APPENDIX. 
XXV n 
merit of ships of war, but the same vessels were thought sufficient 
to answer the purposes of fighting and transport indiscriminately. 
As the arts of navigation and of naval warfare improved, it was 
found that any one of the occupations we have enumerated was 
enough to engross the whole time and application of the persons 
employed in the performance of it ; and it then became customary 
to furnish ships of war with three distinct orders of men; viz., 
rowers, mariners, and soldiers. The rowers were divided into three 
classes ; those of the upper, the middle, and the lower ranges. Each 
person had a separate oar, for, except in cases of necessity, one oar 
was never managed by more than one person ; but the labour and 
pay of the several classes of rowers were not at the same time 
equal : they who were stationed in the uppermost banks, by reason 
of their distance from the water, and the consequent length of their 
oars, underwent more toil and labour than those in the inferior banks, 
and their pay was on that account greater. 
The crew took their rest upon the deck, or upon the seats where 
they rowed ; and the officers only, or persons of more than ordinary 
rank on board, were permitted to have clothes spread under them ; 
of which the following instance is quoted by the author of the 
Archaeologia from Homer : — 
But clothes the men for great Ulysses spread, 
And placed an easy pillow for his head ; 
On these he undisturb’d, securely slept, 
Lying upon the stern. 
They who could not content themselves with the accommodation 
here afforded to the son of Laertes, were looked upon as effeminate, 
and unfit to endure the toils and hardships of war : we find accord- 
ingly, that Alcibiades was censured by the Athenians, for having 
allowed himself the luxury of a “ bed hung on cords,” or, in other 
words, a cot or a hammock. 
The class termed mariners were exempt from drudging at the 
oar, but performed all the other duties of the ship ; and in order that 
every thing might be carried on without tumult or confusion, each had 
