Authors: John Norman
Tags: #Science Fiction, #Fiction, #General, #Fantasy, #Adventure, #Historical, #Erotica, #Thrillers, #Gor (Imaginary Place), #Cabot; Tarl (Fictitious Character)
is carvel-built, and her planking is fastened with nails of bronze and iron; in
places, wooden pegs are also used; her planking, depending on placement, varies
from two to six inches in thickness; also, to strengthen her against the shock
of ramming, four-inch-thich wales run longitudinally about her sides. She
carrieds a single, removable mast, with its long yard. It is lateen rigged. Her
keep, one hundred and twenty-eight feet Gorean, and her beam, sixteen feet
Gorean, mark her as heavy class. Her freeboard area, that between the water line
and the deck, is five feet Gorean. She is long, low and swift.
She has a rather straight keel, and this, with her shallow draft, even given her
size, makes it possible to beach her at night, if one wishes. It is common among
Gorean seamen to beach their craft in the evening, set watches, make camp, and
launch again in the morning.
The Dorna’s ram, a heavy projection in the shape of a tarn’s beak, shod with
iron, rides just below the water line. Behind the ram, to prevent it from going
too deeply into an enemy ship, pinning the attacker, is, shaped like the spread
crest of a tarn, the shield. The entire ship is built in such a way that the
combined strength of teh keel, stempost and strut-frames centeres itself at the
ram, or spur. The ship is, thus, itself the weapon.
The bow of the Dorna is concave, sloping down to meet the ram. Her stern
describles what is almost a complete semicircle. She has two steering oars, or
side rudders. The sternpost is high, and fanlike; it is carved to represent
feathers; the actual tail feathers of a tarn, however, would be horizontal to
the plane, not vertical; the prow of the tarn ship resembles the ram and shield,
though it is made of painted wood; it is designed and painted to resemble the
head of a tarn.
Tarn ships are painted in a variety of colors; the Dorna, of course, was green.
Besides her stem and stern castles the Dorna carried two movable turrets
amidships, each about twenty feet high. She also carried, on leather-cushioned,
swivel mounts, two lihgt catapults, two chain-sling onagers, and eight
springals. Shearing blades, too, of course, were a portion of her equipment.
These blades, mentioned before, are fixed on each side of the hull, abaft of the
bow and forward of the oars. They resemble quarter moons of steel and are
fastened into the frames of the ship itself. They are an invention of Tersites
of Port Kar. They are now, however, found on most recent ram-ships, of whatever
port of origin.
Although the Dorna’s true beam is sixteen feet Gorean, her deck width is
twenty-one feet Gorean, due to the long rectangular rowing frame, which carrieds
the thole ports: the rowing frame is slightly higher than the deck area and
extends beyond it, two and one half feet Gorean on each side; it is supported by
extensions of the hull beams; the rowing frame is placed somewhat nearer the
stem that the sternpost; the extension of the rowing frame not only permits
greater deck area but, because of the size of the oars used, is expedient
because of matters of work space.
The size and weight of the oars used will doubtless seem surprizing, but, in
practice, they are effective and beautiful levers. The oars are set in groups of
three, and three men sit a single bench. These benches are not perpendicular to
the bulwarks but slant obliquely back toward the stern castle. Accordingly their
inboard ends are father aft than their outboard ends. This slanting makes it
possible to have each of the three oars in an oar group parallel to the others.
The three oars are sometimes of the same length, but often they are not. The
Dorna used oars of varying lengths; her oars, like those of many tarn ships,
varied by about one and one-half foot Gorean, oar to oar; the most inboard oar
being the longest; the outblard oar being the shortest. The oars themselves
usually weigh about one stone a foot, or roughly founds pounds a foot. The
length of those oars on a tarn ship commonly varies from twenty-seven to thirty
foot Gorean. A thirty-foot Gorean oar, the most inboard oar, would ommonly weigh
thirty stone, or about one hundred and twenty pounds. The length and weight of
these oars would make their operation impractical were it not for the fact that
each of them, on its inboard end, is weighted with lead. Accordingly the rower
is relieved of the weight of the oar and is responsible only for its work. This
arrangement, one man to an oar, and oars in groups of tree, and oars mounted in
the rowing frame, long and beautiful sweeps, had been found extremely practical
in the Gorean navies. It is almost universal on ram-ships. Thie rowing deck,
further, is open to the air, thereby differing from the rowing holds of round
ships. This brings many more free fighting men, the oarsmen, into any action
which might be required. They, while rowing, are protected, incidentally, by a
parapet fixed on the rowing frame. Between eacy pair of benches, behind the
parapet, is one bowman. The thole ports in a given group of three are about ten
inches apart and the groups themselves, center to center, are a bit less than
four feet apart. Then Dorna carried twenty groups of three to a side, and so
used one hundred and tweny oarsmen.
From this account it may perhaps be conjectured why the oar power of a
single-banked ram-ship is often comparable or superior to that of a doubly- or
trebly-banked ship. The major questions involve the number and size of oars that
can be practically mounted, balanced against the size of ship required for the
differing arrangements. The use of extended rowing frame, permitting the
leverage necessary for the great oars, and teh seating of several oarsmen, each
with his own oar, on a given bench, conserving space, are important in this
regard. If we suppose a trebly-banked ship with one hundred and twenty oarsmen,
say, in three banks of twenty each to a side, I think we chan see she would have
to be a rather large ship, and a good deal heavier than the single-decked,
three-men-to-a-bench typ, also with one hundred and twenty oarsmen. She would
thus, also, be slower. And this does not even take into consideration the
longer, larger oar possible with the projecting rowing frame. To be sure, they
are many factors involed here, and one might suppose triple banks following the
model of the single-banked, three-men-oars-to-a-bench type, and so on, but,
putting aside questions of the size of vessel required for such arrangements, we
may simply note, without commenting further, that the single-banked,
three-men-three-oars arrangement is almost universal in fighting ships on
Thassa. The other type of ship, though found occasionally, does not seem, at
least currently, to present a distinct challenge to the low, swift,
single-banked ships. In questions of ramming, I suppose the heavier ship would
deliver the heaviest blow, but, even this might be contested for the lighter
ship would, presumably, be moving more rapidly. Further, of course, the chances
of being rammed by a lighter ship are greater than those of being rammed by a
heavier ship, because of the greater speed and maneuverablitity of the former.
Other disadvantages to the double- and triple-banked systems, of course, are
that many of your oarsmen, if not all, are below decks and thus unable to enter
into necessary actions as easily as they might otherwise do; further, in case of
ramming or wreck, it is a good deal more dangerous to be below decks than above
decks. At any rate, whatever the reasons or rationale, the single-banked tarn
ship, of which the Dorna is an example, is the dominant type on Thassa.
I had, at my disposal, thirty ram-ships, eighteeen of my own, and twelve on
consignment from the arsenal. The treasure fleet, with her escort, consisted of
seventy ships; forty were ram-ships and thirty round ships. Of the forty ram
ships, twenty-five were heavy class, and fifteen medium class. Of my thirty
ram-ships, twenty were heavy class, and ten medium class. There were no light
galleys in either fleet.
I had made it a practice never to ram round ships, and I had seen that this
practice was wel publicized. I had even had it observed by men at the various
slave wharves, presumably inspecting the merchandise. Doubtless, from hold to
hold over the months, this word had spread that Bosk not only would not sink a
round ship, but that, when he took one, he freed her slaves. I think, had it not
been for this, my own actions against round ships of the past months would not
have been as successful as they had been. Further, I had spread the rumor that I
would be displeased should I discover, after capturing a round ship, that her
slaves had been either mistreated or slain. Accordingly I thus, in effect,
recruited tacit allies in the rowing holds of round ships. The slaves, eager for
the capture of the vessel by one of my ships, could scarcely be expected to row
with their full strength, and the masters, knowing full well the ship might be
taken, feared, under the conditions obtaining, to seriously abuse or slay the
chained oarsmen. The principal alternatives, under these conditions, open to the
men of Cos and Tyros would then seem to be, first, to use free oarsmen, which
was not, however, traditional on round ships, or, two, increase the ram-ship
escort for round ships. It was this latter alternative, rather expensive, which
the men of Cos and Tyros had apparently, almost invariably, selected. On the
other hand, the treasure fleet, under any conditions, would have a heavy escort,
which it did.
The prices of goods, I might note, carried on ships of Cos and Tyros and her
allies, because of the need of paying for additional escort, had risen
considerably. Accordingly, her goods, to the dismay of her merchants, were
becoming less competitive in the markets of Thassa. Insurance rates on such
shipments, even those with escort, I might add, had also soared.
Because of my practices in connection with round ships, I did not expect Cos and
Tyros to enter them seriously into any naval engagement with my fleet. Thus, the
odds, which might have been prohibitive under normal conditions, of seventy
ships to thirty, I supected I had reduced to something of forty, or perhaps
fifty, to thirty. But even so, I did not regard it as rational to undertake odds
of forty, or fifty, to thirty. I had no intention of engaging except under
conditions of either equality or, preferably, superiority. The important thing
as I saw it, was not so much the absolute numbers of ships involved as the
numbers of ships that could be applied at a given place and given time.
Accordingly I began to put my plan into effect.
With twelve ships I began to approach the treasure fleet from the southeast.
Although I had had the masts, with their yards, taken down and lashed to the
decks, and the saild stored below, I had the flutists and drummers, not uncommon
on the ram-ships of Thassa, strike up a martial air.
Then, rather bravely, the music drifting over the water, or oars at only half of
maximum beat, we moved across the gleaming waters toward the large fleet.
Since the ram-ships of the enemy had not yet struck their masts, it would be
only a matter of moments before we were sighted.
From the stern castle of the Dorna, then, with a long glass of the builders, I
observed, far across the waters, the masts of ram-ships, one by one, lowering. I
could hear, moreover, their war trumpets, carrying form ship to the other,
signaling fleet movements. Message flags, doubltless repeating the message of
the trumpets, were being run from the decks on their halyards to the heights of
the stem castles. Although I could not yet see the decks, I had no doubt that
there was a flurry of activity there. Bowmen were setting their weapons;
helmets, weapons and shields were being brought up from below decks. Fires were
being stoked to heat pitch and stones; bundles of tarred javelins would be
shaken out near the springals and light catapults. In a few moments hides,
soaked overside, would be spread over good portions of decks and bulwarks; and
bags of sea water, for putting our fires, would be drawn and placed about the
ships. In about ten Ehn the decks of the treasure fleet, save for the
paraphernalia of war, would be clear, and her hatches would be secured. Similar
preparations, of course, were taking place on my own ships.
“Quarter of maximum!” I called down to the oar-master, some feet below me.
I did not wish to approach the fleet too rapidly.
The treasure fleet would have no way of knowing that I definitely knew her size
and composition.
For all the knew I might be astonished at the force on which I had come.
I listened for a while, chuckling, to the brave tunes being put forth by my
flutists and drummers.
Then, when I saw the perimeter ships of the treasure feelt swinging about toward
me, I motioned for the musicians to discontinure their performance.
When they were silent, I could hear the flutes and drums from the enemy ships.
I called down to the oar-master to rest oars.
I wanted it to appear that I was suddenly undecided as to whether or not to