hungry, wretched, hopeless. They had,
indeed, come to help in the ceremony; for,
 when the great man's gilded feet touched the
 deck of their flying ship, the comites would
 give two shrill whistles;—the first was for
 attention; on hearing the second, they gave
 a lamentable, piteous howl of welcome, which
 must have been most dolorous and terrible
 to hear.
When the waves were rolling up in green
 alps, snow-capped, and threatening—the
galleys could not put to sea; and, such slaves
 as had trades, took to working, planing, shoe-
making, weaving, and painting: such poor
 serfs as had none were taught to knit coarse
 stockings, the comites supplying them with
 yarn, and paying them for all they did half
 the usual price; and that not in money, but
in broken meat and watered wine. To be
 caught sending for wine from the shore, was
 to be turned up, and bastinadoed incontinently.
The most touching sight of all in
 these wet, stormy, dark days, was to see the
 poor, low-browed boors, who knew no trade,
 and could not even read or knit, busying
themselves, and trying to make themselves useful
 and acceptable, by cleaning their comrades'
 clothes, or freeing them from the torments of
 parasitical life; for even the beggar has his
 courtiers.
Such perpetual toil, imprisonment, and bad
 diet, was already breaking out in fever and
 sickness. For the sufferers there was a
 snug hospital in a close, noisome, dark corner
 of the galley's hold, to which light and air
 came only in a Rembrandt sort of way,
 through a miserable scuttle, two feet square.
 At each end of this room was a fanlar,
or scaffold, on which the sick were thrown,
 without beds or pallets. When the scaffold
 grew full, the slaves were laid out on the
 cables, sometimes as many as eighty at once,
 stench and pestilence ruling supreme, and
 tormenting them in various ways. The
 chaplains, who came into this den of death
 to confess the dying, wore a night-gown, to
 protect their clothes from the vermin. In this
 dreadful hole there was only three feet space
 between the scaffold and the ceiling. The
 confessor had to throw himself down on his
 stomach at the dying men's sides, so as to
 listen to the groans of their confessions.
 The place was so horrible, that the sick
 preferred to die straining at the oar, rather
 than sink into the stinking darkness.
There was a surgeon kept to attend to
 these lazars of humanity, but how could he
 fight against such invitations and bribes to
 pestilence and death ? There was also a supply
 of the best drugs furnished by the French
 Government; but the surgeon generally
considered these as mere perquisites.
Every one preyed on these poor wretches.
 For instance:—during sickness, the king
 ordered every man in the dark hold to have
 a pound of fresh bread, a pound of fresh meat,
and two ounces of rice, every day ; but
 the steward stole the allowances, and let the
 slaves die unheeded, generally contriving to
 make a fortune in about six campaigns.
 Seventy sick men would be fed on twenty
 pounds of bad, cheap meat, soaked in hot
 water. At these frauds the surgeon and
 steward connived. Sometimes a simple-
minded, warm-hearted chaplain would
 astonish the silk-coated minister of marine
at Versailles by the narrative of these horrors,
 and obtain a promise of redress, forgotten as
 soon as made.
There were in the galleys five sorts of
 persons,—seamen, Turks, deserters, criminals,
 and Protestants. The Turks were brought
 as stout-limbed gladiator- men, to manage the
 stroke-oars, and were called Vogueavants.
 They had the same allowance as the soldiers,
 and were ranked with the upper slaves, who
 pulled in the Banc du quarta, or the Camille
 and les Espaliers. They were  generally very
 stout men, who wore no chains, but had a ring
 round the ankles. They were servants to the
 officers, and were eminently honest and trusty.
 When they arrived at any port, they had
 liberty to trade, so that some of them were
 worth three or four hundred pounds, which,
 to the shame of Christians, they generally sent
 home to their wives and families. They
 were very kind and  charitable to each other,
 and very strict in their religious observances:
 natural enough; for exiles keep religious by
 the pressure around them of a repugnant faith.
 These Turkish rowers, especially at the
 Ramadan fast, the first moon of the year,
 never ate or drank from sunrise to sun down,
 in spite of all the toil and labour at the oars
 which they pulled, looking faint and hollow-
eyed as ghosts. If a Turk were imprisoned,
 his companions always interceded, in a
turbaned mob, with the captain for him. If one
 was sick, the rest clubbed to buy him meat,
 or purchase him drugs, or tonics. In short,
 as an eye-witness says, the Christians in the
 galleys seemed to turn Turks, and the Turks
 to turn Christians. They were very obdurate
 against any chaplain who tried to convert
 them, declaring they would rather turn dogs
 than be of a religion that was so cruel as to
 suffer so many crimes.
These Turks, during mass, were put into
 the caique or long boat, where they smoked,
 talked, and scoffed; safe from the last of
 the comites. In spite, however, of their
 being so well treated, they sighed for
 liberty: the very name of a galley being
 terrible to them. They generally remained
 slaves for life, unless when they grew
 very old and unserviceable, they meet with
 friends who would buy them off.
Fops in the Palais Royal used to tell stories
 of men who, when released, would not quit
 the galleys: we now may judge how far these
 stories were probable.
The fançoniers, or deserters, were generally
 poor peasants who had committed the
unpardonable offence of buying salt in some
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