{"id":"01KG8AKTGPZP5TAFJ3E7AQF39C","cid":"bafkreifmo6wux63ecmjrxnbdk2umyz3hif7ev25dijpx3fb6a6h6p75w54","type":"chunk","properties":{"end_line":1914,"extracted_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:14.838Z","extracted_by":"structure-extraction-lambda","label":"Chunk 2","source_file":"01KG89J1GP71YDJ60P8SRH97MF","start_line":1851,"text":"At last one of them went below and brought up a box of cigars from his\r\nchest, for some sailors always provide little delicacies of that kind,\r\nto break off the first shock of the salt water after laying idle\r\nashore; and also by way of _tapering off,_ as I mentioned a little\r\nwhile ago. But I wondered that they never carried any pies and tarts to\r\nsea with them, instead of spirits and cigars.\r\n\r\nNed, for that was the man’s name, split open the box with a blow of his\r\nfist, and then handed it round along the windlass, just like a waiter\r\nat a party, every one helping himself. But I was a member of an\r\nAnti-Smoking Society that had been organized in our village by the\r\nPrincipal of the Sunday School there, in conjunction with the\r\nTemperance Association. So I did not smoke any then, though I did\r\nafterward upon the voyage, I am sorry to say. Notwithstanding I\r\ndeclined; with a good deal of unnecessary swearing, Ned assured me that\r\nthe cigars were real genuine Havannas; for he had been in Havanna, he\r\nsaid, and had them made there under his own eye. According to his\r\naccount, he was very particular about his cigars and other things, and\r\nnever made any importations, for they were unsafe; but always made a\r\nvoyage himself direct to the place where any foreign thing was to be\r\nhad that he wanted. He went to Havre for his woolen shirts, to Panama\r\nfor his hats, to China for his silk handkerchiefs, and direct to\r\nCalcutta for his cheroots; and as a great joker in the watch used to\r\nsay, no doubt he would at last have occasion to go to Russia for his\r\nhalter; the wit of which saying was presumed to be in the fact, that\r\nthe Russian hemp is the best; though that is not wit which needs\r\nexplaining.\r\n\r\nBy dint of the spirits which, besides stimulating my fainting strength,\r\nunited with the cool air of the sea to give me an appetite for our hard\r\nbiscuit; and also by dint of walking briskly up and down the deck\r\nbefore the windlass, I had now recovered in good part from my sickness,\r\nand finding the sailors all very pleasant and sociable, at least among\r\nthemselves, and seated smoking together like old cronies, and nothing\r\non earth to do but sit the watch out, I began to think that they were a\r\npretty good set of fellows after all, barring their swearing and\r\nanother ugly way of talking they had; and I thought I had misconceived\r\ntheir true characters; for at the outset I had deemed them such a\r\nparcel of wicked hard-hearted rascals that it would be a severe\r\naffliction to associate with them.\r\n\r\nYes, I now began to look on them with a sort of incipient love; but\r\nmore with an eye of pity and compassion, as men of naturally gentle and\r\nkind dispositions, whom only hardships, and neglect, and ill-usage had\r\nmade outcasts from good society; and not as villains who loved\r\nwickedness for the sake of it, and would persist in wickedness, even in\r\nParadise, if they ever got there. And I called to mind a sermon I had\r\nonce heard in a church in behalf of sailors, when the preacher called\r\nthem strayed lambs from the fold, and compared them to poor lost\r\nchildren, babes in the wood, orphans without fathers or mothers.\r\n\r\nAnd I remembered reading in a magazine, called the Sailors’ Magazine,\r\nwith a sea-blue cover, and a ship painted on the back, about pious\r\nseamen who never swore, and paid over all their wages to the poor\r\nheathen in India; and how that when they were too old to go to sea,\r\nthese pious old sailors found a delightful home for life in the\r\nHospital, where they had nothing to do, but prepare themselves for\r\ntheir latter end. And I wondered whether there were any such good\r\nsailors among my ship-mates; and observing that one of them laid on\r\ndeck apart from the rest, I thought to be sure he must be one of them:\r\nso I did not disturb his devotions: but I was afterward shocked at\r\ndiscovering that he was only fast asleep, with one of the brown jugs by\r\nhis side.\r\n\r","title":"Chunk 2"},"relationships":[{"peer":"01KG8AJQ10PHN931C809JMCG8H","peer_type":"chapter","predicate":"in"},{"peer":"01KG89J1GP71YDJ60P8SRH97MF","peer_type":"file","predicate":"extractedFrom"},{"peer":"01KG89HMDZKNY753EZE1CJ8HZW","peer_type":"collection","predicate":"collection"},{"peer":"01KG8AKTGPAQBY3WGZAHWMM8ZW","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"prev"},{"peer":"01KG8AKTGPW409B1XMZDQZW8SM","peer_type":"chunk","predicate":"next"}],"ver":2,"created_at":"2026-01-30T20:48:16.918Z","ts":"2026-01-30T20:48:25.227Z","edited_by":{"method":"manual","user_id":"01KFF0H3YRP9ZSM033AM0QJ47H"}}