three parts ocean, and
therefore a fit abode for sailors. A few
years afterwards I met in an Indian port a man who had served in
the ships of the same company. Names came up in our talk, names of
our colleagues in the same employ, and, naturally enough, I asked
after P-. Had he got a command yet? And the other man answered
carelessly:
"No; but he's provided for, anyhow. A heavy sea took him off the
poop in the run between New Zealand and the Horn."
Thus P- passed away from
amongst the tall spars of ships that he
had tried to their
utmost in many a spell of
boisterous weather.
He had shown me what carrying on meant, but he was not a man to
learn
discretion from. He could not help his deafness. One can
only remember his
cheerytemper, his
admiration for the jokes in
PUNCH, his little oddities - like his strange
passion for borrowing
looking-glasses, for
instance. Each of our cabins had its own
looking-glass screwed to the bulkhead, and what he wanted with more
of them we never could
fathom. He asked for the loan in
confidential tones. Why? Mystery. We made various surmises. No
one will ever know now. At any rate, it was a harmless
eccentricity, and may the god of gales, who took him away so
abruptly between New Zealand and the Horn, let his soul rest in
some Paradise of true seamen, where no
amount of carrying on will
ever dismast a ship!
XIII.
There has been a time when a ship's chief mate, pocket-book in hand
and pencil behind his ear, kept one eye aloft upon his riggers and
the other down the hatchway on the stevedores, and watched the
disposition of his ship's cargo,
knowing that even before she
started he was already doing his best to secure for her an easy and
quick passage.
The hurry of the times, the loading and discharging organization of
the docks, the use of hoisting machinery which works quickly and
will not wait, the cry for
promptdespatch, the very size of his
ship, stand nowadays between the modern
seaman and the thorough
knowledge of his craft.
There are
profitable ships and un
profitable ships. The
profitableship will carry a large load through all the hazards of the
weather, and, when at rest, will stand up in dock and shift from
berth to berth without ballast. There is a point of
perfection in
a ship as a
worker when she is
spoken of as being able to SAIL
without ballast. I have never met that sort of paragon myself, but
I have seen these paragons advertised
amongst ships for sale. Such
excess of
virtue and good-nature on the part of a ship always
provoked my
mistrust. It is open to any man to say that his ship
will sail without ballast; and he will say it, too, with every mark
of
profoundconviction, especially if he is not going to sail in
her himself. The risk of
advertising her as able to sail without
ballast is not great, since the statement does not imply a warranty
of her arriving
anywhere. Moreover, it is
strictly true that most
ships will sail without ballast for some little time before they
turn
turtle upon the crew.
A shipowner loves a
profitable ship; the
seaman is proud of her; a
doubt of her good looks seldom exists in his mind; but if he can
boast of her more useful qualities it is an added
satisfaction for
his self-love.
The loading of ships was once a matter of skill, judgment, and
knowledge. Thick books have been written about it. "Stevens on
Stowage" is a portly
volume with the
renown and weight (in its own
world) of Coke on Littleton. Stevens is an
agreeablewriter, and,
as is the case with men of
talent, his gifts adorn his sterling
soundness. He gives you the official teaching on the whole
subject, is
precise as to rules, mentions illustrative events,
quotes law cases where verdicts turned upon a point of stowage. He
is never pedantic, and, for all his close adherence to broad
principles, he is ready to admit that no two ships can be treated
exactly alike.
Stevedoring, which had been a
skilled labour, is fast becoming a
labour without the skill. The modern
steamship with her many holds
is not loaded within the sailor-like meaning of the word. She is
filled up. Her cargo is not stowed in any sense; it is simply
dumped into her through six hatchways, more or less, by twelve
winches or so, with
clatter and hurry and
racket and heat, in a
cloud of steam and a mess of coal-dust. As long as you keep her
propeller under water and take care, say, not to fling down barrels
of oil on top of bales of silk, or
deposit an iron bridge-girder of
five ton or so upon a bed of coffee-bags, you have done about all
in the way of duty that the cry for
promptdespatch will allow you
to do.
XIV.
The sailing-ship, when I knew her in her days of
perfection, was a
sensible creature. When I say her days of
perfection, I mean
perfection of build, gear, seaworthy qualities and case of
handling, not the
perfection of speed. That quality has departed
with the change of building material. No iron ship of yesterday
ever attained the marvels of speed which the
seamanship of men
famous in their time had obtained from their
wooden, copper-sheeted
predecessors. Everything had been done to make the iron ship
perfect, but no wit of man had managed to
devise an efficient
coating
composition to keep her bottom clean with the smooth
cleanness of yellow metal sheeting. After a spell of a few weeks
at sea, an iron ship begins to lag as if she had grown tired too
soon. It is only her bottom that is getting foul. A very little
affects the speed of an iron ship which is not
driven on by a
merciless propeller. Often it is impossible to tell what
inconsiderate
trifle puts her off her
stride. A certain
mysteriousness hangs around the quality of speed as it was
displayed by the old sailing-ships commanded by a
competentseaman.
In those days the speed depended upon the
seaman;
therefore, apart
from the laws, rules, and regulations for the good
preservation of
his cargo, he was careful of his loading, - or what is technically
called the trim of his ship. Some ships sailed fast on an even
keel, others had to be trimmed quite one foot by the stern, and I
have heard of a ship that gave her best speed on a wind when so
loaded as to float a couple of inches by the head.
I call to mind a winter
landscape in Amsterdam - a flat foreground
of waste land, with here and there stacks of
timber, like the huts
of a camp of some very
miserable tribe; the long stretch of the
Handelskade; cold, stone-faced quays, with the snow-sprinkled
ground and the hard,
frozen water of the canal, in which were set
ships one behind another with their
frosty mooring-ropes hanging
slack and their decks idle and deserted, because, as the master
stevedore (a gentle, pale person, with a few golden hairs on his
chin and a reddened nose) informed me, their cargoes were
frozen-in
up-country on barges and schuyts. In the distance, beyond the
waste ground, and
runningparallel with the line of ships, a line
of brown, warm-toned houses seemed bowed under snow-laden roofs.
From afar at the end of Tsar Peter Straat, issued in the
frosty air
the
tinkle of bells of the horse tramcars, appearing and
disappearing in the
opening between the buildings, like little toy
carriages harnessed with toy horses and played with by people that
appeared no bigger than children.
I was, as the French say,
biting my fists with
impatience for that
cargo
frozen up-country; with rage at that canal set fast, at the
wintry and deserted
aspect of all those ships that seemed to decay
in grim
depression for want of the open water. I was chief mate,
and very much alone. Directly I had joined I received from my
owners instructions to send all the ship's apprentices away on
leave together, because in such weather there was nothing for
anybody to do, unless to keep up a fire in the cabin stove. That
was attended to by a snuffy and mop-headed, inconceivably dirty,
and weirdly toothless Dutch ship-keeper, who could hardly speak
three words of English, but who must have had some considerable
knowledge of the language, since he managed
invariably to interpret
in the
contrary sense everything that was said to him.
Notwithstanding the little iron stove, the ink froze on the swing-
table in the cabin, and I found it more
convenient to go
ashorestumbling over the
arctic waste-land and shivering in glazed
tramcars in order to write my evening letter to my owners in a
gorgeous cafe in the centre of the town. It was an
immense place,
lofty and gilt, upholstered in red plush, full of electric lights
and so
thoroughly warmed that even the
marble tables felt tepid to