out rounded arms as if to point the way; heads of men
helmeted or bare; full lengths of warriors, of kings,
of statesmen, of lords and princesses, all white from
top to toe; with here and there a dusky turbaned figure,
bedizened in many colours, of some Eastern sultan
or hero, all inclined forward under the slant of mighty
bowsprits as if eager to begin another run of 11,000
miles in their leaning attitudes. These were
the fine figure-heads of the finest ships afloat.
But why, unless for the love of the life those effigies
shared with us in their wandering impassivity, should
one try to reproduce in words an impression of whose
fidelity there can be no critic and no judge, since
such an exhibition of the art of shipbuilding and
the art of figure-head carving as was seen from year’s
end to year’s end in the open-air gallery of
the New South Dock no man’s eye shall behold
again? All that patient, pale company of queens
and princesses, of kings and warriors, of allegorical
women, of heroines and statesmen and heathen gods,
crowned, helmeted, bare-headed, has run for good off
the sea stretching to the last above the tumbling foam
their fair, rounded arms; holding out their spears,
swords, shields, tridents in the same unwearied, striving
forward pose. And nothing remains but lingering
perhaps in the memory of a few men, the sound of their
names, vanished a long time ago from the first page
of the great London dailies; from big posters in railway-stations
and the doors of shipping offices; from the minds
of sailors, dockmasters, pilots, and tugmen; from
the hail of gruff voices and the flutter of signal
flags exchanged between ships closing upon each other
and drawing apart in the open immensity of the sea.
The elderly, respectable seaman, withdrawing his gaze
from that multitude of spars, gave me a glance to
make sure of our fellowship in the craft and mystery
of the sea. We had met casually, and had got
into contact as I had stopped near him, my attention
being caught by the same peculiarity he was looking
at in the rigging of an obviously new ship, a ship
with her reputation all to make yet in the talk of
the seamen who were to share their life with her.
Her name was already on their lips. I had heard
it uttered between two thick, red-necked fellows of
the semi-nautical type at the Fenchurch Street Railway-station,
where, in those days, the everyday male crowd was
attired in jerseys and pilot-cloth mostly, and had
the air of being more conversant with the times of
high-water than with the times of the trains.
I had noticed that new ship’s name on the first
page of my morning paper. I had stared at the
unfamiliar grouping of its letters, blue on white ground,
on the advertisement-boards, whenever the train came
to a standstill alongside one of the shabby, wooden,
wharf-like platforms of the dock railway-line.
She had been named, with proper observances, on the
day she came off the stocks, no doubt, but she was
very far yet from “having a name.”