Concluding Chapter
I trust that they who have followed me to
the end of my narrative, will not refuse to carry their attention a
little farther, to the concluding remarks which I here present to
them.
This chapter is written after the lapse of a
considerable time since the end of my voyage, and after a return to
my former pursuits ; and in it I design to offer those views of
what may be done for seamen, and of what is already doing, which I
have deduced from my experiences, and from the attention which I
have since gladly given to the subject.
The romantic interest which many take in the sea,
and in those who live upon it, may be of use in exciting their
attention to this subject, though I cannot but feel sure that all
who have followed me in my narrative must be convinced that the
sailor has no romance in his every-day life to sustain him, but
that it is very much the same plain, matter-of-fact drudgery and
hardship, which would be experienced on shore. If I have not
produced this conviction, I have failed in persuading others of
what my own experience has most fully impressed upon myself.
There is a witchery in the sea, its songs and
stories, and in the mere sight of a ship, and the sailor’s dress,
especially to a young mind, which has done more to man navies, and
fill merchantmen, than all the press-gangs of Europe. I have known
a young man with such a passion for the sea, that the very creaking
of a block stirred up his imagination so that he could hardly keep
his feet on dry ground; and many are the boys, in every seaport,
who are drawn away, as by an almost irresistible attraction, from
their work and schools, and hang about the decks and yards of
vessels, with a fondness which, it is plain, will have its way. No
sooner, however, has the young sailor begun his new life in
earnest, than all this fine drapery falls off, and he learns that
it is but work and hardship, after all. This is the true light in
which a sailor’s life is to be viewed; and if in our books, and
anniversary speeches, we would leave out much that is said about
“blue water,” jq
“blue jackets,” “open hearts,” “seeing God’s hand on the deep,” and
so forth, and take this up like any other practical subject, I am
quite sure we should do full as much for those we wish to benefit.
The question is, what can be done for sailors, as they are,—men to
be fed, and clothed, and lodged, for, whom laws must be made and
executed, and who are to be instructed in useful knowledge, and,
above all, to be brought under religious influence and restraint?
It is upon these topics that I wish to make a few
observations.
In the first place, I have no fancies about
equality on board ship. It is a thing out of the question, and
certainly, in the present state of mankind, not to be desired. I
never knew a sailor who found fault with the orders and ranks of
the service; and if I expected to pass the rest of my life before
the mast, I would not wish to have the power of the captain
diminished an iota. It is absolutely necessary that there should be
one head and one voice, to control everything, and be responsible
for everything. There are emergencies which require the instant
exercise of extreme power. These emergencies do not allow of
consultation; and they who would be the captain’s constituted
advisers might be the very men over whom he would be called upon to
exert his authority. It has been found necessary to vest in every
government, even the most democratic, some extraordinary, and, at
first sight, alarming powers; trusting in public opinion, and
subsequent accountability to modify the exercise of them. These are
provided to meet exigencies, which all hope may never occur, but
which yet by possibility may occur, and if they should, and there
were no power to meet them instantly, there would be an end put to
the government at once. So it is with the authority of the
shipmaster. It will not answer to say that he shall never do this
and that thing, because it does not seem always necessary and
advisable that it should be done. He has great cares and
responsibilities; is answerable for everything; and is subject to
emergencies which perhaps no other man exercising authority among
civilized people is subject to. Let him, then, have powers
commensurate with his utmost possible need; only let him be held
strictly responsible for the exercise of them. Any other course
would be injustice, as well as bad policy.
In the treatment of those under his authority, the
captain is amenable to the common law, like any other person. He is
liable at common law for murder, assault and battery, and other
offences; and in addition to this, there is a special statute of
the United States which makes a captain or other officer liable to
imprisonment for a term not exceeding five years, and to a fine not
exceeding a thousand dollars, for inflicting any cruel punishment
upon, withholding food from, or in any other way maltreating a
seaman. This is the state of the law on the subject; while the
relation in which the parties stand, and the peculiar necessities,
excuses, and provocations arising from that relation, are merely
circumstances to be considered in each case. As to the restraints
upon the master’s exercise of power, the laws themselves seem, on
the whole, to be sufficient. I do not see that we are in need, at
present, of more legislation on the subject. The difficulty lies
rather in the administration of the laws; and this is certainly a
matter that deserves great consideration, and one of no little
embarrassment.
In the first place, the courts have said that
public policy requires the power of the master and officers should
be sustained. Many lives and a great amount of property are
constantly in their hands, for which they are strictly responsible.
To preserve these, and to deal justly by the captain, and not lay
upon him a really fearful responsibility, and then tie up his
hands, it is essential that discipline should be supported. In the
second place, there is always great allowance to be made for false
swearing and exaggeration by seamen, and for combinations among
them against their officers; and it is to be remembered that the
latter have often no one to testify on their side. These are
weighty and true statements, and should not be lost sight of by the
friends of seamen. On the other hand, sailors make many complaints,
some of which are well founded.
On the subject of testimony, seamen labor under a
difficulty full as great as that of the captain. It is a well-known
fact, that they are usually much better treated when there are
passengers on board. The presence of passengers is a restraint upon
the captain, not only from his regard to their feelings and to the
estimation in which they may hold him, but because he knows they
will be influential witnesses against him if he is brought to
trial. Though officers may sometimes be inclined to show themselves
off before passengers, by freaks of office and authority, yet
cruelty they would hardly dare to be guilty of. It is on long and
distant voyages, where there is no restraint upon the captain, and
none but the crew to testify against him, that sailors need most
the protection of the law. On such voyages as these, there are many
cases of outrageous cruelty on record, enough to make one
heartsick, and almost disgusted with the sight of man; and many,
many more, which have never come to light, and never will be known,
until the sea shall give up its dead. Many of these have led to
mutiny and piracy,—stripe for stripe, and blood for blood. If on
voyages of this description the testimony of seamen is not to be
received in favor of one another, or too great a deduction is made
on account of their being seamen, their case is without remedy; and
the captain, knowing this, will be strengthened in that disposition
to tyrannize which the possession of absolute power, without the
restraints of friends and public opinion, is too apt to
engender.
It is to be considered, also, that the sailor comes
into court under very different circumstances from the master. He
is thrown among landlords, and sharks of all descriptions; is often
led to drink freely; and comes upon the stand unaided, and under a
certain cloud of suspicion as to his character and veracity. The
captain, on the other hand, is backed by the owners and insurers,
and has an air of greater respectability; though, after all, he may
have but a little better education than the sailor, and sometimes,
(especially among those engaged in certain voyages that I could
mention) a very hackneyed conscience.
These are the considerations most commonly brought
up on the subject of seamen’s evidence; and I think it cannot but
be obvious to every one that here, positive legislation would be of
no manner of use. There can be no rule of law regulating the weight
to be given to seamen’s evidence. It must rest in the mind of the
judge and jury; and no enactment or positive rule of court could
vary the result a hair, in any one case. The effect of a sailor’s
testimony in deciding a case must depend altogether upon the
reputation of the class to which he belongs, and upon the
impression he himself produces in court by his deportment, and by
those infallible marks of character which always tell upon a jury.
In fine, after all the well-meant and specious projects that have
been brought forward, we seem driven back to the belief, that the
best means of securing a fair administration of the laws made for
the protection of seamen, and certainly the only means which can
create any important change for the better, is the gradual one of
raising the intellectual and religious character of the sailor, so
that as an individual and as one of a class, he may, in the first
instance, command the respect of his officers, and if any
difficulty should happen, may upon the stand carry that weight
which an intelligent and respectable man of the lower class almost
always does with a jury. I know there are many men who, when a few
cases of great hardship occur, and it is evident that there is an
evil somewhere, think that some arrangement must be made, some law
passed, or some society got up, to set all right at once. On this
subject there can be no call for any such movement; on the
contrary, I fully believe that any public and strong action would
do harm, and that we must be satisfied to labor in the less easy
and less exciting task of gradual improvement, and abide the issue
of things working slowly together for good.
Equally injudicious would be any interference with
the economy of the ship. The lodging, food, hours of sleep, etc.,
are all matters which, though capable of many changes for the
better, must yet be left to regulate themselves. And I am confident
that there will be, and that there is now a gradual improvement in
all such particulars. The forecastles of most of our ships are
small, black, and wet holes, which few landsmen would believe held
a crew of ten or twelve men on a voyage of months or years; and
often, indeed in most cases, the provisions are not good enough to
make a meal anything more than a necessary part of a day’s
duty;44and on
the score of sleep, I fully believe that the lives of merchant
seamen are shortened by the want of it. I do not refer to those
occasions when it is necessarily broken in upon; but, for months,
during fine weather, in many merchantmen, all hands are kept,
throughout the day, and, then, there are eight hours on deck for
one watch each night. Thus it is usually the case that at the end
of a voyage, where there has been the finest weather, and no
disaster, the crew have a wearied and worn-out appearance. They
never sleep longer than four hours at a time, and are seldom called
without being really in need of more rest. There is no one thing
that a sailor thinks more of as a luxury of life on shore, than a
whole night’s sleep. Still, all these things must be left to be
gradually modified by circumstances. Whenever hard cases occur,
they should be made known, and masters and owners should be held
answerable, and will, no doubt, in time, be influenced in their
arrangements and discipline by the increased consideration in which
sailors are held by the public. It is perfectly proper that the men
should live in a different part of the vessel from the officers;
and if the forecastle is made large and comfortable, there is no
reason why the crew should not live there as well as in any other
part. In fact, sailors prefer the forecastle. It is their
accustomed place, and in it they are out of the sight and hearing
of their officers.
As to their food and sleep, there are laws, with
heavy penalties, requiring a certain amount of stores to be on
board, and safely stowed; and, for depriving the crew unnecessarily
of food or sleep, the captain is liable at common law, as well as
under the statute before referred to. Farther than this, it would
not be safe to go. The captain must be the judge when it is
necessary to keep his crew from their sleep; and sometimes a
retrenching, not of the necessaries, but of some of the little
niceties of their meals, as, for instance, duff on Sunday,
may be a mode of punishment, though I think generally an
injudicious one.
I could not do justice to this subject without
noticing one part of the discipline of a ship, which has been very
much discussed of late, and has brought out strong expressions of
indignation from many,—I mean the infliction of corporal
punishment. Those who have followed me in my narrative will
remember that I was witness to an act of great cruelty inflicted
upon my own shipmates; and indeed I can sincerely say that the
simple mention of the word flogging, brings up in me feelings which
I can hardly control. Yet, when the proposition is made to abolish
it entirely and at once; to prohibit the captain from ever, under
any circumstances, inflicting corporal punishment; I am obliged to
pause, and, I must say, to doubt exceedingly the expediency of
making any positive enactment which shall have that effect. If the
design of those who are writing on this subject is merely to draw
public attention to it, and to discourage the practice of flogging,
and bring it into disrepute, it is well; and, indeed, whatever may
be the end they have in view, the mere agitation of the question
will have that effect, and, so far, must do good. Yet I should not
wish to take the command of a ship to-morrow, running my chance of
a crew, as most masters must, and know, and have my crew know, that
I could not, under any circumstances, inflict even moderate
chastisement. I should trust that I might never have to resort to
it; and, indeed, I scarcely know what risk I would not run, and to
what inconvenience I would not subject myself, rather than do so.
Yet not to have the power of holding it up in
terrorem,jr and
indeed of protecting myself, and all under my charge, by it, if
some extreme case should arise, would be a situation I should not
wish to be placed in myself, or to take the responsibility of
placing another in.
Indeed, the difficulties into which masters and
officers are liable to be thrown, are not sufficiently considered
by many whose sympathies are easily excited by stories, frequent
enough, and true enough of outrageous abuse of this power. It is to
be remembered that more than three fourths of the seamen in our
merchant vessels are foreigners. They are from all parts of the
world. A great many from the north of Europe, beside Frenchmen,
Spaniards, Portuguese, Italians, men from all parts of the
Mediterranean, together with Lascars, Negroes, and, perhaps worst
of all, the off-casts of British men-of-war, and men from our own
country who have gone to sea because they could not be permitted to
live on land.
As things now are, many masters are obliged to sail
without knowing anything of their crews, until they get out at sea.
There may be pirates or mutineers among them; and one bad man will
often infect all the rest; and it is almost certain that some of
them will be ignorant foreigners, hardly understanding a word of
our language, accustomed all their lives to no influence but force,
and perhaps nearly as familiar with the use of the knife as with
that of the marline-spike. No prudent master, however peaceably
inclined, would go to sea without his pistols and handcuffs. Even
with such a crew as I have supposed, kindness and moderation would
be the best policy, and the duty of every conscientious man; and
the administering of corporal punishment might be dangerous, and of
doubtful use. But the question is not, what a captain ought
generally to do, but whether it shall be put out of the power of
every captain, under any circumstances, to make use of, even
moderate, chastisement. As the law now stands, a parent may correct
moderately his child, and the master his apprentice; and the case
of the shipmaster has been placed upon the same principle. The
statutes, and the common law as expounded in the decisions of
courts, and in the books of commentators, are express and unanimous
to this point, that the captain may inflict moderate corporal
chastisement, for a reasonable cause. If the punishment is
excessive, or the cause not sufficient to justify it, he is
answerable; and the jury are to determine, by their verdict in each
case, whether, under all the circumstances, the punishment was
moderate, and for a justifiable cause.
This seems to me to be as good a position as the
whole subject can be left in. I mean to say, that no positive
enactment, going beyond this, is needed, or would be a benefit
either to masters or men, in the present state of things. This
again would seem to be a case which should be left to the gradual
working of its own cure. As seamen improve, punishment will become
less necessary; and as the character of officers is raised, they
will be less ready to inflict it; and, still more, the infliction
of it upon intelligent and respectable men, will be an enormity
which will not be tolerated by public opinion, and by juries, who
are the pulse of the body politic. No one can have a greater
abhorrence of the infliction of such punishment than I have, and a
stronger conviction that severity is bad policy with a crew; yet I
would ask every reasonable man whether he had not better trust to
the practice becoming unnecessary and disreputable ; to the measure
of moderate chastisement and a justifiable cause being better
understood, and thus, the act becoming dangerous, and in course of
time to be regarded as an unheard-of barbarity-than to take the
responsibility of prohibiting it, at once, in all cases, and in
what ever degree, by positive enactment?
There is, however, one point connected with the
administration of justice to seamen, to which I wish seriously to
call the attention of those interested in their behalf, and, if
possible, also of some of those concerned in that administration.
This is, the practice which prevails of making strong appeals to
the jury in mitigation of damages, or to the judge, after a verdict
has been rendered against a captain or officer, for a lenient
sentence, on the grounds of their previous good character, and of
their being poor, and having friends and families depending upon
them for support. These appeals have been allowed a weight which is
almost incredible, and which, I think, works a greater hardship
upon seamen than any one other thing in the laws, or the execution
of them. Notwithstanding every advantage the captain has over the
seaman in point of evidence, friends, money, and able counsel, it
becomes apparent that he must fail in his defence. An appeal is
then made to the jury, if it is a civil action, or to the judge for
a mitigated sentence, if it is a criminal prosecution, on the two
grounds I have mentioned. The same form is usually gone through in
every case. In the first place, as to the previous good character
of the party. Witnesses are brought from the town in which he
resides, to testify to his good character, and to his
unexceptionable conduct when on shore. They say that he is a good
father, or husband, or son, or neighbor, and that they never saw in
him any signs of a cruel or tyrannical disposition. I have even
known evidence admitted to show the character he bore when a boy at
school. The owners of the vessel, and other merchants, and perhaps
the president of the insurance company, are then introduced; and
they testify to his correct deportment, express their confidence in
his honesty, and say that they have never seen anything in his
conduct to justify a suspicion of his being capable of cruelty or
tyranny. This evidence is then put together, and great stress is
laid upon the extreme respectability of those who give it. They are
the companions and neighbors of the captain, it is said,—men who
know him in his business and domestic relations, and who knew him
in his early youth. They are also men of the highest standing in
the community, and who, as the captain’s employers, must be
supposed to know his character. This testimony is then contrasted
with that of some half dozen obscure sailors, who, the counsel will
not forget to add, are exasperated against the captain because he
has found it necessary to punish them moderately, and who have
combined against him, and if they have not fabricated a story
entirely, have at least so exaggerated it, that little confidence
can be placed in it.
The next thing to be done is to show to the court
and jury that the captain is a poor man, and has a wife and family,
or other friends, depending upon him for support; that if he is
fined, it will only be taking bread from the mouths of the innocent
and helpless, and laying a burden upon them which their whole lives
will not be able to work off; and that if he is imprisoned, the
confinement, to be sure, he will have to bear, but the distress
consequent upon the cutting him off from his labor and means of
earning his wages, will fall upon a poor wife and helpless
children, or upon an infirm parent. These two topics, well put, and
urged home earnestly, seldom fail of their effect.
In deprecation of this mode of proceeding, and in
behalf of men who I believe are every day wronged by it, I would
urge a few considerations which seem to me to be conclusive.
First, as to the evidence of the good character the
captain sustains on shore. It is to be remembered that masters of
vessels have usually been brought up in a forecastle; and upon all
men, and especially upon those taken from lower situations, the
conferring of absolute power is too apt to work a great change.
There are many captains whom I know to be cruel and tyrannical men
at sea, who yet, among their friends, and in their families, have
never lost the reputation they bore in childhood. In fact, the
sea-captain is seldom at home, and when he is, his stay is short,
and during the continuance of it he is surrounded by friends who
treat him with kindness and consideration, and he has everything to
please, and at the same time to restrain him. He would be a brute
indeed, if, after an absence of months or years, during his short
stay, so short that the novelty and excitement of it has hardly
time to wear off, and the attentions he receives as a visitor and
stranger hardly time to slacken,—if, under such circumstances, a
townsman or neighbor would be justified in testifying against his
correct and peaceable deportment. With the owners of the vessel,
also, to which he is attached, and among merchants and insurers
generally, he is a very different man from what he may be at sea,
when his own master, and the master of everybody and everything
about him. He knows that upon such men, and their good opinion of
him, he depends for his bread. So far from their testimony being of
any value in determining what his conduct would be at sea, one
would expect that the master who would abuse and impose upon a man
under his power, would be the most compliant and deferential to his
employers at home.
As to the appeal made in the captain’s behalf on
the ground of his being poor and having persons depending upon his
labor for support, the main and fatal objection to it is, that it
will cover every case of the kind, and exempt nearly the whole body
of masters and officers from the punishment the law has provided
for them. There are very few, if any masters or other officers of
merchantmen in our country, who are not poor men, and having either
parents, wives, children, or other relatives, depending mainly or
wholly upon their exertions for support in life. Few others follow
the sea for subsistence. Now if this appeal is to have weight with
courts in diminishing the penalty the law would otherwise inflict,
is not the whole class under a privilege which will, in a degree,
protect it in wrongdoing? It is not a thing that happens now and
then. It is the invariable appeal, the last resort, of counsel,
when everything else has failed. I have known cases of the most
flagrant nature, where after every effort has been made for the
captain, and yet a verdict rendered against him, and all other hope
failed, this appeal has been urged, and with such success that the
punishment has been reduced to something little more than nominal,
the court not seeming to consider that it might be made in almost
every such case that could come before them. It is a little
singular, too, that it seems to be confined to cases of shipmasters
and officers. No one ever heard of a sentence, for an offence
committed on shore, being reduced by the court on the ground of the
prisoner’s poverty, and the relation in which he may stand to third
persons. On the contrary, it had been thought that the certainty
that disgrace and suffering will be brought upon others as well as
himself, is one of the chief restraints upon the criminally
disposed. Besides, this course works a peculiar hardship in the
case of the sailor. For if poverty is the point in question, the
sailor is the poorer of the two; and if there is a man on earth who
depends upon whole limbs and an unbroken spirit for support, it is
the sailor. He, too, has friends to whom his hard earnings may be a
relief, and whose hearts will bleed at any cruelty or indignity
practised upon him. Yet I never knew this side of the case to be
once adverted to in these arguments addressed to the leniency of
the court, which are now so much in vogue; and certainly they are
never allowed a moment’s consideration when a sailor is on trial
for revolt, or for an injury done to an officer. Notwithstanding
the many difficulties which lie in a seaman’s way in a court of
justice, presuming that they will be modified in time, there would
be little to complain of, were it not for these two appeals.
It is no cause of complaint that the testimony of
seamen against their officers is viewed with suspicion, and that
great allowance is made for combinations and exaggeration. On the
contrary, it is the judge’s duty to charge the jury on these points
strongly. But there is reason for objection, when, after a strict
cross-examination of witnesses, after the arguments of counsel, and
the judge’s charge, a verdict is found against the master, that the
court should allow the practice of hearing appeals to its lenity,
supported solely by evidence of the captain’s good conduct when on
shore, (especially where the case is one in which no evidence but
that of sailors could have been brought against the accused,) and
then, on this ground, and on the invariable claims of the wife and
family, be induced to cut down essentially the penalty imposed by a
statute made expressly for masters and officers of merchantmen, and
for no one else.
There are many particulars connected with the
manning of vessels, the provisions given to crews, and the
treatment of them while at sea, upon which there might be a good
deal said; but as I have, for the most part, remarked upon them as
they came up in the course of my narrative, I will offer nothing
further now, except on the single point of the manner of shipping
men. This, it is well known, is usually left entirely to
shipping-masters, and is a cause of a great deal of difficulty,
which might be remedied by the captain, or owner, if he has any
knowledge of seamen, attending to it personally. One of the members
of the firm to which our ship belonged, Mr. S—, had been himself a
master of a vessel, and generally selected the crew from a number
sent down to him from the shipping-office. In this way he almost
always had healthy, serviceable, and respectable men; for any one
who has seen much of sailors can tell pretty well at first sight,
by a man’s dress, countenance, and deportment, what he would be on
board ship. This same gentleman was also in the habit of seeing the
crew together, and speaking to them previously to their sailing. On
the day before our ship sailed, while the crew were getting their
chests and clothes on board, he went down into the forecastle and
spoke to them about the voyage, the clothing they would need, the
provision he had made for them, and saw that they had a lamp and a
few other conveniences. If owners or masters would more generally
take the same pains, they would often save their crews a good deal
of inconvenience, beside creating a sense of satisfaction and
gratitude, which makes a voyage begin under good auspices, and goes
far toward keeping up a better state of feeling throughout its
continuance.
It only remains for me now to speak of the
associated public efforts which have been making of late years for
the good of seamen: a far more agreeable task than that of finding
fault, even where fault there is. The exertions of the general
association, called the American Seamen’s Friend Society, and of
the other smaller societies throughout the Union, have been a true
blessing to the seaman; and bid fair, in course of time, to change
the whole nature of the circumstances in which he is placed, and
give him a new name, as well as a new character. These associations
have taken hold in the right way, and aimed both at making the
sailor’s life more comfortable and creditable, and at giving him
spiritual instruction. Connected with these efforts, the spread of
temperance among seamen, by means of societies, called, in their
own nautical language, Windward-Anchor Societies, and the
distribution of books; the establishment of Sailors’ Homes, where
they can be comfortably and cheaply boarded, live quietly and
decently, and be in the way of religious services, reading and
conversation; also the institution of Savings Banks for
Seamen;js the
distribution of tractsjt and
Bibles;—are all means which are silently doing a great work for
this class of men. These societies make the religious instruction
of seamen their prominent object. If this is gained, there is no
fear but that all other things necessary will be added unto them. A
sailor never becomes interested in religion, without immediately
learning to read, if he did not know how before; and regular
habits, fore-handedness (if I may use the word) in worldly affairs,
and hours reclaimed from indolence and vice, which follow in the
wake of the converted man, make it sure that he will instruct
himself in the knowledge necessary and suitable to his calling. The
religious change is the great object. If this is secured, there is
no fear but that knowledge of things of the world will come in fast
enough. With the sailor, as with all other men in fact, the
cultivation of the intellect, and the spread of what is commonly
called useful knowledge, while religious instruction is neglected,
is little else than changing an ignorant sinner into an intelligent
and powerful one. That sailor upon whom, of all others, the
preaching of the Cross is least likely to have effect, is the one
whose understanding has been cultivated, while his heart has been
left to its own devices. I fully believe that those efforts which
have their end in the intellectual cultivation of the sailor; in
giving him scientific knowledge; putting it in his power to read
everything, without securing, first of all, a right heart which
shall guide him in judgment; in giving him political information,
and interesting him in newspapers;—an end in the furtherance of
which he is exhibited at ladies’ fairs and public meetings, and
complimented for his gallantry and generosity,—are all doing a harm
which the labors of many faithful men cannot undo.
The establishment of Bethelsju
in most of our own seaports, and in many foreign ports frequented
by our vessels, where the gospel is regularly preached and the
opening of “Sailors’ Homes,” which I have before mentioned, where
there are usually religious services and other good influences, are
doing a vast deal in this cause. But it is to be remembered that
the sailor’s home is on the deep. Nearly all his life must be spent
on board ship; and to secure a religious influence there, should be
the great object. The distribution of Bibles and tracts into cabins
and forecastles, will do much toward this. There is nothing which
will gain a sailor’s attention sooner, and interest him more
deeply, than a tract, especially one which contains a story. It is
difficult to engage their attention in mere essays and arguments,
but the simplest and shortest story, in which home is spoken of,
kind friends, a praying mother or sister, a sudden death, and the
like, often touches the heart of the roughest and most abandoned.
The Bible is to the sailor a sacred book. It may lie in the bottom
of his chest, voyage after voyage; but he never treats it with
positive disrespect. I never knew but one sailor who doubted its
being the inspired word of God; and he was one who had received an
uncommonly good education, except that he had been brought up
without any early religious influence. The most abandoned man of
our crew, one Sunday morning, asked one of the boys to lend him his
Bible. The boy said he would, but was afraid he would make sport of
it. “No!” said the man, “I don’t make sport of God Almighty.” This
is a feeling general among sailors, and is a good foundation for
religious influence.
A still greater gain is made whenever, by means of
a captain who is interested in the eternal welfare of those under
his command, there can be secured the performance of regular
religious exercises, and the exertion, on the side of religion, of
that mighty influence which a captain possesses for good, or for
evil. There are occurrences at sea which he may turn to great
account,-a sudden death, the apprehension of danger, or the escape
from it, and the like; and all the calls for gratitude and faith.
Besides, this state of thing alters the whole current of feeling
between the crew and their commander. His authority assumes more of
the parental character; and kinder feelings exist. Godwin, though
an infidel, in one of his novels, describing the relation in which
a tutor stood to his pupil, says that the conviction the tutor was
under, that he and his ward were both alike awaiting a state of
eternal happiness or misery, and that they must appear together
before the same judgment-seat, operated so upon his naturally
morose disposition, as to produce a feeling of kindness and
tenderness toward his ward, which nothing else could have caused.
Such must be the effect upon the relation of master and common
seaman.
There are now many vessels sailing under such
auspices, in which great good is done. Yet I never happened to fall
in with one of them. I did not hear a prayer made, a chapter read
in public, nor see anything approaching to a religious service, for
two years and a quarter. There were, in the course of the voyage,
many incidents which made, for the time, serious impressions upon
our minds, and which might have been turned to our good; but there
being no one to use the opportunity, and no services, the regular
return of which might have kept something of the feeling alive in
us, the advantage of them was lost, to some, perhaps,
forever.
The good which a single religious captain may do
can hardly be calculated. In the first place, as I have said, a
kinder state of feeling exists on board the ship. There is no
profanity allowed; and the men are not called by any opprobrious
names, which is a great thing with sailors. The Sabbath is
observed. This gives the men a day of rest, even if they pass it in
no other way. Such a captain, too, will not allow a sailor on board
his ship to remain unable to read his Bible and the books given to
him; and will usually instruct those who need it, in writing,
arithmetic, and navigation; since he has a good deal of time on his
hands, which he can easily employ in such a manner. He will also
have regular religious services; and, in fact, by the power of his
example, and, where it can judiciously be done, by the exercise of
his authority, will give a character to the ship and all on board.
In foreign ports, a ship is known by her captain; for, there being
no general rules in the merchant service, each master may adopt a
plan of his own. It is to be remembered, too, that there are, in
most ships, boys of a tender age, whose characters for life are
forming, as well as old men, whose lives must be drawing toward a
close. The greater part of sailors die at sea; and when they find
their end approaching, if it does not, as is often the case, come
without warning, they cannot, as on shore, send for a clergyman, or
some religious friend, to speak to them of that hope in a Saviour,
which they have neglected, if not despised, through life; but if
the little hull does not contain such an one within its compass,
they must be left without human aid in their great extremity. When
such commanders and such ships, as I have just described, shall
become more numerous, the hope of the friends of seamen will be
greatly strengthened; and it is encouraging to remember that the
efforts among common sailors will soon raise up such a class; for
those of them who are brought under these influences will
inevitably be the ones to succeed to the places of trust and
authority. If there is on earth an instance where a little leaven
may leaven the whole lump, it is that of the religious
shipmaster.
It is to the progress of this work among seamen
that we must look with the greatest confidence for the remedying of
those numerous minor evils and abuses that we so often hear of. It
will raise the character of sailors, both as individuals and as a
class. It will give weight to their testimony in courts of justice,
secure better usage to them on board ship, and add comforts to
their lives on shore and at sea. There are some laws that can be
passed to remove temptation from their way and to help them in
their progress; and some changes in the jurisdiction of the lower
courts, to prevent delays, may, and probably will, be made. But,
generally speaking, more especially in things which concern the
discipline of ships, we had better labor in this great work, and
view with caution the proposal of new laws and arbitrary
regulations, remembering that most of those concerned in the making
of them must necessarily be little qualified to judge of their
operation.
Without any formal dedication of my narrative to
that body of men, of whose common life it is intended to be a
picture, I have yet borne them constantly in mind during its
preparation. I cannot but trust that those of them, into whose
hands it may chance to fall, will find in it that which shall
render any professions of sympathy and good wishes on my part
unnecessary. And I will take the liberty, on parting with my
reader, who has gone down with us to the ocean, and “laid his hand
upon its mane,” to commend to his kind wishes, and to the benefit
of his efforts, that class of men with whom, for a time, my lot was
cast. I wish the rather to do this, since I feel that whatever
attention this book may gain, and whatever favor it may find, I
shall owe almost entirely to that interest in the sea, and those
who follow it, which is so easily excited in us all.