Some Rambling Notes of an Idle Excursion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Some Rambling Notes of an Idle Excursion.

Some Rambling Notes of an Idle Excursion eBook

This eBook from the Gutenberg Project consists of approximately 62 pages of information about Some Rambling Notes of an Idle Excursion.

Among other talk to-day, it came out that whale-ships carry no doctor.  The captain adds the doctorship to his own duties.  He not only gives medicines, but sets broken limbs after notions of his own, or saws them off and sears the stump when amputation seems best.  The captain is provided with a medicine-chest, with the medicines numbered instead of named.  A book of directions goes with this.  It describes diseases and symptoms, and says, “Give a teaspoonful of No. 9 once an hour,” or “Give ten grains of No. 12 every half-hour,” etc.  One of our sea-captains came across a skipper in the North Pacific who was in a state of great surprise and perplexity.  Said he: 

“There’s something rotten about this medicine-chest business.  One of my men was sick—­nothing much the matter.  I looked in the book:  it said give him a teaspoonful of No. 15.  I went to the medicine-chest, and I see I was out of No. 15.  I judged I’d got to get up a combination somehow that would fill the bill; so I hove into the fellow half a teaspoonful of No. 8 and half a teaspoonful of No. 7, and I’ll be hanged if it didn’t kill him in fifteen minutes!  There’s something about this medicine-chest system that’s too many for me!”

There was a good deal of pleasant gossip about old Captain “Hurricane” Jones, of the Pacific Ocean—­peace to his ashes!  Two or three of us present had known him; I particularly well, for I had made four sea-voyages with him.  He was a very remarkable man.  He was born in a ship; he picked up what little education he had among his shipmates; he began life in the forecastle, and climbed grade by grade to the captaincy.  More than fifty years of his sixty-five were spent at sea.  He had sailed all oceans, seen all lands, and borrowed a tint from all climates.  When a man has been fifty years at sea he necessarily knows nothing of men, nothing of the world but its surface, nothing of the world’s thought, nothing of the world’s learning but it’s a B C, and that blurred and distorted by the unfocused lenses of an untrained mind.  Such a man is only a gray and bearded child.  That is what old Hurricane Jones was—­simply an innocent, lovable old infant.  When his spirit was in repose he was as sweet and gentle as a girl; when his wrath was up he was a hurricane that made his nickname seem tamely descriptive.  He was formidable in a fight, for he was of powerful build and dauntless courage.  He was frescoed from head to heel with pictures and mottoes tattooed in red and blue India ink.  I was with him one voyage when he got his last vacant space tattooed; this vacant space was around his left ankle.  During three days he stumped about the ship with his ankle bare and swollen, and this legend gleaming red and angry out from a clouding of India ink:  “Virtue is its own R’d.” (There was a lack of room.) He was deeply and sincerely pious, and swore like a fishwoman.  He considered swearing blameless, because sailors would not understand an order unillumined

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Some Rambling Notes of an Idle Excursion from Project Gutenberg. Public domain.