Ferry me across the water,
Do boatman, do.
If you’ve a penny in your purse
I will ferry you.
I have a penny in my purse,
And my eyes are blue;
So ferry me across the water,
Do, boatman, do.
Step into my ferry-boat,
Be they black or blue,
And for the penny in your purse
I will ferry you.
Boatman, Christina Giorgina Rosetti
There are several commands useful for operating a commercial ferry:
feeSets the fee passengers will be charged
boardPassengers use this to pay their fee and board a ferry
unloadUnload passengers once the destination is reached
ferrySignals passengers waiting in port that they may board
The captain of a ferry uses the fee command to set the fee
charged to passengers boarding his ship (see See fee). The fee can
be expressed in terms of the number of nobles boarding, the number of
men boarding, the weight boarding or any combination of the three.
For instance, if the captain wanted to charge 1/2 gold per unit weight
of the passenger’s stack, he would issue ‘fee weight 500’.
(a 500 gold fee for every 10000 weight).
Note that like any fee, the fee set for a ferry will not take effect until the end of the month.
The fee is a property of the ship, not the captain, but will be cleared
when the last noble leaves the ship. The fee may also be cleared with
the fee command. If no fee is set, then the ship is not
considered to be operating as a ferry, and nobles are may not use
the board order to enter the ship.
Passengers issue ‘board ship’ to board a ferry. The
order will fail if the ship is not present, or if it is not operating as
a ferry (the captain of the ship has no fee set). board will
cause the noble to pay the captain the required boarding fee, then
move the noble’s stack onto the ship.
The board command also prevents the ship from being overloaded.
A stack that would overload the ship is turned away.
Note that the board command, unlike the move command,
ignores the admit list of the ship’s captain.