He went on then to tell us how tired he was and how discouraged by this

lesson of disillusion following swiftly upon the finest day of his life.

He told us how he went the round of all the ship-owners' offices in the

City where some junior clerk would furnish him with printed forms of

application which he took home to fill up in the evening. He used to run

out just before midnight to post them in the nearest pillar-box. And

that was all that ever came of it. In his own words: he might just as

well have dropped them all properly addressed and stamped into the sewer

grating.

Then one day, as he was wending his weary way to the docks, he met a

friend and former shipmate a little older than himself outside the

Fenchurch Street Railway Station.

He craved for sympathy but his friend had just "got a ship" that very

morning and was hurrying home in a state of outward joy and inward

uneasiness usual to a sailor who after many days of waiting suddenly gets

a berth. This friend had the time to condole with him but briefly. He

must be moving. Then as he was running off, over his shoulder as it

were, he suggested: "Why don't you go and speak to Mr. Powell in the

Shipping Office." Our friend objected that he did not know Mr. Powell

from Adam. And the other already pretty near round the corner shouted

back advice: "Go to the private door of the Shipping Office and walk

right up to him. His desk is by the window. Go up boldly and say I sent

you."

Our new acquaintance looking from one to the other of us declared: "Upon

my word, I had grown so desperate that I'd have gone boldly up to the

devil himself on the mere hint that he had a second mate's job to give

away."

It was at this point that interrupting his flow of talk to light his pipe

but holding us with his eye he inquired whether we had known Powell.

Marlow with a slight reminiscent smile murmured that he "remembered him

very well."

Then there was a pause. Our new acquaintance had become involved in a

vexatious difficulty with his pipe which had suddenly betrayed his trust

and disappointed his anticipation of self-indulgence. To keep the ball

rolling I asked Marlow if this Powell was remarkable in any way.

"He was not exactly remarkable," Marlow answered with his usual

nonchalance. "In a general way it's very difficult for one to become

remarkable. People won't take sufficient notice of one, don't you know.

I remember Powell so well simply because as one of the Shipping Masters

in the Port of London he dispatched me to sea on several long stages of

my sailor's pilgrimage. He resembled Socrates. I mean he resembled him

genuinely: that is in the face. A philosophical mind is but an accident.

He reproduced exactly the familiar bust of the immortal sage, if you will

imagine the bust with a high top hat riding far on the back of the head,

and a black coat over the shoulders. As I never saw him except from the

other side of the long official counter bearing the five writing desks of

the five Shipping Masters, Mr. Powell has remained a bust to me."




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