that the wind blows sometimes east and west, north and south,
backwards and forwards, at the same
instant; yet, certain it is
that the land is so contrived, that even the same wind will not,
like the same horse, always bring a man to the end of his
journey; but, that the gale which the
mariner prayed
heartily for
yesterday, he may as
heartily deprecate to-morrow; while all use
and benefit which would have
arisen to him from the westerly wind
of to-morrow may be
totally lost and thrown away by neglecting
the offer of the easterly blast which blows to-day.
Hence ensues grief and disreputation to the
innocent captain,
loss and
disappointment to the
worthy merchant, and not seldom
great
prejudice to the trade of a nation whose manufactures are
thus
liable to lie unsold in a foreign
warehouse the market being
forestalled by some rival whose sailors are under a better
discipline. To guard against these inconveniences the prudent
captain takes every
precaution in his power; he makes the
strongest contracts with his crew, and
thereby binds them so
firmly, that none but the greatest or least of men can break
through them with
impunity; but for one of these two reasons,
which I will not determine, the sailor, like his brother fish the
eel, is too
slippery to be held, and plunges into his element
with perfect
impunity. To speak a plain truth, there is no
trusting to any contract with one whom the wise citizens of
London call a bad man; for, with such a one, though your bond be
ever so strong, it will prove in the end good for nothing.
What then is to be done in this case? What, indeed, but to call
in the
assistance" target="_blank" title="n.协作;援助;帮助">
assistance of that
tremendous magistrate, the justice of
peace, who can, and often doth, lay good and bad men in equal
durance; and, though he seldom cares to stretch his bonds to what
is great, never finds anything too minute for their detention,
but will hold the smallest
reptile alive so fast in his noose,
that he can never get out till he is let drop through it. Why,
therefore, upon the
breach of those contracts, should not an
immediate
application be made to the nearest magistrate of this
order, who should be empowered to
convey the delinquent either to
ship or to prison, at the
election of the captain, to be fettered
by the leg in either place? But, as the case now stands, the
condition of this poor captain without any
commission, and of
this
absolutecommander without any power, is much worse than we
have
hitherto shown it to be; for,
notwithstanding all the
aforesaid contracts to sail in the good ship the Elizabeth, if
the sailor should, for better wages, find it more his interest to
go on board the better ship the Mary, either before their setting
out or on their
speedy meeting in some port, he may prefer the
latter without any other danger than that of "doing what he ought
not to have done,"
contrary to a rule which he is seldom
Christian enough to have much at heart, while the captain is
generally too good a Christian to
punish a man out of revenge
only, when he is to be at a
considerable expense for so doing.
There are many other deficiencies in our laws relating to
maritime affairs, and which would probably have been long since
corrected, had we any seamen in the House of Commons. Not that I
would
insinuate that the
legislature wants a supply of many
gentlemen in the sea-service; but, as these gentlemen are by
their attendance in the house
unfortunately prevented from ever
going to sea, and there
learning what they might
communicate to
their landed brethren, these latter remain as
ignorant in that
branch of knowledge as they would be if none but courtiers and
fox-hunters had been elected into
parliament, without a single
fish among them. The following seems to me to be an effect of
this kind, and it strikes me the stronger as I remember the case
to have happened, and remember it to have been dis
punishable. A
captain of a trading
vessel, of which he was part owner, took in
a large
freight of oats at Liverpool, consigned to the market at
Bearkey: this he carried to a port in Hampshire, and there sold
it as his own, and,
freighting his
vessel with wheat for the port
of Cadiz, in Spain, dropped it at Oporto in his way; and there,
selling it for his own use, took in a lading of wine, with which
he sailed again, and, having converted it in the same manner,
together with a large sum of money with which he was intrusted,
for the benefit of certain merchants, sold the ship and cargo in
another port, and then
wisely sat down
contented with the fortune
he had made, and returned to London to enjoy the
remainder of his
days, with the fruits of his former labors and a good conscience.
The sum he brought home with him consisted of near six thousand
pounds, all in specie, and most of it in that coin which Portugal
distributes so liberally over Europe.
He was not yet old enough to be past all sense of pleasure, nor
so puffed up with the pride of his good fortune as to overlook
his old acquaintances the journeymen tailors, from among whom he
had been
formerly pressed into the sea-service, and, having there
laid the
foundation of his future success by his shares in
prizes, had afterwards become captain of a trading
vessel, in
which he purchased an interest, and had soon begun to trade in
the honorable manner above mentioned. The captain now took up
his
residence at an ale-house in Drury-lane, where, having all
his money by him in a trunk, he spent about five pounds a day
among his old friends the gentlemen and ladies of those parts.
The merchant of Liverpool, having luckily had notice from a
friend during the blaze of his fortune, did, by the
assistance" target="_blank" title="n.协作;援助;帮助">
assistance of
a justice of peace, without the
assistance" target="_blank" title="n.协作;援助;帮助">
assistance of the law, recover
his whole loss. The captain, however,
wisely chose to refund no
more; but, perceiving with what hasty strides Envy was pursuing
his fortune, he took
speedy means to
retire out of her reach, and
to enjoy the rest of his
wealth in an inglorious
obscurity; nor
could the same justice
overtake him time enough to
assist a
second merchant as he had done the first.
This was a very
extraordinary case, and the more so as the
ingenious gentleman had steered entirely clear of all crimes in
our law. Now, how it comes about that a
robbery so very easy to
be committed, and to which there is such immediate temptation
always before the eyes of these fellows, should receive the
encouragement of
impunity, is to be accounted for only from the
oversight of the
legislature, as that oversight can only be, I
think, derived from the reasons I have assigned for it.
But I will dwell no longer on this subject. If what I have here
said should seem of sufficient
consequence to engage the
attention of any man in power, and should thus be the means of
applying any
remedy to the most inveterate evils, at least, I
have obtained my whole desire, and shall have lain so long
wind-bound in the ports of this kingdom to some purpose. I
would, indeed, have this work--which, if I should live to finish
it, a matter of no great
certainty, if indeed of any great hope
to me, will be probably the last I shall ever undertake--to
produce some better end than the mere
diversion of the reader.
Monday.--This day our captain went
ashore, to dine with a
gentleman who lives in these parts, and who so exactly resembles
the
character given by Homer of Axylus, that the only difference
I can trace between them is, the one, living by the highway,
erected his
hospitalitychiefly in favor of land-travelers; and
the other, living by the water-side, gratified his
humanity by
accommodating the wants of the
mariner.
In the evening our
commander received a visit from a brother
bashaw, who lay wind-bound in the same harbor. This latter
captain was a Swiss. He was then master of a
vessel bound to
Guinea, and had
formerly been a privateering, when our own hero
was employed in the same laudable service. The
honesty and
freedom of the Switzer, his vivacity, in which he was in no
respect
inferior to his near neighbors the French, the
awkwardand
affectedpoliteness, which was
likewise of French extraction,
mixed with the
brutal roughness of the English tar--for he had
served under the colors of this nation and his crew had been of
the same--made such an odd
variety, such a hotch-potch of
character, that I should have been much diverted with him, had
not his voice, which was as loud as a speaking-trumpet,
unfortunately made my head ache. The noise which he
conveyed