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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville
81

CHAPTER 29

The symmetry of form attainable in pure fiction can not so readily
be achieved in a narration essentially having less to do with fable
than with fact.

Truth uncompromisingly told will always have its ragged edges;
hence the conclusion of such a narration is apt to be less finished
than an architectural finial.

How it fared with the Handsome Sailor during the year of the
Great Mutiny has been faithfully given. But tho’ properly the story
ends with his life, something in way of sequel will not be amiss.
Three brief chapters will suffice.

In the general re-christening under the Directory of the craft
originally forming the navy of the French monarchy, the St. Louis
line-of-battle ship was named the Atheiste. Such a name, like some
other substituted ones in the Revolutionary fleet, while
proclaiming the infidel audacity of the ruling power was yet, tho’
not so intended to be, the aptest name, if one consider it, ever given
to a war-ship; far more so indeed than the Devastation, the Erebus
(the Hell) and similar names bestowed upon fighting-ships.

On the return-passage to the English fleet from the detached cruise
during which occurred the events already recorded, the
Indomitable fell in with the Atheiste. An engagement ensued;
during which Captain Vere, in the act of putting his ship alongside
the enemy with a view of throwing his boarders across her
bulwarks, was hit by a musket-ball from a port-hole of the enemy’s
main cabin.

More than disabled he dropped to the deck and was carried below
to the same
cock-pit where some of his men already lay. The senior Lieutenant
took command. Under him the enemy was finally captured and
though much crippled was by rare good fortune successfully taken
into Gibraltar, an English port not very distant from the scene of
the fight. There, Captain Vere with the rest of the wounded was
put ashore. He lingered for some days, but the end came.
Unhappily he was cut off too early for the Nile and Trafalgar. The
spirit that spite its philosophic austerity may yet have indulged in
the most secret of all passions, ambition, never attained to the
fulness of fame.

Not long before death, while lying under the influence of that
magical drug which soothing the physical frame mysteriously
operates on the subtler element in man, he was heard to murmur
words inexplicable to his attendant-“Billy Budd, Billy Budd.” That
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PinkMonkey.com Digital Library - PinkMonkey.com - Billy Budd by Herman Melville



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