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- 974
- text
- VII
The lieutenants and other commissioned gentlemen forming Captain Vere’s
staff it is not necessary here to particularise, nor needs it to make
mention of any of the warrant-officers. But among the petty officers was
one who, having much to do with the story, may as well be forthwith
introduced. This portrait I essay, but shall never hit it.
This was John Claggart, the master-at-arms. But that sea-title may to
landsmen seem somewhat equivocal. Originally, doubtless, that petty
officer’s function was the instruction of the men in the use of arms,
sword, or cutlass. But very long ago, owing to the advance in gunnery
making hand-to-hand encounters less frequent, and giving to nitre and
sulphur the pre-eminence over steel, that function ceased; the
master-at-arms of a great warship becoming a sort of chief of police
charged among other matters with the duty of preserving order on the
populous lower gun-decks.
Claggart was a man of about five-and-thirty, somewhat spare and tall,
yet of no ill figure upon the whole. His hand was too small and shapely
to have been accustomed to hard toil. The face was a notable one; the
features, all except the chin, cleanly cut as those on a Greek
medallion; yet the chin, beardless as Tecumseh’s, had something of the
strange protuberant heaviness in its make that recalled the prints of
the Rev. Dr. Titus Oates, the historical deponent with the clerical
drawl in the time of Charles II., and the fraud of the alleged Popish
Plot. It served Claggart in his office that his eye could cast a
tutoring glance. His brow was of the sort phrenologically associated
with more than average intellect; silken jet curls partly clustering
over it, making a foil to the pallor below, a pallor tinged with a faint
shade of amber akin to the hue of time-tinted marbles of old.
This complexion singularly contrasting with the red or deeply bronzed
visages of the sailors, and in part the result of his official seclusion
from the sunlight, though it was not exactly displeasing, nevertheless
seemed to hint of something defective or abnormal in the constitution
and blood. But his general aspect and manner were so suggestive of an
education and career incongruous with his naval function, that when not
actively engaged in it he looked like a man of high quality, social and
moral, who for reasons of his own was keeping incognito. Nothing was
known of his former life. It might be that he was an Englishman; and yet
there lurked a bit of accent in his speech suggesting that possibly he
was not such by birth, but through naturalisation in early childhood.
Among certain grizzled sea-gossips of the gun-decks and forecastle went
a rumour perdue that the master-at-arms was a chevalier who had
volunteered into the King’s Navy by way of compounding for some
mysterious swindle whereof he had been arraigned at the King’s Bench.
The fact that nobody could substantiate this report was, of course,
nothing against its secret currency. Such a rumour once started on the
gun-decks in reference to almost anyone below the rank of a commissioned
officer would, during the period assigned to this narrative, have seemed
not altogether wanting in credibility to the tarry old wiseacres of a
man-of-war crew. And indeed a man of Claggart’s accomplishments, without
prior nautical experience entering the Navy at mature life, as he did,
and necessarily allotted at the start to the lowest grade in it; a man,
too, who never made allusion to his previous life ashore; these were
circumstances which in the dearth of exact knowledge as to his true
antecedents opened to the invidious a vague field for unfavourable
surmise.
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