peopled by a few ships laid up on buoys or tucked
far away from each other at the end of sheds in the
corners of empty quays, where they seemed to slumber
quietly remote, untouched by the bustle of men’s
affairs—in retreat rather than in captivity.
They were quaint and sympathetic, those two homely
basins, unfurnished and silent, with no aggressive
display of cranes, no apparatus of hurry and work
on their narrow shores. No railway-lines cumbered
them. The knots of labourers trooping in clumsily
round the corners of cargo-sheds to eat their food
in peace out of red cotton handkerchiefs had the air
of picnicking by the side of a lonely mountain pool.
They were restful (and I should say very unprofitable),
those basins, where the chief officer of one of the
ships involved in the harassing, strenuous, noisy
activity of the New South Dock only a few yards away
could escape in the dinner-hour to stroll, unhampered
by men and affairs, meditating (if he chose) on the
vanity of all things human. At one time they
must have been full of good old slow West Indiamen
of the square-stern type, that took their captivity,
one imagines, as stolidly as they had faced the buffeting
of the waves with their blunt, honest bows, and disgorged
sugar, rum, molasses, coffee, or logwood sedately
with their own winch and tackle. But when I knew
them, of exports there was never a sign that one could
detect; and all the imports I have ever seen were
some rare cargoes of tropical timber, enormous baulks
roughed out of iron trunks grown in the woods about
the Gulf of Mexico. They lay piled up in stacks
of mighty boles, and it was hard to believe that all
this mass of dead and stripped trees had come out
of the flanks of a slender, innocent-looking little
barque with, as likely as not, a homely woman’s
name—Ellen this or Annie that—upon
her fine bows. But this is generally the case
with a discharged cargo. Once spread at large
over the quay, it looks the most impossible bulk to
have all come there out of that ship along-side.
They were quiet, serene nooks in the busy world of
docks, these basins where it has never been my good
luck to get a berth after some more or less arduous
passage. But one could see at a glance that
men and ships were never hustled there. They
were so quiet that, remembering them well, one comes
to doubt that they ever existed—places
of repose for tired ships to dream in, places of meditation
rather than work, where wicked ships—the
cranky, the lazy, the wet, the bad sea boats, the
wild steerers, the capricious, the pig-headed, the
generally ungovernable—would have full
leisure to take count and repent of their sins, sorrowful
and naked, with their rent garments of sailcloth stripped
off them, and with the dust and ashes of the London
atmosphere upon their mastheads. For that the
worst of ships would repent if she were ever given
time I make no doubt. I have known too many of
them. No ship is wholly bad; and now that their
bodies that had braved so many tempests have been
blown off the face of the sea by a puff of steam,
the evil and the good together into the limbo of things
that have served their time, there can be no harm
in affirming that in these vanished generations of
willing servants there never has been one utterly
unredeemable soul.