- description
- # VI
## Overview
This segment, labeled "VI," is a portion of the text from the novel "[Billy Budd and Other Prose Pieces](arke:01KG6GJKJ0PQQH41HGQ3BBMH23)". It was extracted from the file "[billy_budd.txt](arke:01KG6FXSCNX5F3D880P3YP3PKR)" and is part of the "[Test Collection](arke:01KG2T49K0H5GDRB0G4YDTPG8H)". The segment spans from line 911 to line 976 of the source text.
## Context
This segment follows section "V" and precedes section "VII" within the larger work. It focuses on the character of Captain Vere, the commander of the _Indomitable_. The text describes Vere as an exceptional individual, a seasoned sea-officer with a deep intellectual curiosity and a love for books. Unlike many of his contemporaries, his service had not entirely consumed his personality, leaving him with a penchant for history, biography, and philosophical writings. The narrative highlights his intellectual independence and his reasoned opposition to radical social and political ideas prevalent in his era, which he viewed as detrimental to lasting institutions and the peace of mankind. His colleagues sometimes perceived him as pedantic due to his tendency to cite historical or classical examples in conversation, a trait stemming from his direct and honest nature.
## Contents
This segment delves into the character of Captain Vere, detailing his intellectual pursuits and his philosophical outlook. It contrasts his reserved nature and scholarly inclinations with the more conventional expectations of his naval peers. The text emphasizes Vere's thoughtful engagement with ideas and his grounded convictions, which served as a bulwark against the shifting tides of opinion during a turbulent period. It also touches upon how his intellectual depth and literary references were sometimes misunderstood by his more pragmatic associates, who affectionately, yet perhaps critically, referred to him as "Starry Vere."
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- VI
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- text
- In view of the part that the commander of the _Indomitable_ plays in
scenes shortly to follow, it may be well to fill out that sketch of him
outlined in the previous chapter. Aside from his qualities as a
sea-officer Captain Vere was an exceptional character. Unlike no few of
England’s renowned sailors, long and arduous service with signal
devotion to it, had not resulted in absorbing and _salting_ the entire
man. He had a marked leaning toward everything intellectual. He loved
books, never going to sea without a newly replenished library, compact
but of the best. The isolated leisure, in some cases so wearisome,
falling at intervals to commanders even during a war-cruise, never was
tedious to Captain Vere. With nothing of that literary taste which less
heeds the thing conveyed than the vehicle, his bias was toward those
books to which every serious mind of superior order occupying any active
post of authority in the world, naturally inclines; books treating of
actual men and events, no matter of what era--history, biography, and
unconventional writers who, free from cant and convention, like
Montaigne, honestly, and in the spirit of common sense, philosophise
upon realities.
In this love of reading he found confirmation of his own more reserved
thoughts--confirmation which he had vainly sought in social converse, so
that as touching most fundamental topics, there had got to be
established in him some positive convictions which he felt would abide
in him essentially unmodified so long as his intelligent part remained
unimpaired. In view of the humbled period in which his lot was cast,
this was well for him. His settled convictions were as a dyke against
those invading waters of novel opinion, social, political, and
otherwise, which carried away as in a torrent no few minds in those
days, minds by nature not inferior to his own. While other members of
that aristocracy to which by birth he belonged were incensed at the
innovators mainly because their theories were inimical to the privileged
classes, Captain Vere disinterestedly opposed them not alone because
they seemed to him incapable of embodiment in lasting institutions, but
at war with the world and the peace of mankind.
With minds less stored than his and less earnest, some officers of his
rank, with whom at times he would necessarily consort, found him lacking
in the companionable quality, a dry and bookish gentleman as they
deemed. Upon any chance withdrawal from their company one would be apt
to say to another something like this! ‘Vere is a noble fellow, “Starry
Vere.” ’Spite the Gazettes Sir Horatio is at bottom scarce a better
seaman or fighter. But between you and me now, don’t you think there is
a queer streak of the pedantic running through him? Yes, like the King’s
yarn in a coil of navy-rope.’
Some apparent ground there was for this sort of confidential criticism,
since not only did the captain’s discourse never fall into the jocosely
familiar, but in illustrating any point touching the stirring personages
and events of the time, he would cite some historical character or
incident of antiquity with the same easy air that he would cite from the
moderns. He seemed unmindful of the circumstance that to his bluff
company such allusions, however pertinent they might really be, were
altogether alien to men whose reading was mainly confined to the
journals. But considerateness in such matters is not easy in natures
constituted like Captain Vere’s. Their honesty prescribes to them
directness, sometimes far-reaching like that of a migratory fowl that in
its flight never heeds when it crosses a frontier.
------------------------------------------------------------------------
VII
- title
- VI