If Water Was Dry.
Sep. 5th, 2006 11:24 pm![[personal profile]](https://www.dreamwidth.org/img/silk/identity/user.png)
How much do I want to see Paul McGann on an episode of Nip/Tuck? A whole fucking lot. How much would I give for the time, creativity, and energy to write a full-scale treatment of a PMG/N-T crossover? I'M SURE I WILL FIND OUT.
One of the peculiarities of Naval service is that two men might serve together for over a decade, become the closest of friends, fonder of each other than any other man on earth, and yet, remain vastly ignorant of each other's personal details: for years on end, men lived in closer quarters with each other than they lived with their wives when ashore, but conditions aboard a ship of the line did not encourage intimate conversation.
Consequently, Bush never learned that his captain was tonedeaf. He knew Hornblower's methods in war, and he knew Hornblower's style of sail. He even knew that Hornblower was not fond of music and had a vague recollection that Hornblower never joined in the singing in the wardroom either when he had been a lieutenant or when he visited it on subsequent occaisions, but he put this down to his dear friend's reserve. He agreed, after all, with Hornblower's reserve; it was one of the things about Hornblower's performance of his duties as captain of which Bush most approved. When Bush told stories about Hornblower's early triumphs to the wardroom, he would, in fact, point to this restraint as a sign that their captain was destined for the broad pennant.
Consequently, Bush never put it together. He attributed Hornblower's inability to identify "God Bless the King" as played by the Papillon to preoccupation with more important matters; Hornblower had smiled at him, after all, that night when they had celebrated his first command and Bush had sung "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow" to him. They had become very close that night, and it would have much sooner occurred to Bush that water was dry or that devotion was not, in fact, a part of love.
One of the peculiarities of Naval service is that two men might serve together for over a decade, become the closest of friends, fonder of each other than any other man on earth, and yet, remain vastly ignorant of each other's personal details: for years on end, men lived in closer quarters with each other than they lived with their wives when ashore, but conditions aboard a ship of the line did not encourage intimate conversation.
Consequently, Bush never learned that his captain was tonedeaf. He knew Hornblower's methods in war, and he knew Hornblower's style of sail. He even knew that Hornblower was not fond of music and had a vague recollection that Hornblower never joined in the singing in the wardroom either when he had been a lieutenant or when he visited it on subsequent occaisions, but he put this down to his dear friend's reserve. He agreed, after all, with Hornblower's reserve; it was one of the things about Hornblower's performance of his duties as captain of which Bush most approved. When Bush told stories about Hornblower's early triumphs to the wardroom, he would, in fact, point to this restraint as a sign that their captain was destined for the broad pennant.
Consequently, Bush never put it together. He attributed Hornblower's inability to identify "God Bless the King" as played by the Papillon to preoccupation with more important matters; Hornblower had smiled at him, after all, that night when they had celebrated his first command and Bush had sung "For He's a Jolly Good Fellow" to him. They had become very close that night, and it would have much sooner occurred to Bush that water was dry or that devotion was not, in fact, a part of love.
(no subject)
Date: 2006-09-10 09:11 pm (UTC)And there's SPN fic eating the side of my brain out. I blame you.