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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville
19

CHAPTER 7

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 his
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 philosophize upon realities.

In this line of reading he found confirmation of his own more
reasoned 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 forefelt would abide in him essentially unmodified
so long as his intelligent part remained unimpaired. In view of the
troubled 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, not
alone Captain Vere disinterestedly opposed them because they
seemed to him incapable of embodiment in lasting institutions, but
at war with the peace of the world and the true welfare 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
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville



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