Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Historical, #Erotica, #Thrillers, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character)
smuggling and trading, had become a fairly profitable way of life, apparently
for all. Doubtless, in Cos and Tyros as well there were rumors of fleets being
prepared to be sent against them. The seaman, to his chargrin, was dismissed by
a vote of the council.
We then turned our attention to matters of greater importance, the need for more
covered docks in the arsenal, beneaht which additional galleys could be caulked
for the grain fleet, else how could a hundred vessels be red for the voyage
norht to the grain fields before the sixth passage hand?
It is perhaps worth remarking, briefly, on the power of Port Kar, with it being
understood that the forces of both Cos and Tyros, the other two significant
maritime Ubarates in know Thassa, are quite comparable.
The following figured pertain to medium class or larger vessels:
The five Ubars of Port Kar, Chung, Eteocles, Nigel, Sullius Maximus and Henrius
Sevarius, control among themselves some four hundred ships. The approximately
one hundred and twenty captains of the council of Captains of Port Kar havem
pledged to their personal service, some thousand ships. They further control
another thousand ships, as executor, through the council, which ships comprise
the memebers of the grain fleet, the oil fleet, the slave fleet, and others, as
well as numerous patrol and escort ships. Beyound these ships there re some
twenty-five hundred ships which are owned by some fifteen or sixteen hundred
minor captains of the city, not wealthy enough to sit on the Council of
Captains. The figures I have listed would give us some forty-nine hundred ships.
To get a better figure, particularly since the above figures are themselves
approximations, let us say that Port kar houses in the neighborhood of five
thousand ships. As mentioned above, the naval strengths of Cos and Tyros are,
individually, comparable. It is, of course, true that not all of these some five
thousand ships are war ships. My estimation would be that approximately fifteen
hundred only are the long ships, the ram-ships, those of war. On the other hand,
whereas the round ships do not carry rams and are much slower and less
maneuverable than the long ships, they are not inconsequential in a naval
battle, for their deck areas and deck castles can accommodate springals, small
catapults, and chain-slings onagers, not to mention numerous bowmen, all of
which can provide a most discouraging and vicious barrage, consisting normally
of javelins, burning pitch, fiery rocks and crossbow quarrels. A war ship going
into battle, incidentally, always takes its mast down and stores its sail below
decks. The bulwarks and deck of the ship are often covered with wet hides.
It was voted that another dozen covered docks be raised within the confines of
the arsenal, that the caulking schedule of the gran fleet might be met. The vote
was unanimous.
The next matter for consideration was the negotiation of a dispute between the
sail-makers and the rope-makers in the arsenal with respect to priority in the
annual Procession to the Sea, which takes place on the first of En’Kara, the
Gorean New Year. There had been a riot this year. It was resolved that
henceforth both groups would walk abreast. I smiled to myself. I expected there
would be a riot net year as well.
The rumor of the seaman, that Cos and Tyros were preparing fleets against Port
Kar, again entered my mind, but again I dismissed it.
The next item on the agenda dealt with the demand of the pulley-makers to
receive the same wage per Ahn as the oar-makers. I voted for this measure, but
it did not pass.
A Captain next to me snorted, “Give the pulley-makers the wage of oar-makers,
and sawyers will want the wages of carpenters, and carpenters of shipwrights!”
All who do skilled work in the arsenal, incidentally, are free men. The men of
Port Kar may permit slaves to build their house and their walls, but they do not
permit them to build their ships. The wages of a sail-maker, incidentally, are
four copper tarn disks per day, those of a fine shipwright, hired by the Council
of Captains, as much as a golden tarn disk her day. The average working day is
ten Ahn, or about twelve Earth hours. The amount of time spent in actual work,
however, is far less. The work day of a free man in the arsenal is likely to be,
on the whole, a rather leisurely one. Free Goreans do not like to be pressed in
their tasks. Two Ahn for lunch and stopping an Ahn early for paga and a talk in
the late afternoon are not uncommon. Layoffs occur, but , because of the amount
of work, not frequently. The organizations, such as the sail-makers, almost
guildlike, not castes, have due, and these dues tend to be applied to a number
of purposes, such as support of those injured or their families, loans, payments
when men are out of work, and pensions. The organizations have also, upon
occasion, functioned as collective bargaining agencies. I suspected that the
sail-makers would, threatening desertion of the arsenal, this year or the next
obtain their desired increase in wages. Brutal repressions of organization have
never characterized the arsenal. The Council of Captains respects those who
build and outfit ships. On the other hand, the wages tend to be so slight that
an organization seldom has the means to mount a long strike; the arsenal can
normally be patient, and can usually choose to build a ship a month from now
rather than now, but one cannot well arrange to eat a month from now, and not
today, or tomorrow, or until a month from now. But most importantly the men of
the arsenal regard themselves as just that, the men of the arsenal, and would be
unhappy apart from their work. For all their threats of desertion of the arsenal
there are few of them who would want to leave it. Building fine and beautiful
ships gves them great pleasure.
Beyond this, lastly, it might be mentioned that Gorean society, on the whole,
tends to be tradition bound, and that there is little questioning of the wisdom
of one’s fathers; in such a society individuals usually have an identity
satisfactory to themselves, and a place in which they feel comfortable;
accordingly they are less susceptible ot the social confusions attendant upon a
society in which greater mobility is encouraged and traditonal prestige
considerations replaed with materialistic ones. A society in which each is
expected to succeed, and it placed under conditions where most must fail, would
be incomprehensible, irrational, to most Goreans. This will sound strange, I
suppose, but the workers of the arsenal, as long as they make enough to live
reasonably well, are more concerned with their work, as craftsmen, than they are
with considerabley and indefinitely improving their economic status. This is not
to say taht they would have any objection to being rich; it is only to remark,
in effect, that it has never occurred to them, no more than to most Goreans, to
take very seriously the pursuit of wealth as their universal and compelling
motivation; being ignorant, it seems, they, like most other Goreans, are more
concerned with other things, such as, as I have earlier noted, the building of
fine and beautiful ships. I make no pronouncements on these matters, but report
them as I find them. I would note, of course, that these weaknesses, or virtues,
of the men of the arsenal are, of tradition, welcomed by the Council of
Captains; without them the arsenal could not be as efficiently and ceonomically
managed as it is. Again I make no pronouncements on these matters, but report
them as I find them. My thinking on these matters is mixed.
Why, I asked myself, should Cos and Tyros consider bringing their fleets against
Port Kar? What had changed? But then I recalled that nothing had changed. It was
only a rumor, one which, it seemed, recurred at least every year in Port Kar.
Doubtless there were similares rumors raising their small stirs, in the councils
of Cos and Tyros. I recalled that the words of the seaman had been dismissed.
Now, crying to come before the council, was the mad, half-blind shipwright
Tersites, a scroll of drawings in his hand, and calculations.
At a word from the scribe at the long table before the thrones of the Ubars, two
men put Tersites from the chamber, dragging him away.
Once before he had been permitted to present plans to the council, but they had
been too fantastic to be taken seriously. He had dared to suggest a redesign of
the standard tarn ship. He had wanted to deepen teh keel, to add a foremast, to
change the rowing to great oars, each handled by several men, rather than one
man to an oar; he had wanted ven to raises the ram above the waterline.
I would have been curious to hear the arguments of Tersites pertinent to these
recommendations, but before, when it had become clear how radical and, I gather,
absurd were his proposals, he had been hooted from the chamber.
I recall men shouting, “Many men could not all sit through the stroke of an oar!
Would you have them stand?” “So great an oar could not even be held by the hands
of a man!” “Two masts with their sails could not be quickly removed before
battle!” “You will slow the ship if you deepen the keel!” “If many men sit a
single oar, some will slack their work!” “What good is a ram that does not make
its stroke below waterline?”
Tersites had been permitted that once to address the council because he, though
thought mad, had once been a skilled shipwright. Indeed, the galleys of Port
Kar, medium and heavy class, carried shearing blades, which had been an
invention of Tersites. These are huge quarter-moons of steel, fixed forward of
the oars, anchored into the frame of the ship itself. One of the most common of
naval strategies, other than ramming, is oar shearing, in which one vessel, her
oars suddenly shortened inboard, slides along the hull of another, whose oars
are still outboard, splintering and breaking them off. The injured gally then is
like a broken-winged bird, and at the mercy of the other ship’s ram as she comes
about, flutes playing and drums beating, and makes her strike amidships. Recent
galleys of Cos and Tyros, and other maritime powers, it had been noted, were now
also, most ofte, equipped with shearing blades.
Tersites had also, it might be mentioned, though he had not presented these
ideas in his appearance before the council, argued for a rudder hung on the
sternpost of the tarn ship, rather that the two side-hung rudders, and had
championed a square rigging, as opposed to the beautiful lateen rigging common
on the ships of Thassa. Perhaps this last proposal of Tersites’ had been the
most offensive of all to the men of Port kar. The triangular lateen sail on its
single sloping yar is incredibly beautiful.
Tersites had, some five years before, been removed from the arsenal. He had
taken his ideas to Cos and Tyros, but there, too, he had met with only scorn. He
had then returned to Port Kar, his fortunes exhausted, no place left to him in
the arsenal. He now lived, it was said, on the garbage in the canals. A small
pittance granted him by the shipwrights, of whm he had been one, was spent in
the paga taverns of the city. I dismissed Tersites from my mind.
I had made, since coming to Port Kar, five voyages. Four of these had been
commerical in nature. I had no quarrel with the shipping of others. Like the
Bosk itself I would not seek for trouble, but, too, like the Bosk, I would not
refuse to meet it. My four commercial voyages had been among the exchange
islands, or free islands, in Thassa, administered as free prots by members of
teh Merchants. There were several such islands. Three, which I encountereed
frequently in my voyages, were Teletus, and, south of it, Tabor, named for the
drum, which it resembles, and to the north, among the northern islands, Scagnar.
Others were Farnacium, Hulneth and Asperiche. I did not go as far south as Anago
or Ianda, or as far north as Hunjer or Skjern, west of Torvaldsland. There
islands, with occasional free ports on the coast, north and south of the Gorean
equator, such as Lydius and Helmutsport, and Schendi and Bazi, make possible the
commerce between Cos and Tyros, and the mainland, and its cities, such as
Ko-ro-ba, Thentis, Tor, Ar, Turia, and many others.
On these voyages my cargos were varied. I did not, however, in this early
period, because of the cost, purchase cargos of great value. Accordingly I did
not carry, in these first voyages, any abundance of precious metals or jewels;
not did I carry rugs or tapestries, or medicines, or silks or ointments, or
perfumes or prize slaves, or spices or cannisters of colored table salts. In
these first voyages I was content, quite, to carry tools and stone, dried fruit,
dried fish, bolts of rep-cloth, tem-wood, Tur-wood and Ka-la-na stock, and horn
and hides. I did once carry, however, a hold of chained slaves, and, another
time, a hold filled with the furs of the northern sea sleen. The latter cargo
was the most valuable carrried in these first four voyages. Each of these cargos
I managed to sell at considerable profit. Twice we had been scouted by pirates