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Chapter XXIII
Chapter XXIII
New Ship and Shipmates - My Watchmate
Tuesday, Sept. 8th. This was my first day`s duty on board the ship; and
though a sailor`s life is a sailor`s life wherever it may be, yet I found
everything very different here from the customs of the brig Pilgrim. After all
hands were called, at daybreak, three minutes and a half were allowed for
every man to dress and come on deck, and if any were longer than that, they
were sure to be overhauled by the mate, who was always on deck, and making
himself heard all over the ship. The head-pump was then rigged, and the
decks washed down by the second and third mates; the chief mate walking the
quarter-deck and keeping a general supervision, but not deigning to touch a
bucket or a brush. Inside and out, fore and aft, upper deck and between decks,
steerage and forecastle, rail, bulwarks, and water-ways, were washed,
scrubbed and scraped with brooms and canvas, and the decks were wet and sanded
all over, and then holystoned. The holystone is a large, soft stone, smooth on
the bottom, with long ropes attached to each end, by which the crew keep it
sliding fore and aft, over the wet, sanded decks. Smaller hand-stones, which
the sailors call "prayer-books," are used to scrub in among the crevices and
narrow places, where the large holystone will not go. An hour or two, we were
kept at this work, when the head-pump was manned, and all the sand washed
off the decks and sides. Then came swabs and squilgees; and after the decks
were dry, each one went to his particular morning job. There were five boats
belonging to the ship, - launch, pinnace, jolly-boat, larboard quarter -
boat, and gig, - each of which had a coxswain, who had charge of it, and was
answerable for the order and cleanness of it. The rest of the cleaning was
divided among the crew; one having the brass and composition work about the
capstan; another the bell, which was of brass, and kept as bright as a gilt
button; a third, the harness-cask; another, the man-rope stanchions;
others, the steps of the forecastle and hatchways, which were hauled up and
holystoned. Each of these jobs must be finished before breakfast; and, in the
meantime, the rest of the crew filled the scuttle-butt, and the cook scraped
his kids (wooden tubs out of which the sailors eat) and polished the hoops,
and placed them before the galley, to await inspection. When the decks were
dry, the lord paramount made his appearance on the quarter-deck, and took a
few turns, when eight bells were struck, and all hands went to breakfast. Half
an hour was allowed for breakfast, when all hands were called again; the kids,
pots, bread-bags, etc., stowed away; and, this morning, preparations were
made for getting under weigh. We paid out on the chain by which we swung; hove
in on the other; catted the anchor; and hove short on the first. This work was
done in shorter time than was usual on board the brig; for though everything
was more than twice as large and heavy, the cat-block being as much as a man
could lift, and the chain as large as three of the Pilgrim`s, yet there was a
plenty of room to move about in, more discipline and system, more men, and
more good will. Every one seemed ambitious to do his best: officers and men
knew their duty, and all went well. As soon as she was hove short, the mate on
the forecastle, gave the order to loose the sails, and, in an instant, every
one sprung into the rigging, up the shrouds, and out on the yards, scrambling
by one another, the first up the best fellow, - cast off the yard-arm
gaskets and bunt gaskets, and one man remained on each yard, holding the bunt
jigger with a turn round the tye, all ready to let go, while the rest laid
down to man the sheets and halyards. The mate then hailed the yards - "All
ready forward?" - "All ready the cross-jack yards?" etc., etc., and "Aye,
aye, sir!" being returned from each, the word was given to let go; and in the
twinkling of an eye, the ship, which had shown nothing but her bare yards, was
covered with her loose canvas, from the royal-mast-heads to the decks.
Every one then laid down, except one man in each top, to overhaul the rigging,
and the topsails were hoisted and sheeted home; all three yards going to the
mast-head at once, the larboard watch hoisting the fore, the starboard watch
the main, and five light hands, (of whom I was one,) picked from the two
watches, the mizen. The yards were then trimmed, the anchor weighed, the cat -
block hooked on, the fall stretched out, manned by "all hands and the cook,"
and the anchor brought to the head with "cheerily men!" in full chorus. The
ship being now under weigh, the light sails were set, one after another, and
she was under full sail, before she had passed the sandy point. The fore
royal, which fell to my lot, (being in the mate`s watch,) was more than twice
as large as that of the Pilgrim, and, though I could handle the brig`s easily,
I found my hands full, with this, especially as there were no jacks to the
ship; everything being for neatness, and nothing left for Jack to hold on by,
but his eyelids.
As soon as we were beyond the point, and all sail out, the order was
given, "Go below the watch!" and the crew said that, ever since they had been
on the coast, they had had "watch and watch," while going from port to port;
and, in fact, everything showed that, though strict discipline was kept, and
the utmost was required of every man, in the way of his duty, yet, on the
whole, there was very good usage on board. Each one knew that he must be a
man, and show himself smart when at his duty, yet every one was satisfied with
the usage; and a contented crew, agreeing with one another, and finding no
fault, was a contrast indeed with the small, hard-used, dissatisfied,
grumbling, desponding crew of the Pilgrim.
It being the turn of our watch to go below, the men went to work, mending
their clothes, and doing other little things for themselves; and I, having go
my wardrobe in complete order at San Diego, had nothing to do but to read. I
accordingly overhauled the chests of the crew, but found nothing that suited
me exactly, until one of the men said he had a book which "told all about a
great highwayman," at the bottom of his chest, and producing it, I found, to
my surprise and joy, that it was nothing else than Bulwer`s Paul Clifford.
This, I seized immediately, and going to my hammock, lay there, swinging and
reading, until the watch was out. The between-decks were clear, the
hatchways open, and a cool breeze blowing through them, the ship under easy
way, and everything comfortable. I had just got well into the story, when
eight bells were struck, and we were all ordered to dinner. After dinner came
our watch on deck for four hours, and, at four o`clock, I went below again,
turned into my hammock, and read until the dog watch. As no lights were
allowed after eight o`clock, there was no reading in the night watch. Having
light winds and calms, we were three days on the passage, and each watch
below, during the daytime, I spent in the same manner, until I had finished my
book. I shall never forget the enjoyment I derived from it. To come across
anything with the slightest claims to literary merit, was so unusual, that
this was a perfect feast to me. The brilliancy of the book, the succession of
capital hits, lively and characteristic sketches, kept me in a constant state
of pleasing sensations. It was far too good for a sailor. I could not expect
such fine times to last long.
While on deck, the regular work of the ship went on. The sailmaker and
carpenter worked between decks, and the crew had their work to do upon the
rigging, drawing yarns, making spun-yarn, etc., as usual in merchantmen. The
night watches were much more pleasant than on board the Pilgrim. There, there
were so few in a watch, that, one being at the wheel, and another on the look
- out, there was no one left to talk with; but here, we had seven in a watch,
so that we had long yarns, in abundance. After two or three night watches, I
became quite well acquainted with all the larboard watch. The sailmaker was
the head man of the watch, and was generally considered the most experienced
seaman on board. He was a thoroughbred old man-of-war`s-man, had been to sea
twenty-two years, in all kinds of vessels - men-of-war, privateers, slavers,
and merchantmen; - everything except whalers, which a thorough sailor
despises, and will always steer clear of, if he can. He had, of course, been
in all parts of the world, and was remarkable for drawing a long bow. His
yarns frequently stretched through a watch, and kept all hands awake. They
were always amusing from their improbability, and, indeed, he never expected
to be believed, but spun them merely for amusement; and as he had some humor
and a good supply of man-of-war slang and sailor`s salt phrases, he always
made fun. Next to him in age and experience, and, of course, in standing in
the watch, was an Englishman, named Harris of whom I shall have more to say
hereafter. Then, came two or three Americans, who had been the common run of
European and South American voyages, and one who had been in a "spouter," and,
of course, had all the whaling stories to himself. Last of all, was a
broad-backed, thick-headed boy from Cape Cod, who had been in mackerel
schooners, and was making his first voyage in a square-rigged vessel. He was
born in Hingham, and of course was called "Bucketmaker." The other watch was
composed of about the same number. A tall, fine-looking Frenchman, with coal
- black whiskers and curly hair, a first-rate seaman, and named John, (one
name is enough for a sailor,) was the head man of the watch. Then came two
Americans (one of whom had been a dissipated young man of property and family,
and was reduced to duck trowsers and monthly wages,) a German, an English lad,
named Ben, who belonged on the mizen topsail yard with me, and was a good
sailor for his years, and two Boston boys just from the public schools. The
carpenter sometimes mustered in the starboard watch, and was an old sea-dog,
a Swede by birth, and accounted the best helmsman in the ship. This was our
ship`s company, beside cook and steward, who were blacks, three mates, and the
captain.
The second day out, the wind drew ahead, and we had to beat up the coast;
so that, in tacking ship, I could see the regulations of the vessel. Instead
of going wherever was most convenient, and running from place to place,
wherever work was to be done, each man had his station. A regular tacking and
wearing bill was made out. The chief mate commanded on the forecastle, and had
charge of the head sails and the forward part of the ship. Two of the best men
in the ship - the sailmaker from our watch, and John, the Frenchman, from the
other, worked the forecastle. The third mate commanded in the waist, and, with
the carpenter and one man, worked the main tack and bowlines; the cook,
ex-officio, the fore sheet, and the steward the main. The second mate had
charge of the after yards, and let go the lee fore and main braces. I was
stationed at the weather cross-jack braces; three other light hands at the
lee; one boy at the spanker-sheet and guy; a man and a boy at the main
topsail, top-gallant, and royal braces; and all the rest of the crew - men and
boys - tallied on to the main brace. Every one here knew his station, must be
there when all hands were called to put the ship about, and was answerable for
every rope committed to him. Each man`s rope must be let go and hauled in at
the order, properly made fast, and neatly coiled away when the ship was about.
As soon as all hands are at their stations, the captain, who stands on the
weather side of the quarter-deck, makes a sign to the man at the wheel to put
it down, and calls out "Helm`s a lee`!" "Helm`s a lee`!" answers the mate on
the forecastle, and the head sheets are let go. "Raise tacks and sheets!" says
the captain; "tacks and sheets!" is passed forward, and the fore tack and main
sheet are let go. The next thing is to haul taught for a swing. The weather
cross-jack braces and the lee main braces are each belayed together upon two
pins, and ready to be let go; and the opposite braces hauled taught. "Main
topsail haul!" shouts the captain; the braces are let go; and if he has taken
his time well, the yards swing round like a top; but if he is too late, or too
soon, it is like drawing teeth. The after yards are then braced up and
belayed, the main sheet hauled aft, the spanker eased over to leeward, and the
men from the braces stand by the head yards. "Let go and haul!" says the
captain; the second mate lets go the weather fore braces, and the men haul in
to leeward. The mate, on the forecastle, looks out for the head yards. "Well,
the fore topsail yard!" "top-gallant yard`s well!" "Royal yard too much! Haul
into windward! So! well that!" "Well all!" Then the starboard watch board the
main tack, and the larboard watch lay forward and board the fore tack and haul
down the jib sheet, clapping a tackle upon it, if it blows very fresh. The
after yards are then trimmed, the captain generally looking out for them
himself. "Well the cross-jack yard!" "Small pull the main top-gallant yard!"
"Well that!" "Well the mizen top-gallant yard!" "cross-jack yards all well!"
"Well all aft!" "Haul taught to windward!" Everything being now trimmed and in
order, each man coils up the rigging at his own station, and the order is
given - "Go below the watch!"
During the last twenty-four hours of the passage, we beat off and on
the land, making a tack about once in four hours, so that I had a sufficient
opportunity to observe the working of the ship; and certainly, it took no more
men to brace about this ship`s lower yards, which were more than fifty feet
square, than it did those of the Pilgrim, which were not much more than half
the size; so much depends upon the manner in which the braces run, and the
state of the blocks; and Captain Wilson, of the Ayacucho, who was afterwards a
passenger with us, upon a trip to windward, said he had no doubt that our ship
worked two men lighter than his brig.
Friday, Sept. 11th. This morning, at four o`clock, went below, San Pedro
point being about two leagues ahead, and the ship going on under studding -
sails. In about an hour we were waked up by the hauling of the chain about
decks, and in a few minutes "All hands ahoy!" was called; and we were all at
work, hauling in and making up the studding-sails, overhauling the chain
forward, and getting the anchors ready. "The Pilgrim is there at anchor," said
some one, as we were running about decks; and taking a moment`s look over the
rail, I saw my old friend, deeply laden, lying at anchor inside of the kelp.
In coming to anchor, as well as in tacking, each one had his station and duty.
The light sails were clewed up and furled, the courses hauled up and the jibs
down; then came the topsails in the buntlines, and the anchor let go. As soon
as she was well at anchor, all hands lay aloft to furl the topsails; and this,
I soon found, was a great matter on board this ship; for every sailor knows
that a vessel is judged of, a good deal, by the furl of her sails. The third
mate, a sailmaker, and the larbosrd watch went upon the fore topsail yard; the
second mate, carpenter, and the starboard watch upon the main; and myself and
the English lad, and the two Boston boys, and the young Cape-Cod man, furled
the mizen topsail. This sail belonged to us altogether, to reef and to furl,
and not a man was allowed to come upon our yard. The mate took us under his
special care, frequently making us furl the sail over, three or four times,
until we got the bunt up to a perfect cone, and the whole sail without a
wrinkle. As soon as each sail was hauled up and the bunt made, the jigger was
bent on to the slack of the buntlines, and the bunt triced up, on deck. The
mate then took his place between the knight-heads to "twig" the fore, on the
windlass to twig the main, and at the foot of the mainmast, for the mizen; and
if anything was wrong, - too much bunt on one side, clews too taught or too
slack, or any sail abaft the yard, - the whole must be dropped again. When all
was right, the bunts were triced well up, the yard-arm gaskets passed, so as
not to leave a wrinkle forward of the yard-short gaskets with turns close
together.
From the moment of letting go the anchor, when the captain ceases his
care of things, the chief mate is the great man. With a voice like a young
lion, he was hallooing and bawling, in all directions, making everything fly,
and, at the same time, doing everything well. He was quite a contrast to the
worthy, quiet, unobtrusive mate of the Pilgrim; not so estimable a man,
perhaps, but a far better mate of a vessel; and the entire change in Captain
T___`s conduct, since he took command of the ship, was owing, no doubt, in a
great measure, to this fact. If the chief officer wants force, discipline
slackens, everything gets out of joint, the captain interferes continually;
that makes a difficulty between them, which encourages the crew, and the whole
ends in a three-sided quarrel. But Mr. Brown (the mate of the Alert) wanted no
help from anybody; took everything into his own hands; and was more likely to
encroach upon the authority of the master, than to need any spurring. Captain
T___ gave his directions to the mate in private, and, except in coming to
anchor, getting, under weigh, tacking, reefing topsails, and other
"all-hands-work," seldom appeared in person. This is the proper state of
things, and while this lasts, and there is a good understanding aft,
everything will go on well.
Having furled all the sails, the royal yards were next to be sent down.
The English lad and myself sent down the main, which was larger than the
Pilgrim`s main top-gallant yard; two more light hands, the fore; and one boy,
the mizen. This order, we always kept while on the coast; sending them up and
down every time we came in and went out of port. They were all tripped and
lowered together, the main on the starboard side, and the fore and mizen, to
port. No sooner was she all snug, than tackles were got up on the yards and
stays, and the long-boat and pinnace hove out. The swinging booms were then
guyed out, and the boats made fast by geswarps, and everything in harbor
style. After breakfast, the hatches were taken off, and all got ready to
receive hides from the Pilgrim. All day, boats were passing and repassing,
until we had taken her hides from her, and left her in ballast trim. These
hides made but little show in our hold, though they had loaded the Pilgrim
down to the water`s edge. This changing of the hides settled the question of
the destination of the two vessels, which had been one of some speculation to
us. We were to remain in the leeward ports, while the Pilgrim was to sail, the
next morning, for San Francisco. After we had knocked off work, and cleared up
decks for the night, my friend S___ came on board, and spent an hour with me
in our berth between decks. The Pilgrim`s crew envied me my place on board the
ship, and seemed to think that I had got a little to windward of them;
especially in the matter of going home first. S___ was determined to go home
on the Alert, by begging or buying; if Captain T___ would not let him come on
other terms, he would purchase an exchange with some one of the crew. The
prospect of another year after the Alert should sail, was rather "too much of
the monkey." About seven o`clock, the mate came down into the steerage, in
fine trim for fun, roused the boys out of the berth, turned up the carpenter
with his fiddle, sent the steward with lights to put in the between-decks, and
set all hands to dancing. The between-decks were high enough to allow of
jumping; and being clear, and white, from holystoning, made a fine
dancing-hall. Some of the Pilgrim`s crew were in the forecastle, and we all
turned-to and had a regular sailor`s shuffle, till eight bells. The Cape-Cod
boy could dance the true fisherman`s jig, barefooted, knocking with his heels,
and slapping the decks with his bare feet, in time with the music. This was a
favorite amusement of the mate`s, who always stood at the steerage door,
looking on, and if the boys would not dance, he hazed them round with a rope`s
end, much to the amusement of the men.
The next morning, according to the orders of the agent, the Pilgrim set
sail for the windward, to be gone three or four months. She got under weigh
with very little fuss, and came so near us as to throw a letter on board,
Captain Faucon standing at the tiller himself, and steering her as he would a
mackerel smack. When Captain T___ was in command of the Pilgrim, there was as
much preparation and ceremony as there would be in getting a seventy-four
under weigh. Captain Faucon was a sailor, every inch of him; he knew what a
ship was, and was as much at home in one, as a cobbler in his stall. I wanted
no better proof of this than the opinion of the ship`s crew, for they had been
six months under his command, and knew what he was; and if sailors allow their
captain to be a good seaman, you may be sure he is one, for that is a thing
they are not always ready to say.
After the Pilgrim left us, we lay three weeks at San Pedro, from the 11th
of September until the 2nd of October, engaged in the usual port duties of
landing cargo, taking off hides, etc., etc. These duties were much easier, and
went on much more agreeably, than on board the Pilgrim. "The more, the
merrier," is the sailor`s maxim; and a boat`s crew of a dozen could take off
all the hides brought down in a day, without much trouble, by division of
labor; and on shore, as well as on board, a good will, and no discontent or
grumbling, make everything go well. The officer, too, who usually went with
us, the third mate, was a fine young fellow, and made no unnecessary trouble;
so that we generally had quite a sociable time, and were glad to be relieved
from the restraint of the ship. While here, I often thought of the miserable,
gloomy weeks we had spent in this dull place, in the brig; discontent and hard
usage on board, and four hands to do all the work on shore. Give me a big
ship. There is more room, more hands, better outfit, better regulation, more
life, and more company. Another thing was better arranged here: we had a
regular gig`s crew. A light whale-boat, handsomely painted, and fitted out
with stern seats, yoke, tiller-ropes, etc., hung on the starboard quarter,
and was used as the gig. The youngest lad in the ship, a Boston boy about
thirteen years old, was coxswain of this boat, and had the entire charge of
her, to keep her clean, and have her in readiness to go and come at any hour.
Four light hands, of about the same size and age, of whom I was one, formed
the crew. Each had his oar and seat numbered, and we were obliged to be in our
places, have our oars scraped white, our tholepins in, and the fenders over
the side. The bow-man had charge of the boat-hook and painter, and the
coxswain of the rudder, yoke, and stern-sheets. Our duty was to carry the
captain and agent about, and passengers off and on; which last was no trifling
duty, as the people on shore have no boats, and every purchaser, from the boy
who buys his pair of shoes, to the trader who buys his casks and bales, were
to be taken off and on, in our boat. Some days, when people were coming and
going fast, we were in the boat, pulling off and on, all day long, with hardly
time for our meals; making, as we lay nearly three miles from shore, from
forty to fifty miles` rowing in a day. Still, we thought it the best berth in
the ship; for when the gig was employed, we had nothing to do with the cargo,
except small bundles which the passengers carried with them, and no hides to
carry, besides the opportunity of seeing everybody, making acquaintances,
hearing the news, etc. Unless the captain or agent were in the boat, we had no
officer with us, and often had fine times with the passengers, who were always
willing to talk and joke with us. Frequently, too, we were obliged to wait
several hours on shore; when we would haul the boat up on the beach, and
leaving one to watch her, go up to the nearest house, or spend the time in
strolling about the beach, picking up shells, or playing hopscotch, and other
games, on the hard sand. The rest of the crew never left the ship, except for
bringing heavy goods and taking off hides; and though we were always in the
water, the surf hardly leaving us a dry thread from morning till night, yet we
were young, and the climate was good, and we thought it much better than the
quiet, hum-drum drag and pull on board ship. We made the acquaintance of
nearly half of California; for, besides carrying everybody in our boat, - men,
women, and children, - all the messages, letters, and light packages went by
us, and being known by our dress, we found a ready reception everywhere.
At San Pedro, we had none of this amusement, for, there being but one
house in the place, we, of course, had but little company. All the variety
that I had, was riding, once a week, to the nearest rancho, to order a bullock
down for the ship.
The brig Catalina came in from San Diego, and being bound up to windward,
we both got under weigh at the same time, for a trial of speed up to Santa
Barbara, a distance of about eighty miles. We hove up and got under sail about
eleven o`clock at night, with a light land-breeze, which died away toward
morning, leaving us becalmed only a few miles from our anchoring-place. The
Catalina, being a small vessel, of less than half our size, put out sweeps and
got a boat ahead, and pulled out to sea, during the night, so that she had the
sea-breeze earlier and stronger than we did, and we had the mortification of
seeing her standing up the coast, with a fine breeze, the sea all ruffled
about her, while we were becalmed, in-shore. When the sea-breeze died
away, she was nearly out of sight; and toward the latter part of the
afternoon, the regular north-west wind set in fresh, we braced sharp upon
it, took a pull at every sheet, tack, and halyard, and stood after her, in
fine style, our ship being very good upon a taughtened bowline. We had nearly
five hours of fine sailing, beating up to windward, by long stretches in and
off shore, and evidently gaining upon the Catalina at every tack. When this
breeze left us, we were so near as to count the painted ports on her side.
Fortunately, the wind died away when we were on our inward tack, and she on
her outward, so we were in-shore, and caught the land-breeze first, which
came off upon our quarter, about the middle of the first watch. All hands were
turned-up, and we set all sail, to the skysails and the royal studding -
sails; and with these, we glided quietly through the water, leaving the
Catalina, which could not spread so much canvas as we, gradually astern, and,
by daylight, were off St. Buenaventura, and our antagonist nearly out of
sight. The sea-breeze, however, favored her again, while we were becalmed
under the headland, and laboring slowly along, she was abreast of us by noon.
Thus we continued, ahead, astern, and abreast of one another, alternately;
now, far out at sea, and again, close in under the shore. On the third
morning, we came into the great bay of Santa Barbara, two hours behind the
brig, and thus lost the bet; though, if the race had been to the point, we
should have beaten her by five or six hours. This, however, settled the
relative sailing of the vessels, for it was admitted that although she, being
small and light, could gain upon us in very light winds, yet whenever there
was breeze enough to set us agoing, we walked away from her like hauling in a
line; and in beating to windward, which is the best trial of a vessel, we had
much the advantage of her.
Sunday, Oct. 4th. This was the day of our arrival; and somehow or other,
our captain always managed not only to sail, but to come into port, on a
Sunday. The main reason for sailing on the Sabbath is not, as many people
suppose, because Sunday is thought a lucky day, but because it is a leisure
day. During the six days, the crew are employed upon the cargo and other
ship`s works, and the Sabbath, being their only day of rest, whatever
additional work can be thrown into Sunday, is so much gain to the owners. This
is the reason of our coasters, packets, etc., sailing on the Sabbath. They get
six good days` work out of the crew, and then throw all the labor of sailing
into the Sabbath. Thus it was with us, nearly all the time we were on the
coast, and many of our Sabbaths were lost entirely to us. The Catholics on
shore have no trading and make no journeys on Sunday, but the American has no
national religion, and likes to show his independence of priestcraft by doing
as he chooses on the Lord`s day.
Santa Barbara looked very much as it did when I left it five months
before: the long sand beach, with the heavy rollers, breaking upon it in a
continual roar, and the little town, imbedded on the plain, girt by its
amphitheatre of mountains. Day after day, the sun shone clear and bright upon
the wide bay and the red roofs of the houses; everything being as still as
death, the people really hardly seeming to earn their sun-light. Daylight
actually seemed thrown away upon them. We had a few visitors, and collected
about a hundred hides, and every night, at sundown, the gig was sent ashore,
to wait for the captain, who spent his evenings in the town. We always took
our monkey-jackets with us, and flint and steel, and made a fire on the
beach with the driftwood and the bushes we pulled from the neighboring
thickets, and lay down by it, on the sand. Sometimes we would stray up to the
town, if the captain was likely to stay late, and pass the time at some of the
houses, in which we were almost always well received by the inhabitants.
Sometimes earlier and sometimes later, the captain came down; when, after a
good drenching in the surf, we went aboard, changed our clothes, and turned in
for the night - yet not for all the night, for there was the anchor watch to
stand.
This leads me to speak of my watchmate for nine months - and, taking him
all in all, the most remarkable man I have ever seen - Tom Harris. An hour,
every night, while lying in port, Harris and myself had the deck to ourselves,
and walking fore and aft, night after night, for months, I learned his whole
character and history, and more about foreign nations, the habits of different
people, and especially the secrets of sailors` lives and hardships, and also
of practical seamanship, (in which he was abundantly capable of instructing
me,) than I could ever have learned elsewhere. But the most remarkable thing
about him, was the power of his mind. His memory was perfect; seeming to form
a regular chain, reaching from his earliest childhood up to the time I knew
him, without one link wanting. His power of calculation, too, was remarkable.
I called myself pretty quick at figures, and had been through a course of
mathematical studies; but, working by my head, I was unable to keep within
sight of this man, who had never been beyond his arithmetic: so rapid was his
calculation. He carried in his head not only a log-book of the whole voyage,
in which everything was complete and accurate, and from which no one ever
thought of appealing, but also an accurate registry of all the cargo; knowing,
precisely, where each thing was, and how many hides we took in at every port.
One night, he made a rough calculation of the number of hides that could
be stowed in the lower hold, between the fore and main masts, taking the depth
of hold and breadth of beam, (for he always knew the dimension of every part
of the ship, before he had been a month on board,) and the average area and
thickness of a hide; he came surprisingly near the number, as it afterwards
turned out. The mate frequently came to him to know the capacity of different
parts of the vessel, so he could tell the sailmaker very nearly the amount of
canvas he would want for each sail in the ship; for he knew the hoist of every
mast, and spread of every sail, on the head and foot, in feet and inches. When
we were at sea, he kept a running account, in his head, of the ship`s way -
the number of knots and the courses; and if the courses did not vary much
during the twenty-four hours, by taking the whole progress, and allowing so
many eighths southing or northing, to so many easting or westing; he would
make up his reckoning just before the captain took the sun at noon, and often
came wonderfully near the mark. Calculation of all kinds was his delight. He
had, in his chest, several volumes giving accounts of inventions in mechanics,
which he read with great pleasure, and made himself master of. I doubt if he
ever forgot anything that he read. The only thing in the way of poetry that he
ever read was Falconer`s Shipwreck, which he was delighted with, and whole
pages of which he could repeat. He knew the name of every sailor that had ever
been his shipmate, and also, of every vessel, captain, and officer, and the
principal dates of each voyage; and a sailor whom he afterwards fell in with,
who had been in a ship with Harris nearly twelve years before, was very much
surprised at having Harris tell him things about himself which he had entirely
forgotten. His facts, whether dates or events, no one thought of disputing;
and his opinions, few of the sailors dared to oppose; for, right or wrong, he
always had the best of the argument with them. His reasoning powers were
remarkable. I have had harder work maintaining an argument with him in a
watch, even when I knew myself to be right, and he was only doubting, than I
ever had before; not from his obstinacy, but from his acuteness. Give him only
a little knowledge of his subject, and, certainly among all the young men of
my acquaintance and standing at college, there was not one whom I had not
rather meet, than this man. I never answered a question from him, or advanced
an opinion to him, without thinking more than once. With an iron memory, he
seemed to have your whole past conversation at command, and if you said a
thing now which ill agreed with something said months before, he was sure to
have you on the hip. In fact, I always felt, when with him, that I was with no
common man. I had a positive respect for his powers of mind, and felt often
that if half the pains had been spent upon his education which are thrown
away, yearly, in our colleges, he would have been a man of great weight in
society. Like most self-taught men, he over-estimated the value of an
education; and this, I often told him, though I profited by it myself; for he
always treated me with respect, and often unnecessarily gave way to me, from
an over-estimate of my knowledge. For the intellectual capacities of all the
rest of the crew, captain and all, he had the most sovereign contempt. He was
a far better sailor, and probably a better navigator, than the captain, and
had more brains than all the after part of the ship put together. The sailors
said, "Tom`s got a head as long as the bowsprit," and if any one got into an
argument with him, they would call out - "Ah, Jack! you`d better drop that, as
you would a hot potato, for Tom will turn you inside out before you know it."
I recollect his posing me once on the subject of the Corn Laws. I was
called to stand my watch, and, coming on deck, found him there before me; and
we began, as usual, to walk fore and aft, in the waist. He talked about the
Corn Laws; asked me my opinion about them, which I gave him; and my reasons;
my small stock of which I set forth to the best advantage, supposing his
knowledge on the subject must be less than mine, if, indeed, he had any at
all. When I had got through, he took the liberty of differing from me, and, to
my surprise, brought arguments and facts connected with the subject which were
new to me, to which I was entirely unable to reply. I confessed that I knew
almost nothing of the subject, and expressed my surprise at the extent of his
information. He said that, a number of years before, while at a boarding house
in Liverpool, he had fallen in with a pamphlet on the subject, and, as it
contained calculations, had read it very carefully, and had ever since wished
to find some one who could add to his stock of knowledge on the question.
Although it was many years since he had seen the book, and it was a subject
with which he had no previous acquaintance, yet he had the chain of reasoning,
founded upon principles of political economy, perfect in his memory; and his
facts, so far as I could judge, were correct; at least, he stated them with
great precision. The principles of the steam engine, too, he was very familiar
with, having been several months on board of a steamboat, and made himself
master of its secrets. He knew every lunar star in both hemispheres, and was a
perfect master of his quadrant and sextant. Such was the man, who, at forty,
was still a dog before the mast, at twelve dollars a month. The reason of this
was to be found in his whole past life, as I had it, at different times, from
himself.
He was an Englishman, by birth, a native of Ilfracomb, in Devonshire. His
father was skipper of a small coaster, from Bristol, and dying, left him, when
quite young, to the care of his mother, by whose exertions he received a
common-school education, passing his winters at school and his summers in
the coasting trade, until his seventeenth year, when he left home to go upon
foreign voyages. Of his mother, he often spoke with the greatest respect, and
said that she was a strong-minded woman, and had the best system of
education he had ever known; a system which had made respectable men of his
three brothers, and failed only in him, from his own indomitable obstinacy.
One thing he often mentioned, in which he said his mother differed from all
other mothers that he had ever seen disciplining their children; that was,
that when he was out of humor and refused to eat, instead of putting his plate
away, as most mothers would, and saying that his hunger would bring him to it,
in time, she would stand over him and oblige him to eat it - every mouthful of
it. It was no fault of hers that he was what I saw him; and so great was his
sense of gratitude for her efforts, though unsuccessful, that he determined,
at the close of the voyage, to embark for home with all the wages he should
get, to spend with and for his mother, if perchance he should find her alive.
After leaving home, he had spent nearly twenty years, sailing upon all
sorts of voyages, generally out of the ports of New York and Boston. Twenty
years of vice! Every sin that a sailor knows, he had gone to the bottom of.
Several times he had been hauled up in the hospitals, and as often, the great
strength of his constitution had brought him out again in health. Several
times, too, from his known capacity, he had been promoted to the office of
chief mate, and as often, his conduct when in port, especially his
drunkenness, which neither fear nor ambition could induce him to abandon, put
him back into the forecastle. One night, when giving me an account of his
life, and lamenting the years of manhood he had thrown away, he said that
there, in the forecastle, at the foot of the steps - a chest of old clothes -
was the result of twenty-two years of hard labor and exposure - worked like
a horse, and treated like a dog. As he grew older, he began to feel the
necessity of some provision for his later years, and came gradually to the
conviction that rum had been his worst enemy. One night, in Havana, a young
shipmate of his was brought aboard drunk, with a dangerous gash in his head,
and his money and new clothes stripped from him. Harris had seen and been in
hundreds of such scenes as these, but in his then state of mind, it fixed his
determination, and he resolved never to taste another drop of strong drink, of
any kind He signed no pledge, and made no vow, but relied on his own strength
of purpose. The first thing with him was a reason, and then a resolution, and
the thing was done. The date of his resolution he knew, of course, to the very
hour. It was three years before I knew him, and during all that time, nothing
stronger than cider or coffee had passed his lips. The sailors never thought
of enticing Tom to take a glass, any more than they would of talking to the
ship`s compass. He was now a temperate man for life, and capable of filling
any berth in a ship, and many a high station there is on shore which is held
by a meaner man.
He understood the management of a ship upon scientific principles, and
could give the reason for hauling every rope; and a long experience, added to
careful observation at the time, and a perfect memory, gave him a knowledge of
the expedients and resorts in times of hazard, which was remarkable, and for
which I became much indebted to him, as he took the greatest pleasure in
opening his stores of information to me, in return for what I was able to do
for him. Stories of tyranny and hardship which had driven men to piracy; - of
the incredible ignorance of masters and mates, and of horrid brutality to the
sick, dead, and dying; as well as of the secret knavery and impositions
practised upon seamen by connivance of the owners, landlords, and officers;
all these he had, and I could not but believe them; for men who had known him
for fifteen years had never taken him even in an exaggeration, and, as I have
said, his statements were never disputed. I remember, among other things, his
speaking of a captain whom I had known by report, who never handed a thing to
a sailor, but put it on deck and kicked it to him; and of another, who was of
the best connections in Boston, who absolutely murdered a lad from Boston that
went out with him before the mast to Sumatra, by keeping him hard at work
while ill of the coast fever, and obliging him to sleep in the close steerage.
(The same captain has since died of the same fever on the same coast.)
In fact, taking together all that I learned from him of seamanship, of
the history of sailors` lives, of practical wisdom, and of human nature under
new circumstances, - a great history from which many are shut out, - I would
not part with the hours I spent in the watch with that man for any given hours
of my life passed in study and social intercourse.
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