subsection

Night Gambling

01KG8AKWJQJEMRQ4S1WW4K3JFW

Properties

description
# Night Gambling ## Overview - What this is (type, form, dates, scope) This is a subsection of text extracted from the novel *White-Jacket* and is labeled "Night Gambling". It describes the clandestine gambling activities that take place on a man-of-war ship. The text was extracted on January 30, 2026, and is part of the [Melville Complete Works](arke:01KG89HMDZKNY753EZE1CJ8HZW) collection. ## Context - Background and provenance from related entities This subsection is part of [Chapter LXXIII. Night and Day Gambling in a Man-of-War.](arke:01KG8AJVA0MGBK23WN4PS84AQ6) within the novel *White-Jacket* ([white_jacket.txt](arke:01KG89J19NC56FFGBCM2SWEZZY)). The chapter discusses the prevalence of gambling among sailors and the measures taken to prevent it. The preceding section, [Introduction](arke:01KG8AKWJT3AA6X5AK9C2D6J1K), sets the stage by mentioning the permitted game of draughts and the strict prohibition of gambling. This subsection is followed by another subsection, [Day Gambling](arke:01KG8AKWJT799BWSQPGFFD7ZXW), which likely describes gambling that occurs during the day. ## Contents - What it contains, key subjects and details The text describes the environment and methods used by sailors for gambling at night. It highlights the darkness of the berth-deck, the use of hammocks to create hidden spaces, and the role of the master-at-arms and ship's corporals in attempting to catch the gamblers. It mentions the practice of bribing a shipmate to act as a spy and the consequences for those caught, including being "dragged into the brig there to await a dozen lashes in the morning." The author also recounts being startled awake by the sudden breaking up of a gambling game.
description_generated_at
2026-01-30T20:49:59.156Z
description_model
gemini-2.5-flash-lite
description_title
Night Gambling
end_line
11753
extracted_at
2026-01-30T20:48:16.646Z
extracted_by
structure-extraction-lambda
start_line
11700
text
Sable night, which, since the beginning of the world, has winked and looked on at so many deeds of iniquity—night is the time usually selected for their operations by man-of-war gamblers. The place pitched upon is generally the berth-deck, where the hammocks are swung, and which is lighted so stintedly as not to disturb the sleeping seamen with any obtruding glare. In so spacious an area the two lanterns swinging from the stanchions diffuse a subdued illumination, like a night-taper in the apartment of some invalid. Owing to their position, also, these lanterns are far from shedding an impartial light, however dim, but fling long angular rays here and there, like burglar’s dark-lanterns in the fifty-acre vaults of the West India Docks on the Thames. It may well be imagined, therefore, how well adapted is this mysterious and subterranean Hall of Eblis to the clandestine proceedings of gamblers, especially as the hammocks not only hang thickly, but many of them swing very low, within two feet of the floor, thus forming innumerable little canvas glens, grottoes, nooks, corners, and crannies, where a good deal of wickedness may be practiced by the wary with considerable impunity. Now the master-at-arms, assisted by his mates, the ship’s corporals, reigns supreme in these bowels of the ship. Throughout the night these policemen relieve each other at standing guard over the premises; and, except when the watches are called, they sit in the midst of a profound silence, only invaded by trumpeters’ snores, or the ramblings of some old sheet-anchor-man in his sleep. The two ship’s corporals went among the sailors by the names of Leggs and Pounce; Pounce had been a policeman, it was said, in Liverpool; Leggs, a turnkey attached to “The Tombs” in New York. Hence their education eminently fitted them for their stations; and Bland, the master-at-arms, ravished with their dexterity in prying out offenders, used to call them his two right hands. When man-of-war’s-men desire to gamble, they appoint the hour, and select some certain corner, in some certain shadow, behind some certain hammock. They then contribute a small sum toward a joint fund, to be invested in a bribe for some argus-eyed shipmate, who shall play the part of a spy upon the master-at-arms and corporals while the gaming is in progress. In nine cases out of ten these arrangements are so cunning and comprehensive, that the gamblers, eluding all vigilance, conclude their game unmolested. But now and then, seduced into unwariness, or perhaps, from parsimony, being unwilling to employ the services of a spy, they are suddenly lighted upon by the constables, remorselessly collared, and dragged into the brig there to await a dozen lashes in the morning. Several times at midnight I have been startled out of a sound sleep by a sudden, violent rush under my hammock, caused by the abrupt breaking up of some nest of gamblers, who have scattered in all directions, brushing under the tiers of swinging pallets, and setting them all in a rocking commotion.
title
Night Gambling

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