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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville
35

CHAPTER 14

Passion, and passion in its profoundest, is not a thing demanding a
palatial stage whereon to play its part. Down among the
groundlings, among the beggars and rakers of the garbage,
profound passion is enacted. And the circumstances that provoke
it, however trivial or mean, are no measure of its power. In the
present instance the stage is a scrubbed gun deck, and one of the
external provocations a man-of-war’s-man’s spilled soup.

Now when the Master-at-arms noticed whence came that greasy
fluid streaming before his feet, he must have taken it-to some
extent wilfully, perhaps-not for the mere accident it assuredly was,
but for the sly escape of a spontaneous feeling on Billy’s part more
or less answering to the antipathy on his own. In effect a foolish
demonstration he must have thought, and very harmless, like the
futile kick of a heifer, which yet were the heifer a shod stallion,
would not be so harmless. Even so was it that into the gall of
Claggart’s envy he infused the vitriol of his contempt. But the
incident confirmed to him certain tell-tale reports purveyed to his
ear by Squeak, one of his more cunning Corporals, a grizzled little
man, so nicknamed by the sailors on account of his squeaky voice,
and sharp visage ferreting about the dark corners of the lower
decks after interlopers, satirically suggesting to them the idea of a
rat in a cellar.

From his Chief’s employing him as an implicit tool in laying little
traps for the worriment of the Foretopman-for it was from the
Master-at-arms that the
petty persecutions heretofore adverted to had proceeded-the
Corporal having naturally enough concluded that his master could
have no love for the sailor, made it his business, faithful
understrapper that he was, to foment the ill blood by perverting to
his Chief certain innocent frolics of the goodnatured Foretopman,
besides inventing for his mouth sundry contumelious epithets he
claimed to have overheard him let fall. The Master-at-arms never
suspected the veracity of these reports, more especially as to the
epithets, for he well knew how secretly unpopular may become a
master-at-arms, at least a master-at-arms of those days zealous in
his function, and how the blue-jackets shoot at him in private their
raillery and wit; the nickname by which he goes among them
(Jimmy Legs) implying under the form of merriment their
cherished disrespect and dislike.

But in view of the greediness of hate for patrolmen, it hardly
needed a purveyor to feed Claggart’s passion. An uncommon
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville



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