In almost all cases of betting and
lotteries, the operation of the system is, that certain
persons, called the knowing ones, contrive to manage
the business in such a way, by secret manoeuvres and
intrigues, as to make the result turn out to their
advantage, at the expense of those parties concerned
who are ignorant and inexperienced, or, as they term
it, “green.” Very deep plans were
laid for accomplishing this object in respect to the
lottery described in the last chapter; though, as
it happened in this case, they were fortunately frustrated.
The principal of these manoeuvres
were the work of the man whom they called the Colonel.
He had formed the plan, with another man, of secretly
watching the operation of heaving the log every time
it was performed, and making a note of the result.
By doing this, he thought he could calculate very
nearly how many miles the ship would make, while all
the other passengers would have nothing to guide them
but such general estimates as they could make from
recollection. He accordingly arranged it with
his confederates that one or the other of them should
be on deck whenever the men were called to heave the
log, and, without appearing to pay any particular
attention to the operation, carefully to obtain the
result, and make a memorandum of it. This plan
was sufficient for the daytime. For the night inasmuch
as it might excite suspicion for them to be up at
unseasonable hours to watch the operation they
resorted to another method. They bribed one of
the seamen of each watch to find out the result of
each trial during his watch, and to give them the
answers in the morning. When the last time for
heaving the log, previous to making up the accounts
for the day, came, which was at ten o’clock,
they took that result, and then, shutting themselves
up in their state room, they made a calculation, and
ascertained pretty certainly, as they thought, that
the distance would be about 267 miles. It might
possibly be 266, or 268; but they thought that they
were sure that it would be one of those three numbers.
The next thing was to circulate statements, and to
express opinions in private conversation here and
there among the passengers, in a careless sort of way,
to produce a general impression that the rate of the
ship would be not less than 270 miles. This was
to lead the owners of the tickets, and the betters
generally, not to attach a high value to the numbers
below 270. By doing this, they expected to depress
the value of these tickets in the general estimation,
so that they could buy then easily. They calculated
that, if their plans succeeded, they could buy 266,
267, and 268 for about a sovereign apiece the
holders of them being made to suppose, by their manoeuvres
that those numbers would have very little chance of
obtaining the prize.
The plan was very deeply laid, and
very skilfully executed; and the men were so far successful
in their efforts that they did produce a general impression
that the ship’s run could not be below 270.
They also bought ticket 268, though they had to give
two sovereigns for it. It has already been shown
how their attempts to get possession of 267 failed,
by Hilbert’s refusal to sell it. They of
course also failed to get 266, for that ticket was
not to be found. They could not make any very
open and public inquiries for it, as it was necessary
that every thing which they did should be performed
in a very unconcerned and careless manner. They,
however, made repeated inquiries privately for this
ticket but could not get any tidings of it. A
certain sailor told some of the betters that an Irishwoman
on the forward deck had a ticket which she offered
to sell for two shillings; but when, on being asked
what the number was, he answered 99, they laughed
at him, supposing that somebody had been putting a
hoax upon the poor Irishwoman, as there was no such
number as that in the lottery.
Besides the manoeuvres of these two
confederates, there was another man who was devising
a cunning scheme for obtaining the prize. This
was the mate of a merchant ship that had put into
the port of New York in a damaged condition, and had
there been sold. The mate, being thus left without
a vessel, was now returning as a passenger in the steamer,
to Scotland, where he belonged.
This man was accustomed to navigation;
and he had the necessary books for making the computations
in his trunk. He conceived the idea of being
present on deck at twelve o’clock, when the captain
made his observation, and of learning from him, as
it were accidentally, what the sun’s altitude
was observed to be. This he could very easily
do, for it was customary to have the observation made
not only by the captain, but by one or two of the
chief officers of the ship also, at the same time,
who are all always provided with sextants for
the purpose. The results, when obtained, are
compared together, to see if they agree each
observer telling the others what altitude he obtains.
Thus they are more sure of getting the result correctly.
Besides, it is important that these officers should
have practice, so that they may be able to take the
observation when the captain is sick, or when they
come to command ships themselves.
Now, the mate above referred to thought
that, by standing near the captain and his officers
when they made the observations, he could overhear
them in comparing their results, and then that he could
go down into his state room immediately; and that
there, by working very diligently, he could ascertain
the run of the ship before it should be reported on
the captain’s bulletin, and so know beforehand
what ticket would gain the prize. Or, if he could
not determine absolutely what the precise ticket would
be, since his computation might not agree
precisely with that made by the captain, he
could determine within two or three of the right one,
and then buy three tickets that is, the
one which agreed with his calculation, and also the
one above and below it for perhaps a sovereign
or so apiece: he would thus get the ten sovereigns
by an expenditure of three or four. His plan,
in fact, was similar to that of the Colonel; only
his estimate was to be based on the observation, while
that of the Colonel was based on the dead reckoning.
They both performed their computations in a very skilful
manner, and they came to nearly the same result.
The mate came to the conclusion that the run of the
ship would be 266 miles; while the Colonel, as has
already been stated, made it 267. While, therefore,
the Colonel, to make sure of the prize, wished to
buy tickets 266, 267, and 268, the mate wished to
secure 265, 266, and 267. The mate, after making
some inquiry, found who had 265; and, after some bargaining,
succeeded in buying it for two sovereigns and a half.
But he could not hear any thing of 266. As for
267, he discovered that Hilbert had it, just as the
bell rang for luncheon. He told Hilbert that
if he wished to sell his ticket he would give him
thirty shillings for it, which is a sovereign and a
half. But Hilbert said no.
It is, however, time that this story
of the lottery should draw to a close; were it not
so, a great deal more detail might have been given
of the manoeuvres and contrivances which both the
Colonel and the mate resorted to, to induce Hilbert
to sell his ticket. These efforts attracted no
special attention, for all the others were buying and
selling tickets continually, and making offers for
those which they could not buy. Some were put
up at auction, and sold to the highest bidder, amid
jokes, and gibes, and continual shouts of laughter.
At length, when the time drew nigh
for the captain’s bulletin to appear, the mate
offered Hilbert three pounds for his ticket,
and Hilbert went and asked his father’s advice
about accepting this offer. His father hesitated
for some time, but finally advised him not to sell
his ticket at all. Hilbert was satisfied with
this advice, for he now began to be quite sure that
he should get the prize.
At length, about fifteen minutes after
the party had come up from luncheon, and were all
assembled around the paddle-box settee, a gentleman
came up one of stairways with a slip of paper in his
hands, and, advancing to the group, he attempted to
still the noise they were making, by saying,
“Order, gentlemen, order! I’ve got
the bulletin.”
Every body’s attention was arrested
by these words, and all began to call out “Order!”
and “Silence!” until at length something
like quiet was restored. The persons assembled
were all very much interested in learning the result;
for, in addition to the prize of the lottery, there
were a great many bets, some of them quite large, pending,
all of which were to be decided by the bulletin.
When, at length, the gentleman found
that he could be heard, he began to read in a very
deliberate voice,
“Latitude forty-eight, thirty-one.”
“Never mind the latitude,”
exclaimed the company. “The distance.
Let’s have the distance.”
“Longitude,” continued the reader, “ten,
fourteen.”
“Nonsense!” said the company. “What’s
the distance?”
“Distance,” continued
the reader, in the same tone, “two hundred and
sixty-six.”
“Sixty-six!” they all
exclaimed together; and great inquiries were immediately
made for the missing ticket. But nobody knew any
thing about it. At last, Mr. Chauncy’s
companion, Charles, who happened to be there, said,
“Why, Chauncy had 66, I believe.”
Then calling out aloud to Mr. Chauncy, who had come
up on the deck after luncheon, and was now sitting
on one of the settees that stood around the skylight,
he added,
“Chauncy! here! come here!
Where is your ticket? You have got the prize.”
“No,” said Mr. Chauncy,
in a careless tone, without, however, moving from
his seat. “I have not any ticket.”
Two or three of the gentlemen, then,
headed by Charles, went to the place where Mr. Chauncy
was sitting, to question him more particularly.
“Where’s your ticket?” said Charles.
“I gave it to one of the deck passengers,”
said Mr. Chauncy.
“You did!” said Charles.
“Well, it has drawn the prize. What was
the number of it?”
“Ninety-nine, I believe,” said Mr. Chauncy.
“Ninety-nine!” repeated
Charles, contemptuously. “Nonsense!
There was no ninety-nine. It was sixty-six.”
Then, shouting with laughter, he said,
“O, dear me! that’s so exactly like Chauncy.
He gives half a sovereign for a ticket, then reads
it upside down, and gives it away to an Irishwoman.
O Gemini!”
So saying, Charles, and those with
him, went away, laughing vociferously at Chauncy’s
expense.
The remainder of the adventurers in
the lottery had in the mean time dispersed, having
slunk away, as is usual in such cases, to conceal
their mortification and chagrin. It was not merely
that they had each lost a half sovereign; but they
had all calculated, with greater or less certainty,
on getting the prize; and the vexation which they experienced
at the disappointment was extreme. Some of them
had bought up several tickets, in order to make sure
of the prize. These were, of course, doubly and
trebly chagrined. Some had been offered good prices
for their tickets, but had refused to accept them,
hoping, by keeping the tickets, to get the prize.
These persons were now vexed and angry with themselves
for not accepting these offers. Then there was
a feeling of guilt and condemnation which mingled
with their disappointment, and made it very bitter
and hard to bear.
The Colonel and the mate, when they
learned that the Irishwoman held the winning ticket,
both immediately began to saunter slowly along toward
the stairways that led down to the forward deck, each
having formed the plan of going and buying the ticket
of the woman before she should hear that it had gained
the prize. They moved along with a careless and
unconcerned air, in order not to awaken any suspicion
of their designs. They were suspected, however,
both of them, by Mr. Chauncy. He accordingly
walked forward, too; and he reached a part of the promenade
deck that was near the smoke pipe, where he could look
down upon the place where the woman was sitting.
He reached the spot just as the two men came before
her, one having descended by one staircase, and the
other by the other. When they met each other,
close before where the woman was sitting, they each
understood in an instant for what purpose the other
had come. They knew, too, that it would defeat
the object altogether if they both attempted to buy
the ticket; and yet there was no time or opportunity
to make any formal stipulation on the subject between
them. Such men, however, are always very quick
and cunning, and ready for all emergencies. The
mate, without speaking to the woman, gave a wink to
the Colonel, and said in an undertone, as he sauntered
slowly along by him,
“Colonel! half!”
“Done!” said the Colonel.
So the mate passed carelessly on,
leaving the Colonel to manage the negotiation, with
the understanding that they were to share the profits
of the transaction between them.
Just at this moment, Mr. Chauncy,
who was looking down upon this scene from above, called
out to the woman,
“My good woman, your ticket
has drawn the prize. The Colonel has come to
pay you the money.”
The Colonel was overwhelmed with astonishment
and vexation at this interruption. He looked
up, with a countenance full of rage, to see from whom
the sound proceeded. There were one or two other
gentlemen standing with Chauncy as witnesses of the
scene; and the Colonel saw at once that his scheme
was defeated. So he made a virtue of necessity,
and, taking out the purse, he poured the ten sovereigns
into the poor woman’s lap. She was overwhelmed
and bewildered with astonishment at finding herself
suddenly in possession of so much money.
As for Hilbert, there were no bounds
to the vexation and anger which he experienced in
the failure of all his hopes and expectations.
“What a miserable fool I was!”
said he. “I might have had that very ticket.
He as good as offered to exchange with me. Such
a stupid dolt as I was, not to know when it was upside
down! Then, besides, I was offered two pounds
for my ticket, sure and I believe I should
have taken it, if my father had not advised me not
to do it. That would have come to almost fifteen
dollars, and that I should have been sure of.
So much for taking my father’s advice.
I hope they’ll get up another lottery to-morrow,
and then I’ll buy a ticket and do just as I please
with it, and not take any body’s advice.
I shall be sure to make fifteen dollars, at least,
if I don’t do any better than I might have done
to-day.”
The rest of the company felt very
much as Hilbert did about their losses and disappointments,
though the etiquette of gambling, which they understood
better than he, forbade their expressing their feelings
so freely. In fact, one source of the illusion
which surrounds this vice is, that the interest which
it excites, and the hilarity and mirth which attend
it during its progress, are all open to view, while
the disappointment, the mortification, the chagrin,
and the remorse are all studiously concealed.
The remorse is the worst ingredient in the bitter
cup. It not only stings and torments those who
have lost, but it also spoils the pleasure of those
who win. That is, in fact, always the nature
and tendency of remorse. It aggravates all the
pain and suffering that it mingles with and poisons
all the pleasure.