Comus</i> then? I mean that time in the Adriatic, when she was pooped an’ dam-near drowned the owner in his cabin.’</p>
<p>Mr. Heatleigh fished up that name also from his memory; and backwards and forwards through time they roved, recovering ships and men of ancient and forgotten ages. For, as the old know, the dead draw the dead, as iron does iron. The Admiral sat in the curve of the stern-timbers, his hands clenched on his knees, as though tiller-lines might still be there. Mr. Vergil, erect for the honour of great days and names, faced him across the battered disconnected wheel, swaying a shade in the rush of the memories that flooded past him. Victorias and phaetons began to come back from the filled hotels. One of them held a perspiring officer of the <i>Bulleana</i>, who had been instructed to find by all means Admiral (Retired) Lord Heatleigh, somehow mis-registered in some boarding-house, and to convey to him his Captain’s invitation to do them the honour of lunching with them. And it was already perilously near cocktail time! . . .</p>
<p>Later, over those same cocktails, Lord Heatleigh gathered that the opinion of His Majesty’s Squadron on the station was that ‘Daddy’ Vergil merited hanging at the yard-arm.</p>
<p>‘’Glad you haven’t got one between you,’ was the answer. ‘He taught me most of my seamanship when I was a Snotty. The best Bo’sun and—off duty—<i>the</i> biggest liar in the Service.’</p>
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		<title>A Priest in Spite of Himself</title>
		<link>https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-priest-in-spite-of-himself.htm</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Fri, 14 May 2021 16:08:23 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<strong>page 1 of 7 </strong> <b>THE DAY</b> after they came home from the sea-side they set out on a tour of inspection to make sure everything was as they had left it. Soon they discovered ... <a title="A Priest in Spite of Himself" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-priest-in-spite-of-himself.htm" aria-label="Read more about A Priest in Spite of Himself">Read more</a>]]></description>
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<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 1 of 7<br />
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<p><b>THE DAY</b> after they came home from the sea-side they set out on a tour of inspection to make sure everything was as they had left it. Soon they discovered that old Hobden had blocked their best hedge-gaps with stakes and thorn-bundles, and had trimmed up the hedges where the blackberries were setting.‘It can’t be time for the gipsies to come along,’ said Una. ‘Why, it was summer only the other day!’</p>
<p>‘There’s smoke in Low Shaw!’ said Dan, sniffing. ‘Let’s make sure!’</p>
<p>They crossed the fields towards the thin line of blue smoke that leaned above the hollow of Low Shaw which lies beside the King’s Hill road. It used to be an old quarry till somebody planted it, and you can look straight down into it from the edge of Banky Meadow.</p>
<p>‘I thought so,’ Dan whispered, as they came up to the fence at the edge of the larches. A gipsy-van—not the show-man’s sort, but the old black kind, with little windows high up and a baby-gate across the door—was getting ready to leave. A man was harnessing the horses; an old woman crouched over the ashes of a fire made out of broken fence-rails; and a girl sat on the van-steps singing to a baby on her lap. A wise-looking, thin dog snuffed at a patch of fur on the ground till the old woman put it carefully in the middle of the fire. The girl reached back inside the van and tossed her a paper parcel. This was laid on the fire too, and they smelt singed feathers.</p>
<p>‘Chicken feathers!’ said Dan. ‘I wonder if they are old Hobden’s.’</p>
<p>Una sneezed. The dog growled and crawled to the girl’s feet, the old woman fanned the fire with her hat, while the man led the horses up to the shafts, They all moved as quickly and quietly as snakes over moss.</p>
<p>‘Ah!’ said the girl. ‘I’ll teach you!’ She beat the dog, who seemed to expect it.</p>
<p>‘Don’t do that,’ Una called down. ‘It wasn’t his fault.’</p>
<p>‘How do you know what I’m beating him for?’ she answered.</p>
<p>‘For not seeing us,’ said Dan. ‘He was standing right in the smoke, and the wind was wrong for his nose, anyhow.’</p>
<p>The girl stopped beating the dog, and the old woman fanned faster than ever.</p>
<p>‘You’ve fanned some of your feathers out of the fire,’ said Una. ‘There’s a tail-feather by that chestnut-tot.’</p>
<p>‘What of it?’ said the old woman, as she grAbbéd it.</p>
<p>‘Oh, nothing!’ said Dan. ‘Only I’ve heard say that tail-feathers are as bad as the whole bird, sometimes.’</p>
<p>That was a saying of Hobden’s about pheasants. Old Hobden always burned all feather and fur before he sat down to eat.</p>
<p>‘Come on, mother,’ the man whispered. The old woman climbed into the van, and the horses drew it out of the deep-rutted shaw on to the hard road.</p>
<p>The girl waved her hands and shouted something they could not catch.</p>
<p>‘That was gipsy for “Thank you kindly, Brother and Sister,”’ said Pharaoh Lee.</p>
<p>He was standing behind them, his fiddle under his arm. ‘Gracious, you startled me!’ said Una.</p>
<p>‘You startled old Priscilla Savile,’ Puck called from below them. ‘Come and sit by their fire. She ought to have put it out before they left.’</p>
<p>They dropped down the ferny side of the shaw. Una raked the ashes together, Dan found a dead wormy oak branch that burns without flame, and they watched the smoke while Pharaoh played a curious wavery air.</p>
<p>‘That’s what the girl was humming to the baby,’ said Una.</p>
<p>‘I know it,’ he nodded, and went on:</p>
<div id="leftmargin">‘Ai Lumai, Lumai, Lumai! Luludia!<br />
Ai Luludia!’</div>
<p>He passed from one odd tune to another, and quite forgot the children. At last Puck asked him to go on with his adventures in Philadelphia and among the Seneca Indians.</p>
<p>‘I’m telling it,’ he said, staring straight in front of him as he played. ‘Can’t you hear?’</p>
<p>‘Maybe, but they can’t. Tell it aloud,’ said Puck.</p>
<p>Pharaoh shook himself, laid his fiddle beside him, and began:</p>
<p>‘I’d left Red Jacket and Cornplanter riding home with me after Big Hand had said that there wouldn’t be any war. That’s all there was to it. We believed Big Hand and we went home again—we three braves. When we reached Lebanon we found Toby at the cottage with his waistcoat a foot too big for him—so hard he had worked amongst the yellow-fever people. He beat me for running off with the Indians, but ’twas worth it—I was glad to see him,—and when we went back to Philadelphia for the winter, and I was told how he’d sacrificed himself over sick people in the yellow fever, I thought the world and all of him. No, I didn’t neither. I’d thought that all along. That yellow fever must have been something dreadful. Even in December people had no more than begun to trinkle back to town. Whole houses stood empty and (they)  was robbing them out. But I can’t call to mind that any of the Moravian Brethren had died. It seemed like they had just kept on with their own concerns, and the good Lord He’d just looked after ’em. That was the winter—yes, winter of ’Ninety-three—the Brethren bought a stove for the church. Toby spoke in favour of it because the cold spoiled his fiddle hand, but many thought stove-heat not in the Bible, and there was yet a third party which always brought hickory coal foot-warmers to service and wouldn’t speak either way. They ended by casting the Lot for it, which is like pitch-and-toss. After my summer with the Senecas, church-stoves didn’t highly interest me, so I took to haunting round among the French emigres which Philadelphia was full of. My French and my fiddling helped me there, d’ye see. They come over in shiploads from France, where, by what I made out, every one was killing every one else by any means, and they spread ’emselves about the city—mostly in Drinker’s Alley and Elfrith’s Alley—and they did odd jobs till times should mend. But whatever they stooped to, they were gentry and kept a cheerful countenance, and after an evening’s fiddling at one of their poor little proud parties, the Brethren seemed old-fashioned. Pastor Meder and Brother Adam Goos didn’t like my fiddling for hire, but Toby said it was lawful in me to earn my living by exercising my talents. He never let me be put upon.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 2</strong></p>
<p>‘In February of ’Ninety-four—No, March it must have been, because a new Ambassador called Faucher had come from France, with no more manners than Genet the old one—in March, Red Jacket came in from the Reservation bringing news of all kind friends there. I showed him round the city, and we saw General Washington riding through a crowd of folk that shouted for war with England. They gave him quite rough music, but he looked ’twixt his horse’s ears and made out not to notice. His stirrup brished Red Jacket’s elbow, and Red Jacket whispered up, “My brother knows it is not easy to be a chief.” Big Hand shot just one look at him and nodded. Then there was a scuffle behind us over some one who wasn’t hooting at Washington loud enough to please the people. We went away to be out of the fight. Indians won’t risk being hit.’</p>
<p>‘What do they do if they are?’ Dan asked.</p>
<p>‘Kill, of course. That’s why they have such proper manners. Well, then, coming home by Drinker’s Alley to get a new shirt which a French Vicomte’s lady was washing to take the stiff out of (I’m always choice in my body-linen) a lame Frenchman pushes a paper of buttons at us. He hadn’t long landed in the United States, and please would we buy. He sure-ly was a pitiful scrattel—his coat half torn off, his face cut, but his hands steady; so I knew it wasn’t drink. He said his name was Peringuey, and he’d been knocked about in the crowd round the Stadt—Independence Hall. One thing leading to another we took him up to Toby’s rooms, same as Red Jacket had taken me the year before. The compliments he paid to Toby’s Madeira wine fairly conquered the old man, for he opened a second bottle and he told this Monsieur Peringuey all about our great stove dispute in the church. I remember Pastor Meder and Brother Adam Goos dropped in, and although they and Toby were direct opposite sides regarding stoves, yet this Monsieur Peringuey he made ’em feel as if he thought each one was in the right of it. He said he had been a clergyman before he had to leave France. He admired at Toby’s fiddling, and he asked if Red Jacket, sitting by the spinet, was a simple Huron. Senecas aren’t Hurons, they’re Iroquois, of course, and Toby told him so. Well, then, in due time he arose and left in a style which made us feel he’d been favouring us, instead of us feeding him. I’ve never seen that so strong before—in a man. We all talked him over but couldn’t make head or tail of him, and Red Jacket come out to walk with me to the French quarter where I was due to fiddle at a party. Passing Drinker’s Alley again we saw a naked window with a light in it, and there sat our button-selling Monsieur Peringuey throwing dice all alone, right hand against left.</p>
<p>‘Says Red Jacket, keeping back in the dark, “Look at his face!”</p>
<p>‘I was looking. I protest to you I wasn’t frightened like I was when Big Hand talked to his gentlemen. I—I only looked, and I wondered that even those dead dumb dice ’ud dare to fall different from what that face wished. It—it was a face!</p>
<p>‘“He is bad,” says Red Jacket. “But he is a great chief. The French have sent away a great chief. I thought so when he told us his lies. Now I know.”</p>
<p>‘I had to go on to the party, so I asked him to call round for me afterwards and we’d have hymn-singing at Toby’s as usual. “No,” he says. “Tell Toby I am not Christian tonight. All Indian.” He had those fits sometimes. I wanted to know more about Monsieur Peringuey, and the emigre party was the very place to find out. It’s neither here nor there, of course, but those French emigre parties they almost make you cry. The men that you bought fruit of in Market Street, the hairdressers and fencing-masters and French teachers, they turn back again by candlelight to what they used to be at home, and you catch their real names. There wasn’t much room in the washhouse, so I sat on top of the copper and played ’em the tunes they called for—“Si le Roi m’avait donne,” and such nursery stuff. They cried sometimes. It hurt me to take their money afterwards, indeed it did. And there I found out about Monsieur Peringuey. He was a proper rogue too! None of ’em had a good word for him except the Marquise that kept the French boarding-house on Fourth Street. I made out that his real name was the Count Talleyrand de Perigord—a priest right enough, but sorely come down in the world. He’d been King Louis’ Ambassador to England a year or two back, before the French had cut off King Louis’ head; and, by what I heard, that head wasn’t hardly more than hanging loose before he’d run back to Paris and prevailed on Danton, the very man which did the murder, to send him back to England again as Ambassador of the French Republic! That was too much for the English, so they kicked him out by Act of Parliament, and he’d fled to the Americas without money or friends or prospects. I’m telling you the talk in the washhouse. Some of ’em was laughing over it. Says the French Marquise, “My friends, you laugh too soon. That man ‘ll be on the winning side before any of us.”</p>
<p>‘“I did not know you were so fond of priests, Marquise,” says the Vicomte. His lady did my washing, as I’ve told you.</p>
<p>‘“I have my reasons,” says the Marquise. “He sent my uncle and my two brothers to Heaven by the little door,”—that was one of the emigre names for the guillotine. “He will be on the winning side if it costs him the blood of every friend he has in the world.”</p>
<p>‘“Then what does he want here?” says one of ’em. “We have all lost our game.”</p>
<p>‘“My faith!” says the Marquise. “He will find out, if any one can, whether this canaille of a Washington means to help us to fight England. Genet” (that was my Ambassador in the Embuscade) “has failed and gone off disgraced; Faucher” (he was the new man) “hasn’t done any better, but our Abbé will find out, and he will make his profit out of the news. Such a man does not fall.”</p>
<p>‘“He begins unluckily,” says the Vicomte. “He was set upon today in the street for not hooting your Washington.” They all laughed again, and one remarks, “How does the poor devil keep himself?”</p>
<p>‘He must have slipped in through the washhouse door, for he flits past me and joins ’em, cold as ice.</p>
<p>‘“One does what one can,” he says. “I sell buttons. And you, Marquise?”</p>
<p>‘“I?”—she waves her poor white hands all burned—“I am a cook—a very bad one—at your service, Abbé. We were just talking about you.”</p>
<p>‘They didn’t treat him like they talked of him. They backed off and stood still.</p>
<p>‘“I have missed something, then,” he says. “But I spent this last hour playing—only for buttons, Marquise—against a noble savage, the veritable Huron himself.”</p>
<p>‘“You had your usual luck, I hope?” she says.</p>
<p>‘“Certainly,” he says. “I cannot afford to lose even buttons in these days.”</p>
<p>‘“Then I suppose the child of nature does not know that your dice are usually loaded, Father Tout-a-tous,” she continues. I don’t know whether she meant to accuse him of cheating. He only bows. ‘“Not yet, Mademoiselle Cunegonde,” he says, and goes on to make himself agreeable to the rest of the company. And that was how I found out our Monsieur Peringuey was Count Charles Maurice Talleyrand de Perigord.’</p>
<p>Pharaoh stopped, but the children said nothing.</p>
<p>‘You’ve heard of him?’ said Pharaoh.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 3<br />
</strong></p>
<p>Una shook her head. ‘Was Red Jacket the Indian he played dice with?’ Dan asked.</p>
<p>‘He was. Red Jacket told me the next time we met. I asked if the lame man had cheated. Red Jacket said no—he had played quite fair and was a master player. I allow Red Jacket knew. I’ve seen him, on the Reservation, play himself out of everything he had and in again. Then I told Red Jacket all I’d heard at the party concerning Talleyrand.</p>
<p>‘“I was right,” he says. “I saw the man’s war-face when he thought he was alone. That’s why I played him. I played him face to face. He’s a great chief. Do they say why he comes here?”</p>
<p>‘“They say he comes to find out if Big Hand makes war against the English,” I said.</p>
<p>‘Red Jacket grunted. “Yes,” he says. “He asked me that too. If he had been a small chief I should have lied. But he is a great chief. He knew I was a chief, so I told him the truth. I told him what Big Hand said to Cornplanter and me in the clearing—‘There will be no war.’ I could not see what he thought. I could not see behind his face. But he is a great chief. He will believe.’</p>
<p>‘“Will he believe that Big Hand can keep his people back from war?” I said, thinking of the crowds that hooted Big Hand whenever he rode out.</p>
<p>‘“He is as bad as Big Hand is good, but he is not as strong as Big Hand,” says Red Jacket. “When he talks with Big Hand he will feel this in his heart. The French have sent away a great chief. Presently he will go back and make them afraid.”</p>
<p>‘Now wasn’t that comical? The French woman that knew him and owed all her losses to him; the Indian that picked him up, cut and muddy on the street, and played dice with him; they neither of ’em doubted that Talleyrand was something by himself—appearances notwithstanding.’</p>
<p>‘And was he something by himself?’ asked Una.</p>
<p>Pharaoh began to laugh, but stopped. ‘The way I look at it,’he said, ‘Talleyrand was one of just three men in this world who are quite by themselves. Big Hand I put first, because I’ve seen him.’</p>
<p>‘Ay,’ said Puck. ‘I’m sorry we lost him out of Old England. Who d’you put second?’</p>
<p>‘Talleyrand: maybe because I’ve seen him too,’ said Pharaoh.</p>
<p>‘Who’s third?’said Puck.</p>
<p>‘Boney—even though I’ve seen him.’</p>
<p>‘Whew!’ said Puck. ‘Every man has his own weights and measures, but that’s queer reckoning.’</p>
<p>‘Boney?’ said Una. ‘You don’t mean you’ve ever met Napoleon Bonaparte?’</p>
<p>‘There, I knew you wouldn’t have patience with the rest of my tale after hearing that! But wait a minute. Talleyrand he come round to Hundred and Eighteen in a day or two to thank Toby for his kindness. I didn’t mention the dice-playing, but I could see that Red Jacket’s doings had made Talleyrand highly curious about Indians—though he would call him the Huron. Toby, as you may believe, was all holds full of knowledge concerning their manners and habits. He only needed a listener. The Brethren don’t study Indians much till they join the Church, but Toby knew ’em wild. So evening after evening Talleyrand crossed his sound leg over his game one and Toby poured forth. Having been adopted into the Senecas I, naturally, kept still, but Toby ’ud call on me to back up some of his remarks, and by that means, and a habit he had of drawing you on in talk, Talleyrand saw I knew something of his noble savages too. Then he tried a trick. Coming back from an emigre party he turns into his little shop and puts it to me, laughing like, that I’d gone with the two chiefs on their visit to Big Hand. I hadn’t told. Red Jacket hadn’t told, and Toby, of course, didn’t know. ’Twas just Talleyrand’s guess. “Now,” he says, my English and Red Jacket’s French was so bad that I am not sure I got the rights of what the President really said to the unsophisticated Huron. Do me the favour of telling it again.” I told him every word Red Jacket had told him and not one word more. I had my suspicions, having just come from an emigre party where the Marquise was hating and praising him as usual.</p>
<p>‘“Much obliged,” he said. “But I couldn’t gather from Red Jacket exactly what the President said to Monsieur Genet, or to his American gentlemen after Monsieur Genet had ridden away.”</p>
<p>‘I saw Talleyrand was guessing again, for Red Jacket hadn’t told him a word about the white men’s pow-wow.’</p>
<p>‘Why hadn’t he?’ Puck asked.</p>
<p>‘Because Red Jacket was a chief. He told Talleyrand what the President had said to him and Cornplanter; but he didn’t repeat the talk, between the white men, that Big Hand ordered him to leave behind.’</p>
<p>‘Oh!’ said Puck. ‘I see. What did you do?’</p>
<p>‘First I was going to make some sort of tale round it, but Talleyrand was a chief too. So I said, “As soon as I get Red Jacket’s permission to tell that part of the tale, I’ll be delighted to refresh your memory, Abbé.” What else could I have done?</p>
<p>‘“Is that all?” he says, laughing. “Let me refresh your memory. In a month from now I can give you a hundred dollars for your account of the conversation.”</p>
<p>‘“Make it five hundred, Abbé,” I says. ‘”Five, then,” says he.</p>
<p>‘“That will suit me admirably,” I says. “Red Jacket will be in town again by then, and the moment he gives me leave I’ll claim the money.”</p>
<p>‘He had a hard fight to be civil, but he come out smiling.</p>
<p>‘“Monsieur,” he says, “I beg your pardon as sincerely as I envy the noble Huron your loyalty. Do me the honour to sit down while I explain.”</p>
<p>‘There wasn’t another chair, so I sat on the button-box.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 4<br />
</strong></p>
<p>‘He was a clever man. He had got hold of the gossip that the President meant to make a peace treaty with England at any cost. He had found out—from Genet, I reckon, who was with the President on the day the two chiefs met him. He’d heard that Genet had had a huff with the President and had ridden off leaving his business at loose ends. What he wanted—what he begged and blustered to know—was just the very words which the President had said to his gentlemen after Genet had left, concerning the peace treaty with England. He put it to me that in helping him to those very words I’d be helping three great countries as well as mankind. The room was as bare as the palm of your hand, but I couldn’t laugh at him.</p>
<p>‘“I’m sorry,” I says, when he wiped his forehead. “As soon as Red Jacket gives permission—”</p>
<p>‘“You don’t believe me, then?” he cuts in.</p>
<p>‘“Not one little, little word, Abbé,” I says; “except that you mean to be on the winning side. Remember, I’ve been fiddling to all your old friends for months.”</p>
<p>‘Well, then his temper fled him and he called me names.</p>
<p>‘“Wait a minute, ci-devant,” I says at last. “I am half English and half French, but I am not the half of a man. I will tell thee something the Indian told me. Has thee seen the President?”</p>
<p>‘“Oh yes!” he sneers. “I had letters from the Lord Lansdowne to that estimable old man.”</p>
<p>‘“Then,” I says, “thee will understand. The Red Skin said that when thee has met the President thee will feel in thy heart he is a stronger man than thee.”</p>
<p>‘“Go!” he whispers. “Before I kill thee, go.”</p>
<p>‘He looked like it. So I left him.’</p>
<p>‘Why did he want to know so badly?’ said Dan.</p>
<p>‘The way I look at it is that if he had known for certain that Washington meant to make the peace treaty with England at any price, he’d ha’ left old Faucher fumbling about in Philadelphia while he went straight back to France and told old Danton—“It’s no good your wasting time and hopes on the United States, because she won’t fight on our side—that I’ve proof of!” Then Danton might have been grateful and given Talleyrand a job, because a whole mass of things hang on knowing for sure who’s your friend and who’s your enemy. just think of us poor shop-keepers, for instance.’</p>
<p>‘Did Red Jacket let you tell, when he came back?’ Una asked.</p>
<p>‘Of course not. He said, “When Cornplanter and I ask you what Big Hand said to the whites you can tell the Lame Chief. All that talk was left behind in the timber, as Big Hand ordered. Tell the Lame Chief there will be no war. He can go back to France with that word.”</p>
<p>‘Talleyrand and me hadn’t met for a long time except at emigre parties. When I give him the message he just shook his head. He was sorting buttons in the shop.</p>
<p>‘I cannot return to France with nothing better than the word of an unsophisticated savage,” he says.</p>
<p>‘“Hasn’t the President said anything to you?” I asked him.</p>
<p>‘“He has said everything that one in his position ought to say, but—but if only I had what he said to his Cabinet after Genet rode off I believe I could change Europe—the world, maybe.”</p>
<p>‘“I’m sorry,” I says. “Maybe you’ll do that without my help.”</p>
<p>‘He looked at me hard. “Either you have unusual observation for one so young, or you choose to be insolent,” he says.</p>
<p>‘“It was intended for a compliment,” I says. “But no odds. We’re off in a few days for our summer trip, and I’ve come to make my good-byes.”</p>
<p>‘“I go on my travels too,” he says. “If ever we meet again you may be sure I will do my best to repay what I owe you.”</p>
<p>‘“Without malice, Abbé, I hope,” I says.</p>
<p>‘“None whatever,” says he. “Give my respects to your adorable Dr Pangloss” (that was one of his side-names for Toby) “and the Huron.” I never could teach him the difference betwixt Hurons and Senecas.</p>
<p>‘Then Sister Haga came in for a paper of what we call “pilly buttons,” and that was the last I saw of Talleyrand in those parts.’</p>
<p>‘But after that you met Napoleon, didn’t you?’ said Una.</p>
<p>‘Wait Just a little, dearie. After that, Toby and I went to Lebanon and the Reservation, and, being older and knowing better how to manage him, I enjoyed myself well that summer with fiddling and fun. When we came back, the Brethren got after Toby because I wasn’t learning any lawful trade, and he had hard work to save me from being apprenticed to Helmbold and Geyer the printers. ’Twould have ruined our music together, indeed it would. And when we escaped that, old Mattes Roush, the leather-breeches maker round the corner, took a notion I was cut out for skin-dressing. But we were rescued. Along towards Christmas there comes a big sealed letter from the Bank saying that a Monsieur Talleyrand had put five hundred dollars—a hundred pounds—to my credit there to use as I pleased. There was a little note from him inside—he didn’t give any address—to thank me for past kindnesses and my believing in his future, which he said was pretty cloudy at the time of writing. I wished Toby to share the money. I hadn’t done more than bring Talleyrand up to Hundred and Eighteen. The kindnesses were Toby’s. But Toby said, “No! Liberty and Independence for ever. I have all my wants, my son.” So I gave him a set of new fiddle-strings, and the Brethren didn’t advise us any more. Only Pastor Meder he preached about the deceitfulness of riches, and Brother Adam Goos said if there was war the English ’ud surely shoot down the Bank. I knew there wasn’t going to be any war, but I drew the money out and on Red Jacket’s advice I put it into horse-flesh, which I sold to Bob Bicknell for the Baltimore stage-coaches. That way, I doubled my money inside the twelvemonth.’</p>
<p>‘You gipsy! You proper gipsy!’ Puck shouted.</p>
<p>‘Why not? ’Twas fair buying and selling. Well, one thing leading to another, in a few years I had made the beginning of a worldly fortune and was in the tobacco trade.’</p>
<p>‘Ah!’ said Puck, suddenly. ‘Might I inquire if you’d ever sent any news to your people in England—or in France?’</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 5<br />
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<p>‘O’ course I had. I wrote regular every three months after I’d made money in the horse trade. We Lees don’t like coming home empty-handed. If it’s only a turnip or an egg, it’s something. Oh yes, I wrote good and plenty to Uncle Aurette, and—Dad don’t read very quickly—Uncle used to slip over Newhaven way and tell Dad what was going on in the tobacco trade.’</p>
<p>‘I see—</p>
<div id="leftmargin">Aurettes and Lees—<br />
Like as two peas.</div>
<p>Go on, Brother Square-toes,’ said Puck. Pharaoh laughed and went on.</p>
<p>‘Talleyrand he’d gone up in the world same as me. He’d sailed to France again, and was a great man in the Government there awhile, but they had to turn him out on account of some story about bribes from American shippers. All our poor emigres said he was surely finished this time, but Red Jacket and me we didn’t think it likely, not unless he was quite dead. Big Hand had made his peace treaty with Great Britain, just as he said he would, and there was a roaring trade ’twixt England and the United States for such as ’ud take the risk of being searched by British and French men-o’-war. Those two was fighting, and just as his gentlemen told Big Hand ’ud happen—the United States was catching it from both. If an English man-o’-war met an American ship he’d press half the best men out of her, and swear they was British subjects. Most of ’em was! If a Frenchman met her he’d, likely, have the cargo out of her, swearing it was meant to aid and comfort the English; and if a Spaniard or a Dutchman met her—they was hanging on to England’s coat-tails too—Lord only knows what they wouldn’t do! It came over me that what I wanted in my tobacco trade was a fast-sailing ship and a man who could be French, English, or American at a pinch. Luckily I could lay my hands on both articles. So along towards the end of September in the year ’Ninety-nine I sailed from Philadelphia with a hundred and eleven hogshead o’ good Virginia tobacco, in the brig <i>Berthe Aurette</i>, named after Mother’s maiden name, hoping ’twould bring me luck, which she didn’t—and yet she did.’</p>
<p>‘Where was you bound for?’ Puck asked.</p>
<p>‘Er—any port I found handiest. I didn’t tell Toby or the Brethren. They don’t understand the ins and outs of the tobacco trade.’</p>
<p>Puck coughed a small cough as he shifted a piece of wood with his bare foot.</p>
<p>‘It’s easy for you to sit and judge,’ Pharaoh cried. ‘But think o’ what we had to put up with! We spread our wings and run across the broad Atlantic like a hen through a horse-fair. Even so, we was stopped by an English frigate, three days out. He sent a boat alongside and pressed seven able seamen. I remarked it was hard on honest traders, but the officer said they was fighting all creation and hadn’t time to argue. The next English frigate we escaped with no more than a shot in our quarter. Then we was chased two days and a night by a French privateer, firing between squalls, and the dirty little English ten-gun brig which made him sheer off had the impudence to press another five of our men. That’s how we reached to the chops of the Channel. Twelve good men pressed out of thirty-five; an eighteen-pound shot-hole close beside our rudder; our mainsail looking like spectacles where the Frenchman had hit us—and the Channel crawling with short-handed British cruisers. Put that in your pipe and smoke it next time you grumble at the price of tobacco!</p>
<p>‘Well, then, to top it off, while we was trying to get at our leaks, a French lugger come swooping at us out o’ the dusk. We warned him to keep away, but he fell aboard us, and up climbed his JAbbéring red-caps. We couldn’t endure any more—indeed we couldn’t. We went at ’em with all we could lay hands on. It didn’t last long. They was fifty odd to our twenty-three. Pretty soon I heard the cutlasses thrown down and some one bellowed for the sacri captain.</p>
<p>‘“Here I am!” I says. “I don’t suppose it makes any odds to you thieves, but this is the United States brig <i>Berthe Aurette</i>.”</p>
<p>‘“My aunt!” the man says, laughing. “Why is she named that?”</p>
<p>‘“Who’s speaking?” I said. ’Twas too dark to see, but I thought I knew the voice.</p>
<p>‘“Enseigne de Vaisseau Estephe L’Estrange,” he sings out, and then I was sure.</p>
<p>‘“Oh!” I says. “It’s all in the family, I suppose, but you have done a fine day’s work, Stephen.”</p>
<p>‘He whips out the binnacle-light and holds it to my face. He was young L’Estrange, my full cousin, that I hadn’t seen since the night the smack sank off Telscombe Tye—six years before.</p>
<p>‘“Whew!” he says. “That’s why she was named for Aunt Berthe, is it? What’s your share in her, Pharaoh?”</p>
<p>‘“Only half owner, but the cargo’s mine.”</p>
<p>‘“That’s bad,” he says. “I’ll do what I can, but you shouldn’t have fought us.”</p>
<p>‘“Steve,” I says, “you aren’t ever going to report our little fall-out as a fight! Why, a Revenue cutter ’ud laugh at it!”</p>
<p>‘“So’d I if I wasn’t in the Republican Navy,” he says. “But two of our men are dead, d’ye see, and I’m afraid I’ll have to take you to the Prize Court at Le Havre.”</p>
<p>‘“Will they condemn my ’baccy?” I asks.</p>
<p>‘“To the last ounce. But I was thinking more of the ship. She’d make a sweet little craft for the Navy if the Prize Court ’ud let me have her,” he says.</p>
<p>‘Then I knew there was no hope. I don’t blame him—a man must consider his own interests, but nigh every dollar I had was in ship or cargo, and Steve kept on saying, “You shouldn’t have fought us.”</p>
<p>‘Well, then, the lugger took us to Le Havre, and that being the one time we did want a British ship to rescue us, why, o’ course we never saw one. My cousin spoke his best for us at the Prize Court. He owned he’d no right to rush alongside in the face o’ the United States flag, but we couldn’t get over those two men killed, d’ye see, and the Court condemned both ship and cargo. They was kind enough not to make us prisoners—only beggars—and young L’Estrange was given the <i>Berthe Aurette</i> to re-arm into the French Navy.</p>
<p>‘”I’ll take you round to Boulogne,” he says. “Mother and the rest’ll be glad to see you, and you can slip over to Newhaven with Uncle Aurette. Or you can ship with me, like most o’ your men, and take a turn at King George’s loose trade. There’s plenty pickings,” he says.</p>
<p>‘Crazy as I was, I couldn’t help laughing.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 6<br />
</strong></p>
<p>‘“I’ve had my allowance of pickings and stealings,” I says. “Where are they taking my tobacco?” ’Twas being loaded on to a barge.</p>
<p>‘“Up the Seine to be sold in Paris,” he says. “Neither you nor I will ever touch a penny of that money.”</p>
<p>‘“Get me leave to go with it,” I says. “I’ll see if there’s justice to be gotten out of our American Ambassador.”</p>
<p>‘“There’s not much justice in this world,” he says, “without a Navy.” But he got me leave to go with the barge and he gave me some money. That tobacco was all I had, and I followed it like a hound follows a snatched bone. Going up the river I fiddled a little to keep my spirits up, as well as to make friends with the guard. They was only doing their duty. Outside o’ that they were the reasonablest o’ God’s creatures. They never even laughed at me. So we come to Paris, by river, along in November, which the French had christened Brumaire. They’d given new names to all the months, and after such an outrageous silly piece o’ business as that, they wasn’t likely to trouble ’emselves with my rights and wrongs. They didn’t. The barge was laid up below Notre Dame church in charge of a caretaker, and he let me sleep aboard after I’d run about all day from office to office, seeking justice and fair dealing, and getting speeches concerning liberty. None heeded me. Looking back on it I can’t rightly blame ’em. I’d no money, my clothes was filthy mucked; I hadn’t changed my linen in weeks, and I’d no proof of my claims except the ship’s papers, which, they said, I might have stolen. The thieves! The door-keeper to the American Ambassador—for I never saw even the Secretary—he swore I spoke French a sight too well for an American citizen. Worse than that—I had spent my money, d’ye see, and I—I took to fiddling in the streets for my keep; and—and, a ship’s captain with a fiddle under his arm—well, I don’t blame ’em that they didn’t believe me.</p>
<p>‘I come back to the barge one day—late in this month Brumaire it was—fair beazled out. Old Maingon, the caretaker, he’d lit a fire in a bucket and was grilling a herring.</p>
<p>‘“Courage, mon ami,” he says. “Dinner is served.”</p>
<p>‘“I can’t eat,” I says. “I can’t do any more. It’s stronger than I am.”</p>
<p>‘“Bah!” he says. “Nothing’s stronger than a man. Me, for example! Less than two years ago I was blown up in the Orient in Aboukir Bay, but I descended again and hit the water like a fairy. Look at me now,” he says. He wasn’t much to look at, for he’d only one leg and one eye, but the cheerfullest soul that ever trod shoe-leather. “That’s worse than a hundred and eleven hogshead of ’baccy,” he goes on. “You’re young, too! What wouldn’t I give to be young in France at this hour! There’s nothing you couldn’t do,” he says. “The ball’s at your feet—kick it!” he says. He kicks the old fire-bucket with his peg-leg. “General Buonaparte, for example!” he goes on. “That man’s a babe compared to me, and see what he’s done already. He’s conquered Egypt and Austria and Italy—oh! half Europe!” he says, “and now he sails back to Paris, and he sails out to St Cloud down the river here—don’t stare at the river, you young fool! —and all in front of these pig-jobbing lawyers and citizens he makes himself Consul, which is as good as a King. He’ll be King, too, in the next three turns of the capstan—King of France, England, and the world! Think o’ that!” he shouts, “and eat your herring.”</p>
<p>‘I says something about Boney. If he hadn’t been fighting England I shouldn’t have lost my ’baccy—should I?</p>
<p>‘“Young fellow,” says Maingon, “you don’t understand.”</p>
<p>‘We heard cheering. A carriage passed over the bridge with two in it. ‘“That’s the man himself,” says Maingon. “He’ll give ’em something to cheer for soon.” He stands at the salute.</p>
<p>‘“Who’s t’other in black beside him?” I asks, fairly shaking all over.</p>
<p>‘“Ah! he’s the clever one. You’ll hear of him before long. He’s that scoundrel-bishop, Talleyrand.”</p>
<p>‘“It is!” I said, and up the steps I went with my fiddle, and run after the carriage calling, “Abbé, Abbé!”</p>
<p>‘A soldier knocked the wind out of me with the back of his sword, but I had sense to keep on following till the carriage stopped—and there just was a crowd round the house-door! I must have been half-crazy else I wouldn’t have struck up “Si le Roi m’avait donne Paris la grande ville!” I thought it might remind him.</p>
<p>‘“That is a good omen!” he says to Boney sitting all hunched up; and he looks straight at me.</p>
<p>‘“Abbé—oh, Abbé!” I says. “Don’t you remember Toby and Hundred and Eighteen Second Street?”</p>
<p>‘He said not a word. He just crooked his long white finger to the guard at the door while the carriage steps were let down, and I skipped into the house, and they slammed the door in the crowd’s face. ‘“You go there,” says a soldier, and shoves me into an empty room, where I catched my first breath since I’d left the barge. Presently I heard plates rattling next door—there were only folding doors between—and a cork drawn. “I tell you,” someone shouts with his mouth full, “it was all that sulky ass Sieyes’ fault. Only my speech to the Five Hundred saved the situation.”</p>
<p>‘“Did it save your coat?” says Talleyrand. “I hear they tore it when they threw you out. Don’t gasconade to me. You may be in the road of victory, but you aren’t there yet.”</p>
<p>‘Then I guessed t’other man was Boney. He stamped about and swore at Talleyrand.</p>
<p>‘“You forget yourself, Consul,” says Talleyrand, “or rather you remember yourself—Corsican.”</p>
<p>‘“Pig!” says Boney, and worse.</p>
<p>‘“Emperor!” says Talleyrand, but, the way he spoke, it sounded worst of all. Some one must have backed against the folding doors, for they flew open and showed me in the middle of the room. Boney whipped out his pistol before I could stand up.</p>
<p>“General,” says Talleyrand to him, “this gentleman has a habit of catching us canaille en deshabille. Put that thing down.”</p>
<p>‘Boney laid it on the table, so I guessed which was master. Talleyrand takes my hand—“Charmed to see you again, Candide,” he says. “How is the adorable Dr Pangloss and the noble Huron?”</p>
<p>‘“They were doing very well when I left,” I said. “But I’m not.”</p>
<p>‘“Do you sell buttons now?” he says, and fills me a glass of wine off the table.</p>
<p>‘“Madeira,” says he. “Not so good as some I have drunk.”</p>
<p>‘“You mountebank!” Boney roars. “Turn that out.” (He didn’t even say “man,” but Talleyrand, being gentle born, just went on.)</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 7<br />
</strong></p>
<p>‘“Pheasant is not so good as pork,” he says. “You will find some at that table if you will do me the honour to sit down. Pass him a clean plate, General.” And, as true as I’m here, Boney slid a plate along just like a sulky child. He was a lanky-haired, yellow-skinned little man, as nervous as a cat—and as dangerous. I could feel that.</p>
<p>‘“And now,” said Talleyrand, crossing his game leg over his sound one, “will you tell me your story?”</p>
<p>‘I was in a fluster, but I told him nearly everything from the time he left me the five hundred dollars in Philadelphia, up to my losing ship and cargo at Le Havre. Boney began by listening, but after a bit he dropped into his own thoughts and looked at the crowd sideways through the front-room curtains. Talleyrand called to him when I’d done.</p>
<p>‘“Eh? What we need now,” says Boney, “is peace for the next three or four years.”</p>
<p>‘“Quite so,” says Talleyrand. “Meantime I want the Consul’s order to the Prize Court at Le Havre to restore my friend here his ship.”</p>
<p>‘“Nonsense!” says Boney. “Give away an oak-built brig of two hundred and seven tons for sentiment? Certainly not! She must be armed into my Navy with ten—no, fourteen twelve- pounders and two long fours. Is she strong enough to bear a long twelve forward?”</p>
<p>‘Now I could ha’ sworn he’d paid no heed to my talk, but that wonderful head-piece of his seemingly skimmed off every word of it that was useful to him.</p>
<p>‘“Ah, General!” says Talleyrand. “You are a magician—a magician without morals. But the brig is undoubtedly American, and we don’t want to offend them more than we have. “</p>
<p>‘“Need anybody talk about the affair?” he says. He didn’t look at me, but I knew what was in his mind—just cold murder because I worried him; and he’d order it as easy as ordering his carriage.</p>
<p>‘“You can’t stop ’em,” I said. “There’s twenty-two other men besides me.” I felt a little more ’ud set me screaming like a wired hare.</p>
<p>‘“Undoubtedly American,” Talleyrand goes on. “You would gain something if you returned the ship—with a message of fraternal good-will—published in the <i>Moniteur</i>” (that’s a French paper like the Philadelphia <i>Aurora</i>).</p>
<p>‘“A good idea!” Boney answers. “One could say much in a message.”</p>
<p>‘“It might be useful,” says Talleyrand. “Shall I have the message prepared?” He wrote something in a little pocket ledger.</p>
<p>‘“Yes—for me to embellish this evening. The <i>Moniteur</i> will publish it tonight.”</p>
<p>‘“Certainly. Sign, please,” says Talleyrand, tearing the leaf out.</p>
<p>‘“But that’s the order to return the brig,” says Boney. “Is that necessary? Why should I lose a good ship? Haven’t I lost enough ships already?”</p>
<p>‘Talleyrand didn’t answer any of those questions. Then Boney sidled up to the table and jabs his pen into the ink. Then he shies at the paper again: “My signature alone is useless,” he says. “You must have the other two Consuls as well. Sieyes and Roger Ducos must sign. We must preserve the Laws.”</p>
<p>‘“By the time my friend presents it,” says Talleyrand, still looking out of window, “only one signature will be necessary.”</p>
<p>‘Boney smiles. “It’s a swindle,” says he, but he signed and pushed the paper across.</p>
<p>‘“Give that to the President of the Prize Court at Le Havre,” says Talleyrand, “and he will give you back your ship. I will settle for the cargo myself. You have told me how much it cost. What profit did you expect to make on it?”</p>
<p>‘Well, then, as man to man, I was bound to warn him that I’d set out to run it into England without troubling the Revenue, and so I couldn’t rightly set bounds to my profits.’</p>
<p>‘I guessed that all along,’ said Puck.</p>
<div id="leftmargin">‘There was never a Lee to Warminghurst—<br />
That wasn’t a smuggler last and first.’</div>
<p>The children laughed.</p>
<p>‘It’s comical enough now,’ said Pharaoh. ‘But I didn’t laugh then. Says Talleyrand after a minute, “I am a bad accountant and I have several calculations on hand at present. Shall we say twice the cost of the cargo?”</p>
<p>‘Say? I couldn’t say a word. I sat choking and nodding like a China image while he wrote an order to his secretary to pay me, I won’t say how much, because you wouldn’t believe it.’</p>
<p>‘“Oh! Bless you, Abbé! God bless you!” I got it out at last.</p>
<p>‘“Yes,” he says, “I am a priest in spite of myself, but they call me Bishop now. Take this for my episcopal blessing,” and he hands me the paper.</p>
<p>‘“He stole all that money from me,” says Boney over my shoulder. “A Bank of France is another of the things we must make. Are you mad?” he shouts at Talleyrand.</p>
<p>‘“Quite,” says Talleyrand, getting up. “But be calm. The disease will never attack you. It is called gratitude. This gentleman found me in the street and fed me when I was hungry.”</p>
<p>‘”I see; and he has made a fine scene of it, and you have paid him, I suppose. Meantime, France waits. “</p>
<p>‘“Oh! poor France!” says Talleyrand. “Good-bye, Candide,” he says to me. “By the way,” he says, “have you yet got Red Jacket’s permission to tell me what the President said to his Cabinet after Monsieur Genet rode away?”</p>
<p>‘I couldn’t speak, I could only shake my head, and Boney—so impatient he was to go on with his doings—he ran at me and fair pushed me out of the room. And that was all there was to it.’ Pharaoh stood up and slid his fiddle into one of his big skirt-pockets as though it were a dead hare.</p>
<p>‘Oh! but we want to know lots and lots more,’said Dan. ‘How you got home—and what old Maingon said on the barge—and wasn’t your cousin surprised when he had to give back the <i>Berthe Aurette</i>, and—’</p>
<p>‘Tell us more about Toby!’ cried Una.</p>
<p>‘Yes, and Red Jacket,’ said Dan.</p>
<p>‘Won’t you tell us any more?’ they both pleaded.</p>
<p>Puck kicked the oak branch on the fire, till it sent up a column of smoke that made them sneeze. When they had finished the Shaw was empty except for old Hobden stamping through the larches.</p>
<p>‘They gipsies have took two,’he said. “My black pullet and my liddle gingy-speckled cockrel.’</p>
<p>‘I thought so,’ said Dan, picking up one tail-feather that the old woman had overlooked.</p>
<p>‘Which way did they go? Which way did the runagates go?’ said Hobden.</p>
<p>‘Hobby!’ said Una. ‘Would you like it if we told Keeper Ridley all your goings and comings?’</p>
</div>
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		<title>A Sea Dog</title>
		<link>https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-sea-dog.htm</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Tue, 18 May 2021 13:01:41 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://ks-demo3.web/tale/a-sea-dog/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong>page 1 of 4 </strong> <b>WHEN</b> that sloop known to have been in the West Indies trade for a century had been repaired by Mr. Randolph of Stephano’s Island, there arose between him and her ... <a title="A Sea Dog" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-sea-dog.htm" aria-label="Read more about A Sea Dog">Read more</a>]]></description>
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<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 1 of 4<br />
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<p><b>WHEN</b> that sloop known to have been in the West Indies trade for a century had been repaired by Mr. Randolph of Stephano’s Island, there arose between him and her owner, Mr. Gladstone Gallop, a deep-draught pilot, Admiral (retired) Lord Heatleigh, and Mr. Winter Vergil, R.N. (also retired), the question how she would best sail. This could only be settled on trial trips of the above Committee, ably assisted by Lil, Mr. Randolph’s mongrel fox-terrier, and, sometimes, the Commander of the H.M.S. <i>Bulleana</i>, who was the Admiral’s nephew.</p>
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<h2><b>.     .     .     .     .</b></h2>
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<p>Lil had been slid into a locker to keep dry till they reached easier water. The others lay aft watching the breadths of the all-coloured seas. Mr. Gallop at the tiller, which had replaced the wheel, said as little as possible, but condescended, before that company, to make his boat show off among the reefs and passages of coral where his business and delight lay.</p>
<p>Mr. Vergil, not for the first time, justified himself to the Commander for his handling of the great Parrot Problem, which has been told elsewhere. The Commander tactfully agreed with the main principle that—man, beast, <i>or</i> bird—discipline must be preserved in the Service; and that, so far, Mr. Vergil had done right in disrating, by cutting off her tail-feathers, Josephine, <i>alias</i> Jemmy Reader, the West African parrot . . . .</p>
<p>He himself had known a dog—his own dog, in fact—almost born, and altogether brought up, in a destroyer, who had not only been rated and disrated, but also re-rated and promoted, completely understanding the while what had happened, and why.</p>
<p>‘Come out and listen,’ said Mr. Randolph, reaching into the locker. ‘This’ll do you good.’ Lil came out, limp over his hand, and braced herself against the snap and jerk of a sudden rip which Mr. Gallop was cutting across. He had stood in to show the Admiral Gallop’s Island whose original grantees had freed their Carib slaves more than a hundred years ago. These had naturally taken their owners’ family name; so that now there were many Gallops—gentle, straight-haired men of substance and ancestry, with manners to match, and instinct, beyond all knowledge, of their home waters—from Panama, that is, to Pernambuco.</p>
<p>The Commander told a tale of an ancient destroyer on the China station which, with three others of equal seniority, had been hurried over to the East Coast of England when the Navy called up her veterans for the War. How Malachi—Michael, Mike, or Mickey—throve aboard the old <i>Makee-do</i>, on whose books he was rated as ‘Pup,’ and learned to climb oily steel ladders by hooking his fore-feet over the rungs. How he was used as a tippet round his master’s neck on the bridge of cold nights. How he had his own special area, on deck by the raft, sacred to his private concerns, and never did anything one hair’s-breadth outside it. How he possessed an officers’ steward of the name of Furze, his devoted champion and trumpeter through the little flotilla which worked together on convoy and escort duties in the North Sea. Then the wastage of war began to tell and . . . The Commander turned to the Admiral.</p>
<p>‘They dished me out a new Volunteer sub for First Lieutenant—a youngster of nineteen—with a hand on him like a ham and a voice like a pneumatic riveter, though he couldn’t pronounce “r” to save himself. I found him sitting on the wardroom table with his cap on, scratching his leg. He said to me, “Well, old top, and what’s the big idea for to-mowwow’s agony?” I told him—and a bit more. He wasn’t upset. He was really grateful for a hint how things were run on “big ships” as he called ’em. (<i>Makee-do</i> was three hundred ton, I think.) He’d served in Coastal Motor Boats retrieving corpses off the Cornish coast. He told me his skipper was a vet who called the swells “fuwwows” and thought he ought to keep between ’em. His name was Eustace Cyril Chidden; and his papa was a sugar-refiner . . . .’</p>
<p>Surprise was here expressed in various quarters; Mr. Winter Vergil adding a few remarks on the decadence of the New Navy.</p>
<p>‘No,’ said the Commander. ‘The “old top” business had nothing to do with it. He just didn’t know—that was all. But Mike took to him at once.</p>
<p>‘Well, we were booted out, one night later, on special duty. No marks or lights of course—raining, and confused seas. As soon as I’d made an offing, I ordered him to take the bridge. Cyril trots up, his boots greased, the complete N.O. Mike and I stood by in the chart-room. Pretty soon, he told off old Shide, our Torpedo Coxswain, for being a quarter-point off his course. (He <i>was</i>, too; but he wasn’t pleased.) A bit later, Cyril ships his steam-riveter voice and tells him he’s all over the card, and if he does it again he’ll be “welieved.” It went on like this the whole trick; Michael and me waiting for Shide to mutiny. When Shide came off, I asked him what he thought we’d drawn. “Either a dud or a diamond,” says Shide. “There’s no middle way with that muster.” That gave me the notion that Cyril might be worth kicking. So we all had a hack at him. He liked it. He did, indeed! He said it was so “intewesting” because <i>Makee-do</i> “steered like a witch,” and no one ever dreamed of trying to steer C.M.B.’s. They must have been bloody pirates in that trade, too. He was used to knocking men about to make ’em attend. He threatened a stay-maker’s apprentice (they were pushing all sorts of shore-muckings at us) for imitating his lisp. It was smoothed over, but the man made the most of it. He was a Bolshie before we knew what to call ’em. He kicked Michael once when he thought no one was looking, but Furze saw, and the blighter got his head cut on a hatch-coaming. <i>That</i> didn’t make him any sweeter.’</p>
<p>A twenty-thousand-ton liner, full of thirsty passengers, passed them on the horizon. Mr. Gallop gave her name and that of the pilot in charge, with some scandal as to her weakness at certain speeds and turns.</p>
<p>‘Not so good a sea-boat as <i>her</i>!’ He pointed at a square-faced tug—or but little larger—punching dazzle-white wedges out of indigo-blue. The Admiral stood up and pronounced her a North Sea mine-sweeper.</p>
<p>‘’Was. ’Ferry-boat now,’ said Mr. Gallop. ‘’Never been stopped by weather since ten years.’</p>
<p>The Commander shuddered aloud, as the old thing shovelled her way along. ‘But she sleeps dry,’ he said. ‘<i>We</i> lived in a foot of water. Our decks leaked like anything. We had to shore our bulkheads with broomsticks practically every other trip. Most of our people weren’t broke to the life, and it made ’em sticky. I had to tighten things up.’</p>
<p>The Admiral and Mr. Vergil nodded.</p>
<p>‘Then, one day, Chidden came to me and said there was some feeling on the lower deck because Mike was still rated as “Pup” after all his sea-time. He thought our people would like him being promoted to Dog. I asked who’d given ’em the notion. “Me,” says Cyril. “I think it’ll help de-louse ’em mowally.” Of course I instructed him to go to Hell and mind his own job. Then I notified that Mike was to be borne on the ship’s books as Able Dog Malachi. I was on the bridge when the watches were told of it. They cheered. Fo’c’sle afloat; galley-fire missing as usual; <i>but</i> they cheered. That’s the Lower Deck.’</p>
<p>Mr. Vergil rubbed hands in assent.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 2</strong></p>
<p>‘Did Mike know, Mr. Randolph? He did. He used to sniff forrard to see what the men’s dinners were going to be. If he approved, he went and patronised ’em. If he didn’t, he came to the wardroom for sharks and Worcester sauce. He was a great free-fooder. But—the day he was promoted Dog—he trotted round all messes and threw his little weight about like an Admiral’s inspection—Uncle. (He wasn’t larger than Lil, there.) Next time we were in for boiler-clean, I got him a brass collar engraved with his name and rating. I swear it was the only bit of bright work in the North Sea all the War. They fought to polish it. Oh, Malachi was a great Able Dog, those days, but he never forgot his decencies . . . .’</p>
<p>Mr. Randolph here drew Lil’s attention to this.</p>
<p>‘Well, and then our Bolshie-bird oozed about saying that a ship where men were treated like dogs and <i>vice versa</i> was no catch. Quite true, if correct; but it spreads despondency and attracts the baser elements. You see?’</p>
<p>‘Anything’s an excuse when they are hanging in the wind,’ said Mr. Vergil. ‘And what might you have had for the standing-part of your tackle?’</p>
<p>‘<i>You</i> know as well as I do, Vergil. The old crowd—Gunner, Chief Engineer, Cook, Chief Stoker, and Torpedo Cox. But, no denyin’, we were hellish uncomfy. Those old thirty-knotters had no bows or freeboard to speak of, and no officers’ quarters. (Sleep with your Gunner’s socks in your mouth, and so on.) You remember ’em, sir?’ The Admiral did—when the century was young—and some pirate-hunting behind muddy islands. Mr. Gallop drank it in. His war experiences had ranged no further than the Falklands, which he had visited as one of the prize-crew of a German sailing-ship picked up Patagonia-way and sent south under charge of a modern sub-lieutenant who had not the haziest notion how to get the canvas off a barque in full career for vertical cliffs. He told the tale. Mr. Randolph, who had heard it before, brought out a meal sent by Mrs. Vergil. Mr. Gallop laid the sloop on a slant where she could look after herself while they ate. Lil earned her share by showing off her few small tricks.</p>
<p>‘Mongrels are always smartest,’ said Mr. Randolph half defiantly.</p>
<p>‘Don’t call ’em mongrels.’ The Commander tweaked Lil’s impudent little ear. ‘Mike was a bit that way. Call ’em “mixed.” There’s a difference.’</p>
<p>The tiger-lily flush inherited from his ancestors on the mainland flared a little through the brown of Mr. Gallop’s cheek. ‘Right,’ said he. ‘There’s a heap differ ’twixt mongrel and mixed.’</p>
<p>And in due time, so far as Time was on those beryl floors, they came back to the Commander’s tale.</p>
<p>It covered increasing discomforts and disgusts, varied by escapes from being blown out of water by their own side in fog; affairs with submarines; arguments with pig-headed convoy-captains, and endless toil to maintain <i>Makee-do</i> abreast of her work which the growing ignorance and lowering morale of the new drafts made harder.</p>
<p>‘The only one of us who kept his tail up was Able Dog Malachi. He was an asset, let alone being my tippet on watch. I used to button his front and hind legs into my coat, with two turns of my comforter over all. Did he like it? He had to. It was his station in action. <i>But</i> he had his enemies. I’ve told you what a refined person he was. Well, one day, a buzz went round that he had defiled His Majesty’s quarterdeck. Furze reported it to me, and, as he said, “Beggin’ your pardon, it might as well have been any of <i>us</i>, sir, as him.” I asked the little fellow what he had to say for himself; confronting him with the circumstantial evidence of course. He was <i>very</i> offended. I knew it by the way he stiffened next time I took him for tippet. Chidden was sure there had been some dirty work somewhere; but he thought a Court of Inquiry might do good and settle one or two other things that were loose in the ship. One party wanted Mike disrated on the evidence. They were the——’</p>
<p>‘<i>I</i> know ’em,’ sighed Mr. Vergil; his eyes piercing the years behind him. ‘The other lot wanted to find out the man who had tampered with the—the circumstantial evidence and pitch him into the ditch. At that particular time, we were escorting mine-sweepers—every one a bit jumpy. I saw what Chidden was driving at, but I wasn’t sure our crowd here were mariners enough to take the inquiry seriously. Chidden swore they were. He’d been through the Crystal Palace training himself. Then I said, “Make it so. I waive my rights as the dog’s owner. Discipline’s discipline, tell ’em; and it may be a counter-irritant.”</p>
<p>‘The trouble was there had been a fog, on the morning of the crime, that you couldn’t spit through; so no one had seen anything. Naturally, Mike sculled about as he pleased; but his regular routine—he slept with me and Chidden in the wardroom—was to take off from our stomachs about three bells in the morning watch (half-past five) and trot up topside to attend to himself in his own place. <i>But</i> the evidence, you see, was found near the bandstand—the after six-pounder; and accused was incapable of testifying on his own behalf . . . . Well, that Court of Inquiry had it up and down and thort-ships all the time we were covering the minesweepers. It was a foul area; rather too close to Fritz’s coast. <i>We</i> only drew seven feet, so we were more or less safe. Our supporting cruisers lay on the edge of the area. Fritz had messed that up months before, and lots of his warts—mines—had broke loose and were bobbing about; and then our specialists had swept it, and laid down areas of their own, and so on. Any other time all hands would have been looking out for loose mines. (They have horns that nod at you in a sickly-friendly-frisky way when they roll.) But, while Mike’s inquiry was on, all hands were too worked-up over it to spare an eye outboard . . . . Oh, Mike knew, Mr. Randolph. Make no mistake. <i>He</i> knew he was in for trouble. The Prosecution were too crafty for him. They stuck to the evidence—the <i>locus in quo</i> and so on . . . . Sentence? Disrating to Pup again, which carried loss of badge-of-rank—his collar. Furze took it off, and Mickey licked his hand and Furze wept like Peter . . . . Then Mickey hoicked himself up to the bridge to tell me about it, and I made much of him. He was a distressed little dog. You know how they snuffle and snuggle up when they feel hurt.’</p>
<p>Though the question was to Mr. Randolph, all hands answered it.</p>
<p>‘Then our people went to dinner with this crime on their consciences. Those who felt that way had got in on me through Michael.’</p>
<p>‘Why did you make ’em the chance?’ the Admiral demanded keenly.</p>
<p>‘To divide the sheep from the goats, sir. It was time. . . . Well, we were second in the line—<i>How-come</i> and <i>Fan-kwai</i> next astern and <i>Hop-hell</i>, our flagship, leading. Withers was our Senior Officer. We called him “Joss” because he was always so infernally lucky. It was flat calm with patches of fog, and our sweepers finished on time. While we were escorting ’em back to our cruisers, Joss picked up some wireless buzz about a submarine spotted from the air, surfacing over to the north-east-probably recharging. He detached <i>How-come</i> and <i>Fan-kwai</i> to go on with our sweepers, while him and me went-look-see. We dodged in and out of fog-patches—two-mile visibility one minute and blind as a bandage the next-then a bit of zincy sun like a photograph—and so on. Well, breaking out of one of these patches we saw a submarine recharging-hatches open, and a man on deck—not a mile off our port quarter. We swung to ram and, as he came broadside on to us, I saw <i>Hop-hell</i> slip a mouldie—fire a torpedo—at him, and my Gunner naturally followed suit. By the mercy o’ God, they both streaked ahead and astern him,</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 3<br />
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<p>because the chap on deck began waving an open brolly at us like an old maid hailing a bus. That fetched us up sliding on our tails, as you might say. Then he said, “What do you silly bastards think you’re doin’?” (He was Conolly, and some of his crowd had told us, ashore, that the brolly was his private code. That’s why we didn’t fire on sight, sir.—“Red” Conolly, not “Black.”) He told us he’d gone pretty close inshore on spec the night before and had been hunted a bit and had to lie doggo, and he’d heard three or four big ships go over him. He told us where that was, and we stood by till he’d finished recharging and we gave him his position and he sculled off. He said it was hellish thick over towards the coast, but there seemed to be something doing there. So we proceeded, on the tip Conolly gave us . . . . Oh, wait a minute! Joss’s Gunner prided himself on carrying all the silhouettes of Fritz’s navy in his fat head, and he had sworn that Conolly’s craft was the duplicate of some dam U-boat. Hence his shot. I believe Joss pretty well skinned him for it, but that didn’t alter the fact we’d only one mouldie apiece left to carry on with . . . .</p>
<p>‘Presently Joss fetched a sharp sheer to port, and I saw his bow-wave throw off something that looked like the horns of a mine; but they were only three or four hock bottles. <i>We</i> don’t drink hock much at sea.’</p>
<p>Mr. Randolph and Mr. Gallop smiled. There are few liquors that the inhabitants of Stephano’s Island do not know—bottled, barrelled, or quite loose.</p>
<p>The Commander continued.</p>
<p>‘Then Joss told me to come alongside and hold his hand, because he felt nervous.’</p>
<p>The Commander here explained how, with a proper arrangement of fenders, a trusty Torpedo Cox at the wheel, and not too much roll on, destroyers of certain types can run side by side close enough for their captains to talk even confidentially to each other. He ended, ‘We used to slam those old dowagers about like sampans.’</p>
<p>‘You youngsters always think you discovered navigation,’ said the Admiral. ‘Where did you steal your fenders from?’</p>
<p>‘That was Chidden’s pigeon in port, sir. He was the biggest thief bar three in the Service. C.M.B.’s are a bad school . . . . So, then, we proceeded—bridge to bridge—chinning all comfy. Joss said those hock bottles and the big ships walking over Conolly interested him strangely. It was shoaling and we more or less made out the set of the tide. We didn’t chuck anything overboard, though; and just about sunset in a clear patch we passed another covey of hock bottles. Mike spotted them first. He used to poke his little nose up under my chin if he thought I was missing anything. Then it got blind-thick, as Conolly said it would, and there was an ungodly amount of gibber on the wireless. Joss said it sounded like a Fritz tip-and-run raid somewhere and we might come in handy if the fog held. (You couldn’t see the deck from the bridge.) He said I’d better hand him over my surviving mouldie because he was going to slip ’em himself hence-forward, and back his own luck. My tubes were nothing to write home about, anyhow. So we passed the thing over, and proceeded. We cut down to bare steerage-way at last (you couldn’t see your hand before your face by then) and we listened. You listen better in fog.’</p>
<p>‘But it doesn’t give you your bearings,’ said Mr. Gallop earnestly.</p>
<p>‘True. Then you fancy you hear things—like we did. Then Mike began poking up under my chin again. <i>He</i> didn’t imagine things. I passed the word to Joss, and a minute or two after, we heard voices—they sounded miles away. Joss said, “That’s the hock-bottler. He’s hunting his home channel. I hope he’s too bothered to worry about us; but if this stuff lifts we’ll wish we were Conolly.” I buttoned Mike well in to me bosom and took an extra turn of my comforter round him, and those ghastly voices started again—up in the air this time, and all down my neck. Then something big went astern, both screws—then ahead dead slow—then shut off. Joss whispered, “He’s atop of us!” I said, “Not yet. Mike’s winding .. him to starboard!” The little chap had his head out of my comforter again, sniffin’ and poking my chin . . . . And then, by God! the blighter slid up behind us to starboard. We couldn’t see him. We felt him take what wind there was, and we smelt him—hot and sour. He was passing soundings to the bridge, by voice. I suppose he thought he was practically at home. Joss whispered, “Go ahead and cuddle him till you hear me yap. Then amuse him. I shall slip my second by the flare of his batteries while he’s trying to strafe you.” So he faded off to port and I went ahead slow—oh, perishing slow! Shide swore afterwards that he made out the loom of the brute’s stern just in time to save his starboard propeller. That was when my heart stopped working. Then I heard my port fenders squeak like wet cork along his side, and there we were cuddling the hock-bottler! If you lie close enough to anything big he can’t theoretically depress his guns enough to get you.’</p>
<p>Mr. Gallop smiled again. He had known that game played in miniature by a motor-launch off the Bahamas under the flaring bows of a foreign preventive boat.</p>
<p>‘. . . ’Funny to lie up against a big ship eaves-dropping that way. We could hear her fans and engine-room bells going, and some poor devil with a deuce of a cough. I don’t know how long it lasted, but, all that awful while, Fritz went on with his housekeeping overhead. I’d sent Shide aft to the relieving tackles—I had an idea the wheel might go—and put Chidden on the twelve-pounder on the bridge. My Gunner had the forward six-pounders, and I kept <i>Makee-do</i> cuddling our friend. Then I heard Joss yap once, and then the devil of a clang. He’d got his first shot home. We got in three rounds of the twelve, and the sixes cut into her naked skin at-oh, fifteen feet it must have been. Then we all dived aft. (My ewe-torpedo wouldn’t have been any use anyhow. The head would have hit her side before the tail was out of the tube.) She woke up and blazed off all starboard batteries, but she couldn’t depress to hit us. The blast of ’em was enough, though. It knocked us deaf and sick and silly. It pushed my bridge and the twelve-pounder over to starboard in a heap, like a set of fire-irons, and it opened up the top of the forward funnel and flared it out like a tulip. She put another salvo over us that winded us again. Mind you, we couldn’t hear <i>that</i>! We felt it. Then we were jarred sideways—a sort of cow-kick, and I thought it was finish. Then there was a sort of ripping woolly <i>feel</i>—not a noise—in the air, and I saw the haze of a big gun’s flash streaking up overhead at abou’ thirty degrees. It occurred to me that she was rolling away from us and it was time to stand clear. So we went astern a bit. And that haze was the only sight I got of her from first to last! . . . After a while, we felt about to take stock of the trouble. Our bridge-wreckage was listing us a good deal to starboard: the funnel spewed smoke all over the shop and some of the stays were cut; wireless smashed; compasses crazy of course; raft and all loose fittings lifted overboard; hatches and such-like strained or jammed and the deck leaking a shade more than usual. <i>But</i> no casualties. A few ratings cut and bruised by being chucked against things, and, of course, general bleeding from the nose and ears. But—funny thing—we all shook like palsy. That lasted longest. We all went about shouting and shaking. Shock, I suppose.’</p>
<p>‘And Mike?’ Mr. Randolph asked.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 4<br />
</strong></p>
<p>‘Oh, <i>he</i> was all right. He had his teeth well into my comforter throughout. ’First thing after action, he hopped down to the wardroom and lapped up pints. Then he tried to dig the gas taste out of his mouth with his paws. Then he wanted to attend to himself, but he found all his private area gone west with the other unsecured gadgets. He was very indignant and told Furze about it. Furze bellows into my ear, “That’s proof it couldn’t have been him on the quarterdeck, sir, because, if ever any one was justified in being promiscuous, <i>now</i> would be the time. But ’e’s as dainty as a duchess.” . . . Laugh away!—It wasn’t any laughing matter for Don Miguel.’</p>
<p>‘—I beg his pardon! How did you settle his daintiness?’ said the Admiral.</p>
<p>‘I gave him special leave to be promiscuous, and just because I laughed he growled like a young tiger . . . . You mayn’t believe what comes next, but it’s fact. Five minutes later, the whole ship was going over Mike’s court-martial once again. They were digging out like beavers to repair damage, and chinning at the top of their voices. And a year—no—six months before, half of ’em were Crystal Palace naval exhibits!’</p>
<p>‘Same with shanghaied hands,’ said Mr. Gallop, putting her about with a nudge of his shoulder on the tiller and some almost imperceptible touch on a sheet. The wind was rising.</p>
<p>‘. . . I ran out of that fog at last like running out of a tunnel. I worked my way off shore, more or less by soundings, till I picked up a star to go home by. Arguin’ that Joss ’ud do about the same, I waited for him while we went on cutting away what was left of the bridge and restaying the funnel. It was flat calm still; the coast-fog lying all along like cliffs as far as you could see. ’Dramatic, too, because, when the light came, Joss shot out of the fog three or four miles away and hared down to us clearing his hawsers for a tow. We <i>did</i> look rather a dung-barge. I signalled we were all right and good for thirteen knots, which was one dam lie . . . . Well . . . so then we proceeded line-ahead, and Joss sat on his depth-charge-rack aft, semaphoring all about it to me on my fo’c’sle-head. He had landed the hock-bottler to port with his first shot. His second—it touched off her forward magazine—was my borrowed one; but he reported it as “a torpedo from the deck of my Second in Command!” She was showing a blaze through the fog then, so it was a sitting shot—at about a hundred yards, he thought. He never saw any more of her than I did, but he smelt a lot of burnt cork. She might have been some old craft packed with cork like a life-boat for a tip-and-run raid. <i>We</i> never knew.’</p>
<p>Even in that short time the wind and the purpose of the waves had strengthened.</p>
<p>‘All right,’ said Mr. Gallop. ‘Nothin’ due ’fore to-morrow.’ But Mr. Randolph, under sailing-orders from Mrs. Vergil, had the oilskins out ere the sloop lay down to it in earnest. ‘Then—after that?’ said he.</p>
<p>‘Well, then we proceeded; Joss flag-wagging me his news, and all hands busy on our funnel and minor running-repairs, but all arguin’ Mike’s case hotter than ever. And all of us shaking.’</p>
<p>‘Where was Mike?’ Mr. Randolph asked as a cut wave-top slashed across the deck.</p>
<p>‘Doing tippet for me on the fo’c’sle, and telling me about his great deeds. He never barked, but he could chin like a Peke. Then Joss changed course. I thought it might be mines, but having no bridge I had no command of sight. Then we passed a torpedo-bearded man lolling in a life-belt, with his head on his arms, squinting at us—like a drunk at a pub . . . . Dead? Quite. . . . You never can tell how the lower deck’ll take anything. They stared at it and our Cook said it looked saucy. That was all. Then Furze screeched: “But for the grace o’ God that might be bloody-all of us!” And he carried on with that bit of the Marriage Service—“I ree-quire an’ charge you as ye shall answer at the Day of Judgment, which blinkin’ hound of you tampered with the evidence <i>re</i> Malachi. Remember that beggar out in the wet is listenin’.” ’Sounds silly, but it gave me the creeps at the time. I heard the Bolshie say that a joke was a joke if took in the right spirit. Then there was a bit of a mix-up round the funnel, but of course I was busy swapping yarns with Joss. When I went aft—I didn’t hurry—our Chief Stoker was standing over Furze, while Chidden and Shide were fending off a small crowd who were lusting for the Bolshie’s blood. (He had a punch, too, Cywil.) It looked to me—but I couldn’t have sworn to it—that the Chief Stoker scraped up a knife with his foot and hoofed it overboard.’</p>
<p>‘Knife!’ the shocked Admiral interrupted.</p>
<p>‘A wardroom knife, sir, with a ground edge on it. Furze had been a Leicester Square waiter or pimp or something, for ten years, and he’d contracted foreign habits. By the time I took care to reach the working-party, they were carrying on like marionettes, because they hadn’t got over their shakes, you see . . . . I didn’t do anything. <i>I</i> didn’t expect the two men Chidden had biffed ’ud complain of him as long as the Bolshie was alive; and our Chief Stoker had mopped up any awkward evidence against Furze. All things considered, I felt rather sorry for the Bolshie . . . . Chidden came to me in the wardroom afterwards, and said the man had asked to be “segwegated” for his own safety. Oh yes!—he’d owned up to tampering with the evidence. I said I couldn’t well crime the swine for blackening a dog’s character; but I’d reinstate and promote Michael, and the lower deck might draw their own conclusions. “Then they’ll kill the Bolshie,” says the young ’un. “No,” I said, “C.M.B.’s don’t know everything, Cywil. They’ll put the fear of death on him, but they won’t scupper him. What’s he doing now?” “Weconstwucting Mike’s pwivate awea, with Shide and Furze standing over him gwinding their teeth.” “Then he’s safe,” I said. “I’ll send Mike up to see if it suits him. But what about Dawkins and Pratt?” Those were the two men Cyril had laid out while the Chief Stoker was quenching the engine-room ratings. <i>They</i> didn’t love the Bolshie either. “Full of beans and blackmail!” he says. “I told ’em I’d saved ’em fwom being hung, but they want a sardine-supper for all hands when we get in.”’</p>
<p>‘But what’s a Chief Stoker <i>doin’</i> on the upper deck?’ said Mr. Vergil peevishly, as he humped his back against a solid douche.</p>
<p>‘Preserving discipline. Ours could mend anything from the wardroom clock to the stove, and he’d <i>make</i> a sailor of anything on legs—same as you used to, Mr. Vergil. . . . Well, and so we proceeded, and when Chidden reported the “awea” fit for use I sent Mike up to test it.’</p>
<p>‘Did Mike know?’ said Mr. Randolph.</p>
<p>‘Don’t ask me what he did or didn’t, or you might call me a liar. The Bolshie apologised to Malachi publicly, after Chidden gave out that I’d promoted him to Warrant Dog “for conspicuous gallantwy in action and giving valuable information as to enemy’s whaiwabouts in course of same.” So Furze put his collar on again, and gave the Bolshie <i>his</i> name and rating.’</p>
<p>The Commander quoted it—self-explanatory indeed, but not such as the meanest in His Majesty’s Service would care to answer to even for one day.</p>
<p>‘It went through the whole flotilla.’ The Commander repeated it, while the others laughed those gross laughs women find so incomprehensible.</p>
<p>‘Did he stay on?’ said Mr. Vergil. ‘Because <i>I</i> knew a stoker in the old <i>Minotaur</i> who cut his throat for half as much as that. It takes ’em funny sometimes.’</p>
<p>‘He stayed with us all right; but he experienced a change of heart, Mr. Vergil.’</p>
<p>‘I’ve seen such in my time,’ said the Ancient.</p>
<p>The Admiral nodded to himself. Mr. Gallop at the tiller half rose as he peered under the foresail, preparatory to taking a short-cut where the coral gives no more second chance than a tiger’s paw. In half an hour they were through that channel. In an hour, they had passed the huge liner tied up and discharging her thirsty passengers opposite the liquor-shops that face the quay. Some, who could not suffer the four and a half minutes’ walk to the nearest hotel, had already run in and come out tearing the wrappings off the whisky bottles they had bought. Mr. Gallop held on to the bottom of the harbour and fetched up with a sliding curtsey beneath the mangroves by the boat-shed . . . .</p>
<p>‘I don’t know whether I’ve given you quite the right idea about my people,’ said the Commander at the end. ‘<i>I</i> used to tell ’em they were the foulest collection of sweeps ever forked up on the beach. In some ways they were. But I don’t want <i>you</i> to make any mistake. When it came to a pinch they were the salt of the earth—the very salt of God’s earth—blast ’em and bless ’em. Not that it matters much now. We’ve got no Navy.’</p>
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		<title>A Smoke of Manila</title>
		<link>https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-smoke-of-manila.htm</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[wa_admin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Tue, 18 May 2021 19:54:17 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://ks-demo3.web/tale/a-smoke-of-manila/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong>[a short tale]</strong> <b>THE</b> man from Manila held the floor. “Much care had made him very lean and pale and hollow-eyed.” Added to which he smoked the cigars of his own country, and they were ... <a title="A Smoke of Manila" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-smoke-of-manila.htm" aria-label="Read more about A Smoke of Manila">Read more</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<div id="leftmargin">
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>[a short tale]</strong></p>
<p><b>THE</b> man from Manila held the floor. “Much care had made him very lean and pale and hollow-eyed.” Added to which he smoked the cigars of his own country, and they were bad for the constitution. He foisted his Stinkadores Magnificosas and his Cuspidores Imperiallissimos upon all who would accept them, and wondered that the recipients of his bounty turned away and were sad. “There is nothing,” said he, “like a Manila cigar.” And the pink pyjamas and blue pyjamas and the spotted green pyjamas, all fluttering gracefully in the morning breeze, vowed that there was not and never would be.</p>
<p>“Do the Spaniards smoke these vile brands to any extent?” asked the Young Gentleman travelling for Pleasure as he inspected a fresh box of Oysters of the East. “Smoke ’em!” said the man from Manila; “they do nothing else day and night.” “Ah!” said the Young Gentleman travelling for Pleasure, in the low voice of one who has received mortal injury, “that accounts for the administration of the country being what it is. After a man has tried a couple of these things he would be ready for any crime.”</p>
<p>The man from Manila took no heed of the insult. “I knew a case once,” said he, “when a cigar saved a man from the sin of burglary and landed him in quod for five years.” “Was he trying to kill the man who gave him the cigar?” said the Young Gentleman travelling for Pleasure. “No, it was this way: My firm’s godowns stand close to a creek. That is to say, the creek washes one face of them, and there are a few things in those godowns that might be useful to a man, such as piece-goods and cotton prints—perhaps five thousand dollars’ worth. I happened to be walking through the place one day when, for a miracle, I was not smoking. That was two years ago.” “Great Cæsar! then he has been smoking ever since!” murmured the Young Gentleman travelling for Pleasure.</p>
<p>“Was not smoking,” continued the man from Manila. “I had no business in the godowns. They were a short cut to my house. When half-way through them I fancied I saw a little curl of smoke rising from behind one of the bales. We stack our bales on low saddles, much as ricks are stacked in England. My first notion was to yell. I object to fire in godowns on principle. It is expensive, whatever the insurance may do. Luckily I sniffed before I shouted, and I sniffed good tobacco smoke.” “And this was in Manila, you say?” interrupted the Young Gentleman travelling for Pleasure.</p>
<p>“Yes, in the only place in the world where you get good tobacco. I knew we had no bales of the weed in stock, and I suspected that a man who got behind print bales to finish his cigar might be worth looking up. I walked between the bales till I reached the smoke. It was coming from the ground under one of the saddles. That’s enough, I thought, and I went away to get a couple of the Guarda Civile—policemen, in fact. I knew if there was anything to be extracted from my friend the bobbies would do it. A Spanish policeman carries in the day-time nothing more than a six-shooter and <i>machete</i>, a dirk. At night he adorns himself with a repeating rifle, which he fires on the slightest provocation. Well, when the policemen arrived, they poked my friend out of his hiding-place with their dirks, hauled him out by the hair, and kicked him round the godown once or twice, just to let him know that he had been discovered. They then began to question him, and under gentle pressure—I thought he would be pulped into a jelly, but a Spanish policeman always knows when to leave oflf—he made a clean breast of the whole business. He was part of a gang, and was to lie in the godown all that night. At twelve o’clock a boat manned by his confederates was to drop down the creek and halt under the godown windows, while he was to hand out our bales. That was their little plan. He had lain there about three hours, and then he began to smoke. I don’t think he noticed what he was doing: smoking is just like breathing to a Spaniard. He could not imderstand how he had betrayed himself and wanted to know whether he had left a leg sticking out imder the saddles. Then the Guarda Civile lambasted him all over again for trifling with the majesty of the law, and removed him after full confession.</p>
<p>“I put one of my own men under a saddle with instructions to hand out print bales to anybody who might ask for them in the course of the night. Meantime the police made their own arrangements, which were very comprehensive.</p>
<p>“At midnight a lumbering old barge, big enough to hold about a himdred bales, came down the creek and pulled up under the godown windows, exactly as if she had been one of my own barges. The eight ruffians in her whistled all the national airs of Manila as a signal to the confederate, then cooling his heels in the lock-up. But my man was ready. He opened the window and held quite a long confab with these second-hand pirates. They were all half-breeds and Roman Catholics, and the way they called upon all the blessed saints to assist them in their work was edifying. My man began tilting out the bales quite as quickly as the confederate would have done. Only he stopped to giggle now and again, and they spat and swore at him like cats. That made him worse, and at last he dropped yelling with laughter over the half door of the godown goods window. Then one boat came up stream and another down stream, and caught the barge stem and stem. Four Guarda Civiles were in each boat; consequently, eight repeating rifles were pointed at the barge, which was very nicely loaded with our bales. The pirates called on the saints more fluently than ever, threw up their hands, and threw themselves on their stomachs. That was the safest attitude, and it gave them the chance of cursing their luck, the barge, the godown, the Guarda Civile, and every saint in the calendar. They cursed the saints most, for the Guarda Civile thumped ’em when their remarks became too personal. We made them put all the bales back again. Then they were handed over to justice and got five years apiece. If they had any dollars they would get out the next day. If they hadn’t, they would serve their full time and no ticket-of-leave allowed. That’s the whole story.”</p>
<p>“And the only case on record,” said the Young Gentleman travelling for Pleasure, “where a Manila cigar was of any use to any one.” The man from Manila lit a fresh Cuspidore and went down to his bath.</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">9243</post-id>	</item>
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		<title>A Tour of Inspection</title>
		<link>https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-tour-of-inspection.htm</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[John Radcliffe]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Sat, 03 Jul 2021 16:18:17 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/?post_type=tale&#038;p=34363</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong>page 1 of 10 </strong> <strong>PURE VANITY</strong> took me over to Agg&#8217;s cottage with my new 18-h.p. Decapod in search of Henry Salt Hinchcliffe, E.R.A. who appreciates good machinery. &#8216;He&#8217;s down the coast with Agg ... <a title="A Tour of Inspection" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/a-tour-of-inspection.htm" aria-label="Read more about A Tour of Inspection">Read more</a>]]></description>
										<content:encoded><![CDATA[<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 1 of 10<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><strong>PURE VANITY</strong> took me over to Agg&#8217;s cottage with my new 18-h.p.<br />
Decapod in search of Henry Salt Hinchcliffe, E.R.A. who appreciates good machinery.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;He&#8217;s down the coast with Agg and the cart,&#8217; said Pyecroft, sitting<br />
in the doorway nursing Agg&#8217;s baby, who in turn nursed the cat.<br />
&#8216;What&#8217;s come to your steam-pinnace that we marooned the bobby with?<br />
Mafeesh? Sold? Well, I pity the buyer, whoever he is; but it don&#8217;t<br />
seem to me, in a manner o&#8217; speaking, that this navy-coloured beef-boat<br />
with the turtle-back represents what you might technically call lugshury.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That&#8217;s only a body that the makers have sent down. The real<br />
one&#8217;s at home: we shall put it on tomorrow. It is all varnish and paint,<br />
like a captain&#8217;s galley.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Much more my style,&#8217; said Pyecroft, putting down the baby.<br />
&#8216;Where are you bound?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Just about and about. We&#8217;re running trials,&#8217; I replied.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">He looked at the dust-covered, lead-painted road-body, with the<br />
single tool-box seat where the tonneau should have been; at Leggatt,<br />
my engineer, attired like a ratcatcher turned groom, and rested his<br />
grave eyes on my disreputable dust-coat, gaiters, and cap.<br />
Then he went indoors, to return in a short time clad in blue<br />
civilian serge and a black bowler.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Aren&#8217;t there regulations?&#8217; I said. &#8216;You look like a pilot.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Or a police inspector,&#8217; murmured Leggatt.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Decency forbids&#8217;, said he, climbing into the back seat, &#8216;or I<br />
might say somethin&#8217; about coalin&#8217; rig an&#8217; lighters.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Leggatt turned down a lever, and she flung half a mile of road<br />
behind her with a silky purr.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;No — not lighters,&#8217; said Pyecroft. &#8216;She&#8217;s a destroyer. She licked<br />
up that last stretch like an Italian eatin&#8217; macaroni.&#8217;<br />
He stood up and steadied himself by a pole in the middle of the front<br />
seat which carried the big acetylene lamp.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Why, this is like the periscope gadget on the Portsmouth<br />
submarines. Does she dive?&#8217; said he.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;No, fly!&#8217; I said, and we proved it over a bare upland road (this<br />
was in the days before the numbering of the cars) that brought us<br />
within sight of the summer sea.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Pyecroft pointed automatically to the far line of silver. &#8216;The beach<br />
is always a good place,&#8217; he said. &#8216;An&#8217; it&#8217;s goin&#8217; to be a warm day.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">So we took the fairest of counties to our bosom for an easy hour;<br />
rocking through deep-hedged hollows where the morning&#8217;s coolth still<br />
lingered; electrifying the fine dust of a league of untempered main<br />
road; bathing in the shadows of overarching park timber; slowing<br />
through half-built, liver-coloured suburbs that defiled some exploited<br />
hamlet; speculating in front of wonderful houses all fresh from the<br />
middle parts of <i>Country Life</i>; or shooting a half-vertical hill<br />
from mere delight in the Decapod&#8217;s power, but always edging away<br />
towards the good southerly blue.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Among other things, I remember, we discussed the new naval<br />
reforms. Pyecroft&#8217;s criticisms would have been worth votes to any Government.<br />
He desired what he called &#8216;a free gangway from the lower deck to the<br />
admiral&#8217;s stern walk&#8217; — the career open to the talents.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;An&#8217; they&#8217;d better begin now,&#8217; he concluded, &#8216;for to<br />
this complexion will it come at last, &#8216;Oratio. Three weeks after war breaks out,<br />
the painstakin&#8217; and meritorious admirals will have collapsed, owin&#8217; to<br />
night work and reflecting on their responsibilities to the taxpayer,<br />
takin&#8217; with them seventy-five per cent. of the ambitious but aged captains.<br />
The junior ranks, not carin&#8217; two straws for the taxpayer, an&#8217; sleepin&#8217; where<br />
they can, will survive, in conjunction with the gunner, the boatswain,<br />
an&#8217; similar petty an&#8217; warrant officers, &#8216;oo will thus be seen commandin&#8217;<br />
first, second, an&#8217; third-class cruisers seriatim.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That&#8217;s rather a bold prophecy.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Prophecy be blowed!&#8217; said Pyecroft, leaning on the light-pole<br />
and sweeping the landscape with my binoculars, which had slung<br />
themselves round his neck five minutes after our departure. &#8216;It&#8217;s what&#8217;s<br />
goin&#8217; to happen.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Meaning you&#8217;d take the Channel Fleet into action?&#8217; I suggested.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Setteris paribus — the others being out of action. I&#8217;d &#8216;ave a try.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 2</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Hinchcliffe, or the engine-room staff, would be where poor Tom Bowling&#8217;s<br />
body was, an&#8217; one man&#8217;s orders down the speakin&#8217; tube is very like<br />
another&#8217;s. Besides, think o&#8217; the taxpayer&#8217;s feelin&#8217;s. What &#8216;ud you say<br />
to me if I came flyin&#8217; back to the beach signallin&#8217; for a commissioned<br />
officer to continue the battle — there bein&#8217; two warrants an&#8217; one carpenter<br />
still survivin&#8217;? &#8216;Tain&#8217;t common sense — in the Navy. Hullo! Here&#8217;s the<br />
Channel! Bright and beautiful, an&#8217; bloomin&#8217; &#8216;ard to live with — as usual.&#8217;<br />
We had swung over a steep, oak-crowned ridge, and overlooked<br />
a map-like stretch of marsh ruled with roads, ditches, and canals that<br />
ran off into the still noonday haze on either hand. At our feet lay<br />
Wapshare, that was once a port, and even now commanded a few dingy<br />
keels. Southerly, five or six miles across the levels, the sea whitened<br />
faintly on grey-blue shingle spaced with martello towers. As the car<br />
halted for orders, the decent breathing of the Channel was broken<br />
by a far away hiccough out of the heat haze.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Big guns at Lydd,&#8217; said Pyecroft. &#8216;They&#8217;ll have some triflin&#8217; errors<br />
due to mirage this forenoon. Well, I handle such things for a livin&#8217;.<br />
We needn&#8217;t go there. What&#8217;s yonder — three points on the port bow.<br />
between those towers?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">He pointed to a batch of tall-chimneyed buildings at the very edge<br />
of the wavering beach.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I believe it has something to do with making concrete blocks<br />
for some big Admiralty works down the coast,&#8217; I answered.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;A thirsty job with the lime flyin&#8217; an&#8217; the heat strikin&#8217; off the<br />
shingle. What a lot of &#8216;ard work one misses on leaf! It looks cooler<br />
below here,&#8217; he said, and waved a hand.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">We slid into Wapshare, which, where the jerry builder has left<br />
it alone, precisely resembles an illustration in a mediaeval missal.<br />
Skirting the shade of its grey flint walls, we found ourselves on a<br />
wharf above a doubtful-minded tidal river and a Poole schooner —<br />
she was called the <i>Esther Grant</i> — surrounded by barges of<br />
fireclay for the local potteries.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;All asleep,&#8217; said Pyecroft, &#8216;like a West India port. Let&#8217;s go down<br />
the river. There&#8217;s a sort of road on one side — out where that barge<br />
is lyin&#8217;.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">We trundled along a line of wooden offices, crackling in the heat,<br />
seeing here and there a shirt-sleeved clerk. Then a policeman stopped us.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Can&#8217;t come any further,&#8217; he said. &#8216;This is Admiralty ground,<br />
and that&#8217;s an explosives barge yonder.&#8217; He glanced curiously at<br />
Pyecroft and the severe outlines of my car.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That nothin&#8217;. I know all about the Admiralty — at least, they<br />
know all about me.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Perhaps if you told me —&#8217; the policeman began.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;But I don&#8217;t think I&#8217;ll inspect stores today.&#8217; Pyecroft leaned back<br />
and folded his arms royally. &#8216;What are your instructions? Repeat &#8217;em<br />
in a smart and lifelike manner.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;To allow nobody beyond this barrier,&#8217; the policeman began<br />
obediently, &#8216;unless certain that he is a duly authorised agent of the<br />
Admiralty.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That&#8217;s me. I&#8217;ve been one for eighteen years.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;To allow no communication of any kind, wines, spirits, or tobacco,<br />
from any quarter to the barge, and to see that the watchman does not<br />
come ashore till properly relieved, after searchin&#8217; the relief for wine,<br />
tobacco, spirits or matches.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Pyecroft nodded with slow approval.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I&#8217;ve heard it come quicker off the tongue in — in other quarters,<br />
but that will do. I&#8217;m not a martinet, thank &#8216;Eaven. Now let us inspect<br />
&#8216;im from a safe distance.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">He turned the binoculars on the lonely barge a quarter of a mile<br />
away, where a man sat under a coachman&#8217;s umbrella holding his head<br />
in his hands.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;If I was any judge,&#8217; he said, &#8216;I&#8217;d say that our friend yonder<br />
was recoverin&#8217; from the effects of what I&#8217;ve heard called a bosky<br />
beano.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Oh, no, sir,&#8217; said the policeman hurriedly —&#8217;at least, nothing to<br />
signify. &#8216;E &#8216;asn&#8217;t got a drop now. He&#8217;s only the watchman.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;He&#8217;s taken two large laps out o&#8217; that bucket beside &#8216;im since<br />
I&#8217;ve had &#8216;im under observation. It is now,&#8217; he unshackled a huge watch,<br />
&#8216;eleven twenty-seven. The prima facie evidence is that &#8216;e got that<br />
grievous mouth last night about two a.m. What&#8217;s in the barge?<br />
Shells?&#8217; he said, turning to the half-petrified policeman.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 3<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;No. No ammunition comes here, sir. It&#8217;s only<br />
the Admiralty dynamite for the works down the coast. Sixteen tons with<br />
fuses — waitin&#8217; for the Government tug to tow &#8217;em round when the tide makes.<br />
He isn&#8217;t the regular crew. He&#8217;s one of the watchmen. He&#8217;s relieved<br />
at four.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;But where&#8217;s his red flags?&#8217; said Pyecroft suddenly. &#8216;A powder<br />
barge ought to &#8216;ave two.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Why, they aren&#8217;t there!&#8217; said the policeman, as though he<br />
observed the deficiency for the first time.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;H&#8217;m,&#8217; said Pyecroft. &#8216;They must &#8216;ave been the banner he fought<br />
under last night, or else he pawned &#8217;em for drink.&#8217; He passed me the<br />
binoculars. &#8216;There he dives again! One imperial quart o&#8217; warmish<br />
water an&#8217; sixteen ton o&#8217; dynamite to sober up on — in this &#8216;eat. Give<br />
me cells any day.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;You — you won&#8217;t report it, sir, will you? He&#8217;s only the watchman<br />
— not a regular &#8216;and,&#8217; the policeman urged.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">I saw Leggatt&#8217;s shoulders shake. Pyecroft wrapped himself up in<br />
his virtue.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I have not yet been officially informed there&#8217;s anything to report,&#8217;<br />
he answered ponderously. &#8216;The man&#8217;s present and correct. You&#8217;ve<br />
searched &#8216;im?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That I assure you I &#8216;ave,&#8217; said the policeman.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Then there&#8217;s no evidence he ain&#8217;t drinkin&#8217; for a cure — or a bet.<br />
I don&#8217;t believe in seein&#8217; too much; an&#8217; speakin&#8217; as one man to another,<br />
from the soles o&#8217; my feet upwards I pity the beggar!&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The policeman expanded like one blue lotus of the Nile.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Yes,&#8217; he said. &#8216;You&#8217;ve seen the miserablest man in Wapshare.<br />
&#8216;E can&#8217;t drink nor smoke. I&#8217;m the next, because I can&#8217;t either — on my<br />
beat. I was &#8216;opin&#8217; when I saw you, you&#8217;d exceed the legal limit —&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That isn&#8217;t necessary, is it?&#8217; I said.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8221;Tis with me. I &#8216;ave a conscience. Then I&#8217;d &#8216;ave to stop you, and<br />
then — so I thought till I saw who you was — you&#8217;d &#8216;ave to bribe me.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;What&#8217;s it like at the &#8216;Fuggle Hop&#8217;? &#8216;I demanded. We were very<br />
hot where we stood. The policeman looked irresolutely at Pyecroft,<br />
who naturally echoed the sentiments.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Not so good as at the &#8216; &#8216;Astings Smack&#8217;, if I might be allowed,&#8217;<br />
and alluring to brighter realms, the policeman himself led the way back.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;He takes you for some sort of inspector,&#8217; I said.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Haven&#8217;t I answered &#8216;is expectations?&#8217; Pyecroft retorted. &#8216;Where&#8217;d<br />
you find another Johnty &#8216;ud let &#8216;im drink on &#8216;is beat?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;It&#8217;s the boots.&#8217; said Leggatt. &#8216;The boots and those tight blue clothes.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">It was very good at the &#8216;Hastings Smack.&#8217; The policeman took<br />
his standing, but we withdrew with ours and some lunch (summer pubs<br />
are full of flies) to the shade of a deserted coal-wharf by the Poole<br />
schooner.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;This is what I call a happy ship an&#8217; a good commission,&#8217; said<br />
Pyecroft, brushing away the crumbs. &#8216;Last time we motored together,<br />
we &#8216;ad zebras an&#8217; kangaroos, if I remember right. &#8216;Ere we &#8216;ave, as the<br />
poet so truly sings —</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-size: 14px;"><em>&#8216;Beef when you are hungry,</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 14px;"><em>Beer when you are dry,</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 14px;"><em>Bed when you are sleepy,</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 14px;"><em>An&#8217; &#8216;eaven when you die.&#8217;</em></span></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Three more mugs will just do it.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The potboy brought four, and a mariner with them — a vast and<br />
voluminous man all covered with china clay, whose voice was as the<br />
rolling of hogsheads over planking.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Have you seen my mate?&#8217; he thundered.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;No,&#8217; said Pyecroft above the half-raised mug. &#8216;What might your<br />
Number One have been doin&#8217; recently?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Drink—desertion—refusal o&#8217; lawful orders, an&#8217; committin&#8217;<br />
barratry with a public barge. Put that in your pipe an&#8217; smoke it. I see<br />
you&#8217;re a man o&#8217; principles. I may as well tell you here an&#8217; now — or<br />
now an&#8217; &#8216;ere, as I should rather say — that I&#8217;m a Baptist; but if you<br />
was to tell me that God ever made a human man in Cardiff, I&#8217;d — I&#8217;d —<br />
I&#8217;d dissent from your principles. Attend to me! The Welsh &#8216;appened<br />
at the change of watch when the Devil took charge o’ the West coast.<br />
That was when the Welsh &#8216;appened. I hope none o&#8217; you gentlemen are<br />
Welsh, because I can&#8217;t dissent from my principles.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 4<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">None of us were Welsh at that hour.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;He seems a gay bird, your mate,&#8217; said Pyecroft.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;If I wasn&#8217;t a Baptist, an&#8217; he wasn&#8217;t my cousin, besides bein&#8217; part<br />
owner of the <i>Esther Grant</i> (it comes to &#8216;im with a legacy), I&#8217;d say he<br />
was a red-&#8216;eaded, skim-milk-eyed, freckle-jawed, stern-first-talkin&#8217;,<br />
Cardiff booze-hound. That&#8217;s just what I&#8217;d say o&#8217; Llewellyn. Attend to<br />
me! I paid five pounds for him at Falmouth only last winter for compound<br />
assault or fracture or whatever it was; an&#8217; all &#8216;e can do to show &#8216;is<br />
gratitude is to go an&#8217; commit barratry with a public barge.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;He would,&#8217; said Pyecroft, but this crime was new to me, and I<br />
asked eagerly for particulars.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I gave him &#8216;is orders last night when &#8216;e couldn&#8217;t &#8216;ave been more<br />
than moist. Last night I told &#8216;im to take a barge o&#8217; clay to the potteries<br />
&#8216;ere. Potteries — one barge. &#8216;E might &#8216;ave got drunk afterwards. I&#8217;d &#8216;ave<br />
said nothing — it&#8217;s against my principles — but &#8216;e couldn&#8217;t lay &#8216;is course<br />
even that far. They come to me this mornin&#8217; from the potteries — look —&#8217;<br />
he pulled out papers, a dozen, from several pockets and waved them —<br />
&#8216;they wrote me an&#8217; they telephoned me at the wharf askin&#8217; where that<br />
barge was, because she was missin&#8217;. Now, I ask you gentlemen, do<br />
I look as if I kept barges up my back? &#8216;E&#8217;d committed barratry clear<br />
enough, &#8216;adn&#8217;t &#8216;e?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Plain as a pikestaff,&#8217; said Pyecroft.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That bein&#8217; so, I want to know where my legal liability for the<br />
missin&#8217; barge comes in?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Just what I&#8217;d ha&#8217; thought,&#8217; said Pyecroft.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Besides, &#8217;tisn&#8217;t as if I used their pottery, either.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">There are times when I despair of training Leggatt to my needs.<br />
At this point he got up and fled choking.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;When I catch Master Llewellyn, I&#8217;ve my own bill to settle, too.<br />
He&#8217;s broken the &#8216;eart of a baker&#8217;s dozen of my whisky. You&#8217;d never<br />
be drinkin&#8217; cold beer &#8216;ere if &#8216;e &#8216;adn&#8217;t. You&#8217;d be on the <i>Esther Grant</i><br />
quite &#8216;appy by now. Four bottles &#8216;e went off with ! Four bottles for a<br />
hymn-singin&#8217;, &#8216;arp-strummin&#8217;, passive-resistin&#8217; Non-conformist who talks<br />
a non-commercial language to &#8216;is wife! But I ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to pander to<br />
&#8216;is family any more. If you run across &#8216;im, tell &#8216;im that I&#8217;ll knock &#8216;is<br />
red &#8216;ead flush with &#8216;is shoulders. Tell &#8216;im I&#8217;ll pay fifteen pounds for<br />
&#8216;im this time. &#8216;E&#8217;ll know what I mean. A red &#8216;eaded, goat-shanked,<br />
saucer-eared, fig-nosed, banana-skinned, Cardiff booze-hound answerin&#8217;<br />
to the name o&#8217; Llewellyn. You can&#8217;t miss &#8216;im. &#8216;Ave you got it all down?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Every word,&#8217; I said.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The policeman entered the shed, followed by Leggatt, and I closed<br />
the notebook I was using so shamelessly.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Excuse me,&#8217; said the policeman, addressing the audience at large,<br />
&#8216;but a gentleman outside wants to speak to the owner of the car.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I can testify in their behalf,&#8217; said the mariner. &#8216;Blow &#8216;igh, blow<br />
low or sugared by his mate, Captain Arthur Dudeney&#8217;ll testify in your<br />
be&#8217;alf unless it &#8216;appens to be a Welshman. The Welsh &#8216;appened at the<br />
change o&#8217; watch when the Devil&#8217;.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Drop it, you fool! It&#8217;s young Mr. Voss,&#8217; the policeman murmured.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Be it so. So be it. But remember barratry&#8217;s the offence, which<br />
must be brought &#8216;ome to Master Llewellyn.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Captain Dudeney sat down,<br />
and we went out to face a tall young man in grey trousers, frock-coat<br />
with gardenia in buttonhole, and a new top-hat, furiously biting his nails.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I beg your pardon, but I&#8217;m Mr. Voss, of Norden and Voss — the<br />
cement works. They&#8217;ve telephoned me that the works have stopped.<br />
I can&#8217;t make out why. I sent for a cab, but it would take me nearly an<br />
hour — and I&#8217;m in a particular hurry — so, seein&#8217; your motor — I thought<br />
perhaps —&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Certainly,&#8217; I said. &#8216;Won&#8217;t you get in and tell us where you want<br />
to go?</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Those big works on the beach have stopped since nine o&#8217;clock.<br />
It&#8217;s only five miles away — but it&#8217;s very inconvenient for me.&#8217; He pointed<br />
across the shimmering levels of the marsh as Leggatt wound her up.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;It&#8217;s no good,&#8217; said Pyecroft, climbing in beside me on the narrow<br />
back seat. &#8216;We two go out &#8216;and in &#8216;and, like the Babes in the Wood,<br />
both funnels smoking gently, for a coastwise cruise of inspection, an&#8217;<br />
sooner or later we find ourselves manœvrin&#8217; with strange an&#8217; &#8216;ostile fleets,<br />
till our bearin&#8217;s are red &#8216;ot an&#8217; our superstructure&#8217;s shot away. There&#8217;s<br />
a ju-ju on us somewhere. Well, it won&#8217;t be zebras this time!&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 5<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">We jumped out on a dead-level, dead-straight road, flanked by a<br />
canal on one side and a deep marsh ditch on the other, whose perspective<br />
ended in the cement-works and the shingle ridge behind.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Oh, be quick! I want to get back,&#8217; said Mr. Voss, and that was<br />
an unfortunate remark to make to Leggatt, who has records.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Conversation was blown out of our mouths; Mr. Voss had just<br />
time to save his hat. Pyecroft stood up (he was used to destroyers) by the<br />
lamp-pole and raked the landscape with my binoculars. The marsh<br />
cattle fled from us with stiff tails. The canal streaked past like blue tape,<br />
the inshore landmarks — coast-house and church-spire—opened, closed,<br />
and stepped aside on the low hills, and the cement works enlarged<br />
themselves as under a nearing lens. Leggatt slowed at last, for the latter<br />
end of the road was badly loosed by traffic.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;The steam-mixer has stopped!&#8217; panted Mr. Voss. &#8216;We ought to<br />
hear it from here.&#8217; There was certainly no sound of working machinery.<br />
&#8216;And where are all the men?&#8217; he cried.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">A few hundred yards further on, the canal broadened into a little<br />
basin immediately on the front of the machinery-shed. The road, worse<br />
at each revolution, ran on between two tin sheds, and ended, so far<br />
as we could see, in the shingle of the beach.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Slow! Dead slow! said Pyecroft to Leggatt, &#8216;we don&#8217;t yet know<br />
the accommodation of the port nor the disposition of the natives.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The machine-shed doors were wide open. We could see a vista<br />
of boiler-furnaces, each with a pile of fuming ashes in front of it, and<br />
the outlines of arrested wheels and belting. A man on a barge in the<br />
middle of the basin waved a friendly hand.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">I felt Pyecroft start and recover himself.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Come on,&#8217; said the man, taking the pipe out of his teeth. &#8216;Don&#8217;t<br />
you be shy.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;What&#8217;s the matter?&#8217; said Mr. Voss, standing up. &#8216;Where are<br />
my men?</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Playing. I&#8217;ve ordered a general strike in Europe, Asia, Africa and<br />
America.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">He relit his pipe composedly with a fusee.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Who the deuce are you?&#8217; Mr. Voss was angry.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Johannes Stephanus Paulus Kruger,&#8217; was the answer. Pyecroft<br />
chuckled.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Man&#8217;s mad.&#8217; Mr. Voss bit his lip.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">A breath of hot wind off the corrugated iron rippled the face of<br />
the basin and lifted out two very dingy but perfectly distinct red flags,<br />
one at each end of the barge.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Go on! It&#8217;s a powder-barge,&#8217; said Mr. Voss, sitting down heavily.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Leggatt asserts that he acted automatically. All I know is that<br />
he must have whirled the car forward between the two sheds and up the<br />
shingle ridge behind; for when I had cleared my dry throat, we had<br />
topped the bank, hung for a fraction on the crest, and amid a roar of<br />
pebbles (the seaward side was steep) slid down on to hard sand in the<br />
face of the untroubled Channel and a mob of acutely interested men.<br />
They looked like a bathing-party. Most of them were barefoot and wore<br />
dripping shirts tied round their necks. All were very, very red over as<br />
much of them as I could see.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;What&#8217;s the matter?&#8217; cried Mr. Voss, while they surged round<br />
the car.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">This was a general invitation, accepted as such, and Mr. Voss<br />
waved his white hands.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Why were you so unusual bloomin&#8217; precipitate?&#8217; said Pyecroft<br />
to Leggatt under cover of the riot. &#8216;You very nearly threw us out.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I&#8217;m not fond o&#8217; powder. Besides, it&#8217;s a new car,&#8217; Leggatt replied.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Didn&#8217;t you see &#8216;oo the joker was, then?&#8217; Pyecroft asked.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Friend o&#8217; yours?&#8217; Leggatt asked. The clamour round us grew.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;No — but a friend of Captain Dudeney&#8217;s, if I&#8217;m not mistook. &#8216;E<br />
&#8216;ad all the marks of it. But, to please you, we&#8217;ll take soundings. Mr.<br />
Voss seems to be sufferin&#8217; from &#8216;is mutinous crew, so to put it.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">At that moment Mr. Voss turned an anxious glance on the<br />
tight-buttoned blue coat and the hard, squarish hat.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 6<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Stop!&#8217; said Pyecroft. The voice was new to me and to the others.<br />
It checked the tumult as the bottom checks the roaring anchor-chain.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;You with the stiff neck, two paces to the front and begin!&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;It&#8217;s an Inspector,&#8217; someone whispered. &#8216;Mr. Voss &#8216;as brought<br />
the Police.&#8217; And the mob came to hand like cooing doves.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Look at my blisters!&#8217; said Pyecroft&#8217;s chosen. He stood up in coaly<br />
trousers, the towel that should have supported them waving wet round<br />
his peeled shoulders. &#8216;You&#8217;d &#8216;ave a neck, too, if you&#8217;d been lying out on<br />
the shingle since nine like a bloomin&#8217; dotterel. An&#8217; I&#8217;m a fair man by nature.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Stow your nature!&#8217; said Pyecroft. &#8216;Make your report, or I&#8217;ll<br />
disrate you!&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The man rubbed his neck uneasily. &#8216;We found &#8216;im &#8216;ere when we<br />
come. We &#8216;eard what &#8216;e &#8216;ad: we saw &#8216;ow &#8216;e was: an&#8217; we bloomin&#8217; well<br />
&#8216;ooked it,&#8217; he said.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Now, I consider that almost perfect art; but the crowd growled at the<br />
baldness thereof, and the blistered man went on.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;So&#8217;d you, if a beggar called &#8216;imself Mabon an&#8217; lit all &#8216;is pipes with<br />
fusees settin&#8217; on top o&#8217; sixteen tons of Admiralty dynamite. Ain&#8217;t that<br />
what he done ever since nine? It&#8217;s all very well for you, but why didn&#8217;t<br />
you come sooner an&#8217; &#8216;elp us?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Stop!&#8217; said Pyecroft. &#8216;We don&#8217;t want any of your antitheseses<br />
Where&#8217;s the chief petty — where&#8217;s the fireman?</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">A black-bearded giant stood forth. He, too, was stripped to the<br />
waist, and it had done him little good.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Now, what about the dynamite?&#8217; Pyecroft&#8217;s throne was the back<br />
seat of my car. Mr. Voss, the gardenia already wilted in the heat, made<br />
no attempt to interfere: we could see that his soul leaned heavily on the<br />
stranger. The giant lifted shy eyes.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;We found him here when we came to work. He said he had sixteen<br />
tons of dynamite with fuses; and when he wasn&#8217;t drinkin&#8217;, he was lightin&#8217;<br />
his pipe with fusees and throwin&#8217; &#8217;em about.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Continuous?&#8217; said Pyecroft.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;All the time.&#8217; This with the indescribable rising inflection of the<br />
county.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Leggatt and I exchanged glances with Pyecroft.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That sort o&#8217; stuff ain&#8217;t issued in duplicate,&#8217; he said to me.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Any more than petrol. You have to have a receipt,&#8217; Leggatt<br />
assented. &#8216;An&#8217; I do think &#8216;is hair was red, but I didn&#8217;t look long.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Which only bears out my original argument when you slung us<br />
over the ridge, Mr. Leggatt. You&#8217;ve been too precipitous,&#8217; said Pyecroft.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;What&#8217;s the good o&#8217; talkin&#8217;?&#8217; said the blistered man. &#8216;We saw<br />
&#8216;om &#8216;e was: we &#8216;eard what &#8216;e &#8216;ad; an&#8217; we &#8216;ooked it. I&#8217;ve told you once.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Go on,&#8217; said Pyecroft to the giant. &#8216;Sixteen tons with fuses.<br />
Most upsettin&#8217;, you might say.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;When he said he was going to blow a corner off England, I ordered<br />
the men out of the works while we drew fires. Jernigan drew the fires,<br />
Mr. Voss.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Yes, I did,&#8217; the blistered man cried. &#8216;We &#8216;ad ninety pounds steam,<br />
an&#8217; I know Number Four boiler; but Duncan &#8216;ere &#8216;e got me the time to<br />
draw &#8217;em.&#8217; The crowd clapped.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8221;E &#8216;asn&#8217;t told you &#8216;arf. &#8216;E put &#8216;is &#8216;ands behind &#8216;is back an&#8217; &#8216;e sung<br />
&#8216;ymns to that beggar in the barge all through breakfast-time. It&#8217;s as true<br />
as I&#8217;m standing &#8216;ere. &#8216;E sung &#8216;A Few More Years Shall Roll&#8217; right on<br />
the edge of the basin, with the beggar throwin&#8217; live fusees about regardless<br />
all the time. Else I couldn&#8217;t &#8216;ave drawn the fires, Mr. Voss.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8221;Ighly commendable, Mr. Duncan,&#8217; said Pyecroft, as though it<br />
were his right to praise or blame, and the crowd clapped again.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;How did you get to the telephone to send me the message?&#8217; said<br />
Mr. Voss.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;On &#8216;is &#8216;ands an&#8217; knees over the shingle.&#8217; There was no suppressing<br />
the blistered man. &#8216;While Mr. Mabon was &#8216;oldin &#8216;an I&#8217;Stifford by &#8216;imself.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8220;I — what?&#8217; said Pyecroft.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I&#8217;Stifford. They &#8216;ave &#8217;em in Bethesda. I&#8217;ve worked there. A Welsh<br />
concert like.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Oh, &#8216;e&#8217;s Welsh, then?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 7<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Pyecroft fixed Leggatt with an accusing left eyeball.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;You&#8217;ve only to listen to &#8216;im. &#8216;E&#8217;s seldom quiet. &#8216;Ark now.&#8217; The<br />
blistered man held up his hand.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The tide crept lazily in little flashes over the sand. A becalmed<br />
fishing-boat&#8217;s crew stood up to look at our assembly, and certain gulls<br />
wheeled and made mock of us. East and west the ridge shook in the<br />
heat; the martello-towers flatting into buns or shooting into spires as the<br />
oily streaks of air shifted. We stood about the car as shipwrecked,<br />
mariners in the illustration gather round the long-boat, and seldom were<br />
any sailors more peeled and puffed and salt-scurfed.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">A thin voice floated over the ridge in high falsetto quavers. It was<br />
certainly not English.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That&#8217;s &#8216;ow they sing at Bethesda on a Sunday,&#8217; said the blistered<br />
man. &#8216;I wish &#8216;e was there now. This&#8217;ll all come off in frills-like,<br />
to-morrow,&#8217; he pulled at his whitening nose.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;And the more you go into the water, the more it seems to sting<br />
you coming out,&#8217; said another drearily. &#8216;You&#8217;d better &#8216;ave a wet<br />
&#8216;andkerchief round your &#8216;ead, Mr. Voss.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;"><span style="font-size: 14px;"><em>&#8220;Hark the tramp of Saxon foemen,</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 14px;"><em>Saxon spearmen, Saxon bowmen—</em></span><br />
<span style="font-size: 14px;"><em>Be they knight or be they yeomen—&#8221;</em></span></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">the unseen voice went on, in clipped English.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;If I had a cousin like that, I&#8217;d have drowned &#8216;im long ago,&#8217; said<br />
Pyecroft half to himself.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Drownin&#8217;s too good for &#8216;im. We&#8217;ve been &#8216;ere since nine cookin&#8217;<br />
like ostrich eggs. Baines, run an&#8217; wet a &#8216;andkerchief for Mr. Voss.&#8217; It<br />
was the blistered man again. Duncan stood moodily apart chewing his<br />
beard.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Thank you. Oh, thank you!&#8217; said Mr. Voss. &#8216;The machinery<br />
cost thirty thousand, and it&#8217;s a quarter of a million contract.&#8217; He turned<br />
to Pyecroft as he knotted the dripping handkerchief round his brows<br />
under the radiant hat.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Tactically, Mr. Mabon Kruger&#8217;s position is irreproachable,&#8217;<br />
Pyecroft replied. &#8216;Or, to put it coarsely, there&#8217;s no getting at the<br />
beggar with a brick for instance?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I ain&#8217;t goin&#8217; to &#8216;eave bricks at a dynamite barge, for one,&#8217; said the<br />
blistered man, and this seemed the general opinion.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Nonsense!&#8217; I began. &#8216;Why, there&#8217;s no earthly chance—&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Not if you want it to go off,&#8217; said Pyecroft hurriedly. &#8221;You can fair<br />
chew dynamite then; but if it&#8217;s any object with you to delay ignition,<br />
a friendly nod will fetch her smilin&#8217;. I ought to know somethin&#8217; about it.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Presently,&#8217; said Duncan, the foreman, with great simplicity, &#8216;he&#8217;ll<br />
have to sleep, an&#8217; I&#8217;ll go out to him. I&#8217;ll wait till then.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;No, you don&#8217;t!&#8217; cried many voices. &#8216;Not till you&#8217;ve &#8216;ad a drink<br />
an&#8217; a feed an&#8217; a sleep &#8230; Don&#8217;t talk fulish, Duncan. Go an&#8217; wet yer<br />
&#8216;ead.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;He made me sing hymns,&#8217; Duncan went on in the same flat voice.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;That won&#8217;t &#8216;elp you when you&#8217;re bein&#8217; &#8216;ung at Lewes. . . Don&#8217;t<br />
be fulish, Duncan,&#8217; the voices replied, and a man behind me muttered:<br />
&#8216;I&#8217;ve seen &#8216;im take an&#8217; throw a fireman from the furnace door to the<br />
canal — eight yards. We measured it. No, no, Duncan.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">I thanked fortune that my little plan of dramatically revealing all<br />
to the crowd had been dismissed on a nod from Pyecroft, the reader of<br />
souls, who had seen it in my silly eye.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;No,&#8217; he said aloud, answering me and none other. &#8216;I ain&#8217;t slept<br />
with a few thousand men in hammocks for twenty years without knowin&#8217;<br />
their nature. Mr. Mabon Kruger is in the fairway and has to be shifted;<br />
but whatever &#8216;e&#8217;s done, let us remember that &#8216;e&#8217;s given us a day off.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Off be sugared!&#8217; said the blistered man. &#8216;On — on a bloomin&#8217;<br />
gridiron! If you&#8217;d come to the beach when we did, you wouldn&#8217;t be so<br />
nasty just to the beggar. You talk a lot, but what we want to know is<br />
what you&#8217;re going to do?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8221;Ear! &#8216;ear!&#8217; said the crowd, &#8216;that&#8217;s what we want to know.<br />
Go and shift &#8216;im yourself.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Pyecroft bit back a weighty reproof.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Wind her up, Mr. Leggatt,&#8217; he said, &#8216;and ram &#8216;er at the first<br />
lowest place in the ridge. You men fall in an&#8217; push behind if she checks.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 8<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;What&#8217;s that for? You ain&#8217;t never —&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;We&#8217;re goin&#8217; to shift &#8216;im. All you&#8217;ve got to do is to &#8216;elp the car<br />
over the ridge an&#8217; then take cover. You talk too much.&#8217; He swung out of<br />
the car, and Leggatt mounted. The churn of the machinery drowned Mr. Voss&#8217;s<br />
protests, but as the car drew away along the sands westerly,<br />
followed by the men, he said to Pyecroft: &#8216;But — but suppose you annoy<br />
him? He may blow up the works. Ha — hadn&#8217;t we better wait?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;With him chuckin&#8217; fusees about every minute? Certainly not.<br />
Come along!&#8217; He started at a trot towards the shingle ridge which<br />
Leggatt was already charging.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Would you mind,&#8217; Mr. Voss panted, &#8216;telling me who you are?<br />
&#8216;Pyecroft looked at him reproachfully and he continued: &#8216;I can see that<br />
you&#8217;re in a responsible position, but &#8230; I&#8217;d like to know.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;You&#8217;re right. I hold a position of some responsibility under the<br />
Admiralty. That&#8217;s Admiralty dynamite, ain&#8217;t it?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Yes, but I don&#8217;t understand how it came here.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Nor I. But someone will be hung for it. You can make your mind<br />
quite easy about that. That explains everything, don&#8217;t it? The plain<br />
facts of the case is that someone has blundered, an&#8217; &#8216;ence there&#8217;s not a<br />
minute to be lost. Don&#8217;t you see?&#8217; He edged towards the car on the<br />
top of the ridge, Mr. Voss clinging to his manly hand.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;But, suppose —&#8217; said Mr. Voss. &#8216;The risks are frightful.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;They are. You know &#8216;ow it is with the horrors. If he catches sight<br />
o&#8217; one o&#8217; your men, &#8216;e&#8217;s as like as not to touch off all the fireworks, under<br />
the impression that &#8216;e&#8217;s bein&#8217; bombarded. Keep &#8217;em down on the beach<br />
well under cover while we try to coax &#8216;im. You know &#8216;ow it is with the<br />
horrors.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;No, I don&#8217;t,&#8217; said Mr. Voss with a sudden fury. &#8216;Confound it<br />
all, I&#8217;m going to be married today!&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I&#8217;d postpone it if I was you,&#8217; Pyecroft returned. &#8216;But that explains<br />
much, as you might say.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;We want to say —&#8217; the blistered man clutched Pyecroft&#8217;s leg as<br />
he mounted. I took the back seat, none regarding.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I&#8217;ll &#8216;ear all the evidence pro and con tomorrow. Go back to the<br />
beach! Don&#8217;t you move for an hour! We may &#8216;ave to coax &#8216;im!&#8217; he<br />
shouted. &#8216;Get back and wait! Let &#8216;er go, Leggatt!&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">We plunged down the shingle to the pebble-speckled turf at the<br />
back of the sheds. Leggatt doubled with mirth, steering most vilely.<br />
The crowd retired behind the ridge.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Whew!&#8217; said Pyecroft, unbuttoning his jacket. &#8216;Another minute<br />
and that bridegroom in the four-point-seven hat would have made me<br />
almost a liar.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Stop!&#8217; I said, as Leggatt leaned forward helpless on the tiller;<br />
but Pyecroft continued: &#8221;Ere&#8217;s three solitary unknown strangers<br />
committin&#8217; a piece of blindin&#8217; heroism besides which Casablanca is obsolete;<br />
an&#8217; all the cement-mixer can think o&#8217; saying is: &#8221;Oo are you?&#8217; Or<br />
words to that effect. He must &#8216;ave wanted me to give &#8216;im my card.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;I wonder what he thinks,&#8217; I said, as we ran between the sheds to<br />
the basin.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;The machinery cost thirty thousand pounds, &#8216;e says. &#8216;E&#8217;s sweatin&#8217;<br />
blood to that amount every minute. He ain&#8217;t thinkin&#8217; of his bride.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">An empty whisky bottle broke like a shell before our wheels. We<br />
had come between the sheds within effective range of the man on the<br />
barge.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Good hand at description, Captain Dudeney is,&#8217; said Pyecroft<br />
critically, never moving a muscle. &#8216;Fig-nose — saucer-ear, freckle-jaw —<br />
all present an&#8217; correct. What a cousin! Perishin&#8217; &#8216;Eavens Above! What<br />
a cousin! Good afternoon, Mr. Llewellyn! So here&#8217;s where you&#8217;ve &#8216;id<br />
after stealing Captain Dudeney&#8217;s whisky, is it?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;What? What?&#8217; the man capered the full length of the barge, a<br />
bottle in either hand. &#8216;The old ram! Me hide? Me? No. indeed — what<br />
for? What have I done to be ashamed of?&#8217; He rubbed his broken nose<br />
furiously.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;If that&#8217;s what the Captain paid five pounds for, he got the value<br />
of his money, so to speak,&#8217; said Pyecroft, and raising his voice: &#8216;All<br />
right. Goodbye. I&#8217;ll tell your cousin I&#8217;ve seen you, but you&#8217;re afraid to<br />
come back.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The answer I take it was in Welsh.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 9<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;He told me to tell you that next time he&#8217;ll pay fifteen pounds for<br />
you, besides knocking your red head flush with your shoulders.<br />
Goodbye, Llewellyn.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">I had barely time to avoid a hissing coil of rope hurled at my feet.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;He said thatt!&#8217; the man screamed. &#8216;Catch! Pull! Haul! The old ram!<br />
No, indeed. You shall not go away. I will have him preached of<br />
in chapel. I will bring the bottles. I will show him how! My hair red!<br />
Fetch me away! My cousin!&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Unmoor, then, and we&#8217;ll tow you!&#8217; Pyecroft hauled on the rope.<br />
&#8216;It&#8217;s easier than I thought,&#8217; he said to me. &#8216;I remember a Welsh<br />
fireman in the <i>Sycophant</i> &#8216;oo got drunk on Boaz Island, an&#8217; the only way<br />
we could coax &#8216;im off the reef, where numerous sharks were anticipatin&#8217;<br />
&#8216;im, was by urgin&#8217; &#8216;im to fight the captain.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The barge bumped at our feet, and Pyecroft leaped aboard.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">I seemed to see some sort of demonstrative greeting between the<br />
two — a hug or a pat on the back, perhaps. And then Llewellyn sat in<br />
the stern, lacking only the label for despatch as a neatly corded mummy.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Quacks like a duck. All that&#8217;s pure Welsh,&#8217; said Pyecroft. &#8216;But<br />
I don&#8217;t think it &#8216;ud do you an&#8217; me any good in a manner o&#8217; Speakin&#8217;<br />
even if translated.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8221;Ere! Look out!&#8217; said Leggatt. &#8216;You&#8217;ll pull the rear axle out o&#8217;<br />
her.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;You don&#8217;t know anythin&#8217; about movin&#8217; bodies. I don&#8217;t know much<br />
— yet. We can but essay.&#8217; Pyecroft was on his knees tying expert knots<br />
round the rear axle. I had never seen motorcars applied to canal traffic<br />
before, and so stood deaf to Leggatt&#8217;s highly technical appeals.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Go ahead slow and take care the tow don&#8217;t foul the port tyre. A<br />
towin&#8217; piece an&#8217; bollards is what we really need. One never knows what<br />
one&#8217;ll pick up on inspection tours like ours.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Why, she goes!&#8217; said Leggatt over his shoulder, as the barge<br />
drew after the car.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Like a roseleaf on a stream,&#8217; said Pyecroft at the tiller. &#8216;Jump in!<br />
Kindly increase speed to fifty-seven revolutions, an&#8217; the barge an&#8217; its<br />
lethal cargo will show you what she can do. Look &#8216;ere, Mr. Llewellyn,<br />
you ain&#8217;t with your wife now, an&#8217; your non-commercial language don&#8217;t appeal.<br />
If you&#8217;ve anything on your mind, sing it in a low voice.<br />
We&#8217;re runnin&#8217; trials. Sixty-seven revolutions, if you please, Mr. Leggatt.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">I have the honour to report here that an 18-h.p. Decapod petrol<br />
motor can haul a barge of x tons capacity down a straight canal at the<br />
rate of knots; but that the wash and consequent erosion of the banks<br />
is somewhat marked. The Welshman lay still. Pyecroft was at the tiller,<br />
the delighted Leggatt was stealing extra knots out of her. Our wash<br />
roared behind us — a foot high from bank to bank. I sat in the bows<br />
crying &#8216;Port!&#8217; or &#8216;Starboard!&#8217; as guileless fancy led, and rejoiced<br />
in this my one life.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The cement works grew small behind us — small and very still.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;They have not yet resoomed,&#8217; said Pyecroft. &#8216;I take it they<br />
hardly anticipated such prompt action on the part o&#8217; the relievin&#8217; column.<br />
A little more, Mr. Leggatt, if you please.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;It&#8217;s all very, very beautiful,&#8217; I cooed, for the heat of the day was<br />
past and Llewellyn had fallen asleep; &#8216;but aren&#8217;t we making rather a<br />
wash? There&#8217;s a lump as big as Beachy Head just fallen in behind us.&#8221;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;We &#8216;ave, so to speak, dragged the bowels out of three miles of<br />
&#8216;er,&#8217; Pyecroft admitted. &#8216;Let&#8217;s hope it&#8217;s Mr. Voss&#8217;s canal. That bakin&#8217;<br />
bridegroom owes us a lot. A little more, Mr. Hinchcliffe — or Leggatt, I<br />
should say. We&#8217;re creepin&#8217; up to twelve.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;People — comin&#8217; from Wapshare — four of &#8217;em!&#8217; cried Leggatt who<br />
from the high car seat could see along the road.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Pyecroft passed me the tiller as he unslung the binoculars to look.<br />
None but Pyecrofts should steer barges at P. and O. speeds. In that brief<br />
second, just as he said &#8216;Captain Dudeney!&#8217; the barge&#8217;s nose ran with<br />
ferocity feet deep into the mud; and as I hopefully waggled the tiller,<br />
her stern flourished across the water and stuck even deeper on the<br />
opposite bank. Our wash bottled up by this sudden barricade leaped<br />
aboard in a low, muddy wave that broke all over our Mr. Llewellyn.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Who&#8217;s that dish-washer at the wheel?&#8217; he gurgled.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;You may well ask,&#8217; said Pyecroft, with professional sympathy.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Relieve him at once. I&#8217;ll show him how.&#8217; He sat up in his bonds<br />
rolling blinded eyes.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 10<br />
</strong></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">Pyecroft lifted him, laid his two hands, freed as far as the elbows,<br />
on the tiller, to which he clung fervently, and bellowed in his ear:<br />
&#8216;Down! Hard down for your life. You&#8217;ll be ashore in a minute.<br />
Don&#8217;t abandon the ship!&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">We withdrew over the bows to dry land. I felt I need not apologise<br />
to Leggatt, for, after all, it was my own car that I had brought up with<br />
so round a turn. The barge seemed well at rest.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;They&#8217;ll &#8216;ave to dig &#8216;er out — unless they care to blow &#8216;er up&#8217; said<br />
Pyecroft, climbing into the seat. &#8216;But all the same, that Man of &#8216;Arlech<br />
&#8216;as the feelin&#8217;s of a sailor. Meet &#8216;er ! Meet &#8216;er as she scends! You&#8217;ll<br />
roll the sticks out of her if you don&#8217;t!&#8217; he shouted in farewell.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">We left Mr. Llewellyn clawing off a verdant lee shore, and this the<br />
more readily because Captain Dudeney and three friends were running<br />
towards us. But they passed us, with eyes only for the barge, as though<br />
we had been ghosts. Captain Dudeney roared like all the bulls of the<br />
marshes. I will never allow Leggatt to drive for any distance with his<br />
chin over his shoulder, so we stopped anew.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The Welshman still steered, but when his cousin&#8217;s challenge came<br />
down the wind, he forsook all and, with fettered feet, crawled like a<br />
parrot on a perch to meet him. Like a parrot, too, he screamed and<br />
pointed at us.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">We saw the five faces all pink in the westering sun; the Welshman<br />
was urging them to the chase.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Ungrateful blighter! After we&#8217;ve saved &#8216;im from being killed at<br />
the cement works,&#8217; said Pyecroft. &#8216;Home&#8217;s the port for me. There&#8217;s too<br />
much intricate explanation necessary on this coast. Let&#8217;s navigate.&#8217; &#8230;<br />
Ten minutes later we were three miles from Wapshare and two<br />
hundred feet above it, commanding the map-like stretch of marsh ruled<br />
with roads, ditches, and canals that, etc.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">One canal seemed to be blocked by a barge drawn across it, and<br />
here five dots clustered, separated, rejoined, and gyrated for a full<br />
twenty minutes ere they seemed satisfied to go home. Anon (we were all<br />
fighting for the binoculars) a stream of dots poured from the cement<br />
works and moved — oh, so slowly! — along the white road till they reached<br />
the barge. Here they scattered and did not rejoin for a great space upon<br />
the other side; resembling in this respect a column of ants whose march<br />
has been broken by a drop of spilt kerosene.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;Amen! Amen!&#8217; said Emanuel Pyecroft, bareheaded in the gloom<br />
of an oak hanger. &#8216;This day hasn&#8217;t been one of the worst of &#8217;em, either,<br />
in a manner o&#8217; speakin&#8217;. I&#8217;ll come tomorrow incognito an&#8217; &#8216;elp pick up<br />
the pieces. Because there will be lots of &#8217;em, as one might anticipate.&#8217;</p>
<p><center>* * * * *</center></p>
<p style="text-align: center;">The morrow sent me visitors — young, fair, and infernally curious.<br />
They had heard much of the beauties of Wapshare, which, where the<br />
suburban builder has left it alone, it precisely resembles. And though<br />
I praised half the rest of England, Wapshare they would see. The car&#8217;s new,<br />
mirror-like body—scarlet and claret with gold lines—looked as<br />
spruce as Leggatt in his French smock, and I flatter myself that my own<br />
costume, also Parisian, which included nickel-plated goggles with<br />
flesh-coloured flaps on the cheek-bones and a severely classic leather hat,<br />
was completely of the road.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">My guests were delighted with their trip.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;We had such a perfect day,&#8217; they explained at tea. &#8216;There was<br />
a delightful wedding coming out of that old church up that cobbled<br />
street — don&#8217;t you remember? And just below it by that place where the<br />
ships anchored there was quite a riot. We saw it all from that upper road<br />
by that old tower — hundreds and hundreds of men throwing coal at a<br />
little ship that was trying to go to sea. Oh, yes, and a most fascinating<br />
man with the wonderful eyes who touched his hat so respectfully (all<br />
sailors are dears) — he told us all about it.&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;What did he say?&#8217; someone asked.</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;He said it wasn&#8217;t anything to what it had been. He said we ought<br />
to have been there at noon when he came — before the poor little ship<br />
got away from the wharf. He said they nearly called out the Militia. I<br />
should like to have seen that. Oh, and do you remember that big,<br />
black-bearded man at the very edge of the wharf who kept on throwing<br />
coal at the ship and shouting all the time we watched?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;What had the little ship done?&#8217;</p>
<p style="text-align: center;">&#8216;The coastguard said that he was a stranger in these parts and<br />
didn&#8217;t quite know. Oh, yes, and then the chauffeur swallowed a fly and<br />
choked. But it was a simply perfect day.&#8217;</p>
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		<post-id xmlns="com-wordpress:feed-additions:1">34363</post-id>	</item>
		<item>
		<title>An Unqualified Pilot</title>
		<link>https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/an-unqualified-pilot.htm</link>
		
		<dc:creator><![CDATA[wa_admin]]></dc:creator>
		<pubDate>Thu, 20 May 2021 15:04:59 +0000</pubDate>
				<guid isPermaLink="false">https://ks-demo3.web/tale/an-unqualified-pilot/</guid>

					<description><![CDATA[<strong>page 1 of 3 </strong> <b>ALMOST</b> any pilot will tell you that his work is much more difficult than you imagine; but the Pilots of the Hugli know that they have one hundred miles of ... <a title="An Unqualified Pilot" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/an-unqualified-pilot.htm" aria-label="Read more about An Unqualified Pilot">Read more</a>]]></description>
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<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 1 of 3<br />
</strong></p>
<p><b>ALMOST</b> any pilot will tell you that his work is much more difficult than you imagine; but the Pilots of the Hugli know that they have one hundred miles of the most dangerous river on earth running through their hands—the Hugli between Calcutta and the Bay of Bengal and they say nothing. Their service is picked and sifted as carefully as the bench of the Supreme Court, for a judge can only hang the wrong man, or pass a bad law; but a careless pilot can lose a ten-thousand-ton ship with crew and cargo in less time than it takes to reverse her engines.There is very little chance of anything getting off again when once she touches in the furious Hugli current, loaded with all the fat silt of the fields of Bengal, where soundings change two feet between tides, and new channels make and unmake themselves in one rainy season. Men have fought the Hugli for two hundred years, till now the river owns a huge building, with drawing, survey, and telegraph departments, devoted to its private service, as well as a body of wardens, who are called the Port Commissioners.</p>
<p>They and their officers govern everything that floats from the Hugli Bridge to the last buoy at Pilots Ridge, one hundred and forty miles away, far out in the Bay of Bengal, where the steamers first pick up the pilots from the pilot brig.</p>
<p>A Hugli pilot does not kindly bring papers aboard for the passengers, or scramble up the ship’s side by wet, swaying rope-ladders. He arrives in his best clothes, with a native servant or an assistant pilot to wait on him, and he behaves as a man should who can earn two or three thousand pounds a year after twenty years’ apprenticeship. He has beautiful rooms in the Port Office at Calcutta, and generally keeps himself to the society of his own profession, for though the telegraph reports the more important soundings of the river daily, there is much to be learned from brother pilots between each trip.</p>
<p>Some million tons of shipping must find their way to and from Calcutta each twelvemonth, unless the Hugli were watched as closely as his keeper watches an elephant, there is a fear that it might silt up, as it has silted up round the old Dutch and Portuguese ports twenty and thirty miles behind Calcutta.</p>
<p>So the Port Office sounds and scours and dredges the river, and builds spurs and devices for coaxing currents, and labels all the buoys with their proper letters, and attends to the semaphores and the lights and the drum, ball and cone storm signals; and the pilots of the Hugli do the rest; but, in spite of all care and the very best attention, the Hugli swallows her ship or two every year. Even the coming of wireless telegraphy does not spoil her appetite.</p>
<p>When Martin Trevor had waited on the river from his boyhood; when he had risen to be a Senior Pilot, entitled to bring up to Calcutta the very biggest ships; when he had thought and talked of nothing but Hugli pilotage all his life to nobody except Hugli pilots, he was exceedingly surprised and indignant that his only son should decide to follow his father’s profession. Mrs. Trevor had died when the boy was a child, and as he grew older, Trevor, in the intervals of his business, noticed that the lad was very often by the river-side—no place, he said, for a nice boy. But, as he was not often at home, and as the aunt who looked after Jim naturally could not follow him to his chosen haunts, and as Jim had not the faintest intention of giving up old friends there, nothing but ineffectual growls came of the remark. Later, when Trevor once asked him if he could make anything out of the shipping on the water, Jim replied by reeling off the list of all the house-flags in sight at the moorings, together with supplementary information about their tonnage and captains.</p>
<p>“You’ll come to a bad end, Jim,” said Trevor. “Boys of your age haven’t any business to waste their time on these things.”</p>
<p>“Oh, Pedro at the Sailors’ Home says you can’t begin too early.”</p>
<p>“At what, please?”</p>
<p>“Piloting. I’m nearly fourteen now, and—and I know where most of the shipping in the river is, and I know what there was yesterday over the Mayapur Bar, and I’ve been down to Diamond Harbour—oh, a hundred times already, and I’ve——”</p>
<p>“You’ll go to school, son, and learn what they teach you, and you’ll turn out something better than a pilot,” said his father, who wanted Jim to enter the Subordinate Civil Service, but he might just as well have told a shovel-nosed porpoise of the river to come ashore and begin life as a hen. Jim held his tongue; he noticed that all the best pilots in the Port Office did that; and devoted his young attention and all his spare time to the River he loved. He had seen the nice young gentlemen in the Subordinate Civil Service, and he called them a rude native name for “clerks.”</p>
<p>He became as well known as the Bankshall itself; and the Port Police let him inspect their launches, and the tug-boat captains had always a place for him at their tables, and the mates of the big steam dredgers used to show him how the machinery worked, and there were certain native row-boats which Jim practically owned; and he extended his patronage to the railway that runs to Diamond Harbour, forty miles down the river. In the old days nearly all the East India Company’s ships used to discharge at Diamond Harbour, on account of the shoals above, but now ships go straight up to Calcutta, and they have only some moorings for vessels in distress there, and a telegraph service, and a harbour-master, who was one of Jim’s most intimate friends.</p>
<p>He would sit in the Office listening to the soundings of the shoals as they were reported every day, and attending to the movements of the steamers up and down (Jim always felt he had lost something irretrievable if a boat got in or out of the river without his knowing of it), and when the big liners with their rows of blazing portholes tied up in Diamond Harbour for the night, Jim would row from one ship to the other through the sticky hot air and the buzzing mosquitoes and listen respectfully as the pilots conferred together about the habits of steamers.</p>
<p>Once, for a treat, his father took him down clear out to the Sandheads and the pilot brig there, and Jim was happily sea-sick as she tossed and pitched in the Bay. The cream of life, though, was coming up in a tug or a police boat from Diamond Harbour to Calcutta, over the “James and Mary,” those terrible sands christened after a royal ship that they sunk two hundred years before. They are made by two rivers that enter the Hugli six miles apart and throw their own silt across the silt of the main stream, so that with each turn of the weather and tide the sands shift and change under water like clouds in the sky. It was here (the tales sound much worse when they are told in the rush and growl of the muddy waters) that the <i>Countess of Stirling</i>, fifteen hundred tons, touched and capsized in ten minutes, and a two-thousand-ton steamer in two, and a pilgrim ship in five, and another steamer literally in one instant, holding down her men with the masts and shrouds as she lashed over. When a ship touches on the “James and Mary,” the river knocks her down and buries her, and the sands quiver all around her and reach out under water and take new shapes over the corpse.</p>
<p>Young Jim would lie up in the bows of the tug and watch the straining buoys kick and choke in the coffee-coloured current, while the semaphores and flags signalled from the bank how much water there was in the channel, till he learned that men who deal with men can afford to be careless, on the chance of their fellows being like them; but men who deal with things dare not relax for an instant. “And that’s the very reason,” old McEwan said to him once, “that the ‘James and Mary’ is the safest part of the river,” and he shoved the big black <i>Bandoorah</i>, that draws twenty-five feet, through the Eastern Gat, with a turban of white foam wrapped round her forefoot and her screw beating as steadily as his own heart.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 2</strong></p>
<p>If Jim could not get away to the river there was always the big, cool Port Office, where the soundings were worked out and the maps drawn; or the Pilots’ room, where he could lie in a long chair and listen quietly to the talk about the Hugli; and there was the library, where if you had money you could buy charts and books of directions against the time that you would actually have to steam over the places themselves. It was exceedingly hard for Jim to hold the list of Jewish Kings in his head, and he was more than uncertain as to the end of the verb <i>audio</i> if you followed it far enough down the page, but he could keep the soundings of three channels distinct in his head, and, what is more confusing, the changes in the buoys from “Garden Reach” down to Saugor, as well as the greater part of the <i>Calcutta Telegraph</i>, the only paper he ever read.</p>
<p>Unluckily, you cannot peruse about the Hugli without money, even though you are the son of the best-known pilot on the river, and as soon as Trevor understood how his son was spending his time, he cut down his pocket money, of which Jim had a very generous allowance. In his extremity he took counsel with Pedro, the plum-coloured mulatto at the Sailors’ Home, and Pedro was a bad, designing man. He introduced Jim to a Chinaman in Muchuatollah, an unpleasing place in itself, and the Chinaman, who answered to the name of Erh-Tze, when he was not smoking opium, talked business in pigeon-English to Jim for an hour. Every bit of that business from first to last was flying in the face of every law on the river, but it interested Jim.</p>
<p>“S’pose you takee. Can do? “Erh-Tze said at last.</p>
<p>Jim considered his chances. A junk, he knew, would draw about eleven feet and the regular fee for a qualified pilot, outward to the Sandheads, would be two hundred rupees. On the one hand he was not qualified, so he dared not ask more than half. <i>But</i>, on the other hand, he was fully certain of the thrashing of his life from his father for piloting without license, let alone what the Port Authorities might do to him. So he asked one hundred and seventy-five rupees, and Erh-Tze beat him down to a hundred and twenty. The cargo of his junk was worth anything from seventy to a hundred and fifty thousand rupees, some of which he was getting as enormous freight on the coffins of thirty or forty dead Chinamen, whom he was taking to be buried in their native country.</p>
<p>Rich Chinamen will pay fancy prices for this service, and they have a superstition that the iron of steamships is bad for the spiritual health of their dead. Erh-Tze’s junk had crept up from Singapore, <i>via</i> Penang and Rangoon, to Calcutta, where Erh-Tze had been staggered by the Pilot dues. This time he was going out at a reduction with Jim, who, as Pedro kept telling him, was just as good as a pilot, and a heap cheaper.</p>
<p>Jim knew something of the manners of junks, but he was not prepared, when he went down that night with his charts, for the confusion of cargo and coolies and coffins and clay-cooking places, and other things that littered her decks. He had sense enough to haulthe rudder up a few feet, for he knew that a junk’s rudder goes far below the bottom, and he allowed a foot extra to Erh-Tze’s estimate of the junk’s depth. Then they staggered out into midstream very early, and never had the city of his birth looked so beautiful as when he feared he would not come back to see it. Going down “Garden Reach” he discovered that the junk would answer to her helm if you put it over far enough, and that she had a fair, though Chinese, notion of sailing. He took charge of the tiller by stationing three Chinese on each side of it, and standing a little forward, gathered their pigtails into his hands, three right and three left, as though they had been the yoke lines of a row-boat. Erh-Tze almost smiled at this; he felt he was getting good care for his money and took a neat little polished bamboo to keep the men attentive, for he said this was no time to teach the crew pigeon-English. The more way they could get on the junk the better would she steer, and as soon as he felt a little confidence in her, Jim ordered the stiff, rustling sails to be hauled up tighter and tighter. He did not know their names—at least any name that would be likely to interest a Chinaman—but Erh-Tze had not banged about the waters of the Malay Archipelago all his life for nothing. He rolled forward with his bamboo, and the things rose like Eastern incantations.</p>
<p>Early as they were on the river, a big American oil (but they called it kerosene in those days) ship was ahead of them in tow, and when Jim saw her through the lifted mist he was thankful. She would draw all of seventeen feet, and if he could steer by her they would be safe. It is easier to scurry up and down the “James and Mary” in a police-boat that some one else is handling than to cram a hard-mouthed old junk across the same sands alone, with the certainty of a thrashing if you come out alive.</p>
<p>Jim glued his eyes to the American, and saw that at Fultah she dropped her tug and stood down the river under sail. He all but whooped aloud, for he knew that the number of pilots who preferred to work a ship through the “James and Mary” was strictly limited. “If it isn’t Father, it’s Dearsley,” said Jim, “and Dearsley went down yesterday with the <i>Bancoora</i>, so it’s Father. If I’d gone home last night instead of going to Pedro, I’d have met him. He must have got his ship quick, but—Father <i>is</i> a very quick man.” Then Jim reflected that they kept a piece of knotted rope on the pilot brig that stung like a wasp; but this thought he dismissed as beneath the dignity of an officiating pilot, who needed only to nod his head to set Erh-Tze’s bamboo to work.</p>
<p>As the American came round, just before the Fultah Sands, Jim raked her with his spy-glass, and saw his father on the poop, an unlighted cigar between his teeth. That cigar, Jim knew, would be smoked on the other side of the “James and Mary,” and Jim felt so entirely safe and happy that he lit a cigar on his own account. This kind of piloting was child’s play. His father could not make a mistake if he tried; and Jim, with his six obedient pigtails in his two hands, had leisure to admire the perfect style in which the American was handled—how she would point her bowsprit jeeringly at a hidden bank, as much as to say, “Not to-day, thank you, dear,” and bow down lovingly to a buoy as much as to say, “<i>You’re</i> a gentleman, at any rate,” and come round sharp on her heel with a flutter and a rustle, and a slow, steady swing something like a well-dressed woman staring all round the theatre through opera-glasses.</p>
<p>It was hard work to keep the junk near her, though Erh-Tze set everything that was by any means settable, and used his bamboo most generously. When they were nearly under her counter, and a little to her left, Jim, hidden behind a sail,would feel warm and happy all over, thinking of the thousand nautical and piloting things that he knew. When they fell more than half a mile behind, he was cold and miserable thinking of all the million things he did not know or was not quite sure of. And so they went down, Jim steering by his father, turn for turn, over the Mayapur Bar, with the semaphores on each bank duly signalling the depth of water, through the Western Gat, and round Makoaputti Lumps, and in and out of twenty places, each more exciting than the last, and Jim nearly pulled the six pigtails out for pure joy when the last of the “James and Mary” had gone astern, and they were walking through Diamond Harbour.</p>
<p>From there to the mouth of the Hugli things are not so bad—at least, that was what Jim thought, and held on till the swell from the Bay of Bengal made the old junk heave and snort, and the river broadened into the inland sea, with islands only a foot or two high scattered about it. The American walked away from the junk as soon as they were beyond Kedgeree, and the night came on and the river looked very big and desolate, so Jim promptly anchored somewhere in grey water, with the Saugor Light away off toward the east. He had a great respect for the Hugli to the last yard of her, and had no desire whatever to find himself on the Gasper Sand or any other little shoal. Erh-Tze and the crew highly approved of this piece of seamanship. They set no watch, lit no lights, and at once went to sleep.</p>
<p>Jim lay down between a red-and-black lacquer coffin and a little live pig in a basket. As soon as it was light he began studying his chart of the Hugli mouth, and trying to find out where in the river he might be. He decided to be on the safe side and wait for another sailing-ship and follow her out. So he made an enormous breakfast of rice and boiled fish, while Erh-Tze lit fire-crackers and burned gilt paper to the Joss who had saved them so far. Then they heaved up their rough-and-tumble anchor, and made after a big, fat, iron four-masted sailing ship, heavy as a hay-wain.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 3<br />
</strong></p>
<p>The junk, which was really a very weatherly boat, and might have begun life as a private pirate in Annam forty years before, followed under easy sail; for the four-master would run no risks. She was in old McEwan’s hands, and she waddled about like a broody hen, giving each shoal wide allowances. All this happened near the outer Floating Light, some hundred and twenty miles from Calcutta, and apparently in the open sea.</p>
<p>Jim knew old McEwan’s appetite, and often heard him pride himself on getting his ship to the pilot brig close upon meal hours, so he argued that if the pilot brig was get-at-able (and Jim himself had not the ghost of a notion where she would lie), McEwan would find her before one o’clock.</p>
<p>It was a blazing hot day, and McEwan fidgeted the four-master down to “Pilots Ridge” with what little wind remained, and sure enough there lay the pilot brig, and Jim felt shivers up his back as Erh-Tze paid him his hundred and twenty rupees and he went overside in the junk’s one crazy dinghy. McEwan was leaving the four-master in a long, slashing whale-boat that looked very spruce and pretty, and Jim could see that there was a certain amount of excitement among the pilots on the brig. There was his father too. The ragged Chinese boatmen gave way in a most ragged fashion, and Jim felt very unwashen and disreputable when he heard the click of McEwan’s oars alongside, and McEwan saying, “James Trevor, I’l! trouble you to lay alongside me.”</p>
<p>Jim obeyed, and from the corner of one eye watched McEwan’s angry whiskers stand up all round his face, which turned purple.</p>
<p>“An’ how is it you break the regulations o’ the Porrt o’ Calcutta? Are ye aware o’ the penalties and impreesonments ye’ve laid yourself open to?” McEwan began.</p>
<p>Jim said nothing. There was not very much to say just then; and McEwan roared aloud: “Man, ye’ve perrsonated a Hugli pilot, an’ that’s as much as to say ye’ve perrsonated <i>ME!</i> What did yon heathen give ye for honorarium?”</p>
<p>“’Hundred and twenty,” said Jim.</p>
<p>“An’ by what manner o’ means did ye get through the ‘James and Mary’?”</p>
<p>“Father,” was the answer. “He went down the same tide and I—we—steered by him.”</p>
<p>McEwan whistled and choked, perhaps it was with anger. “Ye’ve made a stalkin’-horse o’ your father, then? Jim, laddie, he’ll make an example o’ you.”</p>
<p>The boat hooked on to the brig’s chains, and McEwan said, as he set foot on deck before Jim could speak, “Yon’s an enterprising cub o’ yours, Trevor. Ye’d better enter him in the regular business, or one o’ these fine days he’ll be acting as pilot before he’s qualified, and sinkin’ junks in the fairway. He fetched yon junk down last night. If ye’ve no other designs I’m thinkin’ I’ll take him as my cub, for there’s no denying he’s a resourceful lad—for all he’s an unlicked whelp.”</p>
<p>“That,” said Trevor, reaching for Jim’s left ear, “is something we can remedy,” and he led him below.</p>
<p>The little knotted rope that they keep for general purposes on the pilot brig did its duty, but when it was all over Jim was unlicked no longer. He was McEwan’s property to be registered under the laws of the Port of Calcutta, and a week later, when the <i>Ellora</i> came along, he bundled over the pilot brig’s side with McEwan’s enamelled leather hand-bag and a roll of charts and a little bag of his own, and he dropped into the sternsheets of the pilot gig with a very creditable imitation of McEwan’s slow, swaying sit-down and hump of the shoulders.</p>
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		<title>Bread upon the Waters</title>
		<link>https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/bread-upon-the-waters.htm</link>
		
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		<pubDate>Thu, 15 Apr 2021 14:14:03 +0000</pubDate>
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					<description><![CDATA[<strong>page 1 of 8 </strong> <b>IF</b> you remember my improper friend Brugglesmith, you will also bear in mind his friend McPhee, Chief Engineer of the <i>Breslau</i>, whose dinghy Brugglesmith tried to steal. His apologies for ... <a title="Bread upon the Waters" class="read-more" href="https://www.kiplingsociety.co.uk/tale/bread-upon-the-waters.htm" aria-label="Read more about Bread upon the Waters">Read more</a>]]></description>
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<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 1 of 8<br />
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<p><b>IF</b> you remember my improper friend Brugglesmith, you will also bear in mind his friend McPhee, Chief Engineer of the <i>Breslau</i>, whose dinghy Brugglesmith tried to steal. His apologies for the performances of Brugglesmith may one day be told in their proper place: the tale before us concerns McPhee. He was never a racing engineer, and took special pride in saying as much before the Liverpool men; but he had a thirty-two years’ knowledge of machinery and the humours of ships. One side of his face had been wrecked through the bursting of a water-gauge in the days when men knew less than they do now; and his nose rose grandly out of the wreck, like a club in a public riot. There were cuts and lumps on his head, and he would guide your forefinger through his short iron-gray hair and tell you how he had come by his trade-marks. He owned all sorts of certificates of extra-competency, and at the bottom of his cabin chest of drawers, where he kept the photograph of his wife, were two or three Royal Humane Society medals for saving lives at sea. Professionally—it was different when crazy steerage-passengers jumped overboard—professionally, McPhee does not approve of saving life at sea, and he has often told me that a new hell is awaiting stokers and trimmers who sign for a strong man’s pay and fall sick the second day out. He believes in throwing boots at fourth and fifth engineers when they wake him up at night with word that a bearing is red-hot, all because a lamp’s glare is reflected red from the twirling metal. He believes that there are only two poets in the world: one being Robert Burns of course, and the other Gerald Massey. When he has time for novels he reads Wilkie Collins and Charles Reade—chiefly the latter—and knows whole pages of <i>Hard Cash</i> by heart. In the saloon his table is next to the captain’s, and he drinks only water while his engines work.He was good to me when we first met, because I did not ask questions, and believed in Charles Reade as a most shamefully neglected author. Later he approved of my writings to the extent of one pamphlet of twenty-four pages that I wrote for Holdock, Steiner, and Chase, owners of the line, when they bought some ventilating patent and fitted it to the cabins of the <i>Breslau</i>, <i>Spandau</i>, and <i>Koltzau</i>. The purser of the <i>Breslau</i> recommended me to Holdock’s secretary for the job; and Holdock, who is a Wesleyan Methodist, invited me to his house, and gave me dinner with the governess when the others had finished, and laced the plans and specifications in my hand, and wrote the pamphlet that same afternoon. It was called ‘Comfort in the Cabin,’ and brought me seven pound ten, cash down—an important sum of money in those days; and the governess, who was teaching Master John Holdock his scales, told me that Mrs. Holdock had told her to keep an eye on me, in case I went away with coats from the hat rack. McPhee liked that pamphlet enormously, for it was composed in the Bouverie-Byzantine style, with baroque and rococo embellishments; and afterward he introduced me to Mrs. McPhee, who succeeded Dinah in my heart; for Dinah was half a world away, and it is wholesome and antiseptic to love such a woman as Janet McPhee. They lived in a little twelve-pound house, close to the shipping. When McPhee was away Mrs. McPhee read the Lloyd’s column in the papers, and called on the wives of senior engineers of equal social standing. Once or twice, too, Mrs. Holdock visited Mrs. McPhee in a brougham with celluloid fittings, and I have reason to believe that, after she had played owner’s wife long enough, they talked scandal. The Holdocks lived in an old-fashioned house with a big brick garden not a mile from the McPhees, for they stayed by their money as their money stayed by them; and in summer you met their brougham solemnly junketing by Theydon Bois or Loughton. But I was Mrs. McPhee’s friend, for she allowed me to convoy her westward, sometimes, to theatres, where she sobbed or laughed or shivered with a simple heart; and she introduced me to a new world of doctors’ wives, captains’ wives, and engineers’ wives, whose whole talk and thought centred in and about ships and lines of ships you have never heard of. There were sailing-ships, with stewards and mahogany and maple saloons, trading to Australia, taking cargoes of consumptives and hopeless drunkards for whom a sea voyage was recommended; there were frouzy little West African boats, full of rats and cockroaches, where men died anywhere but in their bunks; there were Brazilian boats whose cabins could be hired for merchandise that went out loaded nearly awash; there were Zanzibar and Mauritius steamers, and wonderful reconstructed boats that plied to the other side of Borneo. These were loved and known, for they earned our bread and a little butter, and we despised the big Atlantic boats, and made fun of the P.&amp;O. and Orient liners, and swore by our respected owners—Wesleyan, Baptist or Presbyterian, as the case might be.</p>
<p>I had only just come back to England when Mrs. McPhee invited me to dinner at three o’clock in the afternoon, and the notepaper was almost bridal in its scented creaminess. When I reached the house I saw that there were new curtains in the window that must have cost forty-five shillings a pair; and as Mrs. McPhee drew me into the little marble-paper hall, she looked at me keenly, and cried:</p>
<p>‘Have ye not heard? What d’ye think o’ the hat-rack?’</p>
<p>Now, that hat-rack was oak—thirty shillings at least. McPhee came downstairs with a sober foot—he steps as lightly as a cat, for all his weight, when he is at sea—and shook hands in a new and awful manner—a parody of old Holdock’s style when he says good-bye to his skippers. I perceived at once that a legacy had come to him, but I held my peace, though Mrs. McPhee begged me every thirty seconds to eat a great deal and say nothing. It was rather a mad sort of meal, because McPhee and his wife took hold of hands like little children (they always do after voyages), and nodded and winked and choked and gurgled, and hardly ate a mouthful.</p>
<p>A female servant came in and waited; though Mrs. McPhee had told me time and again that she would thank no one to do her housework while she had her health. But this was a servant with a cap, and I saw Mrs. McPhee swell and swell under her <i>garance</i>-coloured gown. There is no small free-board to Janet McPhee, nor is <i>garance</i> any subdued tint; and with all this unexplained pride and glory in the air I felt like watching fireworks without knowing the festival. When the maid had removed the cloth she brought a pineapple that would have cost half a guinea at that season (only McPhee has his own way of getting such things), and a Canton china bowl of dried lichis, and a glass plate of preserved ginger, and a small jar of sacred and imperial chow-chow that perfumed the room. McPhee gets it from a Dutchman in Java, and I think he doctors it with liqueurs. But the crown of the feast was some Madeira of the kind you can only come by if you know the wine and the man. A little maize-wrapped fig of clotted Madeira cigars went with the wine, and the rest was a pale-blue smoky silence; Janet, in her splendour, smiling on us two, and patting McPhee’s hand.</p>
<p>‘We’ll drink,’ said McPhee slowly, rubbing his chin, ‘to the eternal damnation o’ Holdock, Steiner, and Chase.’</p>
<p>Of course I answered ‘Amen,’ though I had made seven pound ten shillings out of the firm. McPhee’s enemies were mine, and I was drinking his Madeira.</p>
<p>‘Ye’ve heard nothing?’ said Janet. ‘Not a word, not a whisper?’</p>
<p>‘Not a word, nor a whisper. On my word, I have not.’</p>
<p>‘Tell him, Mac,’ said she; and that is another proof of Janet’s goodness and wifely love. A smaller woman would have babbled first, but Janet is five feet nine in her stockings.</p>
<p>‘We’re rich,’ said McPhee. I shook hands all round.</p>
<p>‘We’re damned rich,’ he added. I shook hands all round a second time.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 2<br />
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<p>‘I’ll go to sea no more—unless—there’s no sayin’—a private yacht, maybe—wi’, a small an’ handy auxiliary.’</p>
<p>‘It’s not enough for <i>that</i>,’ said Janet. ‘We’re fair rich—well-to-do, but no more. A new gown for church, and one for the theatre. We’ll have it made west.’</p>
<p>‘How much is it?’ I asked.</p>
<p>‘Twenty-five thousand pounds.’ I drew a long breath. ‘An’ I’ve been earnin’ twenty-five an’ twenty pound a month!’ The last words came away with a roar, as though the wide world was conspiring to beat him down.</p>
<p>‘All this time I’m waiting,’ I said. ‘I know nothing since last September. Was it left you?’</p>
<p>They laughed aloud together. ‘It was left,’ said McPhee, choking. ‘Ou, ay, it was left. That’s vara good. Of course it was left. Janet, d’ye note that? It was left. Now if you’d put <i>that</i> in your pamphlet it would have been vara jocose. It <i>was</i> left.’ He slapped his thigh and roared till the wine quivered in the decanter.</p>
<p>The Scotch are a great people, but they are apt to hang over a joke too long, particularly when no one can see the point but themselves.</p>
<p>‘When I rewrite my pamphlet I’ll put it in, McPhee. Only I must know something more first.’</p>
<p>McPhee thought for the length of half a cigar, while Janet caught my eye and led it round the room to one new thing after another—the new vine-pattern carpet, the new chiming rustic clock between the models of the Colombo outrigger-boats, the new inlaid sideboard with a purple cutglass flower-stand, the fender of gilt and brass, and last, the new black-and-gold piano.</p>
<p>‘In October o’ last year the Board sacked me,’ began McPhee. ‘In October o’ last year the <i>Breslau</i> came in for winter overhaul. She’d been runnin’ eight months—two hunder an’ forty days—an’ I was three days makin’ up my indents, when she went to dry-dock. All told, mark you, it was this side o’ three hunder pound—to be preceese, two hunder an’ eighty-six pound four shillings. There’s not another man could ha’ nursed the <i>Breslau</i> for eight months to that tune. Never again—never again! They may send their boats to the bottom, for aught I care.’</p>
<p>‘There’s no need,’ said Janet softly. ‘We’re done wi’ Holdock, Steiner, and Chase.’</p>
<p>‘It’s irritatin’, Janet, it’s just irritatin’. I ha’ been justified from first to last, as the world knows, but—but I canna forgie ’em. Ay, wisdom is justified o’ her children; an’ any other man than me wad ha’ made the indent eight hunder. Hay was our skipper—ye’ll have met him. They shifted him to the <i>Torgau</i>, an’ bade me wait for the <i>Breslau</i> under young Bannister. Ye’ll obsairve there’d been a new election on the Board. I heard the shares were sellin’ hither an’ yon, an’ the major part of the Board was new to me. The old Board would ne’er ha’ done it. They trusted me. But the new Board was all for reorganisation. Young Steiner—Steiner’s son—the Jew, was at the bottom of it, an’ they did not think it worth their while to send me word. The first <i>I</i> knew—an’ I was Chief Engineer—was the notice of the Line’s winter sailin’s, and the <i>Breslau</i> timed for sixteen days between port an’ port! Sixteen days, man! She’s a good boat, but eighteen is her summer time, mark you. Sixteen was sheer flytin’, kitin’ nonsense, an’ so I told young Bannister.</p>
<p>‘“We’ve got to make it,” he said. “Ye should not ha’ sent in a three hunder pound indent.”</p>
<p>‘“Do they look for their boats to be run on air?” I said. “The Board is daft.”</p>
<p>‘“Fen tell ’em so,” he says. “I’m a married man, an’ my fourth’s on the ways now, she says.”’</p>
<p>‘A boy—wi’ red hair,’ Janet put in. Her own hair is the splendid red-gold that goes with a creamy complexion.</p>
<p>‘My word, I was an angry man that day! Forbye I was fond o’ the old <i>Breslau</i>, I looked for a little consideration from the Board after twenty years’ service. There was Board meetin’ on Wednesday; an’ I sat overnight in the engine-room, takin’ figures to support my case. Well, I put it fair and square before them all. “Gentlemen,” I said, “I’ve run the <i>Breslau</i> eight seasons, an’ I believe there’s no fault to find wi’ my wark. But if ye haud to this”—I waggled the advertisement at ’em—“this that <i>I</i>’ve never heard of till I read it at breakfast, I do assure you on my professional reputation, she can never do it. That is to say, she can for a while, but at a risk no thinkin’ man would run.”’</p>
<p>‘“What the deil d’ye suppose we pass your indent for?” says old Holdock. “Man, we’re spendin’ money like watter.”</p>
<p>‘“I’ll leave it in the Board’s hands,” I said, “if two hunder an’ eighty-seven pound is anything beyond right and reason for eight months.” I might ha’ saved my breath, for the Board was new since the last election, an’ there they sat, the damned deevidend-huntin’ ship-chandlers, deaf as the adders o’ Scripture.</p>
<p>‘“We must keep faith wi’ the public,” said young Steiner.</p>
<p>‘“Keep faith wi’ the <i>Breslau</i> then,” I said. “She’s served you well, an’ your father before you. She’ll need her bottom restiffenin’, an’ new bed-plates, an’ turnin’ out the forward boilers, an’ re-borin’ all three cylinders, an’ refacin’ all guides, to begin with. It’s a three months’ job.”</p>
<p>‘“Because one employé is afraid?” says young Steiner. “Maybe a piano in the Chief Engineer’s cabin would be more to the point.”</p>
<p>‘I crushed my cap in my hands, an’ thanked God we’d no bairns an’ a bit put by.</p>
<p>‘“Understand, gentlemen,” I said. “If the <i>Breslau</i> is made a sixteen-day boat, ye’ll find another engineer.”</p>
<p>‘“Bannister makes no objection,” said Holdock.</p>
<p>‘“I’m speakin’ for myself,” I said. “Bannister has bairns.” An’ then I lost my temper. “Ye can run her into Hell an’ out again if ye pay pilotage,” I said, “but ye run without me.”</p>
<p>‘“That’s insolence,” said young Steiner.</p>
<p>‘“At your pleasure,” I said, turnin’ to go.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 3<br />
</strong></p>
<p>‘“Ye can consider yourself dismissed. We must preserve discipline among our employés,” said old Holdock, an’ he looked round to see that the Board was with him. They knew nothin’—God forgie ’em—an’ they nodded me out o’ the Line after twenty years—after twenty years.</p>
<p>‘I went out an’ sat down by the hall porter to get my wits again. I’m thinkin’ I swore at the Board. Then auld McRimmon—o’ McNaughton and McRimmon—came oot o’ his office, that’s on the same floor, an’ looked at me, proppin’ up one eyelid wi’ his forefinger. Ye know they call him the Blind Deevil, forbye he’s onythin’ but blind, an’ no deevil in his dealin’s wi’ me—McRimmon o’ the Black Bird Line.</p>
<p>‘“What’s here, Mister McPhee?” said he.</p>
<p>‘I was past prayin’ for by then. “A Chief Engineer sacked after twenty years’ service because he’ll not risk the <i>Breslau</i> on the new timin’, an’ be damned to ye, McRimmon,” I said.</p>
<p>‘The auld man sucked in his lips an’ whistled. “Ah,” said he, “the new timin’. I see! “He doddered into the Board-room I’d just left, an’ the Dandie-dog that is just his blind man’s leader stayed wi’ me. That was providential. In a minute he was back again. “Ye’ve cast your bread on the watter, M’Phee, an’ be damned to you,” he says. “Whaur’s my dog? My word, is he on your knee? There’s more discernment in a dog than a Jew. What garred ye curse your Board, McPhee? It’s expensive.”</p>
<p>‘“They’ll pay more for the <i>Breslau</i>,” I said. “Get off my knee, ye smotherin’ beastie.”</p>
<p>‘“Bearin’s hot, eh?” said McRimmon. “It’s thirty year since a man daur curse me to my face. Time was I’d ha’ cast ye doon the stairway for that.’</p>
<p>‘“Forgie’s all!” I said. He was wearin’ to eighty, as I knew. “I was wrong, McRimmon; but when a man’s shown the door for doin’ his plain duty he’s not always ceevil.”</p>
<p>‘“So I hear,” says McRimmon. “Ha’ ye ony objection to a tramp freighter? It’s only fifteen a month, but they say the Blind Deevil feeds a man better than others. She’s my <i>Kite</i>. Come ben. Ye can thank Dandie, here. I’m no used to thanks. An’ noo,” says he, “what possessed ye to throw up your berth wi’ Holdock?”</p>
<p>‘“The new timin’,” said I. “The <i>Breslau</i> will not stand it.”</p>
<p>‘“Hoot, oot,” said he. “Ye might ha’ crammed her a little—enough to show ye were drivin’ her—an’ brought her in twa days behind. What’s easier than to say ye slowed for bearin’s, eh? All my men do it, and—I believe ’em.”</p>
<p>‘“McRimmon,” says I, “what’s her virginity to a lassie?”</p>
<p>‘He puckered his dry face an’ twisted in his chair. “The warld an’ a’,” says he. “My God, the vara warld an’ a’! But what ha’ you or me to do wi’ virginity, this late along?”</p>
<p>‘“This,” I said. “There’s just one thing that each one of us in his trade or profession will <i>not</i> do for ony consideration whatever. If I run to time I run to time, barrin’ always the risks o’ the high. seas. Less than that, under God, I have not done. More than that, by God, I will not do! There’s no trick o’ the trade I’m not acquaint wi’——”</p>
<p>‘“So I’ve heard,” says McRimmon, dry as a biscuit.</p>
<p>‘“But yon matter o’ fair runnin’ ’s just my Shekinah, ye’ll understand. I daurna tamper wi’ <i>that</i>. Nursing weak engines is fair craftsmanship; but what the Board ask is cheatin’, wi’ the risk o’ manslaughter addeetional. Ye’ll note I know my business.”</p>
<p>‘There was some more talk, an’ next week I went aboard the <i>Kite</i>, twenty-five hunder ton, ordinary compound, a Black Bird tramp. The deeper she rode, the better she’d steam. I’ve snapped as much as nine out of her, but eight point three was her fair normal. Good food forward an’ better aft, all indents passed wi’out marginal remarks, the best coal, new donkeys, and good crews. There was nothin’ the old man would not do, except paint. That was his deeficulty. Ye could no more draw paint than his last teeth from him. He’d come down to dock, an’ his boats a scandal all along the watter, an’ he’d whine an’ cry an’ say they looked all he could desire. Every owner has his <i>non plus ultra</i>, I’ve obsairved. Paint was McRimmon’s. But you could get round his engines without riskin’ your life, an’, for all his blindness, I’ve seen him reject five flawed intermediates, one after the other, on a nod from me; an’ his cattle-fittin’s were guaranteed for North Atlantic winter weather. Ye ken what <i>that</i> means? McRimmon an’ the Black Bird Line, God bless him!</p>
<p>‘Oh, I forgot to say she would lie down an’ fill her forward deck green, an’ snore away into a twenty-knot gale forty-five to the minute, three an’ a half knots, the engines runnin’ sweet an’ true as a bairn breathin’ in its sleep. Bell was skipper; an’ forbye there’s no love lost between crews an’ owners, we were fond o’ the auld Blind Deevil an’ his dog, an’ I’m thinkin’ he liked us. He was worth the windy side o’ twa million sterling’, an’ no friend to his own blood-kin. Money’s an awfu’ thing—overmuch—for a lonely man.</p>
<p>‘I’d taken her out twice, there an’ back again, when word came o’ the <i>Breslau’s</i> breakdown, just as I prophesied. Calder was her engineer—he’s not fit to run a tug down the Solent—and he fairly lifted the engines off the bed-plates, an’ they fell down in heaps, by what I heard. So she filled from the after-stuffin’-box to the after-bulkhead, an’ lay star-gazing, with seventy-nine squealin’ passengers in the saloon, till the <i>Camaralzaman</i> o’ Ramsey and Gold’s Carthagena Line gave her a tow to the tune o’ five thousand seven hunder an’ forty pound, wi’ costs in the Admiralty Court. She was helpless, ye’ll understand, an’ in no case to meet ony weather. Five thousand seven hunder an’ forty pounds, <i>with</i> costs, an’ exclusive o’ new engines! They’d ha’ done better to ha’ kept me—on the old timin’.</p>
<p>‘But, even so, the new Board were all for retrenchment. Young Steiner, the Jew, was at the bottom of it. They sacked men right an’ left that would not eat the dirt the Board gave ’em. They cut down repairs; they fed crews wi’ leavin’s and scrapin’s; and, reversin’ McRimmon’s practice, they hid their defeeciencies wi’ paint an’ cheap gildin’. <i>Quem Deus vult perrdere prrius dementat</i>, ye remember.</p>
<p>‘In January we went to dry-dock, an’ in the next dock lay the <i>Grotkau</i>, their big freighter that was the <i>Dolabella</i> o’ Piegan, Piegan, and Walsh’s Line in ’84—a Clyde-built iron boat, a flat-bottomed, pigeon-breasted, under-engined, bullnosed bitch of a five thousand ton freighter, that would neither steer, nor steam, nor stop when ye asked her. Whiles she’d attend to her helm, whiles she’d take charge, whiles she’d wait to scratch herself, an’ whiles she’d buttock into a dockhead. But Holdock and Steiner had bought her cheap, and painted her all over like the <i>Hoor</i> o’ Babylon, an’ we called her the <i>Hoor</i> for short.’ (By the way, McPhee kept to that name throughout the rest of his tale; so you must read accordingly.) ‘I went to see young Bannister—he had to take what the Board gave him, an’ he an’ Calder were shifted together from the <i>Breslau</i> to this abortion—an’ talkin’ to him I went into the dock under her. Her plates were pitted till the men that were paint, paint, paintin’ her laughed at it. But the warst was at the last. She’d a great clumsy iron nineteen-foot Thresher propeller—Aitcheson designed the <i>Kite’s</i>—and just on the tail o’ the shaft, before the boss, was a red weepin’ crack ye could ha’ put a penknife to. Man, it was an awful crack!</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 4<br />
</strong></p>
<p>‘“When d’ye ship a new tail-shaft?” I said to Bannister.</p>
<p>‘He knew what I meant. “Oh, yon’s a superfeecial flaw,” says he, not lookin’ at me.</p>
<p>‘“Superfeecial Gehenna!” I said. “Ye’ll not take her oot wi’ a solution o’ continuity that like.”</p>
<p>‘“They’ll putty it up this evening,” he said. “I’m a married man, an’—ye used to know the Board.”</p>
<p>‘I e’en said what was gie’d me in that hour. Ye know how a dry-dock echoes. I saw young Steiner standin’ listenin’ above me, an’, man, he used language provocative of a breach o’ the peace. I was a spy and a disgraced employé, an’ a corrupter o’ young Bannister’s morals, an’ he’d prosecute me for libel. He went away when I ran up the steps—I’d ha’ thrown him into the dock if I’d caught him—an’ there I met McRimmon, wi’ Dandie pullin’ on the chain, guidin’ the auld man among the railway lines.</p>
<p>‘“McPhee,” said he, “ye’re no paid to fight Holdock, Steiner, Chase, and Company, Limited, when ye meet. What’s wrong between you.”</p>
<p>‘“No more than a tail-shaft rotten as a kailstump. For ony sakes go and look, McRimmon. It’s a comedietta.”</p>
<p>‘“I’m feared o’ yon conversational Hebrew,” said he. “Whaur’s the flaw, an’ what like?”</p>
<p>‘“A seven-inch crack just behind the boss. There’s no power on earth will fend it just jarrin’ off.”</p>
<p>‘“When?”</p>
<p>‘“That’s beyon’ my knowledge,” I said.</p>
<p>‘“So it is; so it is,” said McRimmon. “We’ve all oor leemitations. Ye’re certain it was a crack?”</p>
<p>‘“Man, it’s a crevasse,” I said, for there were no words to describe the magnitude of it. “An’ young Bannister’s sayin’ it’s no more than a superfeecial flaw!”</p>
<p>‘“Weel, I tak’ it oor business is to mind oor business. If ye’ve ony friends aboard her, McPhee, why not bid them to a bit dinner at Radley’s?”</p>
<p>‘“I was thinkin’ o’ tea in the cuddy,” I said. “Engineers o’ tramp freighters cannot afford hotel prices.”</p>
<p>‘“Na! na!” says the auld man, whimperin’. “Not the cuddy. They’ll laugh at my <i>Kite</i>, for she’s no plastered with paint like the <i>Hoor</i>. Bid them to Radley’s, McPhee, an’ send me the bill. Thank Dandie; here, man. I’m no used to thanks.” Then he turned him round. (I was just thinkin’ the vara same thing.)</p>
<p>‘“Mister McPhee,” said he, “this is not senile dementia.”</p>
<p>‘“Preserve’s!” I said, clean jumped oot o’ mysel’. “I was but thinkin’ you’re fey, McRimmon.”</p>
<p>‘Dod, the auld deevil laughed till he nigh sat down on Dandie. “Send me the bill,” says he. “I’m lang past champagne, but tell me how it tastes the morn.”</p>
<p>‘Bell and I bid young Bannister and Calder to dinner at Radley’s. They’ll have no laughin’ an’ singin’ there, but we took a private room—like yacht-owners fra’ Cowes.’</p>
<p>McPhee grinned all over, and lay back to think.</p>
<p>‘And then?’ said I.</p>
<p>‘We were no drunk in ony preceese sense o’ the word, but Radley’s showed me the dead men. There were six magnums o’ dry champagne an’ maybe a bottle o’ whisky.’</p>
<p>‘Do you mean to tell me that you four got away with a magnum and a half apiece, besides whisky?’ I demanded.</p>
<p>McPhee looked down upon me from between his shoulders with toleration.</p>
<p>‘Man, we were not settin’ down to drink,’ he said. ‘They no more than made us wutty. To be sure, young Bannister laid his head on the table an’ greeted like a bairn, an’ Calder was all for callin’ on Steiner at two in the morn’ an’ painting him galley-green; but they’d been drinkin’ the afternoon. Lord, how they twa cursed the Board, an’ the <i>Grotkau</i>, an’ the tailshaft, an’ the engines, an’ a’! They didna talk o’ superfeecial flaws that night. I mind young Bannister an’ Calder shakin’ hands on a bond to be revenged on the Board at ony reasonable cost this side o’ losing their certificates. Now mark ye how false economy ruins business. The Board fed them like swine (I have good reason to know it), an’ I’ve obsairved wi’ my ain people that if ye touch his stomach ye wauken the deil in a Scot. Men will tak’ a dredger across the Atlantic if they’re well fed, and fetch her somewhere on the broadside o’ the Americas; but bad food’s bad service the warld over.</p>
<p>‘The bill went to McRimmon, an’ he said no more to me till the week-end, when I was at him for more paint, for we’d heard the <i>Kite</i> was chartered Liverpool-side.</p>
<p>‘“Bide whaur ye’re put,” said the Blind Deevil. “Man, do ye wash in champagne? The <i>Kite’s</i> no leavin’ here till I gie the order, an’—how am I to waste paint on her, wi’ the <i>Lammergeyer</i> docked for who knows how long, an’ a’!”</p>
<p>‘She was our big freighter—McIntyre was engineer—an’ I knew she’d come from overhaul not three months. That morn I met McRimmon’s head-clerk ye’ll not know him—fair bitin’ his nails off wi’ mortification.</p>
<p>‘“The auld man’s gone gyte,” says he. “He’s withdrawn the <i>Lammergeyer</i>.”</p>
<p>‘“Maybe he has reasons,” says I.</p>
<p>‘“Reasons! He’s daft!”</p>
<p>‘“He’ll no be daft till he begins to paint,” I said.</p>
<p>‘“That’s just what he’s done—and South American freights higher than we’ll live to see them again. He’s laid her up to paint her—to paint her—to paint her!” says the little clerk, dancin’ like a hen on a hot plate. “Five thousand ton o’ potential freight rottin’ in drydock, man; an’ he dolin’ the paint out in quarterpound tins, for it cuts him to the heart, mad though he is. An’ the <i>Grotkau</i>—the <i>Grotkau</i> of all conceivable bottoms—soaking up every pound that should be ours at Liverpool!”</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 5<br />
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<p>‘I was staggered wi’ this folly—considerin’ the dinner at Radley’s in connection wi’ the same.</p>
<p>‘“Ye may well stare, McPhee,” says the headclerk. “There’s engines, an’ rollin’ stock, an’ iron bridges—d’ye know what freights are noo?—an’ pianos, an’ millinery, an’ fancy Brazil cargo o’ every species pourin’ into the <i>Grotkau</i>—the <i>Grotkau</i> o’ the Jerusalem firm—and the <i>Lammergeyer’s</i> bein’ painted!”</p>
<p>‘Losh, I thought he’d drop dead wi’ the fits.</p>
<p>‘I could say no more than “Obey orders, if ye break owners,” but on the <i>Kite</i> we believed McRimmon was mad; an’ McIntyre of the <i>Lammergeyer</i> was for lockin’ him up by some patent legal process he’d found in a book o’ maritime law. An’ a’ that week South American freights rose an’ rose. It was sinfu’!</p>
<p>‘Syne Bell got orders to tak’ the <i>Kite</i> round to Liverpool in water-ballast, and McRimmon came to bid’s good-bye, yammerin’ an’ whinin’ o’er the acres o’ paint he’d lavished on the <i>Lammergeyer</i>.</p>
<p>‘“I look to you to retrieve it,” says he. “I look to you to reimburse me! ’Fore God, why are ye not cast off? Are ye dawdlin’ in dock for a purpose.?”</p>
<p>‘“What odds, McRimmon?” says Bell. “We’ll be a day behind the fair at Liverpool. The <i>Grotkau’s</i> got all the freight that might ha’ been ours an’ the <i>Lammergeyer’s</i>.” McRimmon laughed an’ chuckled—the pairfect eemage o’ senile dementia. Ye ken his eyebrows wark up an’ down like a gorilla’s.</p>
<p>‘“Ye’re under sealed orders,” said he, tee-heein’ an’ scratchin’ himself. “Yon’s they”—to be opened <i>seriatim</i>.</p>
<p>‘Says Bell, shufflin’ the envelopes when the auld man had gone ashore: “We’re to creep round a’ the south coast, standin’ in for orders—this weather, too. There’s no question o’ his lunacy now.”</p>
<p>‘Well, we buttocked the auld <i>Kite</i> along—vara bad weather we made—standin’ in alongside for telegraphic orders, which are the curse o’ skippers. Syne we made over to Holyhead, an’ Bell opened the last envelope for the last instructions. I was wi’ him in the cuddy, an’ he threw it over to me, cryin’: “Did ye ever know the like, Mac?”</p>
<p>‘I’ll no say what McRimmon had written, but he was far from mad. There was a sou’-wester brewin’ when we made the mouth o’ the Mersey, a bitter cold morn wi’ a gray-green sea and a gray-green sky—Liverpool weather, as they say; an’ there we lay choppin’, an’ the men swore. Ye canna keep secrets aboard ship. They thought McRimmon was mad, too.</p>
<p>‘Syne we saw the <i>Grotkau</i> rollin’ oot on the top o’ flood, deep an’ double deep, wi’ her newpainted funnel an’ her new-painted boats an’ a’. She looked her name, an’, moreover, she coughed like it. Calder tauld me at Radley’s what ailed his engines, but my own ear would ha’ told me twa mile awa’, by the beat o’ them. Round we came, plungin’ an’ squatterin’ in her wake, an’ the wind cut wi’ good promise o’ more to come. By six it blew hard but clear, an’ before the middle watch it was a sou’wester in airnest.</p>
<p>‘“She’ll edge into Ireland, this gait,” says Bell. I was with him on the bridge, watchin’ the <i>Grotkau’s</i> port light. Ye canna see green so far as red, or we’d ha’ kept to leeward. We’d no passengers to consider, an’ (all eyes being on the <i>Grotkau</i>) we fair walked into a liner rampin’ home to Liverpool. Or, to be preceese, Bell no more than twisted the <i>Kite</i> oot from under her bows, and there was a little damnin’ betwix’ the twa bridges. Noo a passenger’—McPhee regarded me benignantly—‘wad ha’ told the papers that as soon as he got to the Customs. We stuck to the <i>Grotkau’s</i> tail that night an’ the next twa days—she slowed down to five knots by my reckonin’—and we lapped along the weary way to the Fastnet.’</p>
<p>‘But you don’t go by the Fastnet to get to any South American port, do you?’ I said.</p>
<p>‘<i>We</i> do not. We prefer to go as direct as may be. But we were followin’ the <i>Grotkau</i>, an’ she’d no walk into that gale for ony consideration. Knowin’ what I did to her discredit, I couldna blame young Bannister. It was warkin’ up to a North Atlantic winter gale, snow an’ sleet an’ a perishin’ wind. Eh, it was like the Deil walkin’ abroad o’ the surface o’ the deep, whuppin’ off the top o’ the waves before he made up his mind. They’d bore up against it so far, but the minute she was clear o’ the Skelligs she fair tucked up her skirts an’ ran for it by Dunmore Head. Wow, she rolled!</p>
<p>‘“She’ll be makin’ Smerwick,” says Bell.</p>
<p>‘“She’d ha’ tried for Ventry by noo if she meant that,” I said.</p>
<p>‘“They’ll roll the funnel oot o’ her, this gait,” says Bell. “Why canna Bannister keep her head to sea?”</p>
<p>‘“It’s the tail-shaft. Ony rollin’ ’s better than pitchin’ wi’ superfeecial cracks in the tail-shaft. Calder knows that much,” I said.</p>
<p>‘“It’s ill wark retreevin’ steamers this weather,” said Bell. His beard and whiskers were frozen to his oilskin, an’ the spray was white on the weather side of him. Pairfect North Atlantic winter weather!</p>
<p>‘One by one the sea raxed away our three boats, an’ the davits were crumpled like rams’ horns.</p>
<p>‘“Yon’s bad,” said Belt, at the last. “Ye canna pass a hawser wi’oot a boat.” Bell was a vara judeecious man—for an Aberdonian.</p>
<p>‘I’m not one that fashes himself for eventualities outside the engine-room, so I e’en slipped down betwixt waves to see how the <i>Kite</i> fared. Man, she’s the best geared boat of her class that ever left the Clyde! Kinloch, my second, knew her as well as I did. I found him dryin’ his socks on the main steam, an’ combin’ his whiskers wi’ the comb Janet gied me last year, for the warld an’ a’ as though we were in port. I tried the feed, speered into the stoke-hole, thumbed all bearin’s, spat on the thrust for luck, gied ’em my blessin’, an’ took Kinloch’s socks before I went up to the bridge again.</p>
<p>‘Then Bell handed me the wheel, an’ went below to warm himself. When he came up my gloves were frozen to the spokes, an’ the ice clicked over my eyelids. Pairfect North Atlantic winter weather, as I was sayin’.</p>
<p>‘The gale blew out by night, but we lay in smotherin’ cross-seas that made the auld <i>Kite</i> chatter from stem to stern. I slowed to thirty-four, I mind—no, thirty-seven. There was a long swell the morn, an’ the <i>Grotkau</i> was headin’ into it west awa’.</p>
<p>‘“She’ll win to Rio yet, tail-shaft or no tailshaft,” says Bell.</p>
<p>‘“Last night shook her,” I said. “She’ll jar it off yet, mark my word.”</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 6<br />
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<p>‘We were then, maybe, a hunder and fifty mile west-sou’west o’ Slyne Head, by dead reckonin’. Next day we made a hunder an’ thirty—ye’ll note we were not racin’ boats—an’ the day after a hunder and sixty-one, an’ that made us, we’ll say, Eighteen an’ a bittock west, an’ maybe Fifty-one an’ a bittock north, crossin’ all the North Atlantic liner lanes on the long slant, always in sight o’ the <i>Grotkau</i>, creepin’ up by night and fallin’ awa’ by day. After the gale, it was cold weather wi’ dark nights.</p>
<p>‘I was in the engine-room on Friday night, just before the middle watch, when Bell whustled doon the tube: “She’s done it”; an’ up I came.</p>
<p>‘The <i>Grotkau</i> was just a fair distance south, an’ one by one she ran up the three red lights in a vertical line &#8211; the sign of a steamer not under control.</p>
<p>‘“Yon’s a tow for us,” said Bell, lickin’ his chops. “She’ll be worth more than the <i>Breslau</i>. We’ll go down to her, McPhee! “</p>
<p>‘“Bide a while,” I said. “The sea’s fair throng wi’ ships here.”</p>
<p>‘“Reason why,” said Bell. “It’s a fortune gaun beggin’. What d’ye think, man?”</p>
<p>‘“Gie her till daylight. She knows we’re here. If Bannister needs help he’ll loose a rocket.”</p>
<p>‘“Wha told ye Bannister’s need? We’ll ha’ some rag-an’-bone tramp snappin’ her up under oor nose,” said he; an’ he put the wheel over. We were gaun slow.</p>
<p>‘“Bannister wad like better to go home on a liner an’ eat in the saloon. Mind ye what they said o’ Holdock and Steiner’s food that night at Radley’s? Keep her awa’, man—keep her awa’. A tow’s a tow, but a derelict’s big salvage.”</p>
<p>‘“E-eh!” said Bell. “Yon’s an inshot o’ yours, Mac. I love ye like a brother. We’ll bide whaur we are till daylight”; an’ he kept her awa’.</p>
<p>‘Syne up went a rocket forward, an’ twa on the bridge, an’ a blue light aft. Syne a tar-barrel forward again.</p>
<p>‘“She’s sinkin’,” said Bell. “It’s all gaun, an’ I’ll get no more than a pair o’ night-glasses for pickin’ up young Bannister—the fool!”</p>
<p>‘“Fair an’ soft again,” I said. “She’s signallin’ to the south of us. Bannister knows as well as I that one rocket would bring the <i>Kite</i>. He’ll no be wastin’ fireworks for nothin’. Hear her ca’!”</p>
<p>‘The <i>Grotkau</i> whustled. an’ whustled for five minutes, an’ then there were more fireworks—a regular exhibeetion.</p>
<p>‘“That’s no for men in the regular trade,” says Bell. “Ye’re right, Mac. That’s for a cuddy full o’ passengers.” He blinked through the nightglasses where it lay a bit thick to southward.</p>
<p>‘“What d’ye make of it? “I said.</p>
<p>‘“Liner,” he says. “Yon’s her rocket. Ou, ay; they’ve waukened the gold-strapped skipper, an’—noo they’ve waukened the passengers. They’re turnin’ on the electrics, cabin by cabin. Yon’s anither rocket. They’re comin’ up to help the perishin’ in deep watters.”</p>
<p>‘“Gie me the glass,” I said. But Bell danced on the bridge, clean dementit. “Mails—mails—mails!” said he. “Under contract wi’ the Government for the due conveyance o’ the mails; an’ as such, Mac, ye’ll note, she may rescue life at sea, but she canna tow!—she canna tow! Yon’s her night-signal. She’ll be up in half an hour!”</p>
<p>“Gowk! “I said, “an’ we blazin’ here wi’ all oor lights. Oh, Bell, but ye’re a fool.”</p>
<p>‘He tumbled off the bridge forward, an’ I tumbled aft, an’ before ye could wink our lights were oot, the engine-room hatch was covered, an’ we lay pitch-dark, watchin’ the lights o’ the liner come up that the <i>Grotkau</i> ’d been signallin’ for. Twenty knot she came, every cabin lighted, an’ her boats swung awa’. It was grandly done, an’ in the inside of an hour. She stopped like Mrs. Holdock’s machine; doon went the gangway, doon went the boats, an’ in ten minutes we heard the passengers cheerin’, an’ awa’ she fled.</p>
<p>‘“They’ll tell o’ this all the days they live,” said Bell. “A rescue at sea by night, as pretty as a play. Young Bannister an’ Calder will be drinkin’ in the saloon, an’ six months hence the Board o’ Trade ’ll gie the skipper a pair o’ binoculars. It’s vara philanthropic all round.”</p>
<p>‘We lay by till day—ye may think we waited for it wi’ sore eyes—an’ there sat the <i>Grotkau</i>, her nose a bit cocked, just leerin’ at us. She looked pairfectly rideeculous.</p>
<p>‘“She’ll be fillip’ aft,” says Bell; “for why is she doon by the stern? The tail-shaft’s punched a hole in her, an’-we’ve no boats. There’s three hunder thousand pound sterlin’, at a conservative estimate, droonin’ before our eyes. What’s to do?” An’ his bearin’s got hot again in a minute; for he was an incontinent man.</p>
<p>‘“Run her as near as ye daur,” I said: “Gie me a jacket an’ a life-line, an’ I’ll swum for it.” There was a bit lump of a sea, an’ it was cold in the wind—vara cold; but they’d gone overside like passengers, young Bannister an’ Calder an’ a’, leaving the gangway doon on the lee-side. It would ha’ been a flyin’ in the face o’ manifest Providence to overlook the invitation. We were within fifty yards o’ her while Kinloch was garmin’ me all over wi’ oil behind the galley; an’ as we ran past I went outboard for the salvage o’ three hunder thousand pound. Man, it was perishin’ cold, but I’d done my job judgmatically, an’ came scrapin’ all along her side slap on to the lower gratin’ o’ the gangway. No one more astonished than me, I assure ye. Before I’d caught my breath I’d skinned both my knees on the gratin’, an’ was climbin’ up before she rolled again. I made my line fast to the rail, an’ squattered aft to young Bannister’s cabin, whaur I dried me wi’ everything in his bunk, an’ put on every conceivable sort o’ rig I found till the blood was circulatin’. Three pair drawers, I mind I found—to begin upon—an’ I needed them all. It was the coldest cold I remember in all my experience.</p>
<p>‘Syne I went aft to the engine-room. The <i>Grotkau</i> sat on her own tail, as they say. She was vara short-shafted, an’ her gear was all aft. There was four or five foot o’ watter in the engine-room slummockin’ to and fro, black an’ greasy; maybe there was six foot., The stokehold doors were screwed home, an’ the stokehold was tight enough; but for a minute the mess in the engine-room deceived me. Only for a minute, though, an’ that was because I was not, in a manner o’ speakin’, as calm as ordinar’. I looked again to mak’ sure. ’Twas just black wi’ bilge: dead watter that must ha’ come in fortuitously, ye ken.’</p>
<p>‘McPhee, I’m only a passenger,’ I said, ‘but you don’t persuade me that six foot o’ water can come into an engine-room fortuitously.’</p>
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<p>‘Wha’s tryin’ to persuade one way or the other?’ McPhee retorted. ‘I’m statin’ the facts o’ the case—the simple, natural facts. Six or seven foot o’ dead watter in the engine-room is a vara depressin’ sight if ye think there’s like to be more comin’; but I did not consider that such was likely, and so, ye’ll note, I was not depressed.’</p>
<p>‘That’s all very well, but I want to know about the water,’ I said.</p>
<p>‘I’ve told ye. There was six feet or more there, wi’ Calder’s cap floatin’ on top.’</p>
<p>‘Where did it come from?’</p>
<p>‘Weel, in the confusion o’ things after the propeller had dropped off an’ the engines were racin’ an’ a’, it’s vara possible that Calder might ha’ lost it off his head an’ no troubled himself to pick it up again. I remember seein’ that cap on him at Southampton.’</p>
<p>‘I don’t want to know about the cap. I’m asking where the water came from, and what it was doing there, and why you were so certain that it wasn’t a leak, McPhee?’</p>
<p>‘For good reason—for good an’ sufficient reason.’</p>
<p>‘Give it to me, then.’</p>
<p>‘Weel, it’s a reason that does not properly concern myself only. To be preceese, I’m of opinion that it was due, the watter, in part to an error o’ judgment in another man. We can a’ mak’ mistakes.’</p>
<p>‘Oh, I beg your pardon! Go on.</p>
<p>‘I got me to the rail again, an’, “What’s wrang?” said Bell, hailin’.</p>
<p>‘“She’ll do,” I said. “Send’s o’er a hawser, an’ a man to help steer. I’ll pull him in by the life-line.”</p>
<p>‘I could see heads bobbin’ back an’ forth, an’ a whuff or two o’ strong words. Then Bell said: “They’ll not trust themselves—one of ’em—in this watter—except Kinloch, an’ I’ll no spare him.”</p>
<p>‘“The more salvage to me, then,” I said. “I’ll make shift <i>solo</i>.”</p>
<p>‘Says one dock-rat at this: “D’ye think she’s safe?’</p>
<p>‘“I’ll guarantee ye nothing,” I said, “except, maybe, a hammerin’ for keepin’ me this long.”</p>
<p>‘Then he sings out: “There’s no more than one life-belt, an’ they canna find it, or I’d come.”</p>
<p>‘“Throw him over, the Jezebel,” I said, for I was oot o’ patience; an’ they took haud o’ that volunteer before he knew what was in store, and hove him over in the bight of the life-line. So I e’en hauled him up on the sag of it, hand-over-fist—a vara welcome recruit when I’d tilted the salt watter oot of him; for, by the way, he could not swum.</p>
<p>‘Syne they bent a twa-inch rope to the life-line, an’ a hawser to that, an’ I led the rope o’er the drum of a hand-winch forward, an’ we sweated the hawser inboard an’ made it fast to the <i>Grotkau’s</i> bitts.</p>
<p>‘Bell brought the <i>Kite</i> so close I feared she’d roll in an’ do the <i>Grotkau’s</i> plates a mischief. He hove anither life-line to me, an’ went astern, an’ we had all the weary winch-work to do again wi’ a second hawser. For all that, Bell was right: we’d a long tow before us, an’ though Providence had helped us that far, there was no sense in leavin’ too much to its keepin’. When the second hawser was fast, I was wet wi’ sweat, an’ I cried Bell to tak’ up his slack an’ go home. The other man was by way o’ helpin’ the work wi’ askin’ for drinks, but I e’en told him he must hand reef an’ steer, beginnin’ with steerin’, for I was goin’ to turn in. He steered—ou, ay, he steered, in a manner o’ speakin’. At the least, he grippit the spokes an’ twiddled ’em an’ looked wise, but I doubt if the <i>Hoor</i> ever felt it. I turned in there an’ then to young Bannister’s bunk, an’ slept past expression. I waukened ragin’ wi’ hunger, a fair lump o’ sea runnin’, the Kite snorin’ awa’ four knots; an’ the <i>Grotkau</i> slappin’ her nose under, an’ yawin’ an’ standin’ over at discretion. She was a most disgracefu’ tow. But the shameful thing of all was the food. I raxed me a meal fra galley-shelves an’ pantries an’ lazareetes an’ cubbyholes that I would not ha’ gied to the mate of a Cardiff collier; an’ ye ken we say a Cardiff mate will eat clinkers to save waste. I’m sayin’ it was simply vile! The crew had written what <i>they</i> thought of it on the new paint o’ the fo’c’sle, but I had not a decent soul wi’ me to complain on.</p>
<p>There was nothing’ for me to do save watch the hawsers an’ the <i>Kite’s</i> tail squatterin’ down in white watter when she lifted to a sea; so I got steam on the after donkey-pump, an’ pumped oot the engineroom. There’s no sense in leavin’ watter loose in a ship. When she was dry, I went doon the shaft-tunnel, an’ found she was leakin’ a little through the stuffin’-box, but nothin’ to make wark. The propeller had e’en jarred off, as I knew it must, an’ Calder had been waitin’ for it to go wi’ his hand on the gear. He told me as much when I met him ashore. There was nothin’ started or strained. It had just slipped awa’ to the bed o’ the Atlantic as easy as a man dyin’ wi’ due warnin’—a most providential business for all concerned. Syne I took stock o’ the <i>Grotkau’s</i> upper works. Her boats had been smashed on the davits, an’ here an’ there was the rail missin’, an’ a ventilator or two had fetched awa’, an’ the bridge-rails were bent by the seas; but her hatches were tight, and she’d taken no sort of harm. Dod, I came to hate her like a human bein’, for I was eight weary days aboard, starvin’—ay, starvin’—within a cable’s length o’ plenty. All day I lay in the bunk reading the <i>Woman-Hater</i>, the grandest book Charlie Reade ever wrote, an’ pickin’ a toothful here an’ there. It was weary, weary work. Eight days, man, I was aboard the <i>Grotkau</i>, an’ not one full meal did I make. Sma’ blame her crew would not stay by her. The other man? Oh, I warked him to keep him crack. I warked him wi’ a vengeance.</p>
<p>‘It came on to blow when we fetched soundin’s, an’ that kept me standin’ by the hawsers, lashed to the capstan, breathin’ betwixt green seas. I near died o’ cauld an’ hunger, for the <i>Grotkau</i> towed like a barge, an’ Bell howkit her along through or over. It was vara thick up-Channel, too. We were standin’ in to make some sort o’ light, and we near walked over twa three fishin’-boats, an’ they cried us we were o’er close to Falmouth. Then we were near cut down by a drunken foreign fruiter that was blunderin’ between us an’ the shore, and it got thicker and thicker that night, an’ I could feel by the tow Bell did not know whaur he was. Losh, we knew in the morn, for the wind blew the fog oot like a candle, an’ the sun came clear; and as surely as McRimmon gied me my cheque, the shadow o’ the Eddystone lay across our tow-rope! We were that near—ay, we were that near! Bell fetched the <i>Kite</i> round with a jerk that came close to tearin’ the bitts out o’ the <i>Grotkau</i>; an’ I mind I thanked my Maker in young Bannister’s cabin when we were inside Plymouth breakwater.</p>
<p>‘The first to come aboard was McRimmon, wi’ Dandie. Did I tell you our orders were to take anything found into Plymouth? The auld deil had just come down overnight, puttin’ two an’ two together from what Calder had told him when the liner landed the <i>Grotkau’s</i> men. He had preceesely hit oor time. I’d hailed Bell for something to eat, an’ he sent it o’er in the same boat wi’ McRimmon, when the auld man came to me. He grinned an’ slapped his legs and worked his eyebrows the while I ate.</p>
<p style="text-align: center; color: red; font-style: italic;"><strong>page 8<br />
</strong></p>
<p>‘“How do Holdock, Steiner, and Chase feed their men?” said he.</p>
<p>‘“Ye can see,” I said, knockin’ the top off another beer-bottle. “I did not take to be starved, McRimmon.”</p>
<p>‘“Nor to swim, either,” said he, for Bell had tauld him how I carried the line aboard. “Well, I’m thinkin’ you’ll be no loser. What freight could we ha’ put into the <i>Lammergeyer</i> would equal salvage on four hunder thousand pounds—hull and cargo? Eh, McPhee? This cuts the liver out o’ Holdock, Steiner, Chase, and Company, Limited. Eh, McPhee? An’ I’m sufferin’ from senile dementia now? Eh, McPhee? An’ I’m not daft, am I, till I begin to paint the <i>Lammergeyer</i>? Eh, McPhee? Ye may weel lift your leg, Dandie! I ha’ the laugh o’ them all. Ye found watter in the engine-room?”</p>
<p>‘“To speak wi’oot prejudice,” I said, “there was some watter.”</p>
<p>‘“They thought she was sinkin’ after the propeller went. She filled with extraordinary rapeedity. Calder said it grieved him an’ Bannister to abandon her.”</p>
<p>‘I thought o’ the dinner at Radley’s, an’ what like o’ food I’d eaten for eight days.</p>
<p>‘“It would grieve them sore,” I said.</p>
<p>‘“But the crew would not hear o’ stayin’ an’ takin’ their chances. They’re gaun up an’ down sayin’ they’d ha’ starved first.”</p>
<p>‘“They’d ha’ starved if they’d stayed,” said I.</p>
<p>‘“I tak’ it, fra Calder’s account, there was a mutiny a’most.”</p>
<p>‘“Ye know more than I, McRimmon,” I said. “Speakin’ wi’oot prejudice, for we’re all in the same boat, <i>who</i> opened the bilge-cock?”</p>
<p>‘“Oh, that’s it—is it?” said the auld man, an’ I could see he was surprised. “A bilge-cock, ye say?”</p>
<p>‘“I believe it was a bilge-cock. They were all shut when I came aboard, but someone had flooded the engine-room eight feet over all, and shut it off with the worm-an’-wheel gear from the second gratin’ afterwards.”</p>
<p>‘“Losh!” said McRimmon. “The ineequity o’ man’s beyond belief. But it’s awfu’ discreditable to Holdock, Steiner, and Chase, if that came oot in court.”</p>
<p>‘“It’s just my own curiosity,” I said.</p>
<p>‘“Aweel, Dandie’s afflicted wi’ the same disease. Dandie, strive against curiosity, for it brings a little dog into traps an’ suchlike. Whaur was the <i>Kite</i> when yon painted liner took off the <i>Grotkau’s</i> people? “</p>
<p>‘“Just there or thereabouts,” I said.</p>
<p>‘“An’ which o’ you twa thought to cover your lights? “said he, winkin’.</p>
<p>‘“Dandie,” I said to the dog, “we must both strive against curiosity. It’s an unremunerative business. What’s our chance o’ salvage, Dandie?”</p>
<p>‘He laughed till he choked. “Tak’ what I gie you, McPhee, an’ be content,” he said. “Lord, how a man wastes time when he gets old. Get aboard the <i>Kite</i>, mon, as soon as ye can. I’ve clean forgot there’s a Baltic charter yammerin’ for you at London. That’ll be your last voyage, I’m thinkin’, excep’ by way o’ pleasure.”</p>
<p>‘Steiner’s men were comin’ aboard to take charge an’ tow her round, an’ I passed young Steiner in a boat as I went to the <i>Kite</i>. He looked down his nose; but McRimmon pipes up: “Here’s the man ye owe the <i>Grotkau</i> to—at a price, Steiner—at a price! Let me introduce Mister McPhee to you. Maybe ye’ve met before; but ye’ve vara little luck in keeping your men—ashore or afloat!”</p>
<p>‘Young Steiner looked angry enough to eat him as he chuckled an’ whustled in his dry old throat.</p>
<p>‘“Ye’ve not got your award yet,” Steiner says.</p>
<p>‘“Na, na,” says the auld man, in a screech ye could hear to the Hoe, “but I’ve twa million sterlin’, an’ no bairns, ye Judeeas Apella, if ye mean to fight; an’ I’ll match ye p’und for p’und till the last p’und’s oot. Ye ken <i>me</i>, Steiner? I’m McRimmon o’ McNaughton and McRimmon!”</p>
<p>‘“Dod,” he said betwix’ his teeth, sittin’ back in the boat, “I’ve waited fourteen year to break that Jew-firm, an’ God be thankit I’ll do it now.”</p>
<p>‘The <i>Kite</i> was in the Baltic while the auld man was warkin his warks, but I know the assessors valued the <i>Grotkau</i>, all told, at over three hunder and sixty thousand—her manifest was a treat o’ richness—and McRimmon got a third for salvin’ an abandoned ship. Ye see, there’s vast deeference between towin’ a ship wi’ men on her and pickin’ up a derelict—a vast deeference—in pounds sterlin’. Moreover, twa—three o’ the <i>Grotkau’s</i> crew were burnin’ to testify about food, an’ there was a note o’ Calder to the Board in regard to the tail-shaft that would ha’ been vara damagin’ if it had come into court. They knew better than to fight.</p>
<p>‘Syne the <i>Kite</i> came back, and McRimmon paid off me an’ Bell personally, and the rest of the crew <i>pro rata</i>, I believe it’s ca’ed. My share—oor share, I should say—was just twenty-five thousand pounds sterlin’.’</p>
<p>At this point Janet jumped up and kissed him.</p>
<p>‘Five-and-twenty thousand pound sterlin’. Noo, I’m fra the North, and I’m not the like to fling money awa’ rashly, but I’d gie six months’ pay—one hunder an twenty pound—to know <i>who</i> flooded the engine-room of the <i>Grotkau</i>. I’m fairly well acquaint wi’ McRimmon’s eediosyncrasies, and <i>he’d</i> no hand in it. It was not Calder, for I’ve asked him, an’ he wanted to fight me. It would be in the highest degree unprofessional o’ Calder—not fightin’, but openin’ bilge-cocks—but for a while I thought it was him. Ay, I judged it might be him—under temptation.,</p>
<p>‘What’s your theory?’ I demanded.</p>
<p>‘Weel, I’m inclined to think it was one o’ those singular providences that remind us we’re in the hands o’ Higher Powers.’</p>
<p>‘It couldn’t open and shut itself?’</p>
<p>‘I did not mean that; but some half-starvin’ oiler or, maybe, trimmer must ha’ opened it a while to mak’ sure o’ leavin’ the <i>Grotkau</i>. It’s a demoralisin’ thing to see an engine-room flood up after any accident to the gear—demoralisin’ and deceptive both. Aweel, the man got what he wanted, for they went aboard the liner cryin’ that the <i>Grotkau</i> was sinkin’. But it’s curious to think o’ the consequences. In a’ human probability, he’s bein’ damned in heaps at the present moment aboard another tramp-freighter; an’ here am I, wi’ five-an’-twenty thousand pounds invested, resolute to go to sea no more—providential’s the preceese word—except as a passenger, ye’ll understand, Janet.’</p>
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<h2><b>.     .     .     .     .</b></h2>
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<p>McPhee kept his word. He and Janet went for a voyage as passengers in the first-class saloon. They paid seventy pounds for their berths; and Janet found a very sick woman in the second-class saloon, so that for sixteen days she lived below, and chatted with the stewardesses at the foot of the second-saloon stairs while her patient slept. McPhee was a passenger for exactly twenty-four hours. Then the engineers’ mess—where the oilcloth tables are–joyfully took him to its bosom, and for the rest of the voyage that company was richer by the unpaid services of a highly certificated engineer.</p>
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