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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville
18

one hand holding by the rigging, he would absently gaze off at the
blank sea. At the presentation to him then of some minor matter
interrupting the current of his thoughts he would show more or
less irascibility; but instantly he would control it.

In the navy he was popularly known by the appellation-Starry
Vere. How such a designation happened to fall upon one who,
whatever his sterling qualities, was without any brilliant ones was
in this wise: A favorite kinsman, Lord Denton, a free-hearted
fellow, had been the first to meet and congratulate him upon his
return to England from his West Indian cruise; and but the day
previous turning
over a copy of Andrew Marvell’s poems, had lighted, not for the
first time however, upon the lines entitled Appleton House, the
name of one of the seats of their common ancestor, a hero in the
German wars of the seventeenth century, in which poem occur the
lines, “This ‘tis to have been from the first In a domestic heaven
nursed, Under the discipline severe Of Fairfax and the starry
Vere.” - And so, upon embracing his cousin fresh from Rodney’s
great victory wherein he had played so gallant a part, brimming
over with just family pride in the sailor of their house, he
exuberantly exclaimed, “Give ye joy, Ed; give ye joy, my starry
Vere!” This got currency, and the novel prefix serving in familiar
parlance readily to distinguish the Indomitable’s Captain from
another Vere his senior, a distant relative, an officer of like rank in
the navy, it remained permanently attached to the surname.
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville



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