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<h3> CHAPTER XLVI. </h3>
<h3> THE COMMODORE ON THE POOP, AND ONE OF "THE PEOPLE" UNDER THE HANDS OF THE SURGEON. </h3>
<p>A day or two after the publication of Lemsford's "Songs of the Sirens,"
a sad accident befell a mess-mate of mine, one of the captains of the
mizzen-top. He was a fine little Scot, who, from the premature loss of
the hair on the top of his head, always went by the name of <i>Baldy</i>.
This baldness was no doubt, in great part, attributable to the same
cause that early thins the locks of most man-of-war's-men—namely, the
hard, unyielding, and ponderous man-of-war and navy-regulation
tarpaulin hat, which, when new, is stiff enough to sit upon, and
indeed, in lieu of his thumb, sometimes serves the common sailor for a
bench.</p>
<p>Now, there is nothing upon which the Commodore of a squadron more
prides himself than upon the celerity with which his men can handle the
sails, and go through with all the evolutions pertaining thereto. This
is especially manifested in harbour, when other vessels of his squadron
are near, and perhaps the armed ships of rival nations.</p>
<p>Upon these occasions, surrounded by his post-captain sa-traps—each of
whom in his own floating island is king—the Commodore domineers over
all—emperor of the whole oaken archipelago; yea, magisterial and
magnificent as the Sultan of the Isles of Sooloo.</p>
<p>But, even as so potent an emperor and Caesar to boot as the great Don
of Germany, Charles the Fifth, was used to divert himself in his dotage
by watching the gyrations of the springs and cogs of a long row of
clocks, even so does an elderly Commodore while away his leisure in
harbour, by what is called "<i>exercising guns</i>," and also "<i>exercising
yards and sails;</i>" causing the various spars of all the ships under his
command to be "braced," "topped," and "cock billed" in concert, while
the Commodore himself sits, something like King Canute, on an arm-chest
on the poop of his flag-ship.</p>
<p>But far more regal than any descendant of Charlemagne, more haughty
than any Mogul of the East, and almost mysterious and voiceless in his
authority as the Great Spirit of the Five Nations, the Commodore deigns
not to verbalise his commands; they are imparted by signal.</p>
<p>And as for old Charles the Fifth, again, the gay-pranked, coloured
suits of cards were invented, to while away his dotage, even so,
doubtless, must these pretty little signals of blue and red spotted
<i>bunting</i> have been devised to cheer the old age of all Commodores.</p>
<p>By the Commodore's side stands the signal-midshipman, with a sea-green
bag swung on his shoulder (as a sportsman bears his game-bag), the
signal-book in one hand, and the signal spy-glass in the other. As this
signal-book contains the Masonic signs and tokens of the navy, and
would there-fore be invaluable to an enemy, its binding is always
bordered with lead, so as to insure its sinking in case the ship should
be captured. Not the only book this, that might appropriately be bound
in lead, though there be many where the author, and not the bookbinder,
furnishes the metal.</p>
<p>As White-Jacket understands it, these signals consist of
variously-coloured flags, each standing for a certain number. Say there
are ten flags, representing the cardinal numbers—the red flag, No. 1;
the blue flag, No. 2; the green flag, No. 3, and so forth; then, by
mounting the blue flag over the red, that would stand for No. 21: if
the green flag were set underneath, it would then stand for 213. How
easy, then, by endless transpositions, to multiply the various numbers
that may be exhibited at the mizzen-peak, even by only three or four of
these flags.</p>
<p>To each number a particular meaning is applied. No. 100, for instance,
may mean, "<i>Beat to quarters</i>." No. 150, "<i>All hands to grog</i>." No.
2000, "<i>Strike top-gallant-yards</i>." No. 2110, "<i>See anything to
windward?</i>" No. 2800, "<i>No</i>."</p>
<p>And as every man-of-war is furnished with a signal-book, where all
these things are set down in order, therefore, though two American
frigates—almost perfect strangers to each other—came from the
opposite Poles, yet at a distance of more than a mile they could carry
on a very liberal conversation in the air.</p>
<p>When several men-of-war of one nation lie at anchor in one port,
forming a wide circle round their lord and master, the flag-ship, it is
a very interesting sight to see them all obeying the Commodore's
orders, who meanwhile never opens his lips.</p>
<p>Thus was it with us in Rio, and hereby hangs the story of my poor
messmate Bally.</p>
<p>One morning, in obedience to a signal from our flag-ship, the various
vessels belonging to the American squadron then in harbour
simultaneously loosened their sails to dry. In the evening, the signal
was set to furl them. Upon such occasions, great rivalry exists between
the First Lieutenants of the different ships; they vie with each other
who shall first have his sails stowed on the yards. And this rivalry is
shared between all the officers of each vessel, who are respectively
placed over the different top-men; so that the main-mast is all
eagerness to vanquish the fore-mast, and the mizzen-mast to vanquish
them both. Stimulated by the shouts of their officers, the sailors
throughout the squadron exert themselves to the utmost.</p>
<p>"Aloft, topmen! lay out! furl!" cried the First Lieutenant of the
Neversink.</p>
<p>At the word the men sprang into the rigging, and on all three masts
were soon climbing about the yards, in reckless haste, to execute their
orders.</p>
<p>Now, in furling top-sails or courses, the point of honour, and the
hardest work, is in the <i>bunt</i>, or middle of the yard; this post
belongs to the first captain of the top.</p>
<p>"What are you 'bout there, mizzen-top-men?" roared the First
Lieutenant, through his trumpet. "D——n you, you are clumsy as Russian
bears! don't you see the main—top-men are nearly off the yard? Bear a
hand, bear a hand, or I'll stop your grog all round! You, Baldy! are
you going to sleep there in the bunt?"</p>
<p>While this was being said, poor Baldy—his hat off, his face streaming
with perspiration—was frantically exerting himself, piling up the
ponderous folds of canvas in the middle of the yard; ever and anon
glancing at victorious Jack Chase, hard at work at the
main-top-sail-yard before him.</p>
<p>At last, the sail being well piled up, Baldy jumped with both feet into
the <i>bunt</i>, holding on with one hand to the chain "<i>tie</i>," and in that
manner was violently treading down the canvas, to pack it close.</p>
<p>"D——n you, Baldy, why don't you move, you crawling caterpillar;"
roared the First Lieutenant.</p>
<p>Baldy brought his whole weight to bear on the rebellious sail, and in
his frenzied heedlessness let go his hold on the <i>tie</i>.</p>
<p>"You, Baldy! are you afraid of falling?" cried the First Lieutenant.</p>
<p>At that moment, with all his force, Baldy jumped down upon the sail;
the <i>bunt gasket</i> parted; and a dark form dropped through the air.
Lighting upon the <i>top-rim</i>, it rolled off; and the next instant, with
a horrid crash of all his bones, Baldy came, like a thunderbolt, upon
the deck.</p>
<p>Aboard of most large men-of-war there is a stout oaken platform, about
four feet square, on each side of the quarter-deck. You ascend to it by
three or four steps; on top, it is railed in at the sides, with
horizontal brass bars. It is called <i>the Horse Block;</i> and there the
officer of the deck usually stands, in giving his orders at sea.</p>
<p>It was one of these horse blocks, now unoccupied, that broke poor
Baldy's fall. He fell lengthwise across the brass bars, bending them
into elbows, and crushing the whole oaken platform, steps and all,
right down to the deck in a thousand splinters.</p>
<p>He was picked up for dead, and carried below to the surgeon. His bones
seemed like those of a man broken on the wheel, and no one thought he
would survive the night. But with the surgeon's skillful treatment he
soon promised recovery. Surgeon Cuticle devoted all his science to this
case.</p>
<p>A curious frame-work of wood was made for the maimed man; and placed in
this, with all his limbs stretched out, Baldy lay flat on the floor of
the Sick-bay, for many weeks. Upon our arrival home, he was able to
hobble ashore on crutches; but from a hale, hearty man, with bronzed
cheeks, he was become a mere dislocated skeleton, white as foam; but
ere this, perhaps, his broken bones are healed and whole in the last
repose of the man-of-war's-man.</p>
<p>Not many days after Baldy's accident in furling sails—in this same
frenzied manner, under the stimulus of a shouting officer—a seaman
fell from the main-royal-yard of an English line-of-battle ship near
us, and buried his ankle-bones in the deck, leaving two indentations
there, as if scooped out by a carpenter's gouge.</p>
<p>The royal-yard forms a cross with the mast, and falling from that lofty
cross in a line-of-battle ship is almost like falling from the cross of
St. Paul's; almost like falling as Lucifer from the well-spring of
morning down to the Phlegethon of night.</p>
<p>In some cases, a man, hurled thus from a yard, has fallen upon his own
shipmates in the tops, and dragged them down with him to the same
destruction with himself.</p>
<p>Hardly ever will you hear of a man-of-war returning home after a
cruise, without the loss of some of her crew from aloft, whereas
similar accidents in the merchant service—considering the much greater
number of men employed in it—are comparatively few.</p>
<p>Why mince the matter? The death of most of these man-of-war's-men lies
at the door of the souls of those officers, who, while safely standing
on deck themselves, scruple not to sacrifice an immortal man or two, in
order to show off the excelling discipline of the ship. And thus do
<i>the people</i> of the gun-deck suffer, that the Commodore on the poop may
be glorified.</p>
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