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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville
69

CHAPTER 24

Of a series of incidents within a brief term rapidly following each
other, the adequate narration may take up a term less brief,
especially if explanation or comment here and there seem requisite
to the better understanding of such incidents.

Between the entrance into the cabin of him who never left it alive,
and him who when he did leave it left it as one condemned to die;
between this and the closeted interview just given, less than an
hour and a half had elapsed. It was an interval long enough
however to awaken speculations among no few of the ship’s
company as to what it was that could be detaining in the cabin the
Master-at-arms and the sailor; for a rumor that both of them had
been seen to enter it and neither of them had been seen to emerge,
this rumor had got abroad upon the gun decks and in the tops; the
people of a great war-ship being in one respect like villagers taking
microscopic note of every outward movement or non-movement
going on.

When therefore in weather not at all tempestuous all hands were
called in the second dog-watch, a summons under such
circumstances not usual in those hours, the crew were not wholly
unprepared for some announcement extraordinary, one having
connection too with the continued absence of the two men from
their wonted haunts.

There was a moderate sea at the time; and the moon, newly risen
and near to being at its full, silvered the white spar-deck wherever
not blotted by the clear-cut shadows horizontally thrown of
fixtures and moving men. On either side of the quarter-deck, the
marine guard under arms was drawn up; and Captain Vere stand-
ing in his place surrounded by all the ward-room officers,
addressed his men. In so doing his manner showed neither more
nor less than that properly pertaining to his supreme position
aboard his own ship. In clear terms and concise he told them what
had taken place in the cabin; that the Master-at-arms was dead;
that he who had killed him had been already tried by a summary
court and condemned to death; and that the execution would take
place in the early morning watch. The word mutiny was not
named in what he said. He refrained too from making the occasion
an opportunity for any preachment as to the maintenance of
discipline, thinking perhaps that under existing circumstances in
the navy the consequence of violating discipline should be made to
speak for itself.
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville



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