 
       
      from the dock-side, before loud cries of
 lamentation arose, not for parting friends,
—that sort of grief is reserved for less
genteel conveyances,—but for parcels mislaid,
 and umbrellas left behind. Perspiring
passengers and porters held up their hands on
 the quay, despairing for a moment, and then
 disappearing to hire one of the wary boatmen,
who every week gather a fair harvest
 from the great Too-late family. A short
 quarter of an hour's gliding by the lovely
 scenery of the Solent brought us alongside the
 Bella Donna. The style of getting on board a
 large steamer from a small steamer has
considerable advantages, both in dignity and
comfort, over the small boat and rope-ladder
system of emigrant ships; where, with a short sea
 and wobbling boat, climbing up an unsteady
 machine with efforts worthy of those of a
 street mountebank, becomes the necessity of
 passengers, without exception to age and sex;
 all of whom "must climb who never climbed
 before;" and not only climb, but hold on for
 their lives. We were better off.
When the Mouse ran alongside the Bella
 Donna, a sort of big door was opened in the
 side of the latter (excuse want of nautical
 knowledge), leading to the lower deck. The
 court was ready ranged in rows, to receive its
 king, the captain; on one side the officers in
 blue uniforms and gold lace; on the other, a
 selection from the crew, in white trousers and
 blue Jerseys, with "Bella Donna" embroidered
in red on every chest. Among these
 were two negroes, of the blackest, fuzziest
 type; evidently impressed with the dignity
 of their office and the unaccustomed magnificence
of their costume. After the captain, the
 passengers followed pell-mell, and were
soon widely dispersed, the new voyagers
madly shrieking for the steward and stewardess.
Leaving them to their confusion, I mounted
 to the deck; where, from bow to stern, a clear
 promenade, long enough for exercise in a pony
 chair, extended without break or step—a vast
 improvement in comfort on the old style of
 lofty picturesque poop. Man-of-war discipline
 prevailed. The whiteness of the planks, the
 neatness of every arrangement, must be something
frightful to the tobacco-chewing sections
 of the one hundred and fifty passengers whose
 acquaintance with dirt has been so close and so
 protracted, that they have acquired an affection
for it. Two operations of a very different
 character were going on simultaneously. On
 one side passengers, escaped from the luggage
 department, were busy, choosing their light
 reading for the voyage from a parti-coloured
 collection transplanted from a railway station;
—the stock of which had gone off with
extraordinary briskness. On the other, the captain
 mustered his crew and engineers, a formidable
 array; for the officers and crew made up more
 than fifty; six engineers had under their
 command twenty-four firemen, eighteen coal
 trimmers, and a couple of mechanics. Stewards
and servants made up a round dozen,
 beside a quarter of a hundred waiters to
 minister to the wants of a hundred and fifty
 passengers. As for the freight, besides two
 hundred tons of stores to be consumed on
 the voyage, and five hundred tons of cargo,
 there were some thirteen hundred tons of
 coal for the insatiable demands of the stoke-
holes.
From the quarter-deck, I made my way
 amidships to look into the farm. I found it
 well stocked. In separate pens, pigs grunted,
 sheep chewed the cud; while fowls, ducks,
 geese, and turkeys occupied long coops, in
 marvellous profusion. There is no department
in which improvement is more needed
 than in sea-going pens and coops. If every
 sheep had its separate stall divided off by
 stout open rails, and if the coops for poultry
 were subdivided so as not to have more than
 four or five in each division; if, in addition,
 the grain-troughs were kept always full
 of food, and a tin fountain of sufficient
 size were attached to each water-trough,
 a large per centage of the poultry now
destroyed during every voyage by over-crowding
 and fighting for water, would be saved,
and all would be kept in good condition. Already
 poultry mortality had begun to take place,
 and the sheep, if they had been penned
separately, would have avoided many bruises,
 without any loss of space.
From the stock-farm I descended to the
 kitchen, without halting in the long luxuriant
 dining-room, surrounded by softly-cushioned
 sofas. The kitchen is a sort of cage of iron,
 placed on the lower deck, nearly amidships;
 there I had the pleasure of seeing the French
 chef, a first-rate artist, attended by his
myrmidons at work,—and of learning how, within
 a section scarcely twelve feet square, dinners of
 many dishes worthy of the renowned artists of
 the Boulevard Italien and Palais Royal,—could
 be prepared, dished, and transferred to the
 hands of the twenty-five waiters; who, in full
 livery of blue coats with metal buttons, and
 white continuations, perform the part of
 genii of ancient story; and, at the appointed
 signal—no matter whether rubbing a sonorous
 ring, or ringing a bell— lay out the feast.
 To appreciate the capabilities of mechanical
 skill and cooking talents of a high order in
 triumphing over confined space, and in defying
 time, the steam kitchen of a steam-ship must
 be visited. The commander-in-chief, like
 Field-marshal Governor Crusoe, is monarch of
 all he surveys. He plans the whole, but does
 not disdain to execute details; thus, those
 who have on one day luxuriated over his best
 dish, a matelotte à la Macédoine, fricandeau
 de poulet, a vol-au-vent, or a Mayonnaise
 d'homard, may the next see him hard at
 work chopping the vegetables destined to
 form a delicious potage, with the rapidity
 and neatness of a machine; while keeping
 an eye on his ovens, his steamers, his
 braisières, his boilers, and issuing curt
directions to his second in command.
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