The Mayflower is used ordinarily for official purposes in connection with naval reviews and other naval ceremonies, and at such times, with the President on board, there is a punctilious formality to be encountered which makes a mere civilian feel like a recruit under the eyes of a drill-sergeant. But it is very interesting. One gets so used to seeing everybody in uniform standing stiffly at attention as the President passes that one almost forgets that it isnāt their natural attitude.
And then the guns. They shake oneās nerves and hurt oneās ears, but they are most inspiring. The Presidentās salute is twenty-one guns. It is fired every time he sets foot on the deck of the Mayflower , or any other naval vessel, and when he passes, on the Mayflower , between the lines of naval vessels on review he gets it from every ship in the fleet, not one by one, but altogether, so I think I know what a naval battle sounds like.