Master & Commander by Patrick O’Brian

‘You must come to us one Thursday morning and see how the bosun’s mate loveth our defaulters,’ said Jack.

Colonel Pitt, who had been staring heavily at the banker with an undisguised, boorish contempt, broke out into a guffaw and then left, excusing himself on the grounds of regimental business. Jack was about to follow him when Mr Ellis desired him to stay – he begged the favour of a few words.

‘I do a certain amount of business for Mrs Jordan, and I have the honour, the great honour, of being presented to the Duke of Clarence,’ he began, impressively. ‘Have you ever seen him?’

‘I am acquainted with His Highness,’ said Jack, who had been shipmates with that singularly unattractive hot-headed cold-hearted bullying Hanoverian.

‘I ventured to mention our Henry and said we hoped to make an officer of him, and he condescended to advise the sending of him to sea. Now, my wife and I have considered it carefully, and we prefer a little boat to a ship of the line,

because they are sometimes rather mixed, if you understand me, and my wife is very particular – she is a Plantagenet; besides, some of these captains want their young gentlemen to have an allowance of fifty pounds per annum.’

‘I always insist that their friends should guarantee my midshipmen at least fifty,’ said Jack.

‘Oh,’ said Mr Ellis, a little dashed. ‘Oh. But I dare say a good many of the things can be picked up second-hand. Not that I care about that – at the beginning of the war all of us in the alley sent His Majesty an address saying we should support him with our lives and fortunes. I don’t mind fifty quid, or even more, so long as the ship is genteel. My wife’s old friend Mrs H was telling us about you, sir; and what is more, you are a thorough-going Tory, just like me. And yesterday we caught sight of Lieutenant Dillon; who is Lord Kenmare’s nephew, I understand, and has a pretty little estate of his own – seems quite the gentleman, So to put it in a nutshell, sir, if you will take my boy I shall be very much

obliged to you. And allow me to add,’ he said, with an awkward jocularity, clearly against his own better judgment, ‘what with my inside knowledge and experience of the market, you won’t regret it. You’ll find your advantage, I warrant you, hee, hee!’

‘Let us join the ladies,’ said Captain Harte, actually blushing for his guest.

‘The best thing is to take him to sea for a month or so,’ said Jack, standing up. ‘Then he can see how he likes the service and whether he is suited for it; and we can speak of it again.’

‘I am sorry to have let you in for that,’ he said, taking Stephen’s arm and guiding him down Pigtail Stairs, where the green lizards darted along the torrid wall. ‘I had no notion Molly Harte was capable of giving such a wretched dinner – cannot think what has come over her. Did you remark that soldier?’

‘The one in scarlet and gold, with boots?’

‘Yes. Now he was a perfect example of what I was saying,

that the army is divided into two sorts – the one as kind and gentle as ever you could wish, just like my dear old uncle, and the other heavy, lumpish brutes like that fellow. Quite unlike the Navy. I have seen it again and again, and I still cannot understand it. How do the two sorts live together? I wish he may not be a nuisance to Mrs Harte – she is sometimes very free and unguarded, quite unsuspecting -can be imposed upon.’

‘The man whose name I forget, the money-man, was an eminently curious study,’ said Stephen.

‘Oh, him,’ said Jack, with an utter want of interest. ‘What do you expect, when a fellow sits thinking about money all day long? And they can never hold their wine, those sorts of people. Harte must be very much in his debt to have him in the house.’

‘Oh, he was a dull ignorant superficial darting foolish prating creature in himself, to be sure, but I found him truly fascinating. The pure bourgeois in a state of social ferment.

There was that typical costive, haemorrhoidal facies, the knock-knees, the drooping shoulders, the flat feet splayed out, the ill breath, the large staring eyes, the meek complacency; and, of course, you noticed that womanly insistence upon authority and beating once he was thoroughly drunk? I would wager that he is very nearly impotent: that would account for the woman’s restless garrulity, her desire for predominance, absurdly combined with those girlish ways, and her thinning hair – she will be bald in a year or so.’

‘It might be just as well if everybody were impotent,’ said Jack sombrely. ‘It would save a world of trouble.’

‘And having seen the parents I am impatient to see this youth, the fruit of their strangely unattractive loins: will he be a wretched mammothrept? A little corporal? Or will the resiliency of childhood . . .

‘He will be the usual damned little nuisance, I dare say; but at least we shall know whether there is anything to be made of him by the time we are back from Alexandria. We are not saddled with him for the rest of the commission.’

‘Did you say Alexandria?’

‘Yes.’

‘In Lower Egypt?’

‘Yes. Did I not tell you? We are to run an errand to Sir Sidney Smith’s squadron before our next cruise. He is watching the French, you know.’

‘Alexandria,’ said Stephen, stopping in the middle of the quay. ‘0 joy. I wonder you did not cry out with delight the moment you saw me. What an indulgent admiral – paler classis – 0

how I value that worthy man!’

‘Why, ’tis no more than a straight run up and down the Mediterranean, about six hundred leagues each way, with precious little chance of seeing a prize either coming or going.’

‘I did not think you could have been such an earthling,’ cried Stephen. ‘For shame.

Alexandria is classic ground.’

‘So it is,’ said Jack, his good nature and pleasure in life flooding back at the sight of Stephen’s delight. ‘And with any luck I dare say we shall have a sight of the mountains of Candia, too. But come, we must get aboard: if we go on

standing here we shall be run down.’

Chapter Nine

‘It is ungrateful in me to repine,’ he wrote, ‘but when I think that I might have paced the burning sands of Libya, filled (as Goldsmith tells us) with serpents of various malignity; that I might have trodden the Canopic shore, have beheld the ibis, the Mareotic grallatores in their myriads, even perhaps the crocodile himself; that I was whirled past the northern coast of Candia, with Mount Ida in sight all day long; that at a given moment Cythera was no more than half an hour away, and yet for all my pleas no halt to be made, no “heaving to”; and when I reflect upon the wonders that lay at so short a distance from our course the Cyclades, the Peloponnese, great Athens, and yet no deviation allowed, no not for half a day – why, then I am obliged to restrain myself from wishing Jack Aubrey’s soul to the devil. Yet on the other hand, when I look over these notes not as a series of unfulfilled potentialities but as the record of positive accomplishment, how many causes have not I for rational exultation! The Homeric sea (if not the Homeric land); the pelican; the great white shark the seamen so obligingly fished up; the holothurians; euspongia mollissima (the same that Achilles stuffed his helmet with, iaith Poggius); the non-descript gull; the turtles! Again, these weeks have been among the most peaceful 1 have known: they might have been among the happiest, jf I had not been so aware that JA and jD might kill one another, in the civillest way in the world, at the next point of land: for it seems these things cannot take place at sea. JA is still deeply wounded about some remarks concerning the Cacafuego -feels there is a reflexion upon his courage – cannot bear it it preys upon him. And JD, though quieter now, is wholly unpredictable: he is full of contained rage and unhappiness

that will break out in some way; but I cannot tell what. It is not unlike sitting on a barrel of gunpowder in a busy forge, with sparks flying about (the sparks of my figure being the occasions of offence).’

Indeed, but for this tension, this travelling cloud, it would have been difficult to imagine a pleasanter way of spending the late summer than sailing across the whole width of the Mediterranean as fast as the sloop could fly. She flew a good deal faster now that Jack had hit upon her happiest trim, restowing her hold to bring her by the stern and restoring her masts to the rake her Spanish builders had intended. What is more, the brothers Sponge, with a dozen of the Sophie’s swimmers under their instruction, had spent every moment of the long calms in Greek waters (their native element) scraping her bottom; and Stephen could remember an evening when he had sat there in the warm, deepening twilight, watching the sea; it had barely a ruffle on its surface, and yet the Sophie picked up enough moving air with her topgallants to draw a long straight whispering furrow across the water, a line brilliant with unearthly phosphorescence, visible for quarter of a mile behind her. Days and nights of unbelievable purity. Nights when the steady Ionian breeze rounded the square mainsail

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