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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville
28

CHAPTER 10

The next day an incident served to confirm Billy Budd in his
incredulity as to the Dansker’s strange summing-up of the case
submitted. The ship at noon, going large before the wind, was
rolling on her course, and he, below at dinner and engaged in
some sportful talk with the members of his mess, chanced in a
sudden lurch to spill the entire contents of his soup-pan upon the
new scrubbed deck.

Claggart, the Master-at-arms, official rattan in hand, happened to
be passing along the battery in a bay of which the mess was
lodged, and the greasy liquid streamed just across his path.
Stepping over it, he was proceeding on his way without comment,
since the matter was nothing to take notice of under the
circumstances, when he happened to observe who it was that had
done the spilling. His countenance changed. Pausing, he was about
to ejaculate something hasty at the sailor, but checked himself, and
pointing down to the streaming soup, playfully tapped him from
behind with his rattan, saying in a low musical voice peculiar to
him at times, “Handsomely done, my lad! And handsome is as
handsome did it too!” And with that passed on. Not noted by Billy,
as not coming within his view, was the involuntary smile, or rather
grimace, that accompanied Claggart’s equivocal words. Aridly it
drew down the thin corners of his shapely mouth. But everybody
taking his remark as meant for humourous, and at which therefore
as coming from a superior they were bound to laugh “with
counterfeited glee,” acted accordingly; and Billy tickled, it may be,
by the allusion to his being the handsome sailor, merrily joined in;
then addressing his messmates exclaimed, “There
now, who says that Jimmy Legs is down on me!” “And who said
he was, Beauty?” demanded one Donald with some surprise.
Whereat the Foretopman looked a little foolish, recalling that it was
only one person, Board-her-in-thesmoke, who had suggested what
to him was the smoky idea that this Master-atarms was in any
peculiar way hostile to him. Meantime that functionary, resuming
his path, must have momentarily worn some expression less
guarded than that of the bitter smile, and usurping the face from
the heart, some distorting expression perhaps; for a drummer-boy
heedlessly frolicking along from the opposite direction and
chancing to come into light collision with his person was strangely
disconcerted by his aspect. Nor was the impression lessened when
the official, impulsively giving him a sharp cut with the rattan,
vehemently exclaimed, “Look where you go!”
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville



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