sight of land and fearful of being surprised
 by sudden gusts that lash the Mediterranean
 to madness. They were fair-weather birds,
 were those galleys, and, in a storm, were like
 so many butterflies caught in a gusty April
 shower. There were five slaves to every oar,
 and in all three hundred slaves. The top-
sawyers, or upper end rowers, were generally
 shaven Turks, who were willingly granted
 the honour, since the place was the most
 laborious in the vessel. Honour would not
 be so much envied, if it were known with what
 labour it was burdened. To keep down these
 three hundred chained demons, each galley
 had a crew of one hundred and fifty men,
 including officers, soldiers, seamen, and
servants. Men who shouted orders, who reefed
 and clomb, who dragged out guns and fired
 from the rigging, and boys and varlets, who
 ran here and there with dishes and salvers,
 were unchained slaves. At the stern of each
 galley there was a covered chamber, rounded
 like a cradle, in which the captain lurked at
 night, or in foul weather, but in the
daytime it was frequented by the officers and
 chaplain, who repaired here to swear and
 quote their texts, while the subaltern officers
 had also their several lairs and haunts;
 while all the rest of the crew sweltered by
 day in the full glare and blaze of Neapolitan
 and Genoese suns, or the damp and moon
 hours of Corsican or Marseillese nights.
 There was, indeed, a sort of tent or awning
 suspended by a long cable slung from head
 to stern, that afforded some thin shelter, but
 only in bright, fair weather; for in the least
 cap-full of wind or puff of storm it was
 taken down, being dangerous overweight for a
 boat like a barque; so that, after blood-
sweats of passionate rowing, whether
pursuing the English or flying from the Turk,
 the wretched slaves, off Morocco, often found
 their broad backs coated with snow, till they
 could reach the open arms of a friendly
 port.
The slave's yearly allowance for clothes
 was two coarse canvas shirts, and a little
 red serge jerkin, slit up on each side to the
 arm-holes, to give their brawny arms full
 play. The short loose sleeves did not reach
 to the elbow. Every three years they
received a coarse frock, and for their shaved
 bullet-heads, a little red Phrygian cap, that the
 Revolution afterwards rendered so terrible.
 Sick or well, their only bed was a board a foot
 and a half broad; the sleeping places most
 dreaded were those nearest the officers of the
 galley, for if the vermin roused the slave, so
 that his chains rattled and awoke his neighbour,
he was torn to pieces with the gashes
 of rope scourges.
The fatigue of lifting the great oars of a
 galley, though pleasant to read of in the
 Odyssey, was extreme. The slave rose to
 draw his stroke, like those men we see
struggling in a coal barge against the stormy tide
 of the Thames, and they then fell back with
 a bumping jerk that would have astonished
 an Oxford or Cambridge puller. In all
 seasons, hot or cold, the perspiration trickled
 down their harassed limbs; and, when they
 began to grow faint and flag, one of the three
 comites (the comites were boatswains) ran
 down the gangboard which intersected the
 ship, to find out the rascal who did not keep
 touch and time with the rest. "Weak or lazy,
 dying or worn out, they did not care—he
 might be a sapless boy, he might be a
 decrepit old man—down came on his bare
 shoulders the large centurion's rod; which
 was so long, generally, that the two or three
nearest rowers also felt the blow, which left
 triple scars and red letters on every back on
 which it fell. To scowl, or swear, or groan,
 was only to draw down fresh sorrows, and
 fresh blasphemies and threats. Renewed toil
 was the only received mark of submission.
Reaching port brought no end to the
 slave's labours, for rowing ceased only to
 bring fresh toil and grief. The comites
 prided themselves on dexterously casting
 anchor; and, while the cable ran out, their
 lash went faster as the prisoners' arms moved
 quicker.
To support these hardships, the slaves
 received every morning at eight o'clock a
 portion of good biscuit, and at ten, a
porridge of hot-water soup, with some rancid
 oil, musty peas and beans floating at the
 top. When on duty they had handed round
 a pischione (two-thirds of a pint) of wine,
 morning and evening. When quiet at anchor
 in any Mediterranean port, all the slaves
 who had any money were allowed to have a
 jubilee, and to buy meat; and the Turk who
 commanded the oars, that is, who pulled at the
 end, and was not chained, was the agent to
 the meat market, and was also employed to
 watch it dressing in the cook's room. When
 the cook was a sullen villain—villains not
 being rare cattle in the galleys—he would
 sometimes, in a brutal passion at the trouble
 or hindrance, break the poor men's earthen
 stewpot, and throw it overboard to the
 fishes; while the poor fellows, chained by
 their ankles, fainting for want of food, were
 unable to murmur or complain.
The officer's table, however, was all this
 time well furnished both for plenty and
 delicacy, the smell of the dainties giving the
 slaves a more exquisite sense of their misery,
 by seeming to scoff and deride their poverty
 and hunger. Sometimes the galleys were
 lying in the ports of Morocco or Nice during
 the full swing and hubbub of the carnival.
 Then the prince or doge, with all his retinue,
 armed, comes on board, as Don Quixote
boarded the galleys floating on a stream
of music, with a rustle of perfumed feathers,
and a fluttering of long flags; there was
 mirth, and song, and revel, while the slaves
sat doubled-ip upon their benches, ready to
 burst their chains, and cut every honourable
throat, if they could or dared. They were
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