Yes, despite the Dansker's pithy insistence as to the Master-at-arms
being at the bottom of these strange experiences of Billy on board the
Indomitable, the young sailor was ready to ascribe them to almost
anybody but the man who, to use Billy's own expression, "always had a
pleasant word for him." This is to be wondered at. Yet not so much to be
wondered at. In certain matters, some sailors even in mature life remain
unsophisticated enough. But a young seafarer of the disposition of our
athletic Foretopman, is much of a child-man. And yet a child's utter
innocence is but its blank ignorance, and the innocence more or less
wanes as intelligence waxes. But in Billy Budd intelligence, such as it
was, had advanced, while yet his simplemindedness remained for the most
part unaffected. Experience is a teacher indeed; yet did Billy's years
make his experience small. Besides, he had none of that intuitive
knowledge of the bad which in natures not good or incompletely so
foreruns experience, and therefore may pertain, as in some instances it
too clearly does pertain, even to youth.
And what could Billy know of man except of man as a mere sailor? And
the old-fashioned sailor, the veritable man-before-the-mast, the sailor
from boyhood up, he, tho' indeed of the same species as a landsman, is
in some respects singularly distinct from him. The sailor is frankness,
the landsman is finesse. Life is not a game with the sailor, demanding
the long head; no intricate game of chess where few moves are made in
straightforwardness, and ends are attained by indirection; an oblique,
tedious, barren game hardly worth that poor candle burnt out in playing it.
Yes, as a class, sailors are in character a juvenile race. Even
their deviations are marked by juvenility. And this more especially
holding true with the sailors of Billy's time. Then, too, certain things
which apply to all sailors, do more pointedly operate, here and there,
upon the junior one. Every sailor, too, is accustomed to obey orders
without debating them; his life afloat is externally ruled for him; he
is not brought into that promiscuous commerce with mankind where
unobstructed free agency on equal terms -- equal superficially, at least
-- soon teaches one that unless upon occasion he exercise a distrust
keen in proportion to the fairness of the appearance, some foul turn may
be served him. A ruled undemonstrative distrustfulness is so habitual,
not with business-men so much, as with men who know their kind in less
shallow relations than business, namely, certain men-of-the-world, that
they come at last to employ it all but unconsciously; and some of them
would very likely feel real surprise at being charged with it as one of
their general characteristics.