【英文读物】On The Blockade.docx
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1、【英文读物】On The BlockadePREFACE On the Blockade is the third of The Blue and the Gray Series. Like the first and second volumes, its incidents are dated back to the War of the Rebellion, and located in the midst of its most stirring scenes on the Southern coast, where the naval operations of the United
2、 States contributed their full share to the final result. The writer begs to remind his readers again that he has not felt called upon to invest his story with the dignity of history, or in all cases to mingle fiction with actual historic occurrences. He believes that all the scenes of the story are
3、 not only possible, but probable, and that just such events as he has narrated really and frequently occurred in the days of the Rebellion. The historian is forbidden to make his work more palatable or more interesting by the intermixture of fiction with fact, while the story-writer, though required
4、 to be reasonably consistent with the spirit 8 and the truth of history, may wander from veritable details, and use his imagination in the creation of incidents upon which the grand result is reached. It would not be allowable to make the Rebellion a success, if the writer so desired, even on the pa
5、ges of romance; and it would not be fair or just to ignore the bravery, the self-sacrifice, and the heroic endurance of the Southern people in a cause they believed to be holy and patriotic, as almost universally admitted at the present time, any more than it would be to lose sight of the magnificen
6、t spirit, the heroism, the courage, and the persistence, of the Northern people in accomplishing what they believed then, and still believe, was a holy and patriotic duty in the preservation of the union. Incidents not inconsistent with the final result, or with the spirit of the people on either si
7、de in the great conflict are of comparatively little consequence. That General Lee or General Grant turned this or that corner in reaching Appomattox may be important, but the grand historical tableau is the Christian hero, noble in the midst of defeat, disaster, and ruin, formally rendering his swo
8、rd to the impassible but magnanimous conqueror 9 as the crowning event of a long and bloody war. The details are historically important, though overshadowed by the mighty result of the great conflict. Many of the personages of the preceding volumes have been introduced in the present one, and the ce
9、ntral figure remains the same. The writer is willing to admit that his hero is an ideal character, though his lofty tone and patriotic spirit were fully paralleled by veritable individuals during the war; and he is not prepared to apologize for the abundant success which attended the career of Chris
10、ty Passford. Those who really struggled as earnestly and faithfully deserved his good fortune, though they did not always obtain it. Dorchester, Mass., April 24, 1890. CHAPTER I THE UNITED STATES STEAMER BRONX She is a fine little steamer, father, without the possibility of a doubt, said Lieutenant
11、Passford, who was seated at the table with his father in the captains cabin on board of the Bronx. I dont feel quite at home here, and I dont quite like the idea of being taken out of the Bellevite. You are not going to sea for the fun of it, my son, replied Captain Passford. You are not setting out
12、 on a yachting excursion, but on the most serious business in the world. I know and feel all that, father, but I have spent so many pleasant days, hours, weeks, and months on board of the Bellevite, that I am very sorry to leave her, added Christy Passford, who had put on his new uniform, which was
13、that of 16 master in the United States Navy; and he was as becoming to the uniform as the uniform was to him. You cannot well help having some regrets at leaving the Bellevite; but you must remember that your life on board of her was mostly in the capacity of a pleasure-seeker, though you made a goo
14、d use of your time and of your opportunities for improvement; and that is the reason why you have made such remarkable progress in your present profession. I shall miss my friends on board of the Bellevite. I have sailed with all her officers, and Paul Vapoor and I have been cronies for years, conti
15、nued Christy, with a shade of gloom on his bright face. You will probably see them occasionally, and if your life is spared you may again find yourself an officer of the Bellevite. But I think you have no occasion to indulge in any regrets, said Captain Passford, imparting a cheerful expression to h
16、is dignified countenance. Allow me to call your attention to the fact that you are the commander of this fine little steamer. Here you are in your own cabin, and you are still nothing but a boy, hardly eighteen years old. 17 If I have not earned my rank, it is not my fault that I have it, answered C
17、hristy, hardly knowing whether to be glad or sorry for his rapid advancement. I have never asked for anything; I did not ask or expect to be promoted. I was satisfied with my rank as a midshipman. I did not ask for your promotion, though I could probably have procured for you the rank of master when
18、 you entered the navy. I do not like to ask favors for a member of my own family. I have wished you to feel that you were in the service of your country because it needs you, and not for glory or profit. And I have tried to feel so, father. I think you have felt so, my son; and I am prouder of the f
19、act that you are a disinterested patriot than of the rank you have nobly and bravely won, said Captain Passford, as he took some letters from his pocket, from which he selected one bearing an English postage stamp. I have a letter from one of my agents in England, which, I think, contains valuable i
20、nformation. I have called the attention of the government to these employes of mine, and they will soon pass from my service to that of the naval department. 18 The information sent me has sometimes been very important. I know that myself, for the information that came from that source enabled the B
21、ellevite to capture the Killbright, added Christy. The contents of the letter in my hand have been sent to the Secretary of the Navy; but it will do no harm for you to possess the information given to me, continued Captain Passford, as he opened the letter. But I see a man at work at the foot of the
22、 companion way, and I dont care to post the whole ships company on this subject. That is Pink Mulgrum, said Christy with a smile on his face. He is deaf and dumb, and he cannot make any use of what you say. Dont be sure of anything, Christy, except your religion and your patriotism, in these times,
23、added Captain Passford, as he rose and closed the door of the cabin. I dont think there is much danger from a deaf mute, father, said the young commander of the Bronx laughing. Perhaps not; but when you have war intelligence to communicate, it is best to believe that every person has ears, and that
24、every door has a 19 keyhole. I learn from this letter that the Scotian sailed from Glasgow, and the Arran from Leith. The agent is of the opinion that both these steamers are fitted out by the same owners, who have formed a company, apparently to furnish the South with gunboats for its navy, as well
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