A noble
act.
“What have you there, boys?” asked Captain
Bland.
“A ship,” replied one
of the lads who were passing the captain’s neat
cottage.
“A ship! Let me see;”
and the captain took the little vessel, and examined
it with as much fondness as a child does a pretty toy.
“Very fair, indeed; who made it?”
“I did,” replied one of the boys.
“You, indeed! Do you mean to be a sailor,
Harry?”
“I don’t know. I want father to get
me into the navy.”
“As a midshipman?”
“Yes, sir.”
Captain Bland shook his head.
“Better be a farmer, a physician, or a merchant.”
“Why so, captain?” asked Harry;
“All these are engaged in the doing of things
directly useful to society.”
“But I am sure, captain, that
those who defend us against our enemies, and protect
all who are engaged in commerce from wicked pirates,
are doing what is useful to society.”
“Their use, my lad,” replied
Captain Bland, “is certainly a most important
one; but we may call it rather negative than positive.
The civilian is engaged in building up and sustaining
society in doing good, through his active employment,
to his fellow-man. But military and naval officers
do not produce any thing; they only protect and defend.”
“But if they did not protect
and defend, captain, evil men would destroy society.
It would be of no use for the civilian to endeavor
to build up, if there were none to fight against the
enemies of the state.”
“Very true, my lad. The
brave defender of his country cannot be dispensed
with, and we give him all honor. Still, the use
of defence and protection is not so high as the use
of building up and sustaining. The thorn that
wounds the hand stretched forth to pluck the flower,
is not so much esteemed, nor of so much worth, as
the blossom it was meant to guard. Still, the
thorn performs a great use. Precisely a similar
use does the soldier or naval officer perform to society;
and it will be for you, my lad, to decide as to which
position you would rather fill.”
“I never thought of that, captain,”
said one of the lads. “But I can see clearly
how it is. And yet I think those men who risk
their lives for us in war, deserve great honor.
They leave their homes, and remain away, sometimes
for years, deprived of all the comforts and blessings
that civilians enjoy, suffering frequently great hardships,
and risking their lives to defend their country from
her enemies.”
“It is all as you say,”
replied Captain Bland; “and they do, indeed,
deserve great honor. Their calling is one that
exposes them to imminent peril, and requires them
to make many sacrifices; and they encounter not this
peril and sacrifice for their own good, but for the
good of others. Their lives do not pass so evenly
as do the lives of men who spend their days in the
peaceful pursuits of business, art, or literature;
and we could hardly wonder if they lost some of the
gentler attributes of the human heart. In some
cases, this is so; but in very many cases the reverse
is true. We find the man who goes fearlessly
into battle, and there, in defence of his country,
deals death and destruction unsparingly upon her enemies,
acting, when occasion offers, from the most humane
sentiments, and jeopardizing his life to save the
life of a single individual. Let me relate to
you a true story in illustration of what I say.
“When the unhappy war that has
been waged by our troops in Mexico broke out, a lieutenant
in the navy, who had a quiet berth at Washington, felt
it to be his duty to go to the scene of strife, and
therefore asked to be ordered to the Gulf of Mexico.
His request was complied with, and he received orders
to go on board the steamer Mississippi, Commodore Perry,
then about to sail from Norfolk to Vera Cruz.
“Soon after the Mississippi
arrived out, and before the city and castle were taken,
a terrible ‘norther’ sprung up, and destroyed
much shipping in the harbor. One vessel, on which
were a number of passengers, was thrown high upon
a reef, and when morning broke, the heavy sea was making
a clear breach through her. She lay about a mile
from the Mississippi, and it soon became known on
board the steamer, that a mother and her infant were
in the wreck, and that unless succor came speedily,
they would perish. The lieutenant of whom I speak,
immediately ordered out a boat’s crew, and although
the sea was rolling tremendously, and the ‘norther’
still blowing a hurricane, started to the rescue.
Right in the teeth of the wind were the men compelled
to pull their boat, and so slowly did they progress,
that it took over two hours to gain the wreck.
“At one time, they actually
gave out, and the oars lay inactive in their hands.
At this crisis, the brave but humane officer, pointing
with one hand to the fortress of San Juan de Ulloa,
upon which a fire had already commenced, and with
the other to the wreck, exclaimed, with noble enthusiasm,
“’Pull away, men!
I would rather save the life of that woman and her
child, than have the honor of taking the castle!’
“Struck by the noble, unselfish,
and truly humane feelings of their officer, the crew
bent with new vigor to their oars. In a little
while the wreck was gained, and the brave lieutenant
had the pleasure of receiving into his arms the almost
inanimate form of the woman, who had been lashed to
the deck, and over whom the waves had been beating,
at intervals, all night.
“In writing home to his friends,
after the excitement of the adventure was over, the
officer spoke of the moment when he rescued that mother
and child from the wreck as the proudest of his life.
“Afterward he took part in the
bombardment of Vera Cruz, and had command, in turn,
of the naval battery, where he faithfully and energetically
performed his duty as an officer in the service of
his country. He was among the first of those
who entered the captured city; but pain, not pleasure,
filled his mind, as he looked around, and saw death
and destruction on every hand. Victory had perched
upon our banners; the arms of our country had been
successful; the officer had bravely contributed his
part in the work; but he frankly owns that he experienced
far more delight in saving the woman he had borne
from the wreck, than he could have felt had he been
the commander of the army that reduced the city.
“Wherever duty calls, my lads,”
concluded the captain, “you will find that brave
officer. He will never shrink from the post of
danger, if his country have need of him; nor will
he ever be deaf to the appeal of humanity; but so
long as he is a true man, just so long will he delight
more in saving than in destroying.”