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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville
20

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” (meaning him with the Lord title) “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 thro’ 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 of any point touching the stirring personages and
events of the time he would be as apt to cite some historic character
or incident of antiquity as that he would cite from the moderns. He
seemed unmindful of the circumstance that to
his bluff company such remote 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 to 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.
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville



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