Short Fiction Herman Melville (best books to read fiction .TXT) đ
- Author: Herman Melville
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Of course the âGee has his private nature as well as his public coat. To know âGeesâ âto be a sound judge of âGeesâ âone must study them, just as to know and be a judge of horses one must study horses. Simple as for the most part are both horse and âGee, in neither case can knowledge of the creature come by intuition. How unwise, then, in those ignorant young captains who, on their first voyage, will go and ship their âGees at Fogo without any preparatory information, or even so much as taking convenient advice from a âGee jockey. By a âGee jockey is meant a man well versed in âGees. Many a young captain has been thrown and badly hurt by a âGee of his own choosing. For notwithstanding the general docility of the âGee when green, it may be otherwise with him when ripe. Discreet captains wonât have such a âGee. âAway with that ripe âGee!â they cry; âthat smart âGee; that knowing âGee! Green âGees for me!â
For the benefit of inexperienced captains about to visit Fogo, the following may be given as the best way to test a âGee: Get square before him, at, say three paces, so that the eye, like a shot, may rake the âGee fore and aft, at one glance taking in his whole make and buildâ âhow he looks about the head, whether he carry it well; his ears, are they over-lengthy? How fares it in the withers? His legs, does the âGee stand strongly on them? His knees, any Belshazzar symptoms there? How stands it in the regions of the brisket, etc., etc.
Thus far bone and bottom. For the rest, draw close to, and put the centre of the pupil of your eyeâ âput it, as it were, right into the âGeeâs eyeâ âeven as an eye-stone, gently, but firmly slip it in there, and then note what speck or beam of viciousness, if any, will be floated out.
All this and more must be done; and yet after all, the best judge may be deceived. But on no account should the shipper negotiate for his âGee with any middleman, himself a âGee. Because such an one must be a knowing âGee, who will be sure to advise the green âGee what things to hide and what to display, to hit the skipperâs fancy; which, of course, the knowing âGee supposes to lean toward as much physical and moral excellence as possible. The rashness of trusting to one of these middlemen was forcibly shown in the case of the âGee who by his countrymen was recommended to a New Bedford captain as one of the most agile âGees in Fogo. There he stood straight and stout, in a flowing pair of man-of-warâs-man trousers, uncommonly well fitted out. True, he did not step around much at the time. But that was diffidence. Good. They shipped him. But at the first taking in of sail the âGee hung fire. Come to look, both trousers-legs were full of elephantiasis. It was a long sperm-whaling voyage. Useless as so much lumber, at every port prohibited from being dumped ashore, that elephantine âGee, ever crunching biscuit, for three weary years was trundled round the globe.
Grown wise by several similar experiences, old Captain Hosea Kean, of Nantucket, in shipping a âGee, at present manages matters thus: He lands at Fogo in the night; by secret means gains information where the likeliest âGee wanting to ship lodges; whereupon with a strong party he surprises all the friends and acquaintances of that âGee; putting them under guard with pistols at their heads; then creeps cautiously toward the âGee, now lying wholly unawares in his hut, quite relaxed from all possibility of displaying aught deceptive in his appearance. Thus silently, thus suddenly, thus unannounced, Captain Kean bursts upon his âGee, so to speak, in the very bosom of his family. By this means, more than once, unexpected revelations have been made. A âGee, noised abroad for a Hercules in strength and an Apollo Belvidere for beauty, of a sudden is discovered all in a wretched heap; forlornly adroop as upon crutches, his legs looking as if broken at the cartwheel. Solitude is the house of candor, according to Captain Kean. In the stall, not the street, he says, resides the real nag.
The innate disdain of regularly bred seamen toward âGees receives an added edge from this. The âGees undersell them working for biscuit where the sailors demand dollars. Hence anything said by sailors to the prejudice of âGees should be received with caution. Especially that jeer of theirs, that monkey-jacket was originally so called from the circumstance that that rude sort of shaggy garment was first known in Fogo. They often call a monkey-jacket a âGee-jacket. However this may be, there is no call to which the âGee will with more alacrity respond than the word âMan!â
Is there any hard work to be done, and the âGees stand round in sulks? âHere, my men!â cries the mate. How they jump. But ten to one when the work is done, it is plain âGee again. âHere, âGee you âGe-e-e-e!â In fact, it is not unsurmised, that only when extraordinary stimulus is needed, only when an extra strain is to be got out of them, are these hapless âGees ennobled with the human name.
As yet, the intellect of the âGee has been little cultivated. No well-attested educational experiment has been tried upon him. It is said, however, that in the last century a young âGee was by a visionary Portuguese naval officer sent to Salamanca University. Also, among the Quakers of Nantucket, there has been talk of sending five comely âGees, aged sixteen, to Dartmouth College; that venerable institution, as is well known, having been originally founded partly with the object of finishing off wild Indians in the classics and higher mathematics. Two qualities of the âGee which, with his docility, may be justly regarded as
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