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authorRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:38:15 -0700
committerRoger Frank <rfrank@pglaf.org>2025-10-15 02:38:15 -0700
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+<?xml version="1.0" encoding="utf-8"?>
+<!DOCTYPE TEI.2 SYSTEM "http://www.gutenberg.org/tei/marcello/0.4/dtd/pgtei.dtd">
+<TEI.2 lang="en">
+ <teiHeader>
+ <fileDesc>
+ <titleStmt>
+ <title>By Conduct and Courage</title>
+ <author><name reg="Henty, George Alfred">G. A. Henty</name></author>
+ </titleStmt>
+ <editionStmt>
+ <edition n="1">Edition 1</edition>
+ </editionStmt>
+ <publicationStmt>
+ <publisher>Project Gutenberg</publisher>
+ <date value="2009-03-19">March 19, 2009</date>
+ <idno type='etext-no'>28357</idno>
+ <availability>
+ <p>This eBook is for the use of anyone anywhere at no cost and
+ with almost no restrictions whatsoever. You may copy it, give it
+ away or re-use it under the terms of the Project Gutenberg
+ License online at www.gutenberg.org/license</p>
+ </availability>
+ </publicationStmt>
+ <sourceDesc>
+ <p>
+ <bibl>Henty, G. A.: By conduct and courage. - London : Blackie, 1905</bibl>
+ </p>
+ </sourceDesc>
+ </fileDesc>
+ <encodingDesc>
+ </encodingDesc>
+ <profileDesc>
+ <langUsage>
+ <language id="fr" />
+ <language id="en" />
+ </langUsage>
+ </profileDesc>
+ <revisionDesc>
+ <change>
+ <date value="2009-03-19">March 19, 2009</date>
+ <respStmt>
+ <resp>
+ Taavi Kalju, Stefan Cramme, and the Online Distributed Proofreading Team
+ at http://www.pgdp.net
+ (This file was produced from images generously made available
+ by The Internet Archive/Canadian Libraries)
+ </resp>
+ </respStmt>
+ <item>Project Gutenberg TEI edition 1</item>
+ </change>
+ </revisionDesc>
+ </teiHeader>
+
+ <pgExtensions>
+ <pgStyleSheet>
+ .bold { font-weight: bold }
+ .italic { font-style: italic }
+ .right { text-align: right }
+ .smallcaps { font-variant: small-caps }
+ .center { text-align: center }
+ figure { text-align: center }
+ head { text-align: center }
+ </pgStyleSheet>
+<!-- uncomment this CharMap to directly generate ISO 8859-1; replace "(two hyphens)" in the first char with the characters mentioned -->
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+ <charName>ndash</charName>
+ <desc>EN DASH</desc>
+ <mapping>-</mapping>
+ </char>
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+ <charName>oelig</charName>
+ <desc>LATIN SMALL LIGATURE OE</desc>
+ <mapping>oe</mapping>
+ </char>
+
+ <char id="U0x2018">
+ <charName>lsquo</charName>
+ <desc>LEFT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK</desc>
+ <mapping>'</mapping>
+ </char>
+ <char id="U0x2019">
+ <charName>rsquo</charName>
+ <desc>RIGHT SINGLE QUOTATION MARK</desc>
+ <mapping>'</mapping>
+ </char>
+ <char id="U0x201C">
+ <charName>ldquo</charName>
+ <desc>LEFT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK</desc>
+ <mapping>"</mapping>
+ </char>
+ <char id="U0x201D">
+ <charName>rdquo</charName>
+ <desc>RIGHT DOUBLE QUOTATION MARK</desc>
+ <mapping>"</mapping>
+ </char>
+ <char id="U0x215b">
+ <charName>VULGAR FRACTION ONE EIGHTH</charName>
+ <mapping>-1/8</mapping>
+ </char>
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+ <charName>frac12</charName>
+ <mapping>-1/2</mapping>
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+ <charName>frac34</charName>
+ <mapping>-3/4</mapping>
+ </char>
+ <char id="U0x2009">
+ <charName>thinsp</charName>
+ <desc>THIN SPACE</desc>
+ <mapping></mapping>
+ </char>
+ </pgCharMap>-->
+
+ </pgExtensions>
+
+<text lang="en">
+<front>
+ <div>
+ <divGen type="pgheader" />
+ </div>
+ <div>
+ <divGen type="encodingDesc" />
+ </div>
+ <div rend="page-break-before: always">
+ <pb/><anchor id='Pg001a'/>
+
+ <p rend="center; font-size: large">
+ BY CONDUCT AND COURAGE
+ </p>
+ </div><div rend="page-break-before: always">
+ <pb/><anchor id='Pg002a'/>
+
+ <p rend="center">
+ MR. HENTY’S HISTORICAL TALES.
+ </p>
+
+ <list>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>The Cat of Bubastes</hi>: A Story of Ancient Egypt. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>The Young Carthaginian</hi>: A Story of the Times of Hannibal. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>For the Temple</hi>: A Tale of the Fall of Jerusalem. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Beric the Briton</hi>: A Story of the Roman Invasion. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>The Dragon and the Raven</hi>: or, The Days of King Alfred. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Wulf the Saxon</hi>: A Story of the Norman Conquest. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>A Knight of the White Cross</hi>: The Siege of Rhodes. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>In Freedom’s Cause</hi>: A Story of Wallace and Bruce. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>The Lion of St. Mark</hi>: A Story of Venice in the 14th Century. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>St. George for England</hi>: A Tale of Cressy and Poitiers. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>A March on London</hi>: A Story of Wat Tyler. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Both Sides the Border</hi>: A Tale of Hotspur and Glendower. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>At Agincourt</hi>: A Tale of the White Hoods of Paris. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>By Right of Conquest</hi>: or, With Cortez in Mexico. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>St. Bartholomew’s Eve</hi>: A Tale of the Huguenot Wars. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>By Pike and Dyke</hi>: A Tale of the Rise of the Dutch Republic. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>By England’s Aid</hi>: or, The Freeing of the Netherlands. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Under Drake’s Flag</hi>: A Tale of the Spanish Main. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>The Lion of the North</hi>: A Tale of Gustavus Adolphus. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Won by the Sword</hi>: A Tale of the Thirty Years’ War. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>When London Burned</hi>: A Story of the Great Fire. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Orange and Green</hi>: A Tale of the Boyne and Limerick. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>A Jacobite Exile</hi>: In the Service of Charles XII. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>In the Irish Brigade</hi>: A Tale of War in Flanders and Spain. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>The Bravest of the Brave</hi>: or, With Peterborough in Spain. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Bonnie Prince Charlie</hi>: A Tale of Fontenoy and Culloden. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>With Clive in India</hi>: or, The Beginnings of an Empire. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>With Frederick the Great</hi>: The Seven Years’ War. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>With Wolfe in Canada</hi>: or, The Winning of a Continent. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>True To the Old Flag</hi>: The American War of Independence. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Held Fast for England</hi>: A Tale of the Siege of Gibraltar. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>In the Reign of Terror</hi>: The French Revolution. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>No Surrender!</hi> A Tale of the Rising in La Vendée. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>A Roving Commission</hi>: A Story of the Hayti Insurrection. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>The Tiger of Mysore</hi>: The War with Tippoo Saib. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>At Aboukir and Acre</hi>: Napoleon’s Invasion of Egypt. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>With Moore at Corunna</hi>: A Tale of the Peninsular War. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Under Wellington’s Command</hi>: The Peninsular War. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>With Cochrane the Dauntless</hi>: A Tale of his Exploits. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Through the Fray</hi>: A Story of the Luddite Riots. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Through Russian Snows</hi>: The Retreat from Moscow. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>One of the 28th</hi>: A Story of Waterloo. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>In Greek Waters</hi>: A Story of the Grecian War (1821). 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>On the Irrawaddy</hi>: A Story of the First Burmese War. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Through the Sikh War</hi>: A Tale of the Punjaub. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Maori and Settler</hi>: A Story of the New Zealand War. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>With Lee in Virginia</hi>: A Story of the American Civil War. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>By Sheer Pluck</hi>: A Tale of the Ashanti War. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Out With Garibaldi</hi>: A Story of the Liberation of Italy. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>For Name and Fame</hi>: or, To Cabul with Roberts. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>The Dash for Khartoum</hi>: A Tale of the Nile Expedition. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>Condemned As a Nihilist</hi>: A Story of Escape from Siberia. 5<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ <item><hi rend='smallcaps'>With Buller in Natal</hi>: or, A Born Leader. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi></item>
+ </list>
+
+ <pb/><anchor id='Pg001'/>
+
+ </div><div rend="page-break-before: always">
+ <pb/><anchor id='Pg002'/>
+ <pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <q>AS THEY CLIMBED UP THEY WERE CONFRONTED BY<lb/>&nbsp;&nbsp;FULLY A HUNDRED ARMED MOORS</q>]</p>
+ </then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill01"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill01.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend="font-size: small"><q>AS THEY CLIMBED UP THEY WERE CONFRONTED
+ BY<lb/>&nbsp;&nbsp;FULLY A HUNDRED ARMED MOORS</q></hi></head><figDesc>Illustration: AS THEY CLIMBED UP THEY WERE CONFRONTED BY FULLY A HUNDRED ARMED MOORS</figDesc></figure></p>
+ </else></pgIf>
+ </div>
+ <titlePage rend="center; page-break-before: right">
+ <pb/><anchor id='Pg003'/>
+ <docTitle>
+ <titlePart rend="font-size: xx-large">BY CONDUCT AND COURAGE</titlePart>
+ <lb/><lb/>
+ <titlePart>A STORY OF THE DAYS OF NELSON</titlePart>
+ </docTitle>
+ <lb/><lb/>
+ <byline>BY<lb/><lb/> <docAuthor rend="font-size: x-large">G. A. HENTY</docAuthor>
+ <lb/><lb/>
+ <hi rend="font-size: small">Author of “With Roberts to Pretoria” “With Buller in Natal”<lb/>
+ “With Kitchener in the Soudan” &amp;c.</hi>
+ </byline>
+ <lb/><lb/>
+ <titlePart><hi rend='italic; font-size: small'>ILLUSTRATED BY WILLIAM RAINEY, R.I.</hi></titlePart>
+ <lb/><lb/><lb/><lb/>
+ <docImprint><hi rend="font-size: large">BLACKIE AND SON LIMITED</hi><lb/>
+ <hi rend="font-size: small">LONDON GLASGOW DUBLIN BOMBAY</hi>
+ </docImprint>
+ <lb/>
+ <docDate>1905</docDate>
+ <pb/><anchor id='Pg004'/>
+ </titlePage>
+ <div rend="page-break-before: right">
+
+ <pb n='5'/><anchor id='Pg005'/>
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+ <head rend="font-size: x-large">PUBLISHERS’ NOTE</head>
+
+ <p>
+ Mr. George A. Henty, who died in November, 1902, had
+ completed three new stories, <hi rend='italic'>With the Allies to Pekin</hi>, <hi rend='italic'>Through
+ Three Campaigns</hi>, and <hi rend='italic'>By Conduct and Courage</hi>. Of these,
+ <hi rend='italic'>Through Three Campaigns</hi> and <hi rend='italic'>With the Allies to Pekin</hi> were
+ published in the autumn of 1903; the present story is therefore
+ the last of Mr. Henty’s great series of historical stories
+ for boys.
+ </p>
+
+ <p>
+ The proofs have been revised by Mr. G. A. Henty’s son,
+ Captain C. G. Henty.
+ </p>
+
+ <pb n='6'/><anchor id='Pg006'/>
+
+ </div><div rend="page-break-before: right">
+ <pb n='7'/><anchor id='Pg007'/>
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+ <head rend="font-size: x-large">CONTENTS</head>
+
+ <table rend="tblcolumns: 'r lw(40m) r'; latexcolumns: 'rp{6.5cm}r'; margin-left: 2">
+
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right; font-size: small"><hi rend="smallcaps">CHAP.</hi></cell>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell rend="right; font-size: small">Page</cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">I. </cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">An Orphan</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg011">11</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">II. </cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">In the King’s Service</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg032">32</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">III. </cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">A Sea-Fight</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg053">53</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">IV. </cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">Promoted</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg075">75</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">V. </cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">A Pirate Hold</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg096">96</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">VI.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">A Narrow Escape</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg119">119</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">VII.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">An Independent Command</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg137">137</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">VIII.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">A Splendid Haul</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg157">157</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">IX.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">A Spell Ashore</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg178">178</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">X.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">Back at Scarcombe</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg197">197</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">XI.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">Captives Among the Moors</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg212">212</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">XII.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">Back on the <q>Tartar</q></hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg234">234</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">XIII.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">With Nelson</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg250">250</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">XIV.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">The Glorious First of June</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg264">264</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">XV.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">Escaped</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg284">284</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">XVI.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">A Daring Exploit</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg300">300</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">XVII.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">On Board the <q>Jason</q></hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg321">321</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">&nbsp;&nbsp;XVIII.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">St. Vincent and Camperdown</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg342">342</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell rend="right">XIX.</cell>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">Conclusion</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="right"><ref target="Pg362">362</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+
+ </table>
+ <pb n='8'/><anchor id='Pg008'/>
+
+ </div><div rend="page-break-before: right">
+ <pb n='9'/><anchor id='Pg009'/>
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+ <head rend="font-size: x-large">ILLUSTRATIONS</head>
+
+ <table rows="9" cols="3" rend="tblcolumns:'l lw(50m) r'; latexcolumns:'lp{7cm}r'">
+ <row>
+ <cell>&nbsp;&nbsp;</cell>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell rend="right"><hi rend="font-size: small">Page</hi></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps"><q>As they climbed up they were confronted by <lb/>
+ fully a hundred armed Moors</q></hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="text-align: right"><hi rend="italic"><ref target="ill01">Frontis.</ref></hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;<ref target="Pg213">213</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+
+ <row>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">After His First Fight</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="text-align: right"><ref target="ill02">65</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">Will Leads a Party to take the Enemy in the Rear</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="text-align: right"><ref target="ill03">109</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps">The Rescue</hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="text-align: right"><ref target="ill04">155</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps"><q>Tom and Dimchurch made a Desperate Defence</q></hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="text-align: right"><ref target="ill05">191</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps"><q>He ordered the man at the helm to steer for the
+ frigate</q></hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="text-align: right"><ref target="ill06">286</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps"><q>He was just in time to see Lucien alight</q></hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="text-align: right"><ref target="ill07">312</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ <row>
+ <cell/>
+ <cell><hi rend="smallcaps"><q>At last her Captain was compelled to Strike</q></hi></cell>
+ <cell rend="text-align: right"><ref target="ill08">355</ref></cell>
+ </row>
+ </table>
+
+ <pb n='10'/><anchor id='Pg010'/>
+
+ </div>
+</front>
+<body rend="page-break-before: right">
+ <pb n='11'/><anchor id='Pg011'/>
+ <head>BY CONDUCT AND COURAGE</head>
+ <div n="1">
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+
+<head>CHAPTER I</head>
+
+<head type="sub">AN ORPHAN</head>
+
+<p>
+A wandering musician was a rarity in the village of
+Scarcombe. In fact, such a thing had not been known
+in the memory of the oldest inhabitant. What could
+have brought him here? men and women asked themselves.
+There was surely nobody who could dance in the village, and
+the few coppers he would gain by performing on his violin
+would not repay him for his trouble. Moreover, Scarcombe
+was a bleak place, and the man looked sorely shaken with
+the storm of life. He seemed, indeed, almost unable to hold
+out much longer; his breath was short, and he had a hacking
+cough.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+To the surprise of the people, he did not attempt to play
+for their amusement or to ask, in any way, for alms. He had
+taken a lodging in the cottage of one of the fishermen, and on
+fine days he would wander out with his boy, a child some five
+years old, and, lying down on the moorland, would play soft
+tunes to himself. So he lived for three weeks; and then the
+end came suddenly. The child ran out one morning from his
+room crying and saying that daddy was asleep and he could
+<pb n='12'/><anchor id='Pg012'/>not wake him, and on the fisherman going in he saw that
+life had been extinct for some hours. Probably it had come
+suddenly to the musician himself, for there was found among
+his scanty effects no note or memorandum giving a clue to the
+residence of the child’s friends, or leaving any direction concerning
+him. The clergyman was, of course, called in to advise
+as to what should be done. He was a kind-hearted man, and
+volunteered to bury the dead musician without charging any fees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the funeral another question arose. What was to be
+done with the child?
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a fine-looking, frank boy, who had grown and
+hardened beyond his years by the life he had led with his
+father. Fifteen pounds had been found in the dead man’s kit.
+This, however, would fall to the share of the workhouse
+authorities if they took charge of him. A sort of informal
+council was held by the elder fishermen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is hard on the child,</q> one of them said. <q>I have no
+doubt his father intended to tell him where to find his friends,
+but his death came too suddenly. Here is fifteen pounds. Not
+much good, you will say; and it isn’t. It might last a year,
+or maybe eighteen months, but at the end of that time he
+would be as badly off as he is now.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Maybe John Hammond would take him,</q> another suggested.
+<q>He lost his boat and nets three weeks ago, and
+though he has a little money saved up, it is not enough to
+replace them. Perhaps he would take the child in return for
+the fifteen pounds. His old woman could do with him, too,
+and would soon make him a bit useful. John himself is a
+kind-hearted chap, and would treat him well, and in a few
+years the boy would make a useful nipper on board his boat.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='13'/><anchor id='Pg013'/>
+
+<p>
+John Hammond was sent for, and the case was put to him.
+<q>Well,</q> he said, <q>I think I could do with him, and the brass
+would be mighty useful to me just now; but how does the law
+stand? If it got to be talked about, the parish might come
+down upon me for the money.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so, John,</q> one of the others said. <q>The best plan
+would be for you, and two of us, to go up to parson, and ask
+him how the matter stands. If he says that it is all right,
+you may be sure that you would be quite safe.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The clergyman, upon being consulted, said that he thought
+the arrangement was a very good one. The parish authorities
+had not been asked to find any money for the father’s funeral,
+and had therefore no say in the matter, unless they were called
+upon to take the child. Should any question be asked, he
+would state that he himself had gone into the matter and had
+strongly approved of the arrangement, which he considered
+was to their advantage as well as the child’s; for if they took
+charge of the boy they would have to keep him at least ten
+years, and then pay for apprenticing him out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly the boy was handed over to John Hammond.
+With the buoyancy of childhood, William Gilmore, which
+was the best that could be made of what he gave as his
+name, soon felt at home in the fisherman’s cottage. It was
+a pleasant change to him after having been a wanderer with
+his father for as far back as he could remember. The old
+woman was kind in her rough way, and soon took to sending
+him on small errands. She set him on washing-days to watch
+the pot and tell her when it boiled. When not so employed
+she allowed him to play with other children of his own age.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sometimes when the weather was fine, John, who had come
+<pb n='14'/><anchor id='Pg014'/>to be very fond of the boy, never having had any children of
+his own, would take him out with him fishing, to the child’s
+supreme enjoyment. After a year of this life he was put to
+the village school, which was much less to his liking. Here,
+fortunately for himself, he attracted the notice of the clergyman’s
+daughter, a girl of sixteen. She, of course, knew his
+story, and was filled with a great pity for him. She was a
+little inclined to romance, and in her own mind invented many
+theories to account for his appearance in the village. Her
+father would laugh sometimes when she related some of these
+to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My dear child,</q> he said, <q>it is not necessary to go so far
+to account for the history of this poor wandering musician.
+You say that he looked to you like a broken-down gentleman;
+there are thousands of such men in the country, ne’er-do-wells,
+who have tired out all their friends, and have taken at last to
+a life that permits a certain amount of freedom and furnishes
+them with a living sufficient for necessary wants. It is from
+such men as these that the great body of tramps is largely
+recruited. Many such men drive hackney-coaches in our large
+towns; some of them enlist in the army; but wherever they
+are, and whatever they take up, they are sure to stay near the
+foot of the tree. They have no inclination for better things.
+They work as hard as men who have steady employment, but
+they prefer their own liberty with a crust to a solid meal
+regularly earned. I agree with you myself that there was an
+appearance of having seen better times about this man; I can
+go so far with you as to admit that I think that at some time
+or other he moved in decent circles; but if we could get at the
+truth I have no doubt whatever that we should find that he
+<pb n='15'/><anchor id='Pg015'/>had thrown away every opportunity, alienated every friend,
+and, having cut himself adrift from all ties, took to the life of
+a wanderer. For such a man nothing could be done; but I
+hope that the boy, beginning in vastly poorer circumstances
+than his father, will some day come to earn his living honestly
+in the position of life in which he is placed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The interest, however, which Miss Warden took in the boy
+remained unabated, and had a very useful effect upon him.
+She persuaded him to come up every day for half an hour to
+the rectory, and then instructed him in his lessons, educating
+him in a manner very different from the perfunctory teaching
+of the old dame at the school. She would urge him on by
+telling him that if he would attend to his lessons he would
+some day be able to rise to a better position than that of a
+village fisherman. His father, no doubt, had had a good
+education, but from circumstances over which he had had no
+control he had been obliged to take to the life of a strolling
+musician, and she was sure that he would have wished of all
+things that his son should be able to obtain a good position
+in life when he grew up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Under Miss Warden’s teaching the boy made very rapid
+progress, and was, before two more years had passed, vastly in
+advance of the rest of the children of the village. As to this,
+however, by Miss Warden’s advice, he remained silent. When
+he was ten his regular schooling was a great deal interrupted,
+as it was considered that when a boy reached that age it was
+high time that he began to assist his father in the boat. He
+was glad of his freedom and the sense that he was able to
+make himself useful, but of an evening when he was at home,
+or weather prevented the boat from going out, he went up for
+<pb n='16'/><anchor id='Pg016'/>his lesson to Miss Warden, and, stealing away from the others,
+would lie down on the moor and work at his books.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was now admitted to the society of watchers. He had
+often heard whispers among other boys of the look-out that
+had to be kept upon the custom-house officers, and heard
+thrilling tales of adventure and escape on the part of the fishermen.
+Smuggling was indeed carried on on a large scale on the
+whole Yorkshire coast, and cargoes were sometimes run under
+the very noses of the revenue officers, who were put off the
+scent by many ingenious contrivances. Before a vessel was
+expected in, rumours would be circulated of an intention to
+land the cargo on some distant spot, and a mysterious light
+would be shown in that direction by fishing-boats. Sometimes,
+however, the smugglers were caught in the act, and
+then there would be a fierce fight, ending in some, at least, of
+those engaged being taken off to prison and afterwards sent on
+a voyage in a ship of war.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will Gilmore was now admitted as a helper in these proceedings,
+and often at night would watch one or other of the
+revenue men, and if he saw him stir beyond his usual beat
+would quickly carry the news to the village. A score of boys
+were thus employed, so that any movement which seemed to
+evidence a concentration of the coast-guard men was almost
+certain to be thwarted. Either the expected vessel was
+warned off with lights, or, if the concentration left unguarded
+the place fixed upon for landing, the cargo would be immediately
+run.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus another five years passed. Will was now a strong lad.
+His friend, Miss Warden, could teach him but little more, but
+she often had him up of an evening to have a chat with him.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='17'/><anchor id='Pg017'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am afraid, William,</q> she said one evening, <q>that a
+good deal of smuggling is carried on here. Last week there
+was a fight, and three of the men of the village were killed
+and several were taken away to prison. It is a terrible state
+of affairs.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+William did not for a moment answer. It was something
+entirely new to him that there was anything wrong in smuggling.
+He regarded it as a mere contest of wits between the
+coast-guard and the fishermen, and had taken a keen pleasure
+in outwitting the former.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But there is no harm in smuggling, Miss Warden. Almost
+everyone takes part in it, and the farmers round all send their
+carts in when a run is expected.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But it is very wrong, William, and the fact that so
+many people are ready to aid in it is no evidence in its
+favour. People band together to cheat the King’s Revenue,
+and thereby bring additional taxation upon those who deal
+fairly. It is as much robbery to avoid the excise duties as
+it is to carry off property from a house, and it has been a
+great grief to my father that his parishioners, otherwise
+honest and God-fearing people, should take part in such
+doings, as is evidenced by the fact that so many of them were
+involved in the fray last week. He only abstains from denouncing
+it in the pulpit because he fears that he might
+thereby lose the affection of the people and impair his power
+of doing good in other respects.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I never thought of it in that way, miss,</q> the lad said
+seriously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Just think in your own case, William: suppose you were
+caught and sent off to sea; there would be an end of the
+<pb n='18'/><anchor id='Pg018'/>work you have been doing. You would be mixed up with
+rough sailors, and, after being away on a long voyage, you
+would forget all that you have learnt, and would be as rough
+as themselves. This would be a poor ending indeed to all the
+pains I have taken with you, and all the labour you have
+yourself expended in trying to improve yourself. It would
+be a great grief to me, I can assure you, and a cruel disappointment,
+to know that my hopes for you had all come to
+naught.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They sha’n’t, Miss Warden,</q> the boy said firmly. <q>I
+know it will be hard for me to draw back, but, if necessary,
+I will leave the village now that you are going to be married.
+If you had been going to stay I would have stopped too, but
+the village will not be like itself to me after you have left.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am glad to think you mean that. I have remained here
+as long as I could be of use to you, for though I have taught
+you as much as I could in all branches of education that would
+be likely to be useful to you, have lent you my father’s books,
+and pushed you forward till I could no longer lead the way,
+there are still, of course, many things for you to learn. You
+have got a fair start, but you must not be content with that.
+If you have to leave, and I don’t think a longer stay here
+would be of use to you, I will endeavour to obtain some situation
+for you at Scarborough or Whitby, where you could, after
+your work is done, continue your education. But I beg you
+to do nothing rashly. It would be better if you could stay
+here for another year or so. We may hope that the men will
+not be so annoyed as you think at your refusal to take further
+part in the smuggling operations. At any rate, stay if you
+can for a time. It will be two months before I leave, and
+<pb n='19'/><anchor id='Pg019'/>three more before I am settled in my new home at Scarborough.
+When I am so I have no doubt that my husband
+will aid me in obtaining a situation for you. He has been
+there for years, and will, of course, have very many friends
+and acquaintances who would interest themselves in you. If,
+however, you find that your position would be intolerable, you
+might remain quiet as to your determination. After the fight
+of last week it is not likely that there will be any attempt at
+a landing for some little time to come, and I shall not blame
+you, therefore, if you at least keep up the semblance of still
+taking part in their proceedings.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, Miss Warden,</q> the boy said sturdily, <q>I didn’t know
+that it was wrong, and therefore joined in it willingly enough,
+but now you tell me that it is so I will take no further share
+in it, whatever comes of it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am glad to hear you say so, William, for it shows that
+the aid I have given you has not been thrown away. What
+sort of work would you like yourself, if we can get it for
+you?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I would rather go to sea, Miss Warden, than do anything
+else. I have, for the last year, taken a lot of pains to understand
+those books of navigation you bought for me. I don’t
+say that I have mastered them all, but I understand a good
+deal, and feel sure that after a few years at sea I shall be able
+to pass as a mate.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, William, you know that, when I got the books for
+you, I told you that I could not help you with them, but I
+can quite understand that with your knowledge of mathematics
+you would be able at any rate to grasp a great deal of
+the subject. I was afraid then that you would take to the
+<pb n='20'/><anchor id='Pg020'/>sea. It is a hard life, but one in which a young man capable
+of navigating a ship should be able to make his way. Brought
+up, as you have been, on the sea, it is not wonderful that you
+should choose it as a profession, and, though I may regret it,
+I should not think of trying to turn you from it. Very well,
+then, I will endeavour to get you apprenticed. It is a hard
+life, but not harder than that of a fisherman, to which you
+are accustomed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When William returned to his foster-father he informed
+him that he did not mean to have anything more to do with
+the smuggling.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man looked at him in astonishment. <q>Are you
+mad?</q> he said. <q>Don’t I get five shillings for every night
+you are out, generally four or five nights a month, which pays
+for all your food.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am sorry,</q> the lad said, <q>but I never knew that it was
+wrong before, and now I know it I mean to have nothing more
+to do with it. What good comes of it? Here we have three
+empty cottages, and five or six others from which the heads
+will be absent for years. It is dear at any price. I work
+hard with you, father, and am never slack; surely the money
+I earn in the boat more than pays for my grub.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can guess who told you this,</q> the old man said angrily.
+<q>It was that parson’s daughter you are always with.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Don’t say anything against her,</q> the boy said earnestly;
+<q>she has been the best friend to me that ever a fellow had,
+and as long as I live I shall feel grateful to her. You know
+that I am not like the other boys of the village; I can read
+and write well, and I have gathered a lot of knowledge from
+books. Abuse me as much as you like, but say nothing
+<pb n='21'/><anchor id='Pg021'/>against her. You know that the terms on which you took
+me expired a year ago, but I have gone on just as before
+and am ready to do the same for a time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You have been a good lad,</q> the old man said, mollified,
+<q>and I don’t know what I should have done without you.
+I am nigh past work now, but in the ten years you have
+been with me things have always gone well with me, and I
+have money enough to make a shift with for the rest of my
+life, even if I work no longer. But I don’t like this freak
+that you have taken into your head. It will mean trouble, lad,
+as sure as you are standing there. The men here won’t understand
+you, and will like enough think that the revenue people
+have got hold of you. You will be shown the cold shoulder,
+and even worse than that may befall you. We fisher-folk are
+rough and ready in our ways, and if there is one thing we
+hate more than another it is a spy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have no intention of being a spy,</q> the boy said. <q>I
+have spoken to none of the revenue men, and don’t mean to
+do so, and I would not peach even if I were certain that a
+cargo was going to be landed. Surely it is possible to stand
+aside from it all without being suspected of having gone over
+to the enemy. No gold that they could give me would tempt
+me to say a word that would lead to the failure of a landing,
+and surely there can be no great offence in declining to act
+longer as a watcher.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man shook his head.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>A wilful man must have his way,</q> he said; <q>but I know
+our fellows better than you do, and I foresee that serious
+trouble is likely to come of this.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, if it must be, it must,</q> the boy said doggedly. <q>I
+<pb n='22'/><anchor id='Pg022'/>mean, if I live, to be a good man, and now that I know that
+it is wrong to cheat the revenue I will have no more to do
+with it. It would be a nice reward for all the pains Miss
+Warden has spent upon me to turn round and do what she
+tells me is wrong.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John Hammond was getting to the age when few things
+excite more than a feeble surprise. He felt that the loss of
+the boy’s assistance would be a heavy one, for he had done no
+small share of the work for the past two years. But he had
+more than once lately talked to his wife of the necessity for
+selling his boat and nets and remaining at home. With this
+decision she quite agreed, feeling that he was indeed becoming
+incapable of doing the work, and every time he had gone out
+in anything but the calmest weather she had been filled with
+apprehension as to what would happen if a storm were to blow
+up. He was really sorry for the boy, being convinced that
+harm would befall him as the result of this, to him, astonishing
+decision. To John Hammond smuggling appeared to be
+quite justifiable. The village had always been noted as a nest
+of smugglers, and to him it came as natural as fishing. It was
+a pity, a grievous pity, that the boy should have taken so
+strange a fancy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was a good boy, a hard-working boy, and the only fault
+he had to find with him was his unaccountable liking for
+study. John could neither read nor write, and for the life
+of him could not see what good came of it. He had always
+got on well without it, and when the school was first started
+he and many others shook their heads gravely over it, and
+regarded it as a fad of the parson’s. Still, as it only affected
+children too young to be useful in the boats, they offered no
+<pb n='23'/><anchor id='Pg023'/>active opposition, and in time the school had come to be
+regarded as chiefly a place where the youngsters were kept
+out of their mothers’ way when washing and cooking were
+going on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went slowly back into the cottage and acquainted his
+wife with this new and astonishing development on the part
+of the boy. His wife was full of indignation, which was,
+however, modified at the thought that she would now have
+her husband always at home with her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I shall speak my mind to Miss Warden,</q> she said, <q>and
+tell her how much harm her advice has done.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, no, Jenny,</q> her husband said; <q>what is the use of
+that? It is the parson’s duty to be meddling in all sorts of
+matters, and it will do no good to fight against it. Parson
+is a good man, all allow, and he always finishes his sermons
+in time for us to get home to dinner. I agree with you that
+the young madam has done harm, and I greatly fear that
+trouble will come to the boy. There are places where smuggling
+is thought to be wrong, but this place ain’t among them.
+I don’t know what will happen when Will says that he doesn’t
+mean to go any more as a watcher, but there is sure to be
+trouble of some sort.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not long indeed before Will felt a change in the
+village. Previous to this he had been generally popular, now
+men passed without seeing him. He was glad when John
+Hammond called upon him to go out in the boat, when the
+weather was fine, but at other times his only recourse was to
+steal away to the moors with his books. Presently the elder
+boys took to throwing sods at him as he passed, and calling
+spy and other opprobrious epithets after him. This brought
+<pb n='24'/><anchor id='Pg024'/>on several severe fights, and as Will made up for want of
+weight by pluck and activity his opponents more than once
+found themselves badly beaten. One day he learned from a
+subdued excitement in the village that it was time for one
+of the smuggling vessels to arrive. One of his boyish friends
+had stuck to him, and was himself almost under a ban for
+associating with so unpopular a character.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Don’t you come with me, Stevens,</q> Will had urged again
+and again; <q>you will only make it bad for yourself, and it
+will do me no good.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t care,</q> the former said sturdily. <q>We have always
+been good friends, and you know I don’t in the least believe
+that you have anything to do with the revenue men. It is
+too bad of them to say so. I fought Tom Dickson only this
+morning for abusing you. He said if you were not working
+with them, why did you give up being on the watch. I told
+him it was no odds to me why you gave it up, I supposed
+that you had a right to do as you liked. Then from words
+we came to blows. I don’t say I beat him, for he is a good
+bit bigger than I am, but I gave him as good as I got, and he
+was as glad to stop as I was. You talk of going away soon.
+If you do, and you will take me, I will go with you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t know yet where I am going, Tommy, but if I go
+to a town I have no doubt I shall be able in a short time
+to hear of someone there who wants a strong lad, or perhaps
+I may be able to get you a berth as cabin-boy in the ship
+in which I go. I mean to go for a sailor myself if I can, and
+I shall be glad to have you as a chum on board. We have
+always been great friends, and I am sure we always shall be,
+Tommy. If I were you I would think it over a good many
+<pb n='25'/><anchor id='Pg025'/>times before you decide upon it. You see I have learnt a
+great deal from books to prepare myself for a sea life. Miss
+Warden is going to try to get me taken as an apprentice, and
+in that case I may hope to get to be an officer when my time
+is out, but you would not have much chance of doing so. Of
+course if we were together I could help you on. So far you
+have never cared for books or to improve yourself, and without
+that you can never rise to be any more than a common
+sailor.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hate books,</q> the boy said; <q>still, I will try what I can
+do. But at any rate I don’t care much so that I am with
+you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, we will see about it when the time comes, Tommy.
+Miss Warden was married, as you know, last week. In
+another three months she will be at Scarborough, and she has
+promised that her husband will try to get me apprenticed
+either there or at Whitby, which is a large port. Directly I
+get on board a ship I will let you know if there is a vacancy
+in her for a cabin-boy. But you think it over well first; you
+will find it difficult, for I don’t expect your uncle will let
+you go.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t care a snap about him. He is always knocking me
+about, and I don’t care what he likes and what he don’t. You
+may be sure that I sha’n’t ask him, but shall make off at night
+as soon as I hear from you. You won’t forget me, will you,
+Will?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly I will not; you may be quite sure of that. Mind,
+I don’t promise that I shall be able to get you a berth as
+cabin-boy at once, or as an apprentice. I only promise that
+I will do so as soon as I have a chance. It may be a month,
+<pb n='26'/><anchor id='Pg026'/>and it may be a year; it may even be three or four years, for
+though there is always a demand for men, at least so I have
+heard, there may not be any demand for boys. But you may
+be sure that I will not keep you waiting any longer than I can
+help.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day Will was walking along the cliffs, feeling very
+solitary, when he heard a faint cry, and, looking down, saw
+Tom Stevens in a deep pool. It had precipitous sides, and
+he was evidently unable to climb out. <q>Hold on, Tom,</q> he
+shouted, <q>I will come to you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was half a mile before he could get to a place where he was
+able to climb down, and when he reached the shore he ran
+with breathless speed to the spot where Tom’s head was still
+above the water. He saw at once that his friend’s strength
+was well-nigh spent, and, leaping in, he swam to him. <q>Put
+your arms round my neck,</q> he said. <q>I will swim down
+with you to the point where the creek ends.</q> The boy was
+too far gone to speak, and it needed all Will’s strength to
+help him down the deep pool to the point where it joined the
+sea, and then to haul him ashore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I was nearly gone, Will,</q> the boy said when he recovered
+a little.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I saw that. But how on earth did you manage to
+get into the water?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I was running along by the side of the cliff, when my foot
+slipped. I came down on my knee and hurt myself frightfully;
+I was in such pain that I could not stop myself from
+rolling over. I tried to swim, which, of course, would have
+been nothing for me, but I think my knee is smashed, and it
+hurt me so frightfully that I screamed out with pain, and had
+<pb n='27'/><anchor id='Pg027'/>to give up. I could not have held on much longer, and should
+certainly have been drowned had you not seen me. I was
+never so pleased as when I heard your voice above.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Can you walk now, do you think?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, I am sure I can’t walk by myself, but I might if I
+leant on you. I will try anyhow.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He hobbled along for a short distance, but at last said: <q>It
+is of no use, Will, I can’t go any farther.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, get on my back and I will see what I can do for
+you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slowly and with many stoppages Will got him to the point
+where he descended the cliff. <q>I must get help to carry you
+up here, Tom; it is very steep, and I am sure I could not take
+you myself. I must go into the village and bring assistance.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will wait here till morning, Will. There will be no
+hardship in that, and I know that you don’t like speaking to
+anyone.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will manage it,</q> Will said cheerfully. <q>I will tell John
+Hammond, and he will go to your uncle and get help.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, that will do! Most of the men are out, but I dare
+say there will be two or three at home.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will ran all the way back to the village, which was more
+than a mile away. <q>Tom Stevens is lying at the foot of the
+cliff, father. I think he has broken his leg, and he has been
+nearly drowned. Will you go and see his uncle, and get three
+or four men to carry him home. You know very well it is no
+use my going to his uncle. He would not listen to what I have
+to say, and would simply shower abuse upon me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will go,</q> the old man said. <q>The boy can’t be left
+there.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='28'/><anchor id='Pg028'/>
+
+<p>
+In a quarter of an hour the men started. Will went
+ahead of them for some distance until he reached the top of
+the path. <q>He is down at the bottom,</q> he said, and turned
+away. Tom was brought home, and roundly abused by his
+uncle for injuring himself so that he would be unable to
+accompany him in his boat for some days. He lay for a week
+in bed, and was then only able to hobble about with the aid of
+a stick. When he related how Will had saved him there was a
+slight revulsion of feeling among the better-disposed boys, but
+this was of short duration. It became known that a French
+lugger would soon be on the coast. Will was not allowed to
+approach the edge of the cliff, being assailed by curses and
+threats if he ventured to do so. Every care was taken to
+throw the coast-guard off the scent, but things went badly.
+There was some sharp fighting, and a considerable portion of
+the cargo was seized as it was being carried up the cliff.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day Tom hurried up to Will, who was a short
+way out on the moor.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You must run for your life, Will. There are four or five
+of the men who say that you betrayed them last night, and I
+do believe they will throw you over the cliff. Here they
+come! The best thing you can do is to make for the coast-guard
+station.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will saw that the four men who were coming along were
+among the roughest in the village, and started off immediately
+at full speed. With oaths and shouts the men pursued him.
+The coast-guard station was two miles away, and he reached
+it fifty yards in front of them. The men stopped, shouting:
+<q>You are safe there, but as soon as you leave it we will have
+you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='29'/><anchor id='Pg029'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>What is the matter, lad?</q> the sub-officer in charge of the
+station said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Those men say that I betrayed them, but you know ’tis
+false, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly I do. I know you well by sight, and believe
+that you are a good young fellow. I have always heard you
+well spoken of. What makes them think that?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is because I would not agree to go on acting as watcher.
+I did not know that there was any harm in it till Miss Warden
+told me, and then I would not do it any longer, and that set
+all the village against me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What are you going to do?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will stay here to-night if you will let me. I am sure
+they will keep up a watch for me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will sling a hammock for you,</q> the man said. <q>Now we
+are just going to have dinner, and I dare say you can eat
+something. You are the boy they call Miss Warden’s pet,
+are you not?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, they call me so. She has been very kind to me, and
+has helped me on with my books.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, well, a boy is sure to get disliked by his fellows when
+he is cleverer with his books than they are!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After dinner the officer said: <q>It is quite clear that you
+won’t be able to return to the village. I think I have heard
+that you have no father. Is it not so?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, he died when I was five years old. He left a little
+money, and John Hammond took me in and bought a boat
+with that and what he had saved. I was bound to stay with
+him until I was fourteen years old, but was soon going to
+leave him, for he is really too old to go out any longer.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='30'/><anchor id='Pg030'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Have you ever thought of going into the royal navy?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have thought of it, sir, but I have not settled anything.
+I thought of going into the merchant navy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Bah! I am surprised at a lad of spirit like you thinking
+of such a thing. If you have learned a lot you will, if you
+are steady, be sure to get on in time, and may very well
+become a petty officer. No lad of spirit would take to the
+life of a merchantman who could enter the navy. I don’t say
+that some of the Indiamen are not fine ships, but you would
+find it very hard to get a berth on one of them. Our lieutenant
+will be over here in a day or two, and I have no doubt
+that if I speak to him for you he will ship you as a boy in a
+fine ship.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How long does one ship for, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You engage for the time that the ship is in commission, at
+the outside for five years; and if you find that you do not like
+it, at the end of that time it is open to you to choose some
+other berth.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can enter the merchant navy then if I like?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Of course you could, but I don’t think that you would.
+On a merchantman you would be kicked and cuffed all round,
+whereas on a man-of-war I don’t say it would be all easy sailing,
+but if you were sharp and obliging things would go
+smoothly enough for you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, I will think it over to-night.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Good, my boy! you are quite right not to decide in a hurry.
+It is a serious thing for a young chap to make a choice like
+that; but it seems to me that, being without friends as you are,
+and having made enemies of all the people of your village, it
+would be better for you to get out of it as soon as possible.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='31'/><anchor id='Pg031'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I quite see that; and really I think I could not do better
+than pass a few years on a man-of-war, for after that I should
+be fit for any work I might find to do.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sleep upon it, lad.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will sat down on the low wall in front of the station and
+thought it over. After all, it seemed to him that it would be
+better to be on a fine ship and have a chance of fighting with
+the French than to sail in a merchantman. At the end of
+five years he would be twenty, and could pass as a mate if
+he chose, or settle on land. He would have liked to consult
+Miss Warden, but this was out of the question. He knew
+the men who had pursued him well enough to be sure that
+his life would not be safe if they caught him. He might
+make his way out of the station at night, but even that was
+doubtful. Besides, if he were to do so he had no one to go
+to at Scarborough; he had not a penny in his pocket, and
+would find it impossible to maintain himself until Miss
+Warden returned. He did not wish to appear before her as
+a beggar. He was still thinking when a shadow fell across
+him, and, looking up, he saw his friend Tom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have come round to see you, Will,</q> he said. <q>I don’t
+know what is to be done. Nothing will convince the village
+that you did not betray them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The thing is too absurd,</q> Will said angrily. <q>I never
+spoke to a coast-guardsman in my life till to-day, except,
+perhaps, in passing, and then I would do no more than make
+a remark about the weather. Besides, no one in the village
+has spoken to me for a month, so how could I tell that the
+lugger was coming in that night?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I really don’t think it would be safe for you to go back.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='32'/><anchor id='Pg032'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am not going back. I have not quite settled what I
+shall do, but certainly I don’t intend to return to the village.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then what are you going to do, Will?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t know exactly, but I have half decided to ship as
+a boy on one of the king’s ships.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should like to go with you wherever you go, but I
+should like more than anything to do that.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is a serious business, you know; you would have to
+make up your mind to be kicked and cuffed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I get that at home,</q> Tom said; <q>it can’t be harder for me
+at sea than it is there.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I have not got to decide until to-morrow; you go
+home and think it over, and if you come in the morning with
+your mind made up, I will speak to the officer here and ask
+him if they will take us both.</q>
+</p>
+ </div><div n="2">
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER II</head>
+
+<head type="sub">IN THE KING’S SERVICE</head>
+
+<p>
+Before morning came Will had thought the matter over
+in every light, and concluded that he could not do better
+than join the navy for a few years. Putting all other things
+aside, it was a life of adventure, and adventure is always
+tempting to boys. It really did not seem to him that, if he
+entered the merchant service at once, he would be any better
+off than he would be if he had a preliminary training in the
+royal navy. He knew that the man-of-war training would
+make him a smarter sailor, and he hoped that he would find
+<pb n='33'/><anchor id='Pg033'/>time enough on board ship to continue his work, so that
+afterwards he might be able to pass as a mate in the merchant
+service.
+</p>
+
+ <p>
+Tom Stevens came round in the morning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have quite made up my mind to go with you if you will
+let me,</q> he said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will let you readily enough, Tom, but I must warn you
+that you will not have such a good look-out as I shall. You
+know, I have learnt a good deal, and if the first cruise lasts
+for five years I have no doubt that at the end of it I shall be
+able to pass as a mate in the merchant service, and I am
+afraid you will have very little chance of doing so.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can’t help that,</q> Tom said. <q>I know that I am not like
+you, and I haven’t learnt things, and I don’t suppose that if I
+had had anyone to help me it would have made any difference.
+I know I shall never rise much above a sailor before the mast.
+If you leave the service and go into a merchantman I will go
+there with you. It does not matter to me where I am. I felt
+so before, and of course I feel it all the more now that you
+have saved my life. I am quite sure you will get on in the
+world, Will, and sha’n’t grudge you your success a bit, however
+high you rise, for I know how hard you have worked, and
+how well you deserve it. Besides, even if I had had the pains
+bestowed upon me, and had worked ever so hard myself,
+I should never have been a bit like you. You seem different
+from us somehow. I don’t know how it is, but you are
+smarter and quicker and more active. I expect some day
+you will find out something about your father, and then
+probably we shall be able to understand the difference between
+us. At any rate I am quite prepared to see you rise,
+<pb n='34'/><anchor id='Pg034'/>and I shall be well content if you will always allow me to
+remain your friend.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will gratified the sub-officer later by telling him that he
+had made up his mind to ship on board one of the king’s
+vessels, and that his friend and chum, Tom Stevens, had
+made up his mind to go with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The coxswain looked Tom up and down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You have the makings of a fine strong man,</q> he said,
+<q>and ought to turn out a good sailor. The training you have
+had in the fishing-boats will be all in your favour. Well, I
+will let you know when the lieutenant makes his rounds. I
+am sure there will be no difficulty in shipping you. Boys ain’t
+what they were when I was young. Then we thought it an
+honour to be shipped on board a man-of-war, now most of
+them seem to me mollycoddled, and we have difficulty in
+getting enough boys for the ships. You see, we are not
+allowed to press boys, but only able-bodied men; so the
+youngsters can laugh in our faces. Most of the crimps get
+one or two of them to watch the sailors as the boys of the
+village watch our men, and give notice when they are going to
+make a raid. I don’t think, therefore, that there is any fear of
+your being refused, especially when I say that one of you has
+got into great trouble from refusing to aid in throwing us off
+the scent when a lugger is due. If for no other reason he
+owes you a debt for that.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three days passed. Will still remained at the coast-guard
+station, and men still hovered near. Tom came over once
+and said that it had been decided among a number of the
+fishermen that no great harm should be done to Will when
+they got him, but that he should be thrashed within an
+<pb n='35'/><anchor id='Pg035'/>inch of his life. On the third day the coxswain said to
+Will:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have a message this morning from the lieutenant, that
+he will be here by eleven o’clock. If you will write a line to
+your friend I will send it over by one of the men.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tom arrived breathless two minutes before the officer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My eye, I have had a run of it,</q> he said. <q>The man
+brought me the letter just as I was going to start in the boat
+with my uncle. I pretended to have left something behind me
+and ran back to the cottage, he swearing after me all the way
+for my stupidity. I ran into the house, and then got out of the
+window behind, and started for the moors, taking good care
+to keep the house in a line between him and me. My, what
+a mad rage he will be in when I don’t come back, and he goes
+up and finds that I have disappeared! I stopped a minute to
+take a clean shirt and my Sunday clothes. I expect, when he
+sees I am not in the cottage, he will look round, and he will
+discover that they have gone from their pegs, and guess that
+I have made a bolt of it. He won’t guess, however, that I
+have come here, but will think I have gone across the moors.
+He knows very well how hard he has made my life; still, that
+won’t console him for losing me, just as I am getting really
+useful in the boat.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lieutenant landed from his cutter at the foot of the path
+leading up to the station. The sub-officer received him at
+the top, and after a few words they walked up to the station
+together.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Who are these two boys?</q> he asked as he came up to them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Two lads who wish to enter the navy, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Umph! runaways, I suppose?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='36'/><anchor id='Pg036'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Not exactly, sir. Both of them are fatherless. That one
+has received a fair education from the daughter of the clergyman
+of the village, who took a great fancy to him. He has
+for some years now been assisting in one of the fishing-boats
+and, as he acknowledges, in the spying upon our men, as
+practically everyone else in the village does. When, however,
+Miss Warden told him that smuggling was very wrong,
+he openly announced his intention of having nothing more to
+do with it. This has had the effect of making the ignorant
+villagers think that he must have taken bribes from us to
+keep us informed of what was going on. In consequence he
+has suffered severe persecution and has been sent to Coventry.
+After the fight we had with them the other day they appear
+to think that there could be no further doubt of his being
+concerned in the matter, and four men set out after him to
+take his life. He fled here as his nearest possible refuge, and
+if you will look over there you will see two men on the watch
+for him. He had made up his mind to ship as an apprentice
+on a merchantman, but I have talked the matter over with
+him, and he has now decided to join a man-of-war.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>A very good choice,</q> the officer said. <q>I suppose you
+can read and write, lad?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir,</q> Will said, suppressing a smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Know a bit more, perhaps?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, if you are civil and well behaved, you will get on.
+And who is the other one?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He is Gilmore’s special chum, sir. He has a brute of an
+uncle who is always knocking him about, and he wants to go
+to sea with his friend.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='37'/><anchor id='Pg037'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, they are two likely youngsters. The second is more
+heavily built than the other, but there is no doubt as to which
+is the more intelligent. I will test them at once, and then
+take them off with me in the cutter and hand them over to
+the tender at Whitby. Now send four men and catch those
+two fellows and bring them in here. I will give them a sharp
+lesson against ill-treating a lad who refuses to join them in
+their rascally work.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A minute later four of the men strolled off by the cliffs,
+two in each direction. When they had got out of sight of the
+watchers, they struck inland, and, making a detour, came down
+behind them. The fishermen did not take the alarm until it
+was too late. They started to run, but the sailors were
+more active and quick-footed, and, presently capturing them,
+brought them back to the coast-guard station.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So my men,</q> the lieutenant said sternly, <q>you have been
+threatening to ill-treat one of His Majesty’s subjects for refusing
+to join you in your attempts to cheat the revenue? I might
+send you off to a magistrate for trial, in which case you would
+certainly get three months’ imprisonment. I prefer, however,
+settling such matters myself. Strip them to the waist, lads.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The orders were executed in spite of the men’s struggles
+and execrations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now tie them up to the flag-post and give them a dozen
+heartily.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the men were all indignant at the treatment that had
+been given to Will they laid the lash on heavily, and the
+execrations that followed the first few blows speedily subsided
+into shrieks for mercy, followed at last by low moaning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When both had received their punishment, the lieutenant
+<pb n='38'/><anchor id='Pg038'/>said: <q>Now you can put on your clothes again and carry the
+news of what you have had to your village, and tell your
+friends that I wish I had had every man concerned in the
+matter before me. If I had I would have dealt out the same
+punishment to all. Now, lads, I shall be leaving in an hour’s
+time; if you like to send back to the village for your clothes,
+one of the men will take the message.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tom already had all his scanty belongings, but Will was
+glad to send a note to John Hammond, briefly stating his
+reasons for leaving, and thanking him for his kindness in the
+past, and asking him to send his clothes to him by the bearer.
+An hour and a half later they embarked in the lieutenant’s
+gig and were rowed off to the revenue cutter lying a quarter
+of a mile away. Here they were put under the charge of the
+boatswain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They have shipped for the service, Thompson,</q> the lieutenant
+said. <q>I think they are good lads. Make them as
+comfortable as you can.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So you have shipped, have you?</q> the boatswain said as he
+led them forward. <q>Well, you are plucky young cockerels.
+It ain’t exactly a bed of roses, you will find, at first, but if you
+can always keep your temper and return a civil answer to a
+question you will soon get on all right. You will have more
+trouble with the other boys than with the men, and will have
+a battle or two to fight.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We sha’n’t mind that,</q> Will said; <q>we have had to deal
+with some tough ones already in our own village, and have
+proved that we are better than most of our own age. At any
+rate we won’t be licked easily, even if they are a bit bigger
+and stronger than ourselves, and after all a licking doesn’t go
+<pb n='39'/><anchor id='Pg039'/>for much anyway. What ship do you think they will send us
+to, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, that is a good deal more than I can say! There is a
+cutter that acts as a receiving-ship at Whitby, and you will
+be sent off from it as opportunity offers and the ships of war
+want hands. Like enough you will go off with a batch down
+to the south in a fortnight or so, and will be put on board
+some ship being commissioned at Portsmouth or Devonport.
+A large cutter comes round the coast once a month, to pick
+up the hands from the various receiving-ships, and as often
+as not she goes back with a hundred. And a rum lot you
+will think them. There are jail-birds who have had the offer
+of release on condition that they enter the navy; there are
+farm-labourers who don’t know one end of a boat from the
+other; there are drunkards who have been sold by the crimps
+when their money has run out; but, Lord bless you, it don’t
+make much difference what they are, they are all knocked into
+shape before they have been three months on board. I think,
+however, you will have a better time than this. Our lieutenant
+is a kind-hearted man, though he is strict enough in the way
+of business, and I have no doubt he will say a good word for
+you to the commander of the tender, which, as he is the senior
+officer, will go a long way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two boys were soon on good terms with the crew, who
+divined at once that they were lads of mettle, and were
+specially attracted to Will on account of the persecution he
+had suffered by refusing to act as the smugglers’ watcher, and
+also when they heard from Tom how he had saved his life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You will do,</q> was the verdict of an old sailor. <q>I can see
+that you have both got the right stuff in you. When one
+<pb n='40'/><anchor id='Pg040'/>fellow saves another’s life, and that fellow runs away and ships
+in order to be near his friend, you may be sure that there is
+plenty of good stuff in them, and that they will turn out a
+credit to His Majesty’s service.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were a week on board before the cutter finished her
+trip at Whitby. Both boys had done their best to acquire
+knowledge, and had learnt the names of the ropes and their
+uses by the time they got to port.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You need not go on board the depot ship until to-morrow,</q>
+the lieutenant said. <q>I will go across with you myself. I have
+had my eye upon you ever since you came on board, and I
+have seen that you have been trying hard to learn, and have
+always been ready to give a pull on a rope when necessary.
+I have no fear of your getting on. It is a pity we don’t get
+more lads of your type in the navy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the following morning the lieutenant took them on board
+the depot and put them under the charge of the boatswain.
+<q>You will have to mix with a roughish crew here,</q> the latter
+said, <q>but everything will go smoothly enough when you
+once join your ship. You had better hand over your kits
+to me to keep for you, otherwise there won’t be much left at
+the end of the first night; and if you like I will let you stow
+yourselves away at night in the bitts forward. It is not cold,
+and I will throw a bit of old sail-cloth over you; you will be
+better there than down with the others, where the air is almost
+thick enough to cut.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you very much, sir; we should prefer that. We
+have both been accustomed to sleep at night in the bottom of
+an open boat, so it will come natural enough to us. Are there
+any more boys on board?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='41'/><anchor id='Pg041'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, you are the only ones. We get more boys down in
+the west, but up here very few ship.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went below together. <q>Dimchurch,</q> the boatswain
+said to a tall sailor-like man, <q>these boys have just joined. I
+wish you would keep an eye on them, and prevent anyone
+from bullying them. I know that you are a pressed man, and
+that we have no right to expect anything of you until you
+have joined your ship, but I can see that for all that you are
+a true British sailor, and I trust to you to look after these
+boys.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>All right, mate!</q> the sailor said. <q>I will take the nippers
+under my charge, and see that no one meddles with them. I
+know what I had to go through when I first went to sea, and
+am glad enough to do a good turn to any youngsters joining.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you! Then I will leave them now in your charge.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is your first voyage, I suppose,</q> the sailor said as he
+sat down on the table and looked at the boys. <q>I see by
+your togs that you have been fishing.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, we both had seven or eight years of it, though of
+course we were of no real use till the last five.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You don’t speak like a fisherman’s boy either,</q> the man
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No. A lady interested herself in me and got me to work
+all my spare time at books.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, they will be of no use to you at present, but they
+may come in handy some day to get you a rating. I never
+learnt to read or write myself or I should have been mate
+long ago. This is my first voyage in a ship of war. Hitherto
+I have always escaped being pressed when I was ashore, but
+now they have caught me I don’t mind having a try at it.
+<pb n='42'/><anchor id='Pg042'/>I believe, from all I hear, that the grub and treatment are
+better than aboard most merchantmen, and the work nothing
+like so hard. Of course the great drawback is the cat, but I
+expect that a well-behaved man doesn’t often feel it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The others had looked on curiously when the lads first came
+down, but they soon turned away indifferently and took up
+their former pursuits. Some were playing cards, others
+lying about half-asleep. Two or three who were fortunate
+enough to be possessed of tobacco were smoking. In all there
+were some forty men. When the evening meal was served
+out the sailor placed one of the boys on each side of him, and
+saw that they got their share.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I must find a place for you to sleep,</q> he said when they
+had finished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The officer who brought us down has given us permission
+to sleep on deck near the bitts.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, yes, that is quite in the bows of the ship! You will
+do very well there, much better than you would down here.
+I will go up on deck and show you the place. How is it that
+he is looking specially after you?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I believe Lieutenant Jones of the <name type="ship">Antelope</name> was good enough
+to speak to the officer in command of this craft in our favour.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How did you make him your friend?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will told briefly the story of his troubles with the
+smugglers. The sailor laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well,</q> he said, <q>you must be a pretty plucky one to fly in
+the face of a smuggling village in that way. You must have
+known what the consequence would be, and it is not every
+boy, nor every man either, if it comes to that, that would
+venture to do as you did.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='43'/><anchor id='Pg043'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>It did not seem to me that I had any choice when I once
+found out that it was wrong.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailor laughed again. <q>Well, you know, it is not what
+you could call a crime, though it is against the law of the
+land, but everyone does a bit of smuggling when they get the
+chance. Lord bless you! I have come home from abroad when
+there was not one of the passengers and crew who did not
+have a bit of something hidden about him or his luggage—brandy,
+’baccy, French wines, or knick-knacks of some sort.
+Pretty nigh half of them got found out and fined, but the
+value of the things got ashore was six or eight times as much
+as what was collared.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Still it was not right,</q> Will persisted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Oh, no! it was not right,</q> the sailor said carelessly, <q rend="post: none">but
+everyone took his chance. It is a sort of game, you see, between
+the passengers and crew on one side and the custom-house
+officers on the other. It was enough to make one laugh
+to see the passengers land. Women who had been as thin as
+whistles came out as stout matrons, owing to the yards and
+yards of laces and silk they had wound round them. All
+sorts of odd places were choke-full of tobacco; there were
+cases that looked like baggage, but really had a tin lining,
+which was full of brandy. It was a rare game for those who
+got through, I can tell you, though I own it was not so pleasant
+for those who got caught and had their contraband goods confiscated,
+besides having to pay five times the proper duty. As
+a rule the men took it quietly enough, they had played the
+game and lost; but as for the women, they were just raging
+tigers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>For myself, I laughed fit to split. If I lost anything it
+<pb n='44'/><anchor id='Pg044'/>was a pound or two of tobacco which I was taking home for
+my old father, and I felt that things might have been a deal
+worse if they had searched the legs of my trousers, where I
+had a couple of bladders filled with good brandy. You see,
+young ’un, though everyone knows that it is against the law,
+no one thinks it a crime. It is a game you play; if you lose
+you pay handsomely, but if you win you get off scot-free. I
+think the lady who told you it was wrong did you a very bad
+service, for if she lived near that village she must have known
+that you would get into no end of trouble if you were to say
+you would have nothing more to do with it. And how is it</q>—turning
+to Tom—<q>that you came to go with him? You
+did not take it into your head that smuggling was wrong too?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I never thought of it,</q> Tom said, <q>and if I had been told
+so should only have answered that what was good enough for
+others was good enough for me. I came because Will came.
+We had always been great friends, and more than once joined
+to thrash a big fellow who put upon us. But the principal thing
+was that a little while ago he saved me from drowning. There
+was a deep cut running up to the foot of the cliffs. One day
+I was running past there, when I slipped, and in falling hurt
+my leg badly. I am only just beginning to use it a bit now.
+The pain was so great that I did not know what I was doing;
+I rolled off the rock into the water. My knee was so bad that
+I could not swim, and the rock was too high for me to crawl
+out. I had been there for some time, and was beginning to
+get weak, when Will came along on the top of the cliff and
+saw me. He shouted to me to hold on till he could get down
+to me. Then he ran half a mile to a place where he was able
+to climb down, and tore back again along the shore till he
+<pb n='45'/><anchor id='Pg045'/>reached the cut, and then jumped in and swam to me. There
+was no getting out on either side, so he swam with me to the
+end of the cut and landed me there. I was by that time
+pretty nigh insensible, but he half-helped and half-carried me
+till we got to the point of the cliff where he had come down.
+Then he left me and ran off to the village to get help. So you
+will understand now why I should wish to stick to him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should think so,</q> the sailor said warmly. <q>It was a fine
+thing to do, and I would be glad to do it myself. Stick to
+him, lad, as long as he will let you. I fancy, from the way he
+speaks and his manner, that he will mount up above you, but
+never you mind that.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I won’t, as long as I can keep by him, and I hope that
+soon I may have a chance of returning him the service he
+has done me. He knows well enough that if I could I would
+give my life for him willingly.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think,</q> the sailor said to Will seriously, <q>you are a
+fortunate fellow to have made a friend like that. A good
+chum is the next best thing to a good wife. In fact, I don’t
+know if it is not a bit better. Ah, here comes the boatswain
+with a bit of sail-cloth, so you had better lie down at once. We
+shall most of us turn in soon down below, for there is nothing
+to pass the time, and I for one shall be very glad when the
+cutter comes for us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boys chatted for some time under cover of the sail-cloth.
+They agreed that things were much better than they
+could have expected. The protection of the boatswain was
+a great thing, but that of their sailor friend was better.
+They hoped that he would be told off to the ship in which
+they went, for they felt sure that he would be a valuable
+<pb n='46'/><anchor id='Pg046'/>friend to them. The life on board the cutter, too, had been
+pleasant, and altogether they congratulated themselves on the
+course they had taken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have no doubt we shall like it very much when we are
+once settled. They look a rough lot down below, and that
+sentry standing with a loaded musket at the gangway shows
+pretty well what sort of men they are. I am not surprised
+that the pressed men should try to get away, but I have no
+pity for the drunken fellows who joined when they had spent
+their last shilling. Our fishermen go on a spree sometimes,
+but not often, and when they do, they quarrel and fight a bit,
+but they always go to work the next morning.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a different thing altogether, for I heard that in
+the towns men will spend every penny they have, give up
+work altogether, and become idle, lazy loafers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two days later, to the great satisfaction of the boys, a
+large cutter flying the white ensign was seen approaching
+the harbour. No doubt was entertained that she was the
+receiving-ship. This was confirmed when the officer in charge
+of the depot-ship was rowed to the new arrival as soon as the
+anchor was dropped. A quarter of an hour later he returned,
+and it became known that the new hands were to be taken to
+Portsmouth. The next morning two boats rowed alongside.
+Will could not but admire the neat and natty appearance of
+the crew, which formed a somewhat striking contrast to the
+slovenly appearance of the gang on the depot-ship. A list of
+the new men was handed over to the officer in charge, and
+these were at once transferred to the big cutter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here everything was exquisitely clean and neat. The new-comers
+were at once supplied with uniforms, and told off as
+<pb n='47'/><anchor id='Pg047'/>supernumeraries to each watch. Will and Tom received no
+special orders, and were informed that they were to make
+themselves generally useful. Beyond having to carry an
+occasional message from one or other of the midshipmen, or
+boatswain, their duties were of the lightest kind. They
+helped at the distribution of the messes, the washing of the
+decks, the paring of the potatoes for dinner, and other odd
+jobs. When not wanted they could do as they pleased, and
+Will employed every spare moment in gaining what information
+he could from his friend Dimchurch, or from any sailor he
+saw disengaged and wearing a look that invited interrogation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You seem to want to know a lot all at once, youngster,</q>
+one said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have got to learn it sooner or later,</q> Will replied, <q>and
+it is just as well to learn as much as I can while I have time
+on my hands. I expect I shall get plenty to do when I join
+a ship at Portsmouth. May I go up the rigging?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That you may not. You don’t suppose that His Majesty’s
+ships are intended to look like trees with rooks perched all
+over them? You will be taught all that in due time. There
+is plenty to learn on deck, and when you know all that, it
+will be time enough to think of going aloft. You don’t want
+to become a Blake or a Benbow all at once, do you?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No,</q> Will laughed, <q>it will be time to think of that in
+another twenty years.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailor broke into a roar of laughter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, there is nothing like flying high, young ’un; but
+there is no reason why in time you should not get to be
+captain of the fore-top or coxswain of the captain’s gig. I
+suppose either of these would content you?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='48'/><anchor id='Pg048'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I suppose it ought,</q> Will said with a merry laugh. <q>At
+any rate it will be time to think of higher posts when I have
+gained one of these.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The voyage to Portsmouth was uneventful. They stopped
+at several receiving-stations on their way down, and before
+they reached their destination they had gathered a hundred
+and twenty men. Will and Tom were astonished at the bustle
+and activity of the port. Frigates and men-of-war lay off
+Portsmouth and out at Spithead; boats of various sizes rowed
+between them, or to and from the shore. Never had they
+imagined such a scene; the enormous bulk of the men-of-war
+struck them with wonder. Will admired equally the tapering
+spars and the more graceful lines of the frigates and corvettes,
+and his heart thrilled with pride as he felt that he too was a
+sailor, and a portion, however insignificant, of one of these
+mighty engines of war.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The officer in command of the receiving-ship at Whitby had
+passed on to the captain of the cutter what had been told him
+of the two boys by the lieutenant of the <name type="ship">Antelope</name>, and he in
+turn related the story to one of the chief officers of the dockyard.
+It happened that they were the only two boys that had
+been brought down, and the dockyard official said it would
+be a pity to separate them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will put them down as part of the crew of the <name type="ship">Furious</name>.
+I want a few specially strong and active men for her; her
+commander is a very dashing officer, and I should like to see
+that he is well manned.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two boys had especially noticed and admired the
+<name type="ship">Furious</name>, which was a thirty-four-gun frigate, so next morning,
+when the new hands were mustered and told off to different
+<pb n='49'/><anchor id='Pg049'/>ships, they were delighted when they found their names appear
+at the end of the list for that vessel, all the more so because
+Dimchurch was to join her also.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am pleased, Dimchurch, that we are to be in the same
+ship with you,</q> Will exclaimed as soon as the men were dismissed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am glad too, youngster. I have taken a fancy to you,
+as you seem to have done to me, and it will be very pleasant
+for us to be together. But now you must go and get your
+kit-bags ready at once; we are sure to be sent off to the
+<name type="ship">Furious</name> in a short time, and it will be a bad mark against you
+if you keep the boat waiting.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a quarter of an hour a boat was seen approaching from
+the <name type="ship">Furious</name>. The officer in charge ascended to the deck of
+the cutter, and after a chat with the captain called out the
+list, and counted the men one by one as they went down to
+the boat, each carrying his kit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Not a bad lot,</q> he said to the young midshipman sitting
+by his side. <q>This pretty nearly makes up our complement;
+the press gang are sure to pick up the few hands we want
+either to-day or to-morrow.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I shall be glad when we are off, sir,</q> the midshipman said.
+<q>I am never comfortable, after beginning to get into commission,
+until we are out on blue water.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Nor am I. I hope the dockyard won’t keep us waiting
+for stores. We have got most of them, but the getting on
+board of the powder and shot is always a long task, and we
+have to be so careful with the powder. There is the captain
+on deck; he is looking out, no doubt, to see the new hands.
+I am glad they are good ones, for nothing puts him into a
+<pb n='50'/><anchor id='Pg050'/>bad temper so readily as having a man brought on board
+who is not, as he considers, up to the mark.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they mustered on deck the captain’s eye ran with a
+keen scrutiny over them. A slight smile crossed his lips as
+he came to the two boys.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That will do, Mr. Ayling; they are not a bad lot, taking
+them one for all, and there are half a dozen men among
+them who ought to make first-rate topmen. I should say
+half of them have been to sea before, and the others will soon
+be knocked into shape. The two boys will, of course, go
+into the same mess as the others who have come on board.
+One of them looks a very sharp young fellow.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He has been rather specially passed down, sir. He belonged
+to one of the most noted smuggling villages on the
+Yorkshire coast, which is saying a great deal, and he struck
+against smuggling because some lady in the place told him
+that it was wrong. Of course he drew upon himself the
+enmity of the whole village. The coast-guard stopped a landing,
+and two or three of the fishermen were killed. The
+hostility against the lad, which was entirely unfounded, rose
+in consequence of this to such a pitch that he was obliged to
+take refuge in the coast-guard station. I hear from the captain
+of the <name type="ship">Hearty</name> that the boy has been far better educated than
+the generality of fisher lads, and was specially recommended
+to him by the officer of the receiving-ship.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Is there anything extraordinary about the other boy?</q>
+the captain asked with a slight smile.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir; I believe he joined chiefly to be near his companion,
+the two being great friends.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He looks a different kind of boy altogether,</q> the captain
+<pb n='51'/><anchor id='Pg051'/>said. <q>You could pick him out as a fisher boy anywhere, and
+picture him in high boots, baggy corduroy breeches, and blue
+guernsey.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He is a strong, well-built lad, and I should say a good
+deal more powerful than his friend.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, they are good types of boys, and are not likely to
+give us as much trouble as some of those young scamps, run-away
+apprentices and so on, who want a rope’s end every
+week or so to teach them to do their duty.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boys were taken down to a deck below the water-level,
+where the crew were just going to begin dinner. At one end
+was a table at which six boys were sitting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Hillo, who are you?</q> the eldest among them asked. <q>I
+warn you, if you don’t make things comfortable, you will get
+your heads punched in no time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My name is William Gilmore, and this is Tom Stevens.
+As to punching heads, you may not find it as easy as you
+think. I may warn you at once that we are friends and will
+stick together, and that there will be no punching one head
+without having to punch both.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We shall see about that before long,</q> the other said.
+<q>Some of the others thought they were going to rule the
+roost when they joined a few days ago, but I soon taught
+them their place.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, you can begin to teach us ours as soon as you like,</q>
+Tom Stevens said. <q>We have met bullies of your sort before.
+Now, as dinner is going on, we will have some of it, as they
+didn’t victual us before we left the cutter.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, then, you had better go to the cook-house and draw
+rations. No doubt the cook has a list of you fellows’ names.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='52'/><anchor id='Pg052'/>
+
+<p>
+The boys took the advice and soon procured a cooked ration
+of meat and potatoes. The cook told them where they would
+find plates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>One of the mess has to wash them up,</q> he said, <q>and
+stow them away in the racks provided for them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Johnson,</q> the eldest boy said to the smallest of the party,
+<q>you need not wash up to-day; that is the duty of the last
+comer.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I suppose it is the duty of each one of the mess by turn,</q>
+Will said quietly; <q>we learnt that much as we came down the
+coast.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You will have to learn more than that, young fellow,</q> the
+bully, who was seventeen, blustered. <q>You will have to learn
+that I am senior of the mess, and will have to do as I tell you.
+I have made one voyage already, and all the rest of you are
+greenhorns.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It seems to me from the manner in which you speak, that
+it is not a question of seniority but simply of bounce and
+bullying, and I hope that the other boys will no more give in
+to that sort of thing than Stevens or myself. I have yet to
+learn that one boy is in any way superior to the others, and in
+the course of the next hour I shall ascertain whether this is
+so.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Perhaps, after the meal is over, you will go down to the
+lower deck and allow me to give you a lesson.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>As I told you,</q> Will answered quietly, <q>my friend and I
+are one. I don’t suppose that single-handed I could fight a great
+hulking fellow like you, but my friend and I are quite willing
+to do so together. So now if there is any talk of fighting, you
+know what to expect.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='53'/><anchor id='Pg053'/>
+
+<p>
+The bully eyed the two boys curiously, but, like most of the
+type, he was at heart a coward, and felt considerable doubt
+whether these two boys would not prove too much for him.
+He therefore muttered sullenly that he would choose his own
+time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>All right! choose by all means, and whenever you like to
+fix a time we shall be perfectly ready to accommodate you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Who on earth are you with your long words? Are you a
+gentleman in disguise?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Never mind who I am,</q> Will said. <q>I have learnt enough,
+at any rate, to know a bully and a coward when I meet him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lad was too furious to answer, but finished his dinner
+in silence, his anger being all the more acute from the fact
+that he saw that some of the other boys were tittering and
+nudging each other. But he resolved that, though it might
+be prudent for the present to postpone any encounter with
+the boys, he would take his revenge on the first opportunity.
+</p>
+ </div><div n="3">
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER III</head>
+
+<head type="sub">A SEA-FIGHT</head>
+
+<p>
+As the conflict of words came to an end, a roar of laughter
+burst from the sailors at the next mess-table.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well done, little bantam!</q> one said; <q>you have taken that
+lout down a good many pegs, and I would not mind backing
+you to thrash him single-handed. We have noticed his goings-on
+for the past two or three days with the other boys, and had
+<pb n='54'/><anchor id='Pg054'/>intended to give him a lesson, but you have done it right well.
+He may have <anchor id="corr054"/><corr sic="been">been on</corr> a voyage before, but I would wager that
+he has never been aloft, and I would back you to be at the
+masthead before he has crawled through the lubbers’ hole.
+Now, my lad, just you understand that if you are ready to
+fight both those boys we won’t interfere, but if you try it one
+on one of them we will.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boys’ duties consisted largely of working with the
+watch to which they were attached, of scrubbing decks, and
+cleaning brass-work. In battle their place was to bring up
+the powder and shot for the guns. On the second day, when
+the work was done, Will Gilmore went up to the boatswain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>If you please, sir,</q> he said, <q>may I go up the <anchor id="corr054a"/><corr sic="mast.">mast?</corr></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The boatswain looked at him out of one eye.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do you really want to learn, lad?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I do, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, when there are, as at present, other hands aloft, you
+may go up, but not at other times.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, sir!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will at once started. He was accustomed to climb the
+mast of John Hammond’s boat, but this was a very different
+matter. From scrambling about the cliffs so frequently he
+had a steady eye, and could look down without any feeling of
+giddiness. The lubbers’ hole had been pointed out to him,
+but he was determined to avoid the ignominy of having to go
+up through it. When he got near it he paused and looked
+round. It did not seem to him that there was any great
+difficulty in going outside it, and as he knew he could trust
+to his hands he went steadily up until he stood on the main-top.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='55'/><anchor id='Pg055'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Hallo, lad,</q> said a sailor who was busy there, <q>do you
+mean to say that you have come up outside?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, there did not seem to be any difficulty about it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And is it the first time you have tried?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then one day you will turn out a first-rate sailor. What
+are you going to do now?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will looked up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am going up to the top of the next mast.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are sure that you won’t get giddy?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I am accustomed to climbing up the cliffs on the
+Yorkshire coast, and I have not the least fear of losing my
+head.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, then, fire away, lad, and if you find that you are
+getting giddy shout and I will come up to you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you! I will call if I want help.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Steadily he went up till he stood on the cap of the topmast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I may as well go up one more,</q> he said. <q>I can’t think
+why people make difficulties of what is so easy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailor called to him as he saw him preparing to ascend
+still higher, but Will only waved his hand and started up.
+When he reached the cap of the top-gallant mast he sat
+upon it and looked down at the harbour. Presently he
+heard a hail from below, and saw the first lieutenant standing
+looking up at him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>All right, sir! I will come down at once,</q> and steadily he
+descended to the maintop, where the sailor who had spoken to
+him abused him roundly. Then he went to where the lieutenant
+was standing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How old are you, youngster?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='56'/><anchor id='Pg056'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am a little past fifteen, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Have you ever been up a mast before?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Never, sir, except that I have climbed up a fishing-boat’s
+mast many a time, and I am accustomed to clambering about
+the cliffs. I hope there was no harm in my going so high?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No harm as it has turned out. You are a courageous little
+fellow; I never before saw a lad who went outside the lubbers’
+hole on his first ascent. Well, I hope, my lad, that you will
+be as well-behaved as you are active and courageous. I shall
+keep my eye upon you, and you have my permission henceforth,
+when you have no other duties, to climb about the masts
+as you like.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lieutenant afterwards told the captain of Will’s exploit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is the sort of lad to make a good topman,</q> the
+captain remarked. <q>He will soon be up to the duties, but
+will have to wait to get some beef on him before he is of
+much use in furling a sail.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am very glad to have such a lad on board,</q> said the
+lieutenant. <q>If we are at any station on the Mediterranean,
+and have sports between the ships, I should back him against
+any other boy in the fleet to get to the masthead and down
+again.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the midshipmen, named Forster, came up to Will
+when he left the lieutenant, and said: <q>Well done, young un!
+It was as much as I could do at your age, though I had been
+two years in the navy, to climb up where you did. If there
+is anything I can do for you at any time I will gladly do it.
+I don’t say that it is likely, for midshipmen have no power to
+speak of; still, if there should be anything I would gladly help
+you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='57'/><anchor id='Pg057'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is something, if you would be so very good, sir.
+I am learning navigation, but there are some things that I
+can’t make out, and it would be a kindness indeed if you
+would spare a few minutes occasionally to explain them to
+me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The midshipman opened his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I am blowed,</q> he exclaimed in intense astonishment.
+<q>The idea of a newly-joined boy wanting to be helped in
+navigation beats me altogether. However, lad, I will certainly
+do as you ask me, though I cannot think that, unless you have
+been at a nautical school, you can know anything about it.
+But come to me this evening during the dog-watches, and
+then I will see what you have learned about the subject.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That evening Will went on deck rather shyly with two or
+three of his books. The midshipman was standing at a quiet
+spot on the deck. He glanced at Will enquiringly when he
+saw what he was carrying.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do you mean to say that you understand these books?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Not altogether, sir. I think I could work out the latitude
+and longitude if I knew something about a quadrant, but I
+have never seen one, and have no idea of its use. But what
+I wanted to ask you first of all was the meaning of some of
+these words which I cannot find in the dictionary.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It seems to me, youngster, that you know pretty well as
+much as I do, for I cannot do more than fudge an observation.
+How on earth did you learn all this? I thought you were
+a fisher-boy before you joined.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So I was, sir. I was an orphan at the age of five.
+My father left enough money to buy a boat, and, as one of
+the fishermen had lately lost his, he adopted me, and I became
+<pb n='58'/><anchor id='Pg058'/>bound to him as an apprentice till I was fourteen. The
+clergyman’s daughter took a fancy to me from the first, and
+she used to teach me for half an hour a day, which gave me
+a great advantage over the other boys in the school. I was
+very fond of reading, and she supplied me with books. As
+I said I meant to go to sea, she bought me some books that
+would help me. So there is nothing extraordinary in my
+knowing these things; it all came from her kindness to me for
+ten years.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Why didn’t she try to get you into the mercantile
+marine?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She got married and left the place, sir, but before she
+went she told me that it was very wrong to have anything to
+do with smugglers. So I decided to give it up, and that set
+the whole village against me, and I should probably have been
+killed if I had not taken refuge in the coast-guard station.
+There the officer in charge spoke to me of joining the royal
+navy, and it seemed to me that it would do me good to serve
+a few years in it; for I could afterwards, if I chose, pass as an
+officer in the merchant service.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are the rummest boy that I ever came across,</q> Forster
+said. <q>Well, I must think it over. Now, if there is anything
+that you specially wish to know, I will explain it to you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For half an hour they talked together, and the midshipman
+solved many of the problems that had troubled the lad. Then
+with many thanks Will went below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Is it true, Will,</q> Tom Stevens said, <q>that you have been
+right up the mast?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Not exactly, Tom, but I went up to the top of the top-gallant
+mast.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='59'/><anchor id='Pg059'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>But why did you do that?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I wanted to get accustomed to going up. There was not
+a bit of difficulty about it, except that it was necessary to
+keep a steady head. You could do it just as well as I, for we
+have climbed about the cliffs together scores of times.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do you think it will do any good, Will?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I think so. When they see that a fellow is willing
+and anxious to learn, it is sure to do him good in the long run.
+It will help him on, and perhaps in two or three years he may
+get rated as an able seaman, and no longer be regarded as a
+boy, useful only to do odd jobs. One of the midshipmen is
+going to give me some help with my navigation. I wish, Tom,
+you would take it up too, but I am afraid it would be no
+use. You have got to learn a tremendous lot before you can
+master it, and what little you were taught at our school would
+hardly help you at all.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I know that well enough, Will, and I should never think
+of such a thing. I always was a fool, and could hardly take in
+the little that old woman tried to teach us. No, it is of no use
+trying to make a silk purse out of a sow’s ear. I hope that
+soon I shall be able to hit a good round blow at a Frenchman;
+that is about all I shall be fit for, though I hope I
+may some day get to be a smart topman. The next time you
+climb the mast I will go with you. I don’t think there is
+enough in my head to make it unsteady. At any rate I think
+that I can promise that I won’t do anything to bring discredit
+upon you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The feat that Will had performed had a great effect upon
+the bully of the mess. Before that he had frequently enjoyed
+boasting of his experience in climbing, and even hinted that
+<pb n='60'/><anchor id='Pg060'/>he had upon one occasion reached the masthead. Now no
+more was heard of this, for, as Tom said openly, he was afraid
+that Will might challenge him to a climbing-match. The next
+evening the first lieutenant said to the captain: <q>That other
+lad who was brought down from Yorkshire has been up the
+mast with his chum this afternoon. As I told you, sir, I heard
+that they were great friends, and Stevens did as well as the
+other.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But there is a great difference between them. The one
+is as sharp and as bright as can be; the other is simply a
+solidly-built fisher-boy who will, I have no doubt, make a good
+sailor, but is not likely to set the Thames on fire.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do you know, sir, Mr. Forster came to me this morning,
+and told me that on his talking to the boy he astounded
+him by asking if he would be kind enough to explain a few
+things in navigation, as he had pretty well mastered all the
+book-work, but had had no opportunity of learning the use of
+a quadrant. Forster asked if I had any objection to his giving
+him lessons. It is the first time that I ever heard of such a
+request, and to allow it would be contrary to all idea of
+discipline; still, a lad of that sort deserves encouragement, and
+I will talk with the padre concerning him. He is one of the most
+good-natured of men, and I think he would not mind giving
+a quarter of an hour a day to this boy, after he has dismissed
+the midshipmen from their studies. Of course he must do the
+same work as the other boys, and no distinction must be made
+between them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly not. I think the idea is an excellent one, and I
+have not much doubt that Mr. Simpson will fall in with it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+ The first lieutenant went off at once to find the <anchor id="corr060"/><corr sic="clergyman">clergyman.</corr>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='61'/><anchor id='Pg061'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, he must be a strange boy,</q> the chaplain said when
+the case was laid before him; <q>I should not be surprised if a
+fellow like that found his way to the quarter-deck some day.
+He appears to be a sort of admirable Crichton. Such an amount
+of learning is extraordinary in a boy of his age and with his
+opportunities, especially in one active and courageous enough
+to go up to the cap of the top-gallant mast on his first trial in
+climbing a mast. Certainly I shall be very glad to take the
+boy on, and will willingly give him, as you say, a quarter of
+an hour a day. I feel sure that my time will not be wasted.
+I never before heard of a ship’s boy who wished to be instructed
+in navigation, and I shall be glad to help such an
+exceptional lad.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day the <name type="ship">Furious</name>, having received all her stores,
+went out to Spithead. The midshipmen had been all fully
+engaged, and there were no lessons with the padre, but on the
+following day these were resumed, and presently one of the
+other boys came down with a message that Will was to go to
+the padre’s cabin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have arranged, lad,</q> the chaplain said when he entered,
+<q>to give you a quarter of an hour a day to help you on with
+your navigation, and I take it that you, on your part, are
+ready to do the work. It seems to me almost out of the question
+that you can be advanced enough to enter upon such
+studies. That, however, I shall soon ascertain. Now open
+that book and let me see how you would work out the following
+<corr sic="no quote">observation,</corr></q> and he gave him the necessary data.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In five minutes Will handed him the result.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Of course, sir, to obtain the exact answer I should require
+to know more than you have given me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='62'/><anchor id='Pg062'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is quite right. To-morrow you shall go on deck
+with me, and I will show you how to use a quadrant and
+take the altitude of the sun, and from it how to calculate
+the longitude, which is somewhat more difficult than the latitude.
+I see you have a good knowledge of figures, and I am
+quite sure that at the end of a few days’ work you will be
+able to take an observation that will be close enough for all
+practical purposes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then asked Will many questions as to his course of study,
+the books he had read, and the manner in which he had got
+up the book-work of navigation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But how did you manage about logarithms,</q> he said. <q>I
+generally find them great stumbling-blocks in the way of my
+pupils.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t really understand them now, sir. I can look down
+the columns and find the number I want, and see how it works
+out the result, but why it should do so I have not been able to
+understand. It seems quite different from other operations in
+figures.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is so,</q> the chaplain said, <q>and let me tell you that not
+one navigator in fifty really grasps the principle. They
+<q>fudge</q>, as it is termed, the answer, and if they get it right
+are quite content without troubling themselves in any way
+with the principle involved. If you want to be a good
+navigator you must grasp the principle, and work the answer
+out for yourself. When you can do this you will have a right
+to call yourself a navigator. If you come to me at twelve
+o’clock to-morrow I will show you how to work a quadrant.
+The theory is easy. You have but to take the angle the
+sun makes with the horizon at its moment of highest
+ascen<pb n='63'/><anchor id='Pg063'/>sion. In practice, however, this is far from easy, and you
+will be some time before you can hit upon the right moment.
+It requires patience and close observation, but if you have
+these qualities you will soon pick it up.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors were the next day greatly astonished at seeing
+the chaplain take his place at the side of the ship and explain
+to Will the methods of taking an observation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the meantime Will was making rapid progress in the
+good graces of the crew. He was always ready to render
+assistance in running messages, in hauling on ropes, and
+generally making himself useful in all respects. His fight
+with Robert Jones had come off. Will had gained great confidence
+in himself when he found that he was able to climb
+the mast in the ordinary way, while Tom Stevens was able
+only to crawl up through the lubbers’ hole. Goaded to madness
+by the chaff of the other boys, all of whom had ranged
+themselves under Will’s banner, Jones threw down the challenge.
+Tom Stevens was most anxious that Will should not
+take it up except on the conditions stated, but Will proclaimed
+a profound contempt for the bully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will try it myself, Tom. I can hardly fail to lick such
+a braggart as that. I don’t believe he has any muscles to
+speak of in that big body of his, while I am as hard as nails.
+No doubt it will be a tough fight if he has a scrap of pluck
+in him, but I think I will win. Besides, if he does beat me,
+he will certainly get little credit for it, while I shall have
+learnt a lot that will be useful to me in the next fight.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly, at the time appointed the two lads went down
+to the orlop deck, a good many of the sailors accompanying
+them. An ordinary fight between boys attracted little
+atten<pb n='64'/><anchor id='Pg064'/>tion, but the disparity between the years of the combatants,
+and the liking entertained for Will, brought most of those
+who were off duty to witness it. The difference between the
+antagonists when they stripped was very marked. Robert
+Jones was fully three stone the heavier and four inches the
+taller, but he was flabby and altogether out of condition, while
+Will was as hard as nails, and as active on his feet as a kid.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is ten to one against the young un,</q> one of the men
+said, <q>but if he holds on for the first five rounds I would back
+him at evens.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So would I,</q> another said, <q>but I doubt whether he can
+do so; the odds are too great against him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will take four to one,</q> another said. <q>Look at the
+young un’s muscles down his back. You won’t often see anything
+better among lads two years older than he is.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fight began with a tremendous rush on the part of
+Jones. Will stood his ground doggedly, and struck his
+opponent fairly between the eyes, making him shake his head
+like an exasperated bull. Time after time Jones repeated
+the manœuvre, but only once or twice landed a blow, while he
+never escaped without a hard return. At length he began to
+feel the effects of his own efforts, and stood on the defensive,
+panting for breath. Now it was Will’s turn. He danced
+round and round his opponent with the activity of a goat,
+dodging in and delivering a heavy body-blow and then leaping
+out again before his opponent could get any return. The
+cheers of the sailors rose louder and louder, and Will heard
+them shouting: <q>Go in; finish him, lad!</q> But Will was too
+prudent to risk anything; he knew that the battle was in his
+hands unless he threw it away, and that Jones was well-nigh
+<pb n='65'/><anchor id='Pg065'/>pumped out. At last, after dealing a heavy blow, he saw his
+antagonist stagger back, and in an instant sprang forward and
+struck him between the eyes with far greater force than he
+had before exerted. Jones fell like a log, and was altogether
+unable to come up to time. A burst of cheering rose from
+the crowd, and many and hearty were the congratulations
+Will received.
+</p>
+ <pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: AFTER HIS FIRST FIGHT]</p>
+ </then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill02"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill02.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend="font-size: small">AFTER HIS FIRST FIGHT</hi></head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: AFTER HIS FIRST FIGHT</figDesc></figure></p>
+ </else></pgIf>
+<p>
+<q>What was going on this afternoon, Mr. Farrance?</q> asked
+the captain; <q>I heard a lot of cheering.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I made enquiry about it, sir, and the boatswain told
+me that it was only a fight between two of the boys. Of
+course he had not been present.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah! It is not often that a boys’ fight excites such interest.
+Who were they?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They were Jones, the biggest of the boys, and by no
+means a satisfactory character, and young Gilmore.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Why, Jones is big enough to eat him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, at any rate he ought to have been. He was a
+great bully when he first came on board, but the other tackled
+him as soon as they were together, and it seems he has to-day
+given him as handsome a thrashing as could be wished for,
+and that without being seriously hurt himself. He has
+certainly established his supremacy among the boys of this
+ship.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That boy is out of the common,</q> the captain said. <q>A
+ship’s boy newly joined taking up navigation, going about
+the masts like a monkey, and finally thrashing a fellow two
+years his senior must be considered as altogether exceptional.
+I shall certainly keep my eye upon him, and give him every
+opportunity I can for making his way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='66'/><anchor id='Pg066'/>
+
+<p>
+Will received his honours quietly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is nothing,</q> he said, <q>in fighting a fellow who is
+altogether out of condition, and has a very small amount of
+pluck to make up for it. I was convinced when we first met
+that he had nothing behind his brag, though I certainly did
+not expect to beat him as easily as I did. Well, I hope we
+shall be good friends in future. I have no enmity against
+him, and there is no reason why we should not get on well
+together after this.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t know,</q> said the sailor to whom he was speaking;
+<q>a decent fellow will make it up and think no more about it,
+but if I am not mistaken, Robert Jones will do you a bad turn
+if he gets the chance.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No one was more delighted at the result than Tom Stevens,
+who had cheered loudly and enthusiastically. Dimchurch was
+also exuberant at Will’s success.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I knew that you were a good un, but I never thought
+you could have tackled that fellow. I don’t know what to
+make of you; as a general thing, as far as I have seen, a
+fellow who takes to books is no good for anything else, but
+everything seems to agree with you. If I am not mistaken,
+you will be on the quarter-deck before many years have
+passed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were now running down channel, and the boys were
+astonished at the ease and smoothness with which the ship
+breasted the waves, and at the mass of snowy canvas that
+towered above her. As they sat one day at the bow watching
+the sheets of spray rise as the ship cut her way through the
+water, Tom said to his friend: <q>You are going up above me
+quick, Will. Anyone can see that. You are thought a lot of.
+<pb n='67'/><anchor id='Pg067'/>I knew it would be so, and I said I should not grudge it you;
+in fact, the greater your success the better I shall be pleased.
+But I did not think that your learning would have made such
+a difference already. The first lieutenant often says a word
+to you as he passes, and the padre generally speaks to you
+when he goes along the deck. It is wonderful what a difference
+learning makes; not, mind you, that I should ever have gone
+in for it, even had I known how useful it is. I could never
+have taken it in, and I am sure the old woman could never
+have taught me. I suppose some fellows are born clever and
+others grow to it. And some never are clever at all. That
+was my way, I suppose. I just learned to spell words of two
+letters, which, of course, was of no use. A fellow can’t do
+much with ba, be, by, and bo, and these are about all the
+words I remember. I used to think, when we first became
+chums, how foolish you were to be always reading and studying.
+Now I see what a pull you have got by it. I expect
+it is partly because your father was a clever man, and, as most
+of the people thought, a gentleman, that you came to take to it.
+Well, if I had my time over again I would really try to learn
+something. I should never make much of it, but still, I suppose
+I should have got to read decently.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly you would, Tom; and when you once had got
+to read, so as to be able to enjoy it, you would have gone
+through all sorts of books and got lots of information from
+them. I am afraid, however, it is too late to worry over
+that. A man may be a good man and a good sailor without
+knowing how to read and write. I am sure you will do your
+share when it comes to that.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I wonder when we shall fall in with a Frenchman?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='68'/><anchor id='Pg068'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is no saying. You may be sure that every man on
+board is longing to do so. I hope she will be a bit bigger
+than we are, and I know the captain hopes so too. He is for
+ever watching every ship that comes in sight.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When running down the coast of Spain one day the look-out
+at the masthead shouted: <q>A sail!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What is she like?</q> the first lieutenant hailed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can only see her top-gallant sails, sir, but she is certainly
+a square-rigged ship bound south, and her sails have a foreign
+cut.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first lieutenant swung his telescope over his shoulder
+and mounted the rigging. When he came to the top-gallant
+crosstrees he sat down and gazed into the distance through his
+glass.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After making a careful examination of the ship he called to
+the captain, who was now on deck:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is, as Johnson says, sir, a square-rigged ship, and I
+agree with him as to the cut of her sails. She is certainly a
+Frenchman, and evidently a large frigate. She is running
+down the coast as we are, and I expect hopes to get through
+the Straits at night.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, edge in towards her,</q> the captain said. <q>Lower
+the top-gallant sails. If she hasn’t already made us out, I
+shall be able to work in a good deal closer to her before she
+does so.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All hands were now on the <hi rend='italic'>qui vive</hi>, but it was not for
+some time that the stranger could be made out from the
+deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You can get up our top-gallant sails again,</q> the captain
+said. <q>She must have made us out by this time, and she
+<pb n='69'/><anchor id='Pg069'/>certainly has gained upon us since we first saw her. There is
+no longer any possibility of concealment, so hoist royals as
+well as top-gallant sails.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The stranger made no addition to her sails. By this time
+those on board the <name type="ship">Furious</name> were able to judge of her size, and
+came to the conclusion that she was a battle-ship of small
+size, and ought to be more than a match for the <name type="ship">Furious</name>. The
+vessels gradually approached each other, until at last a shot
+was thrown across the bows of the Frenchman. She made no
+reply, but continued on her way as if unconscious of the
+presence of the English frigate. The crew of the <name type="ship">Furious</name> could
+now make out that she had fifty guns, whereas their own ship
+had thirty-four.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Just comfortable odds,</q> the captain said quietly when this
+was reported to him. <q>I have no doubt she carries heavier
+metal as well as more guns. Altogether she would be a satisfactory
+prize to send into Portsmouth.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men had not waited for orders, but had mustered to
+quarters on their own account. The guns were run in and
+loaded, and the boarding-pikes got ready. In five minutes
+orders were given to fire another shot. There was a cheer as
+white splinters were seen to fly from the Frenchman’s side.
+Her helm was put up at once, and she swept round and fired
+a broadside into the <name type="ship">Furious</name>. Four or five shots took effect,
+some stays and ropes were cut, and two shot swept across her
+deck, killing three of the sailors and knocking down several of
+the others.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Aim steadily, lads,</q> the captain shouted; <q>don’t throw
+away a shot. It is our turn now. All aim at her centre ports.
+Fire!</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='70'/><anchor id='Pg070'/>
+
+<p>
+The ship swayed from the recoil of the guns, and then she
+swung half-round and a broadside was poured into the
+Frenchman from the other side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After this Will and Tom knew little more of what was
+going on, for they were kept busy running to and from the
+magazine with fresh cartridges. They were not tall enough to
+see over the bulwarks, and were only able to peep out occasionally
+from one of the port-holes. They presently heard from
+the shouts and exclamations of the men that everything was
+going well, and on looking out they saw that the enemy’s
+foremast had been shot away, and in consequence she was
+unmanageable. The crew of the <name type="ship">Furious</name> had suffered heavily,
+but her main spars were intact, and the captain, manœuvring
+with great skill, was able to sail backwards and forwards across
+the enemy’s stern and rake him repeatedly fore and aft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the fight continued until at last the captain gave
+the order to lay the ship alongside the Frenchman and board.
+There was no more work for the powder-monkeys now, so
+Will and Tom seized boarding-pikes and joined in the rush
+on to the enemy’s deck. The resistance, however, was short-lived;
+the enemy had suffered terribly from the raking fire
+of the <name type="ship">Furious</name>, and as the captain and many of the officers had
+fallen, the senior survivor soon ordered the flag to be lowered.
+A tremendous cheer broke from the British. They now
+learned that the ship they had captured was the <name type="ship">Proserpine</name>,
+which was on her way to enter the Mediterranean and effect
+a junction with the French fleet at Toulon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day the crew worked hard to get up a jury foremast.
+When this was done a prize crew was put on board.
+The French prisoners were confined below, as they far
+out<pb n='71'/><anchor id='Pg071'/>numbered their captors. Then, having repaired her own
+damages, the <name type="ship">Furious</name> proceeded on her way.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On arriving at Gibraltar the captain received orders to proceed
+to Malta, and to place himself under the order of the
+admiral there. For a time matters proceeded quietly, for the
+winds were light and baffling, and it took a fortnight to get
+to their destination. Here the ship was thoroughly examined,
+and the damage she had suffered more satisfactorily repaired
+than had been possible while she was at sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the overhauling was completed she received orders
+to cruise off the coast of Africa. This was by no means
+pleasing to the crew, who considered that they had small
+chance of falling in with anything of their own size on that
+station. They were told, however, that there had been serious
+complaints of piracy on the part of the Moors, and that they
+were specially to direct their attention to punishing the perpetrators
+of such acts.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One morning three strange craft were sighted lying close
+together. Unfortunately, however, it was a dead calm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They are Moors, certainly,</q> the captain said to the first
+lieutenant after examining them with his glass. <q>What would
+I not give for a breath of wind now? But they are not going
+to escape us. Get all the boats hoisted out, and take command
+of the expedition yourself.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immediately all was bustle on board the ship, and in a very
+short time every boat was lowered into the water. Will was
+looking on with longing eyes as the men took their places.
+The lieutenant noticed him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Clamber down into the bow of my boat,</q> he said; <q>you
+deserve it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='72'/><anchor id='Pg072'/>
+
+<p>
+In the highest state of delight Will seized a spare cutlass
+and made his way into the bow of the boat amid the jokes of
+the men. These, however, were stilled the moment the first
+lieutenant took his place in the stern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Moors had not been idle. As soon as they saw that
+the boats had been lowered they got out their sweeps and
+began to row at a pace which the lieutenant saw would tax
+the efforts of his oarsmen to the utmost. The Moors had
+fully three miles start, and, although the men bent to their oars
+with the best will, they gained very slowly. The officers in
+the various boats encouraged them with their shouts, and the
+men pulled nobly. Five miles had been passed and but one
+mile gained. It was evident, however, that the efforts of the
+Moorish rowers were flagging, while the sailors were rowing
+almost as strongly as when they started. Three more miles
+and another mile had been gained. Then from the three
+vessels came a confused fire of cannon of all sizes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Several men were hit, boats splintered, and oars smashed.
+The first lieutenant shouted orders for the boats to open out
+so that the enemy would no longer have a compact mass
+to aim at. At last, after another mile, the Moors evidently
+came to the conclusion that they could not escape by rowing,
+and at once drew in their oars, lowered their sails, and all
+formed in line. As soon as this manœuvre was completed
+heavy firing began again. Will, lying in the bow, looked out
+ahead, and, seeing the sea torn up with balls, wondered that
+any of the boats should escape unharmed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lieutenant shouted to the boats to divide into two parties,
+one, led by himself, to attack the vessel on the left of the
+line, and the other, under the second lieutenant, to deal with
+<pb n='73'/><anchor id='Pg073'/>the ship on the right, for the middle boat would assuredly be
+captured if the other two were taken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Row quietly, men,</q> he shouted; <q>you will want your
+breath if it comes to fighting. Keep on at a steady pace
+until within two hundred yards of them, and then make
+a dash.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This order was carried out by both parties, and when within
+the given distance the men gave a cheer, and, bending their
+backs to the oars, sent the boats tearing through the water.
+The pirate craft were all crowded with men, who raised yells
+of rage and defiance. However, except that one boat was
+sunk by a shot that struck her full in the bow, Lieutenant
+Farrance’s party reached their vessel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first to try to climb on board were all cut down or
+thrown backwards, but at length the men gained a footing
+on the deck, and, led by Mr. Farrance, fell upon the enemy
+with great spirit. Will was the last to climb up out of his
+boat, but he soon pushed his way forward until he was close
+behind the lieutenant. Several times the boarders were
+pushed back, but as often they rallied, and won their way
+along the deck again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During one of these rushes Lieutenant Farrance’s foot slipped
+in a pool of blood, and he fell to the deck. Two Moors sprang
+at him, but Will leapt forward, whirling his cutlass, and by
+luck rather than skill cut down one of them. The other
+attacked him and dealt him a severe blow on the arm, but
+before he could repeat it the lieutenant had regained his feet,
+and, springing forward, had run the Moor through the body.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Another five minutes’ fighting and all resistance was at an
+end. Some of the Moors rushed below, others jumped
+over<pb n='74'/><anchor id='Pg074'/>board and swam to their consort. As soon as resistance had
+ceased the lieutenant ordered the majority of the men to
+return to the boats, and, leaving a sufficient number to hold
+the captured vessel, proceeded to the attack of the middle
+craft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fight here was even more stubborn than before, for the
+men that fled from the ships that had already been taken had
+strongly reinforced the crew of this one. The British, however,
+were not to be denied. The boats of one division
+attacked on one side, those of the second on the other, and,
+after nearly a quarter of an hour’s hard fighting, brought the
+enemy to their knees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pirates were all now battened down, the wounded
+seamen cared for by the doctor who had accompanied the
+expedition, and the bodies of the dead Moors thrown overboard.
+When this was done the successful expedition prepared
+to return to the <name type="ship">Furious</name>. They had lost twenty-eight killed,
+and nearly forty wounded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The loss has been very heavy,</q> the first lieutenant said
+when the return was given to him; <q>and to do the fellows
+justice they fought desperately. Well, now we have to get
+back to the ship, which is a good ten miles away. She is still
+becalmed, and so are we, and unless the wind springs up we
+shall hardly reach her before nightfall. I don’t like to ask
+the men for more exertions after a ten miles row at such a
+ripping pace; still, it must be done. Let two boats take each
+of the pirates in tow; they shall be relieved every hour.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors, who were in high glee at their success, took
+their places in the boats cheerfully, but when night fell they
+were still more than four miles away from the frigate.
+</p>
+
+</div><div n="4">
+<pb n='75'/><anchor id='Pg075'/>
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER IV</head>
+
+<head type="sub">PROMOTED</head>
+
+<p>
+The lieutenant took a boat when it became dusk and rowed
+to the frigate, where he handed in his report of the fight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will read that later, Mr. Farrance,</q> the captain said.
+<q>Meanwhile, tell me briefly what is the result? Of course I
+saw you returning with the three vessels in tow.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We had a very sharp fight, sir, and I am sorry to say that
+the casualties are heavy, twenty-eight killed and nearly forty
+wounded more or less severely.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a heavy list indeed, Mr. Farrance, very heavy, and
+we are the less able to bear it since we have some seventy men
+away on the French prize. The rascals must have fought
+desperately.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They did, sir. I am bound to say that men could hardly
+have fought better. We had very hard work with the two
+outside ships, and as most of the fellows jumped overboard
+and swam to the other, we had an even stiffer fight there. In
+fact, if we had had only one of our division of boats available
+I am sure we should not have carried her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What are the casualties among the officers?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Midshipman Howard is killed, sir, and Lieutenant Ayling
+and Midshipman James very severely wounded. I myself
+had a very narrow escape. I slipped upon some blood, and
+two Moors rushed at me and would have killed me had not
+that boy Gilmore thrown himself between us. He waved
+his cutlass about wildly, and, principally from good luck, I
+<pb n='76'/><anchor id='Pg076'/>think, cut down one of them. On this the other attacked
+him, and I had time to get to my feet again. As soon as I
+was up I ran the Moor through, but not before he had given
+the boy a very ugly wound on the arm.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a wonderful boy,</q> the captain said with a smile.
+<q>I think he is too good to remain where he is, and I must put
+him on the quarter-deck.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should feel greatly obliged if you would, sir, for there
+is no doubt that he saved my life. He is certainly as well up
+in his work as any of the midshipmen. The chaplain told me
+only yesterday that he had learnt to use the quadrant, and can
+take an observation quite as accurately as most of his pupils.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Such a boy as that,</q> said the captain, <q>ought to be given
+a chance of rising in his profession. He is quite at home aloft,
+and may be fairly called a sailor. He is certainly a favourite
+with the whole crew, and I think, if promoted, will give every
+satisfaction. Very well, Farrance, we may consider that as
+settled.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you very much, sir! I need hardly say that it
+will be a pleasure to me to fit him out.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning there was a light breeze, and the three
+prizes, which had remained four miles from the frigate through
+the night, closed up to her. The wounded were transhipped,
+and a prize crew was told off to each of the captures, a considerable
+portion of the Moors being also transferred to the
+frigate and sent down into the hold.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the afternoon Will, to his surprise, received word that
+the captain wished to speak to him. His jacket had been cut
+off and his injured arm was in a sling, so he could only throw
+the garment over his shoulders before he hurried aft. When
+<pb n='77'/><anchor id='Pg077'/>he reached the poop he found that the crew were mustered,
+and in much trepidation as to his appearance, and with a great
+feeling of wonder as to why he had been sent for, he made his
+way to where the captain was standing surrounded by a group
+of officers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Men,</q> the captain said in a loud clear voice, <q>I am going
+to take a somewhat unusual step, and raise one of your comrades
+to the quarter-deck. Still more unusual is it that such
+an honour should fall to a ship’s boy. In this case, however,
+I am sure you will all agree with me that the boy in question
+has distinguished himself not only by his activity and keenness
+aloft, but by the fact that he has, under great difficulties,
+educated himself, and in manner and education is perfectly
+fit to be a messmate of the midshipmen of this vessel. Moreover,
+in the fight yesterday he saved the life of Lieutenant
+Farrance when he had fallen and was attacked by two of the
+Moors. One of these the lad killed, and the other he engaged.
+This gave Lieutenant Farrance time to recover his feet, and
+he quickly disposed of the second Moor, not, however, before
+the rascal had inflicted a severe wound on the lad. Mr.
+William Gilmore, I have real pleasure in nominating you a
+midshipman on board His Majesty’s ship <name type="ship">Furious</name>, and inviting
+you to join us on the quarter-deck.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cheer that broke from the men showed that they
+heartily approved of the honour that had fallen upon their
+young comrade. As to Will himself, he was so surprised and
+overcome by this most unexpected distinction that he could
+scarcely speak. The captain stepped forward and shook him
+by the hand, an example followed by the other officers and
+midshipmen.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='78'/><anchor id='Pg078'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>You had better retire,</q> the captain said, seeing that the
+lad was quite unable to speak, <q>and when you have recovered
+from your wound the ship’s tailor will take your uniform in
+hand. Lieutenant Farrance has kindly expressed his intention
+of providing you with it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will, with the greatest difficulty, restrained his feelings till
+he reached the sick berth, and then he threw himself into a
+hammock and burst into tears. Presently Tom Stevens came
+in to see him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am glad, Will,</q> he said, <q>more glad than I can possibly
+express. It is splendid to think that you are really an
+officer.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is too much altogether, Tom. I had hoped that some
+day I might come to be a mate, or even a captain in a
+merchant ship, but to think that in less than two months after
+joining I could be on the quarter-deck was beyond my wildest
+dreams. Well I hope I sha’n’t get puffed up, and I am sure,
+Tom, that I shall be as much your friend as ever.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t doubt that, Will; you would not be yourself if it
+made any difference in you. Dimchurch asked me to tell you
+how much he too was pleased, but that he was not surprised
+at all, for he felt sure that in less than a year you would be on
+the quarter-deck, as it would be ridiculous that anyone who
+could take an observation and be at the same time one of the
+smartest hands aloft should remain in the position of ship’s
+boy. One of the elder sailors said that in all his experience
+he had never known but three or four cases of men being
+promoted from the deck except when old warrant officers were
+made mates and appointed to revenue cutters.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank Dimchurch very heartily for me, Tom, and tell him
+<pb n='79'/><anchor id='Pg079'/>that I hope we shall sail many years together, although it may
+be in different parts of the ship. Now I will lie quiet for a
+time, for my arm is throbbing dreadfully. The doctor tells me
+that although the wound is severe it can hardly be called
+serious, for with so good a constitution as I have it will heal
+quickly, and in a month I shall be able to use it as well as
+before.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The agitation and excitement, however, acted injuriously,
+and the next day Will was in a state of high fever, which did
+not abate for some days, and left him extremely weak.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You have had a sharp bout of it, lad,</q> the doctor said,
+<q>but you are safe now, and you will soon pick up strength
+again. It has had one good effect; it has kept you from
+fidgeting over your wound, and I have no doubt that, now
+the fever has left you, you will go on nicely.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In another three weeks Will was able to leave the sick bay,
+and on the morning he was discharged from the sick list he
+found by his hammock two suits of midshipman’s uniform, a
+full dress and a working suit, together with a pile of shirts
+and underclothing of all kinds, and two or three pairs of shoes.
+His other clothes had been taken away, so he dressed himself
+in the working suit, and with some little trepidation made his
+way to his new quarters. The midshipmen were just sitting
+down to breakfast, and, rising, they all shook hands with him
+and congratulated him heartily both on his promotion and his
+recovery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are very good to welcome me so heartily,</q> he said.
+<q>I know that neither by birth nor station am I your equal.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are quite our equal, youngster,</q> said one of the midshipmen,
+<q>whatever you may be by birth. Not one of us
+<pb n='80'/><anchor id='Pg080'/>could have worked half so well as you have done; the chaplain
+tells us that you can take an observation as well as he can.
+I can assure you we are all heartily glad to have you with us.
+Sit down and make yourself at home. We have not much to
+offer you besides our rations; for we have been out for over a
+month, and our soft tack and all other luxuries were finished
+long ago, so we are reduced to ham and biscuit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It could not be better,</q> Will said with a smile, <q>for I
+have got such an appetite that I could eat horse with satisfaction.
+I feel immensely indebted to you, Mr. Forster; for if
+you had not brought my request before the first lieutenant I
+should not have been able to make such progress with my
+books as I have done.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The chaplain is a first-rate fellow—but, by the way, we
+have no misters here; we all call each other by our surname
+plain and simple. Even Peters, who has welcomed you in our
+name and who is a full-fledged master’s mate, does not claim to
+be addressed as mister, though he will probably do so before
+long, for the wound of Lieutenant Ayling, who, it is settled,
+will be invalided when we get to Malta, will give him his step.
+On that occasion we will solemnly drink his health, at his own
+expense of course.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is not the ordinary way,</q> the mate laughed. <q>I
+know that you fellows will be game to shell out a bottle
+apiece—I don’t think I can do it—not at least until I get
+three months of my new rate of pay.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So they laughed and chaffed, and Will felt grateful to them,
+for he saw that it was in no small degree due to the desire to
+set him at his ease.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You will be in the starboard watch, Gilmore,</q> the mate
+<pb n='81'/><anchor id='Pg081'/>said when the meal was finished. <q>That was the one Ayling
+had. The third lieutenant, Bowden, who is now in charge,
+isn’t half a bad fellow. Of course he is a little cocky—third
+lieutenants on their first commission generally are, but he is
+kind-hearted and likes to makes himself popular, and he will
+wink one eye when you take a nap under a gun, which is no
+mean virtue. The boatswain, who is in the same watch, is a
+much more formidable person, and busies himself quite unnecessarily.
+One cannot, however, have everything, and on
+the whole you will get on very comfortably. I am in the
+other watch, Rodwell and Forster are with you. They are
+well-meaning lads; I don’t know that I can say anything more
+for them, but you will find out their faults soon enough yourself.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will then went up on deck with the others. It seemed
+strange to him to enter upon what he had hitherto regarded
+as a sort of sacred ground, and he stood shyly aside while the
+others fell into their duties of looking after the men and
+seeing that the work was being done. Presently the first
+lieutenant came on deck. Will went up to him and touched
+his hat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I cannot tell you, sir,</q> he said, <q>how indebted I feel to
+you for your kindness in speaking for me to the captain, and
+especially in providing me with an outfit. I can assure you,
+sir, that as long as I live I shall remember your kindness.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My lad, these things weigh but little against the saving of
+my life, and I can assure you that it was a great satisfaction to
+me to be able to make this slight return. I shall watch your
+career with the greatest interest, for I am convinced that it
+will be a brilliant one.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='82'/><anchor id='Pg082'/>
+
+<p>
+Owing to the fact that two officers had gone away in their
+first prize, and that three had been killed or disabled in the
+late fight, there was a shortage of officers on the <name type="ship">Furious</name>.
+Three had left in the Moorish prizes, and when, a week later,
+another Moorish vessel was captured without much fighting,
+the captain had no officers to spare above the rank of midshipmen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Mr. Forster,</q> he said, <q>I have selected you to go in the
+prize. You can take one of the juniors with you; I cannot
+spare either of the seniors. Who would you like to take?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I would rather have Gilmore, sir. I feel that I can trust
+him thoroughly.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think you have made a good choice. I cannot spare you
+more than thirty men. You will go straight to Malta, hand
+over your prize to the agent there, and either wait till we
+return, or come back again if there should be any means of
+doing so.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will was delighted when he heard that he was to go with
+Forster. <q>Will you pick the crew?</q> he asked his friend.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, but I could arrange without difficulty for anyone you
+specially wished.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should like very much to have my friend Tom Stevens
+and the sailor named Dimchurch; they are both good hands in
+their way, and were very friendly with me before I got promoted.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>All right! there will no difficulty about that; we shall
+want a boy to act as our servant, and one able seaman is as
+good as another. I have noticed Dimchurch; he is a fine
+active hand, and I will appoint him boatswain.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Great was the pride of Will as the prize crew rowed from
+<pb n='83'/><anchor id='Pg083'/>the <name type="ship">Furious</name> to the Moorish galley of which he was to be
+second in command, but he could not help bursting out laughing
+as he went down with Forster into the cabin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What are you laughing at?</q> Forster asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I was having a bit of a laugh at the thought of the change
+that has come over my position. Not that I am conceited
+about it, but it all seems so strange that I should be here and
+second in command.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No doubt it does,</q> laughed Forster, <q>but you will soon
+get accustomed to it. It is almost as strange for me, for it is
+the first time that I have been in command. I have brought
+a chart on board with me. Our course is north-north-east,
+and the distance is between two and three hundred miles. In
+any decent part of the world we should do it in a couple
+of days, but with these baffling winds we may take a week
+or more. Well, I don’t much care how long we are; it will
+be a luxury to be one’s own master for a bit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first step was to divide the crew into two watches.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am entitled not to keep a watch,</q> Forster said, <q>but I
+shall certainly waive the privilege. We will take a watch
+each.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tom Stevens was appointed cabin servant, and one of the men
+was made cook; nine of the others were told off to each watch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I wish she hadn’t all those prisoners on board,</q> Forster
+said. <q>They will be a constant source of anxiety. There
+are over fifty of them, and as hang-dog scoundrels as one
+would wish to see. We shall have to keep a sharp look-out
+on them, to make sure that they don’t get a ghost of a chance
+of coming up on deck, for if they did they would not think
+twice about cutting our throats.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='84'/><anchor id='Pg084'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t see how they could possibly get out,</q> Will said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No; it generally does look like that, but they manage it
+sometimes for all that. These fellows know that when they
+get to Malta they will be set to work in the yards, and if
+there was an opportunity, however small, for them to break
+out, you may be sure that they would take it. These Moorish
+pirates are about as ruffianly scoundrels as are to be found,
+and if they don’t put their prisoners to death they only spare
+them for what they will fetch as slaves.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After three days’ sailing they had made but little way, for
+it was only in the morning and the evening that there was
+any breeze. Will had just turned in for the middle watch,
+and had scarcely dropped to sleep, when he was suddenly
+awakened by a loud noise. He sprang out of bed, seized his
+dirk and a brace of pistols which were part of the equipment
+given him by the first lieutenant. As he ran up the companion
+he heard a coil of rope thrown against the door, so
+he leapt down again and ran with all speed to the men’s
+quarters. They, too, were all on their feet, but the hatch had
+been battened down above them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is a bad job, sir,</q> Dimchurch said. <q>How they have
+got out I have no idea. I looked at the fastenings of the
+two hatches when I came down twenty minutes ago, and they
+looked to me all right. I am afraid they will cut all our
+comrades’ throats.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I fear so, Dimchurch. What do you think we had better
+do?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t know, sir; it will require a good deal of thinking
+out. I don’t suppose they will meddle with us at present, but
+of course they will sooner or later.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='85'/><anchor id='Pg085'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, Dimchurch, as a first step we will bring all the
+mess tables and other portable things forward here, and
+make a barricade with them. We will also obtain two or
+three barrels of water and a stock of food, so that when
+the time comes we may at any rate be able to make a stout
+resistance.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a good idea, sir. We will set to work at once.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a short time, with the aid of tubs of provisions, barrels
+of water, and bales of goods, a barricade was built across the
+bow of the vessel, forming a triangular enclosure of about
+fourteen feet on each side. The arms were then collected
+and placed inside, and when this was done there was a general
+feeling of satisfaction that they could at least sell their lives
+dearly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, sir, what is the next step?</q> Dimchurch asked.
+<q>You have only to give your orders and we are ready to carry
+them out.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have thought of nothing at present,</q> Will said. <q>I fancy
+it will be better to allow them to make the first move, for
+even with the advantage of attacking them in the dark we
+could hardly hope to overcome four times our number.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It would be a tough job certainly, sir; but if the worst
+comes to the worst, we might try it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It must come to quite the worst, Dimchurch, before we
+take such a step as that.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As evening approached, the Moors were heard descending
+the companion. There was a buzz of talk, and then they came
+rushing forward. When they reached the door between the
+fore and aft portions of the ship Will and his men opened fire
+upon them, and as they poured out they were shot down.
+<pb n='86'/><anchor id='Pg086'/>Seven or eight fell, and then the others dashed forward.
+The seamen lined the barricade and made a strenuous resistance.
+Cutlass clashed against Moorish yatagan; the Moors
+were too crowded together to use their guns, and as they
+could gather no more closely in front than the sailors stood,
+they were unable to break through the barricade. At last,
+after many had fallen, the rest retired. Three or four of the
+sailors had received more or less severe wounds, but none
+were absolutely disabled. Tom Stevens had fought pluckily
+among the rest, and Will was ready with his shouts of encouragement,
+and a cutlass he had taken for use instead of his
+dirk, wherever the pressure was most severe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the Moors had retired, Dimchurch and two others
+went outside the barricade and piled some heavy bales against
+the door, after first carrying out the dead Moors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They will hardly attack us that way again, sir,</q> he said to
+Will; <q>it will be our turn next time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, six of their number are killed, and probably several
+badly wounded, so we ought to have a good chance of success
+if we make a dash at them in the dark.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They waited until night had fallen. Then Will said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do you think you can lift that hatchway, Dimchurch?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will have a pretty hard try anyhow,</q> the man said. <q>I
+will roll this tub under it; that will give me a chance of using
+my strength.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although he was able to move it slightly, his utmost efforts
+failed to lift it more than an inch or two.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They have piled too many ropes on it for me, sir; but I
+think that if some others will get on tubs and join me we
+shall be able to move the thing.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='87'/><anchor id='Pg087'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Wait a minute, Dimchurch. Let each man make sure that
+his musket is loaded.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a short pause, during which all firelocks were
+carefully examined. When he saw that all were in good
+order, Will said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, lads, heave away.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Slowly the hatchway yielded, and with a great effort it was
+pushed up far enough for a man to crawl out. Pieces of wood
+were shoved in at each corner so as to hold the hatch open,
+and the men who had lifted it stood clear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Clamber out, Dimchurch, and have a look round. Are
+there many of them on deck?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Only about a dozen, as far as I can make out, sir. They
+are jabbering away among themselves disputing, I should
+say, as to the best way to get at us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I expect they intend to leave us alone and take us into
+Algiers. However, that does not matter. You two crawl
+out and lie down, then give me a hand and hoist me out.
+I think the others can all reach, except Tom; you had better
+hoist him up after me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each man, as he clambered out, lay down on the deck.
+When all were up, they crawled along aft to within a few
+yards of the Moors, then leapt to their feet and fired a volley.
+Five of the Moors fell, while the others, panic-stricken, ran
+below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, pile cables over the hatchway,</q> Will shouted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors rushed to carry out the order. They were
+startled as they did so by a shout from above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Hillo, below there! Have you got possession of the ship?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes. Is that you, Forster?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='88'/><anchor id='Pg088'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank God for that!</q> Will shouted back, while the men
+gave a cheer. <q>Why don’t you come down?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am going to slide down the mast.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What for? Why don’t you come down by the rattlings?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have cut the shrouds. When our last man fell I made
+a dash for them, and directly I got to the top I cut them, and
+half a dozen men who were climbing after me fell sprawling
+to the deck. Then I cut them on the other side. I thought
+then that they would at once shoot me, but there was a lively
+argument among them and shouts of laughter, and they
+evidently thought that it would be a great joke to leave me
+up here until I chose to slide down and be killed. Of course
+I heard their attack on you, and trembled for the result;
+but when the noise suddenly ceased I guessed that you had
+repulsed them. Well, here goes!</q> and half a minute later he
+slid down to the deck. <q>How do matters stand?</q> he asked,
+when he stood among them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We killed six and wounded eight or ten in the first attack
+upon us, and we have shot five more now. All the rest are
+battened down below.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There they had better remain for the present. Well,
+Gilmore, I congratulate you on having recaptured the ship.
+It has been a bad affair, for we have lost nine men killed; but
+as far as you are concerned you have done splendidly. I am
+afraid I shall get a pretty bad wigging for allowing them to
+get out, though certainly the bolts of the hatchways were all
+right when we changed the watch. Of course I see now that
+I ought to have placed a man there as sentry. It is always so
+mighty easy to be wise after the event. I expect the rascals
+<pb n='89'/><anchor id='Pg089'/>pretty nearly cut the wood away round the bolts, and after
+the watch was changed set to work and completed the job.
+We shall not, however, be able to investigate that until we
+get to Malta.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We have blocked up the door between the fore and the
+after parts of the ship,</q> said Will; <q>but I think it would be
+as well to place a sentry at each hatch now, as they might turn
+the tables upon us again.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly. Are you badly wounded, Dimchurch?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have got a slash across the cheek, sir, but nothing to
+speak of.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, will you take post at the after-hatch for the present.
+Stevens, you may as well go down and guard the door. You
+will be able to tell us, at least, if they are up to any mischief.
+I should think, however, the fight is pretty well taken out
+of them, and that they will resign themselves to their fate
+now.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is a bad job for me,</q> Forster said, as he and Will sat
+down together on a gun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am awfully sorry, Forster, but I am afraid there is no
+getting out of it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, that is out of the question.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is one thing, Forster. If you did not put a sentry
+over the hatchway, neither did I, so I am just as much to
+blame for the disaster as you are. If I had had a man there
+they could hardly have cut away the woodwork without his
+hearing. I certainly wish you to state in your report that you
+took the watch over from me just as I left it, and that no
+sentry had been placed there, as ought certainly to have been
+done when I came on watch at eight o’clock.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='90'/><anchor id='Pg090'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is very kind of you, Gilmore, to wish to take the blame
+upon your own shoulders, but the responsibility is wholly
+mine. I ought to have reminded you to put a man there,
+there can be no question at all about that, but I never gave
+the matter a thought, and the blunder has cost us nine good
+seamen. I shall be lucky if I only escape with a tremendous
+wigging. I must bear it as well as I can.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While they were talking the sailors were busy splicing the
+shrouds. When this was done two of the men swarmed up
+the mast by means of the halliards. Then they hoisted up
+the shrouds, and fastened them round the mast, making all
+taut by means of the lanyards. The sails were still standing,
+flapping loosely in the light breeze, so the sheets were hauled
+in and the vessel again began to move through the water.
+Two days later they anchored in Valetta harbour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Here goes,</q> Forster said, as he stepped into the boat with
+his report. <q>It all depends now on what sort of a man the
+admiral is, but I should not be surprised if he ordered me to
+take court-martial.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Oh, I hope not!</q> Will exclaimed. <q>I do wish you would
+let me go with you to share the blame.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It cannot be thought of,</q> Forster said; <q>the commanding
+officer must make the report.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two hours later Forster returned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is all right, Gilmore,</q> he said as the boat came alongside.
+<q rend="post: none">Of course I got a wigging. The admiral read the report
+and then looked at me as fierce as a tiger.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>How was it that no sentry was placed over the
+prisoners?</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>I have to admit, sir,</q> I said, <q>that I entirely overlooked
+<pb n='91'/><anchor id='Pg091'/>that. I am quite conscious that my conduct was indefensible,
+but I have certainly paid very heavily for it.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>It was a smart trick taking to the shrouds,</q> the admiral
+said, <q>though one would have thought they would have shot
+you at once after you had cut them.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>That is what I expected, sir,</q> said I, <q>but they seemed to
+think it was a very good joke, my being a prisoner up there,
+and preferred to wait till I was driven down by thirst.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>I suppose your men sold their lives dearly?</q> he asked.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>Yes, sir,</q> I replied. <q>Taken by surprise as they were
+they certainly accounted for more than one man each.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>And doubtless you did the same, Mr. Forster?</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>Yes, sir, I cut down two of them, and I did not cease
+fighting until I saw that all was lost.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>Then I suppose you thought that your duty to His
+Majesty was to take care of yourself,</q> he said slyly.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>I am afraid, sir,</q> I said, <q>at that moment I thought more
+of my duty towards myself than of my duty to him.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none">He smiled grimly.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>I have no doubt that was so, Mr. Forster. Well, you
+committed a blunder, and I hope it will be a lesson to you
+in future.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>It will indeed, sir,</q> I said.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none">Then he started to question me about you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>Your junior officer seems to have behaved very well,</q> he
+said.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>Extremely well, sir,</q> I said. <q>I only wish I had done as
+well.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>His plan of forming a barricade across the bow so that
+his little force were ample to defend it was excellent,</q> he said.
+<pb n='92'/><anchor id='Pg092'/><q>Also the blocking up of the door of communication through
+the bulkhead was well thought of, and his final escape through
+the hatchway and sudden attack upon the enemy was well
+carried out. I will make a note of his name. I suppose he
+is not as old as yourself, as he is your junior?</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>No, sir, he is not yet sixteen, and he was only promoted
+from being a ship’s boy to the quarter-deck three weeks ago.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>Promoted from being a ship’s boy?</q> the admiral said in
+surprise.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none">Then I had to give a detailed account, not only of the
+fight that led to your promotion, but also of your life so
+far as I knew <corr sic="extra quote">it.</corr></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none">When I had finished, the admiral said:</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q>He must be a singular lad, this Gilmore, and is likely
+to prove an honour to the navy. Bring him up here at this
+hour to-morrow; I shall be glad to see him. There, now, you
+may go, and don’t forget in future that when you are in
+charge of prisoners you must always place a guard over
+them.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So unknowingly you have done me a good turn, Gilmore,
+for I expect that if the admiral had not been so interested in
+you he would not have let me off so easily. You must put on
+your best uniform for the first time and go up to-morrow.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I am afraid I should have felt very shaky if I had
+not heard your account of the admiral. From what you say
+it is evident he is a kindly man, and after all you have told
+him about me he can’t have many questions to ask.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I feel a good deal easier in my mind, as you may
+guess,</q> Forster said. <q>When I went ashore I felt like a bad
+boy who is in for a flogging. I dare say I shall get it a little
+<pb n='93'/><anchor id='Pg093'/>hotter from the captain, but it will be just a wigging, and
+there will be no talk of courts-martial. By what we saw of
+the goods on board this craft before this rumpus took place
+I fancy the Moor had captured and plundered a well-laden
+merchantman. In that case the prize-money will be worth a
+good round sum, and as the admiral gets a picking out of it
+he will be still more inclined to look favourably on the matter.
+Here comes the boat to take off the prisoners. I have no
+doubt some of them will be hanged, especially as they will
+not be able to give any satisfactory explanation as to the fate
+of the merchantman. As soon as we have got rid of them we
+will overhaul a few of the bales and see what are their contents.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the last of the prisoners were taken ashore Forster
+and Gilmore went below and examined the cargo. This
+proved to consist of valuable Eastern stuffs, broad-cloths,
+silks, and Turkish carpets.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It could not be better,</q> Forster said; <q>she must be worth
+a lot of money, and it will add to the nice little handful of
+prize-money we shall get when we return home. They ought
+to give us a good round sum for the <name type="ship">Proserpine</name>; then there
+were the three Moorish vessels, though I don’t think they
+were worth much, for their holds were nearly empty and I
+fancy they had only been cruising a short time. This fellow,
+however, is a rich prize; he certainly had very hard luck,
+falling in with us as he did. I fancy the ship they pillaged
+was a Frenchman or Italian, more likely the latter. I don’t
+think there are many French merchantmen about, and it is
+most likely that the cargo was intended for Genoa, whence
+a good part of it might be sent to Paris. Well, it makes little
+<pb n='94'/><anchor id='Pg094'/>difference to us what its destination was, its proceeds are
+certainly destined to enrich us instead of its original consignees.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning Will put on his best uniform for the first
+time, and, landing with Forster, ascended the Nix Mangare
+stairs and called on the admiral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, Mr. Gilmore,</q> the admiral said as he was shown in,
+<q>it gives me great pleasure to meet so promising a young
+officer. Will you kindly tell me such details of your early
+history as may seem fitting to you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will gave him a fairly detailed account of his history up to
+the time he joined the navy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, you cannot be too grateful to that young lady,
+but at the same time there are few who would have availed
+themselves so well of her assistance. It is nothing short of
+astonishing that you should have progressed so far under her
+care that you were able, after a few lessons from the chaplain
+of your ship, to use a quadrant. As a mark of my approbation
+I will present you with one. I will send it off to your ship
+to-morrow morning.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With many thanks Will took his leave, and returned with
+Forster to the prize.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the following morning the quadrant arrived. That
+afternoon the prize was handed over to the prize-agents, and
+the crew transferred to the naval barracks, Forster and Gilmore
+receiving lodging money to live on shore. Hitherto,
+the only fortifications Will had seen were those of Portsmouth,
+so he was greatly interested in the castle with its
+heavy frowning stone batteries, the deep cut separating it from
+the rest of the island, and its towering rock. Then there was
+<pb n='95'/><anchor id='Pg095'/>the church of St. John, paved with tombstones of the knights,
+and other places of interest. The costume and appearance of
+the inhabitants amused and pleased him, as did the shops with
+their laces, cameos, and lovely coral ornaments. Beyond the
+walls there were the gardens full of orange-trees, bright with
+their fruit, and the burying-place of the old monks, each body
+standing in a niche, dressed in his gown and cowl as in life.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will wished that he could get his share of prize-money at
+once, and promised himself that his very first expenditure
+would be a suite of coral for the lady who had done so much
+for him. In no way, he thought, could he lay out money
+with such gratification to himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A fortnight later the <name type="ship">Furious</name> came into harbour bringing
+another prize with her. This had been taken without any
+trouble. One morning, when day broke, she was seen only
+a quarter of a mile from the frigate. A gun was at once fired
+across her bows, and, seeing that escape was impossible, she
+hauled down her colours without resistance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Forster and Gilmore, with the officers who had brought in
+the other prizes, all went on board at once and made their
+reports. As Forster had predicted, he was severely reprimanded
+for not having placed a sentry over the prisoners, but
+in consideration of the fact that he had already been spoken
+to by the admiral himself the captain was less severe on him
+than he would otherwise have been. Gilmore, on the other
+hand, was warmly commended.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You managed extremely well,</q> the captain said, <q>and
+showed that you fully deserved your promotion.</q>
+</p>
+
+</div><div n="5">
+<pb n='96'/><anchor id='Pg096'/>
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER V</head>
+
+<head type="sub">A PIRATE HOLD</head>
+
+ <p>
+The <name type="ship">Furious</name> was at once placed in the hands of the dockyard
+people, who set to work immediately to repair
+damages, while large quantities of provisions were brought off
+from the stores on shore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They are not generally as sharp as this,</q> Forster said; <q>I
+should say there must be something in the wind.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Such was the general opinion on board the ship, for double
+gangs of workers were put on, and in three days she was
+reported to be again ready for sea. The captain came on
+board half an hour later and spoke to the first lieutenant, and
+orders were at once issued to get up the anchors and set
+sail. Her head was pointed west as she left the harbour, and
+the general opinion was that she was bound for Gibraltar. It
+leaked out, however, in the afternoon that she was sailing
+under sealed orders, and as that would hardly be the case if
+she were bound for Gibraltar, there were innumerable discussions
+among the sailors as to her destination. Could she
+be meant to cruise along the west coast of France, or to return
+to England and join a fleet being got ready there for some
+important <anchor id="corr096"/><corr sic="operation.">operation?</corr>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What do you say, Bill?</q> one of the men asked an old
+sailor, who had sat quietly, taking no part in the discussion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, if you asks me,</q> he said, <q>I should say we are
+bound for the West Indies.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The West Indies, Bill! What makes you think that?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='97'/><anchor id='Pg097'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I thinks that, because it seems to me as that is where
+we are most wanted. The French have got a stronger fleet
+than we have out there.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, they have got as strong a fleet at Toulon, and quite
+as strong a one at Brest.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, that may be so, but I think we are pretty safe to
+lick them at either of these places if they will come out and
+fight us fair, whereas in the West Indies they are a good bit
+stronger. There are so <anchor id="corr097"/><corr sic="may">many</corr> ports and islands that, as we are,
+so to speak, a good deal scattered, they might at any moment
+come upon us in double our strength.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Have you ever been there before, Bill?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none">Ay, two or three times. In some respects it could not be
+better; you can buy fruit, and ’bacca and rum for next to
+nothing, when your officers give you a chance. Lor’, the games
+them niggers are up to to circumvent them would make you
+laugh! When you land, an old black woman will come up with
+a basket full of cocoa-nuts. Your officer steps up to her and
+examines them, and they look as right as can be. Perhaps he
+breaks one and it is full of milk; very good. So you go up
+to buy, and the officer looks on. The woman hands you two
+or three, and when she gives you the last one she winks her
+eye. She don’t say anything, but you drop a sixpence into
+her hand among the coppers you have to pay for the others,
+and when she has quite sold out the officer orders you into
+the boat to lie off till he comes back. And when he returns
+he is quite astonished to find that most of the crew are three
+sheets in the wind.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then they will bring you sugar-canes half as thick as your
+wrist, looking as innocent as may be; both ends are sealed
+<pb n='98'/><anchor id='Pg098'/>up with bits of the pith, and when you open one end you
+find that all the joints have been bored through, and the cane
+is full of rum. But mind, lads, you are fools if you touch it;
+it is new and strong and rank, and a bottle of it would knock
+you silly. And that is not the worst of it, for fever catches
+hold of you, and fever out there ain’t no joke. You eats a
+good dinner at twelve o’clock, and you are buried in the
+palisades at six; that’s called yellow jack. It is a country
+where you can enjoy yourselves reasonable with fruit, and
+perhaps a small sup of rum, but where you must beware of
+drinking; if you do that you are all right. The islands are
+beautiful, downright beautiful; there ain’t many places which
+I troubles myself to look at, but the West Indies are like
+gardens with feathery sorts of trees, and mountains, and
+everything that you can want in nature.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is very hot, isn’t it, Bill?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none">It ain’t, so to speak, cool in summer-time. In winter it is
+just right, but in summer you would like to lie naked all day
+and have cold water poured over you. Still, one gets accustomed
+to it in time. Then, you see, there is always excitement
+of some kind. There are pirates and Frenchmen, and there are
+Spaniards, whom I regard as a cross between the other two.
+They hide about among the islands and pop out when you
+least expect them. You always have to keep your eyes in
+your head and your cutlass handy when you go ashore. The
+worst of them are what they call mulattoes; they are a whity-brown
+sort of chaps, neither one thing nor the other, and a
+nice cut-throat lot they are. A sailor who drinks too much
+and loses his boat is as like as not to be murdered by some
+of them before morning. I hate them chaps like poison.
+<pb n='99'/><anchor id='Pg099'/>There are scores of small craft manned by them which prey
+upon the negroes, who are an honest, merry lot, and not bad
+sailors either in their way. Sometimes four or five of these
+pirate craft will go together, and many of them are a good size
+and carry a lot of guns. They make some island their head-quarters.
+Any niggers there may be on it they turn into
+slaves. There are thousands of these islands, so at least I
+should say, scattered about, some of them mere sand-spots,
+others a goodish size.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I hope it is the West Indies. There is plenty of
+amusement and plenty of fighting to be done there, and I
+should like to know what a sailor can want more.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a hum of approval; the picture was certainly
+tempting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After a six days’ run with a favourable wind they passed
+through the Straits without touching at Gibraltar, and held
+west for twenty-four hours. Then the sealed orders were
+opened, and it was soon known throughout the ship that it
+was indeed the West Indies for which they were bound. The
+ship’s course was at once changed. Teneriffe was passed,
+and they stopped for a day to take in fresh water and vegetables
+at St. Vincent. Then her head was turned more westward,
+and three weeks later the <name type="ship">Furious</name> anchored at Port
+Royal. The captain went on shore at once to visit the admiral,
+and returned with the news that the <name type="ship">Furious</name> was to cruise off
+the coast of Cuba. The exact position of the French fleet
+was unknown, but when last heard of was in the neighbourhood
+of that island.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I must keep a sharp look-out for them,</q> the captain said,
+<q>and bring back news of their whereabouts if I do catch
+<pb n='100'/><anchor id='Pg100'/>sight of them; that is, of course, if we don’t catch a tartar, for
+not only do the French ships carry heavier guns than we do,
+but they sail faster. We are as speedy, however, as any of our
+class, and will, I hope, be able to show them a clean pair of
+heels. In addition to this, I am told that three piratical craft,
+which have their rendezvous on some island off the south
+coast of Cuba, have been committing great depredations. A
+number of merchantmen have been missed; so I am to keep
+a sharp look-out for them and to clip their wings if I can.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What size are they?</q> asked the first lieutenant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>One is said to be a cutter carrying eight guns and a
+long-tom, the other two are schooners, each carrying six guns
+on a broadside; it is not known whether they have a long-tom,
+but the probability is that they have.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They would be rather formidable opponents then if we
+caught them together, as they carry as many guns as we do,
+and those long-toms are vastly more powerful than anything
+we have. I think it is a pity that they don’t furnish all ships
+on this station with a long twenty-four; it would be worth
+nearly all our broadsides.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so, Mr. Farrance, but somehow the people at home
+cannot get out of their regular groove, and fill up the ships with
+eight and ten-pounders, while, as you say, one long twenty-four
+would be worth a dozen of them. If we do catch one of
+these pirates I shall confiscate their long guns to our own use.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It would be a capital plan, sir. Well, I am glad we shall
+have something to look for besides the French fleet, which
+may be a hundred miles away.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ay, or a thousand,</q> the captain added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will had been standing not far from the captain, and heard
+<pb n='101'/><anchor id='Pg101'/>this conversation. His heart beat high at the thought of the
+possibility of a fight with these murderous pirates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For three weeks they cruised off the coast of Cuba. They
+saw no sign whatever of the French fleet, but from time to
+time they heard from native craft of the pirates. The
+natives differed somewhat widely as to the head-quarters of
+these pests, but all agreed that it was on an island lying in
+the middle of dangerous shoals.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day they saw smoke rising some fifteen miles away
+and at once shaped their course for it. When they approached
+it they found that it rose from a vessel enveloped in flames.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is a European ship,</q> the captain said as they neared
+her. <q>Send an officer in a boat to row round her and gather
+any particulars as to her fate. I see no boats near her, and
+I am afraid that it is the work of those pirates.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All watched the boat with intent interest as she rowed
+round the ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have no doubt whatever that it is the work of pirates,</q>
+the officer said on his return. <q>Her bulwarks are burnt
+away, and I could make out several piles on deck which looked
+like dead men.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Send a man up to the mast-head, Farrance, and tell him
+to scan the horizon carefully for a sail. I should say this
+ship can’t have been burning above three hours at most.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner had the man reached the top of the mast than he
+called down <q>Sail ho!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Where away?</q> Mr. Farrance shouted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>On the port bow, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What do you make her out to be?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should say she was a schooner by her topsails.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='102'/><anchor id='Pg102'/>
+
+<p>
+The ship’s course was at once changed, and every rag of sail
+put upon her. The first lieutenant climbed to the upper crosstrees,
+and after a long look through his telescope returned to
+deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should say she is certainly one of the schooners that we
+are in search of, sir, but I doubt whether with this light wind
+we have much chance of overhauling her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We will try anyhow,</q> the captain said. <q>She is probably
+steering for the rendezvous, so by following her we may at
+least get some important information.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All day the chase continued, but there was no apparent
+change in the position of the two vessels. The <name type="ship">Furious</name> was
+kept on the same course through the night, and to the satisfaction
+of all on board they found, when morning broke, that
+they had certainly gained on the schooner, as her mainsails
+were now visible. At twelve o’clock a low bank of sand was
+sighted ahead, and the schooner had entered a channel in this
+two hours later. The <name type="ship">Furious</name> had to be hove-to outside the
+shoal. The sand extended a long distance, but there were
+several breaks in it, and from the masthead a net-work of
+channels could be made out. It was a great disappointment
+to the crew of the <name type="ship">Furious</name> to have to give up the chase and
+see the schooner only some four miles off on her way under
+easy sail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is an awkward place, Mr. Farrance,</q> the captain said,
+<q>and will need a deal of examination before we go any farther.
+The first thing to do will be to sail round and note and sound
+the various channels. I wish you would go aloft with your
+glass and see whether there is any ground higher than the rest.
+Such a place would naturally be the point of rendezvous.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='103'/><anchor id='Pg103'/>
+
+<p>
+Lieutenant Farrance went aloft and presently returned.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is a clump of green trees,</q> he said, <q>some ten miles
+off. The schooner is nearing them, and I think, though of
+this I am not certain, that I can make out the masts of another
+craft lying there.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, it is something to have located her,</q> the captain
+said. <q>Now we must find how we can best get there; that
+will be a work of time. We may as well begin by examining
+some of these channels.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Four boats were at once lowered and rowed to the mouths
+of those nearest. The sounding operations quickly showed
+that in three of them there was but two feet of water; the
+other was somewhat deeper, but there was still two feet less
+water than the <name type="ship">Furious</name> drew. The deep part was very narrow
+and winding.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It may be this one that the schooner has gone up,</q> the
+captain said. <q>I have no doubt she draws three or four feet
+less than we do, and, knowing the passage perfectly, she could
+get up it easily. I hope, however, we shall find something
+deeper presently.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next three days were spent in circumnavigating the
+sand-banks and in sounding the various channels, but at last
+the captain was obliged to admit that none of them were deep
+enough for the <name type="ship">Furious</name>, although there were fully half a dozen
+by which vessels of lighter draught might enter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am ready to run any fair risk, Mr. Farrance,</q> he said,
+<q>but I daren’t send a boat expedition against such a force as
+that, especially as they have no doubt thrown up batteries to
+strengthen their position. They must have any number of
+cannon which they have taken from ships they have captured.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='104'/><anchor id='Pg104'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>It would certainly be a desperate enterprise,</q> the first
+lieutenant agreed, <q>and, as you say, too dangerous to be
+attempted now.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Gilmore,</q> Forster said, as the midshipmen met at dinner,
+<q>you are always full of ideas; can’t you suggest any way by
+which we might get at them?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am afraid not,</q> Will laughed. <q>The only possible way
+that I can see would be to sail away, get together a number of
+native craft, and then make a dash at the place.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What would be the advantage of native craft over our
+boats,</q> one of the others said scoffingly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The great advantage would be that, if we had a dozen
+native craft, the men would be scattered about their decks
+instead of being crowded in boats, and would therefore be
+able to land with comparatively little loss.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Upon my word,</q> one of the seniors said, <q>I think there is
+something in Gilmore’s idea. Of course they would have to
+be very shallow, and one would have to choose a night when
+there was just enough breeze to take them quietly along. At
+any rate I will run the risk of being snubbed, and will mention
+it to one of the lieutenants. ’Pon my word, the more I
+think of it the more feasible does it seem.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After dinner was over the midshipman went up to Mr.
+Peters, who was now third lieutenant, and saluted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What is it?</q> the lieutenant asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, it is an idea of Gilmore’s. It may not be worth
+anything at all, but it certainly seemed to me that there was
+something in it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>His ideas are generally worth something. What is it?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The midshipman explained Will’s plan.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='105'/><anchor id='Pg105'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is certainly something in it,</q> Peters said. <q>What
+a beggar that boy is for ideas! At any rate, I will mention it
+to Mr. Farrance.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Farrance at first pooh-poohed the idea, but, on thinking
+it over, he concluded that it would be as well at any rate to
+lay it before the captain.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>’Pon my word it does seem feasible,</q> the captain said.
+<q>They could tow the boats in after them, so that, when they
+came under the pirates’ fire, the men could get into the boats
+and so be in shelter. Only one hand would be required to
+steer each vessel, and the rest would remain out of sight
+of the enemy until near enough to make a dash either for
+the shore or the pirates’ craft, as the case might be. It is
+a good idea, a really brilliant idea, and well worth putting
+into effect. Besides, each of the vessels could carry one or two
+small guns, and so keep down the enemy’s fire to some extent.
+Send for Gilmore.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a few minutes Will entered the captain’s cabin cap in
+hand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Mr. Farrance tells me, Mr. Gilmore, that you have an idea
+that by collecting a number of native craft of shallow draught
+we might attack the pirates with some hope of success.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It was only an idea, sir, that occurred to me on the spur
+of the moment.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I am inclined to regard it as a feasible one,</q> the
+captain said. <q>A dozen boats of that kind would carry the
+greater part of the ship’s crew, and if each had a couple of
+light cannon on board they would be able to answer the
+enemy’s fire. If I do attack in this manner I propose to send
+the boats in towing behind the native craft, so that when the
+<pb n='106'/><anchor id='Pg106'/>enemy’s fire becomes really heavy the men can take their
+places in these, and so be in shelter until close enough to
+make a dash. Is there any other suggestion you can offer I?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir. The plan of taking the boats certainly seems to
+me to be a good one.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain smiled a little. He was not accustomed to have
+his plans approved of by midshipmen. However, he only
+said: <q>I think it will work. Should any other suggestion
+occur to you, you will mention it to Mr. Farrance. I am really
+obliged to you for the idea, which does great credit to your
+sharpness.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, sir!</q> said Will, and retired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+An hour later the frigate was sailing away from the sand-banks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What did the old man say?</q> the midshipmen asked Will
+as he rejoined them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He thinks that there was something in the idea, but of
+course he has greatly improved it. He means to send the
+boats towing behind the native craft, so that if the fire gets
+very heavy the men can take to them and be towed in perfect
+shelter until near enough to make a rush. He intends to put
+a gun or two in each of the native boats, to keep down the
+enemy’s fire a bit as they approach.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is an improvement,</q> Forster said, <q>and it certainly
+seems, Gilmore, as if you had found a way out of our dilemma.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Those who had been most disposed to laugh at Will’s suggestion
+were eager to congratulate him now that the captain
+had expressed his approval of it and had adopted it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <name type="ship">Furious</name> sailed direct for Port Royal. There was no
+fear that the pirates would abandon their island, for they
+<pb n='107'/><anchor id='Pg107'/>would naturally take the retirement of the <name type="ship">Furious</name> as an
+admission of defeat. They were, of course, open to a boat
+attack, but they would consider themselves strong enough to
+beat off any such attempt without difficulty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Arriving at Port Royal, Lieutenant Farrance went ashore
+in search of suitable craft. He had no difficulty in buying a
+dozen old native boats. He then procured a large quantity of
+cane, and lashed these in the bottom of the boats, using a sufficient
+quantity to keep them afloat even if they were riddled
+with balls. Then the carpenters set to work to make platforms
+in the bows of each to carry a seven-pounder gun. In three
+days the work was completed and the <name type="ship">Furious</name> started again,
+putting two men in each of the boats and taking them in tow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Five days later they arrived off the sand-spits, and preparations
+were at once made for the attack. Lying low in the
+water, and keeping in a line behind the <name type="ship">Furious</name>, the native
+craft would be altogether invisible from the central islands,
+so that the pirates would not be aware of the method of
+attack. The greater portion of the men were told off to them,
+only forty remaining on board the <name type="ship">Furious</name>. All was ready
+an hour after nightfall, and the men took their places in the
+native craft, fastening their boats to the stern in each case.
+The sails were at once got up, and, following each other in
+single file, they entered the channel which had been found to
+be the deepest. The leading boat kept on sounding—an easy
+matter, as, the wind being light, the rate of progress did not
+exceed a mile an hour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will had been posted by the first lieutenant in his own
+boat, which was the leader, and Dimchurch and Tom Stevens
+were among the crew. Dimchurch had exchanged places with
+<pb n='108'/><anchor id='Pg108'/>another seaman; Tom had been allowed a place by the special
+solicitation of Will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He fought stoutly in that fight on the Moorish prize, and
+he is very much attached to me. I should be obliged, sir, if
+you would take him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>All right!</q> said the first lieutenant; <q>let him stow himself
+away in the bow till the fighting begins.</q> Accordingly Tom
+curled himself up by the gun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was between two and three in the morning when the
+trees of the central island were made out; they were not
+more than five hundred yards away. Presently from a projecting
+point, where a heavy mass could be made out, a cannon
+was fired. The shot flew overhead, but the effect was instantaneous.
+Shouts were heard on shore and the sound of oars
+in rowlocks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Take to the boats!</q> the lieutenant shouted. The two
+lines of lights in the port-holes showed the positions of two
+vessels, and the men on the native craft left to work the guns
+at once opened fire at them. For a minute or two there was
+no return, and it was evident that the greater portion of the
+crew had been ashore. The battery that had first fired now
+kept up a steady discharge, but as the boats were almost invisible,
+the shot flew wildly overhead or splashed harmlessly in
+the water. The gunners on board disregarded it, and maintained
+a steady fire at the ports of the enemy’s vessels. From
+these now came answering flashes, but the shot did little
+damage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the attacking party had got within a hundred yards
+of the pirate ships, the lieutenant gave the signal, and the
+boats, with a cheer, dashed forward at full speed. They had
+<pb n='109'/><anchor id='Pg109'/>
+received instructions how to act in case two vessels were found,
+and, dividing, they made for their respective quarters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The race was short and sharp, each officer urging his men
+to the fullest exertions. The instant they were alongside the
+oars were cast aside, and the men, drawing their cutlasses,
+leapt to their feet and endeavoured to climb up. They were
+thrust back with boarding-pikes, axes, and weapons of all
+kinds, but at last managed to get a foothold aft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will in vain endeavoured to get on deck; the sides were too
+high for him. Finding himself left with half the crew, he
+made his way in the boat forward along the side of the pirate
+vessel and clambered up by the bowsprit shrouds. Some of
+the men in the other boats, seeing what he was doing, followed
+his example. They were unnoticed. A fierce fight was raging
+on the quarter-deck, and the shouting was prodigious. When
+some thirty men were gathered Will led the way aft. Their
+arrival was opportune, for the attacking party, under the
+lieutenant, had been vastly outnumbered by the pirates, and
+although fighting stoutly, had been penned against the bulwark,
+where with difficulty they defended themselves.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: WILL LEADS A PARTY TO TAKE THE ENEMY IN THE REAR]</p>
+ </then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill03"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill03.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend="font-size: small">WILL LEADS A PARTY TO TAKE THE ENEMY IN THE REAR</hi></head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: WILL LEADS A PARTY TO TAKE THE ENEMY IN THE REAR</figDesc>
+ </figure></p>
+ </else></pgIf>
+<p>
+With a cheer Will’s party rushed aft, taking the pirates in
+the rear. Many of these were cut down, and the rest fell
+back confused by this unexpected attack.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now is your time, lads!</q> the lieutenant shouted. <q>Throw
+yourselves upon them and drive them back!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Although the pirates still fought desperately, knowing that
+no mercy would be extended them, the steady valour of the
+sailors was too much for them. At last the pirate captain
+was cut down by Dimchurch, and with his fall his men entirely
+lost heart. Some threw down their arms, and many of them
+<pb n='110'/><anchor id='Pg110'/>jumped overboard and swam ashore. A loud cheer burst from
+the sailors as the resistance came to an end.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fight was still raging on board the other ship, and the
+lieutenant ordered the men of his own and another boat to
+row to it. Unseen by the pirates they reached the bow and
+climbed on deck. Then as soon as all had gained a footing
+they rushed aft. Here, too, the rear attack decided the
+struggle; in five minutes all was over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Daylight was now breaking, and they were able to see that
+there was a line of storehouses on the islands together with a
+large number of huts. The greater portion of the men were
+ordered to land, and the fugitives from the ships were hunted
+down. Most of these had taken refuge in the battery at the
+mouth of the harbour, but as this was open on the land side it
+was soon stormed and the defenders all cut down. Then the
+huts were searched and burnt and the storehouses opened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These were found to contain an enormous quantity of goods,
+the spoil evidently of many ships, and the men were at once
+set to work to transfer it to the prizes, and when these were
+full, to the native craft. A boat had been sent off, directly the
+fighting was over, with news to the captain of the success they
+had gained, and in the morning another message was sent saying
+that it would take four or five days to transfer the stores
+to the ships, and the <name type="ship">Furious</name> had in consequence hoisted anchor
+and gone for a short cruise away from the dangerous proximity
+of the sands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the afternoon of the third day a large cutter was seen
+approaching. Lieutenant Farrance ordered the native craft to
+be towed behind a small islet, where they were hidden from
+sight of a vessel entering the harbour, and the crews to take
+<pb n='111'/><anchor id='Pg111'/>their places on the captured vessels. When this was done
+the guns were loaded and the men stood to their quarters.
+The new-comer approached without apparently entertaining
+any suspicion that anything unusual had happened, the huts
+that had been destroyed being hidden by the groves of trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As she came abreast of them the guns were run out and the
+lieutenant shouted: <q>I call upon you to surrender! These
+vessels are prizes of His Majesty’s frigate <name type="ship">Furious</name>, and if you
+don’t surrender we will sink you at once!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a hoarse shout of fury and astonishment, and
+then the captain called back: <q>We will never surrender!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Both the schooners at once poured in their broadsides,
+doing immense damage, and killing large numbers of the
+pirates. A few cannon were fired in answer, but in such haste
+that they had no effect. When two more broadsides had been
+fired into her, the cutter blew up with a tremendous explosion
+which shook both vessels to the keel and threw many of the
+men down. When the smoke cleared away the cutter had disappeared.
+Whether a shot had reached her magazine, or
+whether she was blown up by her desperate commander, was
+never known, as not a single survivor of the crew was picked
+up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the work of loading was completed, and the storehouses
+had been destroyed by fire, the two schooners sailed
+out, followed by the native craft with the boats towing behind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The victory had been won at very little cost. Only three
+men had been killed and some seventeen wounded, while with
+the exception of some thirty prisoners, for the most part
+wounded, the whole pirate force had been annihilated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain had already visited the scene, having rowed in
+<pb n='112'/><anchor id='Pg112'/>as soon as he had received news of the success of the expedition.
+In Lieutenant Farrance’s despatch several officers
+were noted for distinguished conduct. Among these was
+Will Gilmore, to whom the lieutenant gave great credit for
+the manner in which he had boarded the pirate, and by his
+sudden attack upon the rear of the enemy converted what
+was a distinctly perilous situation into a success.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I tell you what it is, Gilmore,</q> one of the midshipmen
+jestingly said, <q>if you go on like this we shall send you to
+Coventry. It is unbearable that you should always get to the
+front.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Great was the rejoicing among the merchants of Port Royal
+when the <name type="ship">Furious</name> returned with her two prizes and it became
+known that the third had been destroyed and the nest of
+pirates completely broken up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the following day Will was sent for by the admiral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My lad,</q> he said, <q>I wish to tell you that although it is
+not usual for a captain to acknowledge in official despatches
+that he acted on the ideas of a young midshipman, Captain
+Marker has done full justice to you in his verbal report to
+me. Your idea showed great ingenuity, and although the
+surprise was so complete that even had the attack been made
+by ships’ boats only it would probably have been successful,
+this detracts in no way from the merit of the suggestion. Of
+course you have some years to serve yet before you can pass,
+but I can promise you that as soon as you do so you shall,
+if you are still here, have your appointment at once as mate,
+with employment in which you can distinguish <corr sic="no quote">yourself.</corr></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you very much, sir!</q> Will said, and, saluting, retired.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In three days the ship’s prizes and native craft were
+un<pb n='113'/><anchor id='Pg113'/>loaded, and their contents were found to be of very great
+value, for by the marks upon the goods it was evident that at
+least twenty-three merchantmen must have been captured and
+pillaged, and as none of these were ever heard of after they
+had sailed it was reasonably concluded that all must have
+been burnt, and those on board murdered. The case was so
+atrocious that the prisoners were all tried, condemned to death,
+and executed in batches. There was little doubt that the
+pirates must have had agents in the various ports who had
+kept them informed of the sailing of ships, but there was no
+means of ascertaining who these parties were.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <name type="ship">Furious</name> sailed four days after her return, and this time
+cruised on the northern coast of Cuba. One day, when sailing
+along by a stretch of high cliffs, a ship of war suddenly appeared
+from a narrow inlet; she was followed by two others.
+The <name type="ship">Furious</name> was headed round at once, and with the three
+French frigates in pursuit started on her way back. The
+wind was light, and though every stitch of canvas was set, it
+was evident, after an hour’s sailing, that one, at least, of her
+pursuers gained steadily on her. The French ship would,
+indeed, have gained more than she had done had she not
+yawed occasionally and fired with her bow-chasers. The
+<name type="ship">Furious</name> had shifted two of her broadside guns to her stern
+to reply, but, although the aim was good, only one or two
+hits were made, the distance being still too great for accurate
+shooting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I wish the other two Frenchmen were a little slower,</q>
+the captain said to the first lieutenant. <q>They are only a
+little farther behind her than when we started, and are, I
+think, only about half a mile astern of her. If she continues
+<pb n='114'/><anchor id='Pg114'/>to travel at her present rate she will be close up to us by
+sunset. She is just about our own size, and I make no doubt
+that we should give a good account of her, but we could not
+hope to do so before her two consorts came up, and we could
+not expect to beat all three. If we could but fall in with one
+of our cruisers I would fight them willingly.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, the odds are too much against us at present, sir.
+I don’t say that we could not fight them separately, but we
+could hardly hope to beat three of them at once. We can’t
+make her go through the water faster than she is doing as far
+as I can see.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, every sail seems to be doing its best. There is
+nothing for it but to pray either for another frigate or for
+more wind. I am not sure that wind would help us, still it
+might.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think, sir,</q> the lieutenant said, two hours later, <q>that
+one of your wishes is going to be fulfilled. There is a cloud
+rising very rapidly on the larboard bow, and from its colour
+and appearance it seems to me that we are going to have
+a tornado.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It will be welcome indeed,</q> the captain said. <q>We have
+been hit ten times in the last half-hour, and the nearest ship
+is not more than three-quarters of a mile away.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Five minutes later the captain said: <q>It is certainly a
+tornado. All hands reduce sail. Don’t waste a moment, lads;
+it will be on us in three minutes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a moment the vessel was a scene of bustle; the men
+swarmed up the rigging, urged to the greatest exertions not
+only by the voices of their officers but by the appearance of
+the heavens. The frigate behind held on three or four minutes
+<pb n='115'/><anchor id='Pg115'/>longer, then her sheets were let fly, and immediately she was
+a scene of wild confusion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It will be on her before she is ready,</q> the captain said
+grimly, <q>and if it is, she will turn turtle. It is as much as we
+shall do to be ready.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just as a line of white foam was seen approaching with the
+speed of a race-horse, the last man reached the deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I would give a great deal,</q> the captain said, <q>to have
+time to get down all our light spars. Get ready your small
+fore try-sail, and a small stay-sail to run up on the mizzen.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A minute later the storm was upon them. A blinding
+sheet of spray, driven with almost the force of grape-shot,
+swept over the ship, followed by a deafening roar and a force
+of wind that seemed about to lift the ship bodily out of the
+water. Over and over she heeled, and all thought that she
+was about to founder, when, even above the noise of the
+storm, three loud crashes were heard, and the three masts,
+with all their lofty hamper, went over the side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank God,</q> the lieutenant exclaimed, <q>that has saved
+her!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+All hands with axes and knives began cutting away the
+wreckage. At the same time the two try-sails were hoisted,
+but they at once blew out of the bolt-ropes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Don’t you think, sir,</q> the first lieutenant shouted, <q>that
+if we lash a hawser to all this hamper, and hang to it, it will act
+as a floating anchor, and bring her head up to the wind?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well thought of, Mr. Farrance,</q> the captain shouted
+back; <q>by all means do so.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The order was given and immediately carried out. The
+tangle of ropes and spars, with the ship’s strongest hawser
+<pb n='116'/><anchor id='Pg116'/>attached, soon drifted past her, and as the cable tightened the
+vessel’s head began to come slowly up into the wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That will delay her fate for a bit,</q> the captain said, <q>but
+we can’t hope that it will more than delay it, unless we can
+get up some sail and crawl off the coast. Get ready the
+strongest try-sails we have in case they may be wanted.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a few minutes the sails were got ready, but for the
+present there was nothing for it but to hang on to the wreckage.
+The shore was some miles away, but in spite of the floating
+anchor the drift was great. The crew of the <name type="ship">Furious</name> had now
+time to breathe, but it was pitch dark and nothing could be
+seen save the white heads of the waves which now every
+moment threatened to overwhelm them. Not a trace of the
+frigate which had so hotly pursued them could be seen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>God rest their souls!</q> the captain said earnestly. <q>I am
+afraid she is gone. In fair fight one strives to do as much
+damage as possible, but such a catastrophe as this is awful. I
+trust the other two took warning in time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hope so too. They were under the lee of that island we
+passed shortly before it began, so would be partially sheltered.
+There is no hope for the first, and their fate is terrible indeed,
+sir; all the more awful, perhaps, because we know that it may
+become ours before long.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is no doubt about that,</q> the captain said. <q>Unless
+the wind drops or chops round our fate is sealed, and a few
+hours will see the ship grinding her bones on that rocky shore.
+It is too dark to see it, but we know that we are most surely
+approaching it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As day broke the shore was made out a little more than
+half a mile away. The captain then called the crew together.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='117'/><anchor id='Pg117'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>My lads,</q> he shouted, but in spite of his efforts his voice
+was heard but a few yards away, <q>everything has been done
+for the ship that could be done, but as you see for yourselves
+our efforts have been in vain. I trust that you will all get
+ashore, but as far as we can see at present the rocks are almost
+precipitous, and, high as they are, the spray flies right over
+them. I thank you all for your good conduct while the ship
+has been in commission, and am sure that you will know how
+to die, and will preserve your calm and courage till the end.
+Go to your stations and remain there until she is about to
+strike; then each man must make the best fight for life that
+he can.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men went quietly off. Mr. Farrance stood watching
+the shore with his telescope. Presently he exclaimed: <q>See,
+sir, there is a break in the cliff! I do not know how far it
+goes in, but it looks to me as if it might be the opening to an
+inlet. We are nearly opposite to it, so if we shift the hawser
+from the bow to the stern she will swing round, and will
+probably drift right into the creek if that is what it is.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>By all means let us make the attempt,</q> the captain said.
+<q>Thank God, there is a hope of escape for us all!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men sprang to their feet with alacrity when they heard
+the news. Another hawser was brought up and firmly spliced
+to the one in use just beyond the bulwark forward. Then it
+was led along outside the shrouds and fastened to the bitts
+astern and then to the mizzen-mast. This done, the first
+hawser was cut at the bulwark forward, and the ship swung
+round almost instantly. As soon as she headed dead for shore
+the raffle that had so long served for their floating anchor was
+cut adrift and the try-sail was hoisted on the stump of the
+<pb n='118'/><anchor id='Pg118'/>foremast, and with six good men at the wheel the vessel
+surged shorewards under the force of the gale, every man on
+board holding his breath. The opening was but a ship’s-length
+across, but driven by the wind and steered with the greatest
+care the <name type="ship">Furious</name> shot into it as quickly and as surely as if
+she were propelled with oars. A great shout of relief burst
+from the whole crew when, after proceeding for a hundred
+yards along a narrow channel, the passage suddenly widened
+out into a pool a quarter of a mile across.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Let go the anchor!</q> the captain cried, and he had scarce
+spoken when the great anchor went thundering down. <q>Pay
+out the chain gradually,</q> was the next order, <q>and check her
+when she gets half-way across.</q> The order was obeyed and
+the vessel’s head swung round, and in less than a minute she
+was riding quietly over great waves that came rolling in
+through the entrance and broke in foam against the shore of
+the inlet. The quiet after the roar and din was almost
+startling. Above, the clouds could be seen flying past in
+rugged masses, but the breast of the pool, sheltered as it was
+from the wind by its lofty sides, was scarcely rippled, and the
+waves rolled in as if they were made of glass. Not a word
+was heard until the captain spoke.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is the least we can do, men, to thank God for this
+miraculous escape. I trust that there is not a man on board
+this ship who will not offer his fervent thanks to Him who
+has so wonderfully brought us out of the jaws of death.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every head was bared, and for two or three minutes no
+sound was heard on board the ship. Then the captain replaced
+his hat, and the men went quietly off to their duties.
+</p>
+
+</div><div n="6">
+<pb n='119'/><anchor id='Pg119'/>
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER VI</head>
+
+<head type="sub">A NARROW ESCAPE</head>
+
+<p>
+They were hardly anchored before the gale showed signs
+of breaking, and in a few hours the sun shone out and
+the wind subsided. The destruction of the timber on the
+hillsides had been prodigious, and large spaces were entirely
+cleared.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain and first lieutenant had an anxious consultation.
+Every boat had gone, and all the masts and rigging.
+They were in what was practically a hostile country, for
+although Spain had not declared war against us, she gave
+every assistance to the French and left her ports open to them.
+In a few weeks probably she would openly throw herself into
+the scale against us.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is clear that we must communicate with Port Royal
+somehow,</q> the captain said, <q>but it certainly isn’t clear how
+we are to do it. Between this and the nearest port there may
+be miles and miles of mountain all encumbered by fallen trees,
+which it would be almost impossible to get through. Then
+again we have heard that there are always bands of fugitive
+slaves in the mountains, who would be sure to attack us. As
+to the sea, we might possibly make shift to build a boat.
+There is certainly no lack of timber lying round, and we have
+plenty of sail-cloth for sails, so we could fit her out fairly
+well. It would be a journey of fully a thousand miles, but
+that seems the most feasible plan. A small craft of, say, forty
+feet long might be built and got ready for sea in the course
+of a week.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='120'/><anchor id='Pg120'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should say so certainly, sir. With the amount of labour
+we have at our disposal it might be built even sooner than
+that. We have plenty of handy men on board who could give
+efficient help to the carpenter’s gang.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I suppose you would build it rather as a ship than as a
+boat?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I think so. We could build her of one-and-a-half-inch
+planks, fill the seams well with oakum, and give her a
+couple of coats of paint. Let her be of shallow draft with
+plenty of beam. She should, of course, be decked over, as she
+might meet with another tornado. The crew would consist
+of an officer and ten men. With such a vessel there should
+be no difficulty in reaching Port Royal.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The carpenters were at once told off to carry out the
+work.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You can have as many hands to help you as you wish,</q>
+the captain said to the head of the gang. <q>What will you
+do first?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I shall get some planks from below, sir, and make a raft.
+By means of that we can get on shore and choose the trunks
+that would be most suitable for the purpose; we are sure to
+find plenty about. Then we will find a suitable spot for a
+ship-yard, and at once start on the work. I will set a gang of
+men with axes to square the trunks and make them ready for
+sawing. They need not be more than six inches square when
+finished, and as I have a couple of double-handed saws we can
+soon rip these into planks.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How long do you think you will be?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should say, sir, with the help I can get, I ought to be
+ready to start in less than a week. Of course the ribs will
+<pb n='121'/><anchor id='Pg121'/>take some time to prepare, but when I have them and the keel
+and stem- and stern-post in place the planking will not take us
+very long.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is to be decked, Thompson.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>All over, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I think so. She may meet with weather like that
+we have just come through, and if she is well decked we may
+feel assured that she will reach Port Royal. I will leave Mr.
+Farrance and you to draw out her lines.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think,</q> said the first lieutenant, <q>she should be like a
+magnified launch, with greater beam and a larger draft of
+water, which could, perhaps, best be gained by giving her a
+deep keel. Of course she must be a good deal higher out of
+the water than a launch, say a good four feet under the deck.
+There should be no need to carry much ballast; she will gain
+her stability by her beam.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I understand, sir. The first thing to be done is to form
+the raft.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ship’s crew were soon at work, and it was not long
+before a raft was constructed. A rope was at once taken
+ashore and made fast to a tree, so that the raft could be hauled
+rapidly backwards and forwards between the ship and the
+shore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The carpenter and his mates were the first to land, and
+while the chief selected a suitable point for a yard his assistants
+scattered, examining all fallen trees and cutting the
+branches off those that seemed most suitable. These were
+soon dragged down to the yard. Then strong gangs set to
+work to square them, and the carpenters to cut them into
+planks.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='122'/><anchor id='Pg122'/>
+
+<p>
+The first lieutenant remained with them, encouraging them
+at their work, while the junior officers and midshipmen were
+divided among the various gangs. By six o’clock, when the
+<name type="ship">Furious</name> signalled for all hands to come on board, they had
+indeed done a good day’s work. A pile of planks lay ready
+to be used as required. The carpenters had made some progress
+with a keel, which they were laboriously chopping out
+from the straight trunk of a large tree. By evening of the
+next day this was finished and placed in position. On the
+third day some started to shape the stem- and stern-posts,
+while the head-carpenter made from some thin planks
+templates of the ribs, and set others to chop out the ribs
+to fit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In two more days all was ready for fastening on the planks.
+A hundred and fifty men can get through an amazing amount
+of labour when they work well and heartily. The planks
+were bent by main strength to fit in their places, and as there
+was an abundance of nails and other necessary articles on
+board, the sheathing was finished in two days. The rest of the
+work was comparatively easy. While the deck was being laid
+the hull was caulked and painted, and the two masts, sails,
+and rigging prepared. The boat had no bulwarks, it being
+considered that she would be a much better sea-boat without
+them, as in case of shipping a sea the water would run off at
+once. The hatchways fore and aft were made very small,
+with close-fitting hatches covered with tarpaulin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain was delighted when she was finished.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is really a fine boat,</q> he said, <q>with her forty feet of
+length and fifteen of beam. It has taken longer to build her
+than I had expected, but we had not reckoned sufficiently on
+<pb n='123'/><anchor id='Pg123'/>the difficulties. Everything, however, has now been done to
+make her seaworthy, so those of us who remain here may feel
+sure that she will reach Port Royal safely. In case of a gale
+the sails must be lowered and lashed to the deck, and all
+hands must go below and fasten the hatchways securely. She
+has no ballast except her stores, but I think she will be perfectly
+safe; there is very little chance of her capsizing.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>With such beam and such a depth of keel,</q> said the
+first lieutenant, <q>she could not possibly capsize. In case of a
+tornado the masts might very well be taken out of her and
+used as a floating anchor to keep her head to it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now whom do you intend to send in her, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will send two officers,</q> the captain said. <q>Peters, and
+a midshipman to take his place in case he should be disabled.
+I think it is Robson’s turn for special service.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning the boat started soon after daybreak, the
+ship’s crew all watching her till the two white lug-sails disappeared
+through the opening.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now we will take a strong party of wood-cutters,</q> the
+captain said, <q>and see if we can make a way to the top of the
+hill and get some idea of the country round. I don’t expect
+we shall see much of interest, but it is just as well that we
+should be kept employed. By the way, before we do that, we
+will get hawsers to the shore and work the frigate round so as
+to bring her broadside to bear upon the opening; we ought to
+have done that at first. The French may know of this place,
+or if they don’t they may learn of it from the Spaniards.
+Those two ships astern of us probably got themselves snug
+before the tornado struck them, and weathered it all right,
+though I doubt very much if they did so, unless they knew
+<pb n='124'/><anchor id='Pg124'/>of some inlets they could run for. If they did escape, it
+is likely that they will be taking some trouble to find out
+what became of us. They may have seen their companion’s
+fate, but they would hardly have made us out in the darkness.
+Still, they would certainly want to report our loss, and may
+sail along close inshore to look for timbers and other signs
+of wreck. I think, therefore, that it will be advisable to
+station a well-armed boat at this end of the cut, and tell them
+to row every half-hour or so to the other end and see if they
+can make out either sailing or rowing craft coming along the
+shore. If they do see them they must retire to this end of
+the opening, unless they can find some place where they could
+hide till a boat came abreast of them, and then pounce out and
+capture it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It would certainly be a good precaution, sir. I will see
+to it at once—but we are both forgetting that we have no
+boats.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Bless me, I did forget that altogether! Well, here is that
+little dug-out the carpenters made for sending messages to and
+from the ship. It will carry three. I should be glad if you
+would take a couple of hands and row down to the mouth of
+the entrance and see if there is any place where, without any
+great difficulty, a small party with a gun could be stationed
+so as not to be noticed by a boat coming up.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I understand, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lieutenant started at once, and when he returned, some
+hours later, he reported that there was a ledge some twenty
+feet long and twelve deep. <q>It is about eight feet from the
+water’s edge and some twelve above it, sir,</q> he said, <q>and is
+not noticeable until one is almost directly opposite it. If we
+<pb n='125'/><anchor id='Pg125'/>were to pile up rocks regularly four feet high along the face,
+both the gun and its crew would be completely hidden.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Get one of the hands on board, Mr. Farrance; I will myself
+go and see it with you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the men at once climbed on deck, and the captain
+took his place in the little dug-out. When they reached the
+ledge he made a careful inspection of it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes,</q> he said, <q>ten men could certainly lie hidden here,
+and with a rough parapet, constructed to look as natural as
+possible, they should certainly be unobserved by an incoming
+boat, especially as the attention of those in the stern
+would be directed into the inlet. Will you order Mr.
+Forster and one of the other midshipmen to go with as many
+men as the raft will carry, and build such a parapet. They
+had better take one of the rope-ladders with them and fix
+it to the ledge by means of a grapnel. There is plenty of
+building material among the rocks that have fallen from
+the precipices above. I must leave it to their ingenuity to
+make it as natural as possible.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they returned to the ship the first lieutenant called
+Forster and gave him the captain’s orders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You can take young Gilmore with you,</q> he said. <q>Your
+object will be to make it as natural as possible, so as to look,
+in fact, as if the rocks that had fallen out behind had lodged
+on the ledge. The height is not very important, for if a boat
+were coming along, the men would, of course, lie down till
+it was abreast of them, and the cannon would be withdrawn
+and only run out at the last moment.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, sir, I will do my best.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The raft was again brought into requisition, and it was
+<pb n='126'/><anchor id='Pg126'/>found that it could carry twelve men. Dimchurch and nine
+others were chosen, and, using oars as paddles, they slowly
+made their way down to the spot.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It will be a difficult job to make anything like a natural
+wall there,</q> Forster said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes,</q> Will agreed, <q>I don’t see how it is to be managed
+at all. Of course we could pile up a line of stones, but that
+would not look in the least natural. If we could get up
+three or four big chunks they might do if filled in with
+small stones, but it would be impossible to raise great blocks
+to that shelf.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The ladder was fixed and they climbed up to the ledge.
+When they reached it they found that it was very rough and
+uneven, and consequently that the task was more difficult
+than it had seemed from below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The only way I see,</q> Forster said, <q>would be to blast out
+a trench six feet wide and one foot deep, in which the men
+could lie hidden. The question is whether the captain will
+not be afraid that the blasting might draw attention to our
+presence here.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They were just starting for the top of the hill when we
+came away,</q> Will said, <q>and may be able to see whether
+there are any habitations in the neighbourhood. A couple of
+men in the dug-out would be able to bring us news of any
+craft in sight. I certainly don’t see any other way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Forster made his report the captain said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none">I believe it will be the best plan. At the top of the hill
+we could see nothing but forests, for the most part levelled;
+we could make out no sign of smoke anywhere. The operation
+of blasting can be done with comparatively small charges, and
+<pb n='127'/><anchor id='Pg127'/>occurring as it does at the foot of a gorge like that, the sound
+would hardly spread much over the surrounding country, and
+we could, of course, take care that there was no ship in sight
+when we fired the charges.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, you can begin to-morrow. I believe there are some
+blasting-tools in the store. Take the gunner with you; this
+work comes within his province.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the following morning the raft went off again, and at
+midday a number of sharp explosions told that the work was
+begun. In the evening another series of shots were fired, and
+the party returned with the news that the ground had been
+broken up to the depth of two feet and of ample size to give
+the men cover. The next morning the rocks were cleared out,
+and a seven-pounder and carriage, with tackle for hoisting it
+up, were sent over.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the afternoon the captain went in the dug-out and inspected
+the work, and expressed himself as thoroughly satisfied
+with it. A garrison consisting of an officer and ten men
+was then placed in the fort. They remained there all day
+and returned to the ship as darkness fell, as it was thought
+pretty certain that no one would try to explore the inlet
+during the night. The next morning another party was told
+off to garrison duty, and so on, no man being given two
+consecutive days in the fort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the fourth day the dug-out returned in haste to the
+ship from its post at the mouth of the gap, and reported that
+two men-of-war were to be seen in the distance cruising close
+inshore. Mr. Farrance landed, and with difficulty made his
+way up the hill to a point near the mouth of the opening,
+which commanded a view over the sea. From that point he
+<pb n='128'/><anchor id='Pg128'/>could easily see the hulls of the ships with his telescope, and
+had no doubt whatever that they were the former antagonists
+of the <name type="ship">Furious</name>. After watching for some time he made out
+four little black specks very close to the shore. He examined
+them closely and then hurried down to the cove.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They are searching the coast with boats,</q> he reported,
+<q>as I feared they would.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The news had been given to the little party at the battery
+as the dug-out came in, and they were at once on the alert.
+The carpenters, who after the departure of their first boat had
+been employed in building a large gig to pull twelve oars,
+were at once recalled to the ship, and the magazines were
+opened and the guns loaded. All the guns from the larboard
+main deck had been brought up to the upper deck and port-holes
+made for them, and a boom of trees had been built from
+the bow and stern of the ship to the shore, so as to prevent
+any craft from getting inside her. Thus prepared, the captain
+considered that he was fully a match for any two ships of his
+own size, but he knew, nevertheless, that, even if he beat
+them off, he might be exposed to attack from a still larger
+force unless assistance arrived from Jamaica.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+But he did not think only of the ship. The dug-out, which
+had brought Mr. Farrance back with his report, was at once
+sent off with orders to the party at the battery that they
+must, if possible, sink any boat or boats that entered, but that
+if ships of war came in they must not try to work their gun
+after the first shot, as if they did so they would simply be swept
+away by the enemy’s fire. That one shot was to be aimed at
+the enemy’s rudder; then they were to lie down, and if they
+had not disabled the ship they were to keep up a heavy
+<pb n='129'/><anchor id='Pg129'/>musketry fire, aimed solely against her steersman. It was
+hardly likely that they would be attacked by boats, as the
+enemy would be fully engaged with the <name type="ship">Furious</name>; but even if
+they should, the Frenchmen would have no means of climbing
+the eight feet of precipitous rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dug-out went to and from the entrance, bringing back
+news of the progress made by the enemy’s boats. About three
+hours from the time when they had first been made out by
+Mr. Farrance the little boat reported that they were only two
+or three hundred yards from the entrance. On board the ship
+all listened anxiously, for a slight bend in the narrow passage
+prevented them from seeing the battery. Presently the
+boom of a cannon was heard, followed by a cheer, which told
+that the little garrison had been successful; then for two or
+three minutes there was a rattle of musketry. When this
+stopped, the dug-out at once went out to the fort, and returned
+with the news that two boats had come up abreast, that one of
+them had been sunk by the cannon at the fort, and that its
+crew had been picked up by the other boat, which had rowed
+hastily back, suffering a good deal from the musketry fire
+under which the operation was carried on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is act one,</q> the captain said; <q>now we shall have to
+look for act two. I will go up with you, Mr. Farrance, to the
+place whence you saw them; we may be sure that there will be
+a great deal of signalling and consultation before they make
+any further step.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly they landed and went up to the look-out. The
+two vessels were lying close to each other with their sails
+aback. The more fortunate of the two boats which had attempted
+to explore the passage had just returned to them with
+<pb n='130'/><anchor id='Pg130'/>its load of wounded and the survivors of its late companion,
+and boats were passing to and fro between the two ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is an awkward question for them to decide,</q> the captain
+said. <q>Of course they know well enough that a ship must be
+in here, the gun shows them that, but they cannot tell that
+we are capable of making any defence beyond the single gun
+battery on the ledge.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was an hour before there was any change in the position,
+but at the end of that time the sails were filled and the
+two vessels headed for the mouth of the inlet. They had
+evidently concluded that the English ship was lying there
+disabled. The two officers hurried back to the <name type="ship">Furious</name>,
+and gave orders to prepare for the attack. The men at
+once stood to their posts. Presently the gun of the fort
+boomed out again, and by the cheering that followed the sound
+it was evident that the shot had taken effect and smashed the
+rudder of one of the French ships. Several guns were fired in
+reply, but a minute later the bowsprit of the leading ship
+came into view. The men waited until they could see the
+whole vessel, then a crashing broadside from every gun on
+board the <name type="ship">Furious</name> was poured into her bow.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The effect was tremendous; a hole ten or twelve feet wide
+was torn in her bow, and the ship was swept from end to end
+by balls and splinters, and the shrieks and groans that arose
+from her told that the execution was heavy. It was evident
+that the battle was already half-won as far as she was concerned.
+There was not room enough in the little inlet for her
+to manœuvre in the light wind so as to bring her broadside to
+bear on the <name type="ship">Furious</name>, and another crashing broadside from the
+latter vessel completed her discomfiture. The other vessel now
+<pb n='131'/><anchor id='Pg131'/>came up by her side, but she had been disabled by the fort,
+and her helm would not act. Her captain at once lowered
+her boats and tried to get her head round, but these were
+smashed up by the fire of the <name type="ship">Furious</name>, and the two vessels lay
+together side by side, helpless to reply in any efficient way to
+the incessant fire kept up upon them. The Frenchmen did all
+that was possible for brave men to do in the circumstances, but
+their position was hopeless, and after suffering terribly for ten
+minutes, one after the other hauled down their flag.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A tremendous burst of cheering broke from the <name type="ship">Furious</name>.
+She had lost but two men killed and four or five wounded by the
+bullets of the French topmen. She had also been struck twice
+by balls from the bow-chaser of the second ship; but this was
+the extent of her damage, while the loss of life on board the
+French frigates had been frightful. Some sixty men had been
+killed and eighty wounded on the first ship, while thirty were
+killed and still more wounded in the boats of the second
+vessel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Captain Harker went on board the captures to receive the
+swords of their commanders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You have done your best, gentlemen,</q> he said; <q>no one in
+the circumstances could have done more. Had there been ten
+of you instead of two the result must have been the same. If
+your boats had got in and seen the situation you would have
+understood that the position was an impossible one. There
+was no room in here for manœuvring, and even had one of you
+not been damaged by the shot from that little battery of ours,
+your position would have been practically unchanged, and you
+could not possibly have brought your broadsides to bear upon
+us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='132'/><anchor id='Pg132'/>
+
+<p>
+The French captains, who were much mortified by the disaster,
+bowed silently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is the fortune of war, sir,</q> one of them said, <q>and
+certainly we could not have anticipated that you would be so
+wonderfully placed for defence. I agree with you that our
+case was hopeless from the first, and I compliment you upon
+your dispositions, which were certainly admirable.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You and your officers will be perfectly at liberty,</q> the
+captain said; <q>your crews must be placed in partial confinement,
+but a third of them can always be on deck. My surgeon
+has come on board with me, and will at once assist yours in
+attending to your wounded.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A considerable portion of the crew of the <name type="ship">Furious</name> were at
+once put on board the French frigate <name type="ship">Eclaire</name>, and set to work
+to dismantle her. The masts, spars, and rigging were transferred
+to the <name type="ship">Furious</name> and erected in place of her own shattered
+stumps, which were thrown overboard. Thus, after four days
+of the hardest work for all, the <name type="ship">Furious</name> was again placed in
+fighting trim.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Preparations were immediately made for sailing. The
+<name type="ship">Furious</name> led the way, towing behind her the dismantled hull in
+which the whole of the prisoners were carried. A prize crew
+of sixty were placed on board the <name type="ship">Actif</name>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they were about half-way to Jamaica a squadron of
+three vessels were sighted. Preparations were made to throw
+off the <name type="ship">Eclaire</name> if the ships proved to be hostile, but before long
+it was evident that they were English. They approached
+rapidly, and when they rounded-to near the <name type="ship">Furious</name> the crews
+manned the yards and greeted her with tremendous cheers.
+The officer in command was at once rowed to the <name type="ship">Furious</name>.
+<pb n='133'/><anchor id='Pg133'/>As the boat neared the ship his friends recognized Mr. Peters
+and Robson sitting in the stern.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What miracle is this, Captain Harker?</q> the officer cried
+as he came on deck. <q>Your lieutenant brought us news that
+you were dismasted and lying helpless in some little inlet,
+and here you are with what I can see is a French equipment
+and a couple of prizes! I can almost accuse you of having
+brought us here on a fool’s errand.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It must have that appearance to you; but the facts of
+the case are simple;</q> and he told the story of the fight. <q>The
+battle was practically over when the first shot was fired,</q> he
+said. <q>The two French ships lost upwards of seventy killed
+and over a hundred wounded, while we had only four men
+killed and two wounded. If the place had been designed by
+nature specially for defence it could not have been better
+adapted for us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I see that,</q> Captain Ingham said; <q>but you made the
+most of the advantages. Your plan of laying her broadside
+to the entrance, getting all your cannon on one side, and building
+a boom to prevent any vessel from getting behind you,
+was most excellent. Well, it is a splendid victory, the more
+so as it has been won with so little loss. The French certainly
+showed but little discretion in thus running into the trap you
+had prepared for them. Of course they could not tell what
+to expect, but at least, whatever it might have cost them, they
+ought to have sent a strong boat division in to reconnoitre.
+No English captain would have risked his vessel in such a
+way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With very little delay the voyage to Jamaica was continued.
+Two of the relief party went straight on, the other remained
+<pb n='134'/><anchor id='Pg134'/>with the <name type="ship">Furious</name> in case she should fall in with a French
+fleet. When the little squadron entered Port Royal they received
+an enthusiastic welcome from the ships on the station.
+Both prizes were bought into the service and handed over
+to the dockyard for a thorough refit. Their names were
+changed, the <name type="ship">Eclaire</name> being rechristened the <name type="ship">Sylph</name>, the <name type="ship">Actif</name>
+becoming the <name type="ship">Hawke</name>. Lieutenant Farrance was promoted to
+the rank of captain, and given the command of the latter
+vessel, and some of the survivors of a ship that had a fortnight
+before been lost on a dangerous reef were told off to
+her. He was, according to rule, permitted to take a boat’s
+crew and a midshipman with him from his old ship, and he
+selected Will Gilmore, and, among the men, Dimchurch and
+Tom Stevens.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The planters of Jamaica were celebrated for their hospitality,
+and the officers received many invitations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are quite at liberty to accept any of them you like,</q>
+Captain Farrance said to Will. <q>Till the vessel gets out of
+the hands of the dockyard men there is nothing whatever for
+you to do. But I may tell you that there is a good deal of
+unrest in the island among the slaves. The doings of the
+French revolutionists, and the excitement they have caused
+by becoming the patrons of the mulattoes has, as might be
+expected, spread here, and it is greatly feared that trouble may
+come of it. Of course the planters generally pooh-pooh the idea,
+but it is not to be despised, and a few of them have already left
+their plantations and come down here. I don’t say that you
+should not accept any invitation if you like, but if an outbreak
+takes place suddenly I fancy very few of the planters
+will get down safely. I mean, of course, if there is a general
+<pb n='135'/><anchor id='Pg135'/>rising, which I hope will not be the case. Negroes are a good
+deal like other people. Where they are well treated they
+are quite content to go on as they are. Where they are badly
+treated they are apt to try and better themselves. Still, that
+is not always the case. There is no doubt that altogether the
+French planters of San Domingo are much gentler in their
+treatment of their slaves than our people are here. Large
+numbers of them are of good old French families, and look on
+their slaves rather as children to be ruled by kindness than
+as beasts of burden, as there is no doubt some, not many, I
+hope, but certainly some of the English planters do. With
+San Domingo in the throes of a slave revolution, therefore,
+it will not be surprising if the movement communicates itself
+to the slaves here. I know that the admiral thinks it prudent
+to keep an extra ship of war on the station so as to be prepared
+for any emergency.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, sir. Then I will not accept invitations for
+overnight.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t say that, Mr. Gilmore. In nine cases out of ten
+I should say it could be done without danger; for if a rebellion
+breaks out it will not at first be general, but will begin at
+some of the most hardly-managed plantations, and there will
+be plenty of time to return to town before it spreads.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As Will had no desire to mix himself up in a slave insurrection,
+he declined all invitations to go out to houses beyond
+a distance whence he could drive back in the evening. At all
+the houses he visited he was struck by the apparently good
+relations between masters and slaves. The planters were
+almost aggrieved when he insisted on leaving them in the
+evening, but he had the excuse that he was a sort of
+aide-de-<pb n='136'/><anchor id='Pg136'/>camp to Captain Farrance, and was bound to be there the first
+thing in the morning to receive any orders that he might have
+to give. He generally hired a gig and drove over early so as
+to have a long day there, and always took either Dimchurch
+or Tom with him. He enjoyed himself very much, but was
+not sorry when the repairs on the <name type="ship">Hawke</name> were completed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As the admiral was anxious for her to be away, some men
+were drafted from the other ships; others were recruited
+from the crews of the merchantmen in the port by Dimchurch,
+who spoke very highly of the life on board a man-of-war, and
+of the good qualities of the <name type="ship">Hawke’s</name> commander. The complement
+was completed by a draft of fresh hands from England,
+brought out to make good the losses of the various
+ships on the station. Within three weeks, therefore, of her
+leaving the dockyard the <name type="ship">Hawke</name> sailed to join the expedition
+under Sir John Laforey and General Cuyler, to capture the
+island of Tobago, where, on 14th April, 1793, some troops were
+landed. The French governor was summoned to surrender,
+but refused, so the works were attacked and carried after a
+spirited resistance. But the attempt to capture St. Pierre in the
+island of Martinique was not equally successfully. The French
+defended the place so desperately that the troops were re-embarked
+with considerable loss.
+</p>
+
+</div><div n="7">
+<pb n='137'/><anchor id='Pg137'/>
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER VII</head>
+
+<head type="sub">AN INDEPENDENT COMMAND</head>
+
+<p>
+Will was hit by a musket-ball in the last engagement
+that took place, and was sent back with a batch of
+wounded to Port Royal. Three of the fingers of his left
+hand had been carried away, but he bore the loss with
+equanimity, as it would not compel him to leave the service.
+Tom, who went with him as his servant, fretted a good deal
+more over it than he himself, and was often loud in his
+lamentations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It would not have made any difference if it had been me,</q>
+he said, <q>but it is awfully hard on you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What ridiculous nonsense, Tom!</q> Will said quite angrily,
+after one of these outbursts. <q>If it had been you it would
+have been really serious, for though an officer can get on very
+well without some of his fingers a sailor would be useless and
+would be turned adrift with some trifling pension. I shall
+do very well. I have been mentioned in despatches and I am
+certain to get my step as soon as I have served long enough
+to pass, so after a time I shall not miss them at all.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tom was silenced, though not convinced. The wound healed
+rapidly, thanks to Will’s abstemious habits, and in six weeks
+after entering the hospital he was discharged as fit for duty.
+The <name type="ship">Hawke</name> was not in harbour, so he went to an hotel. On
+the following day he received an order to call upon the admiral.
+When he did so that officer received him very kindly. <q>I
+am sorry,</q> he said, <q>to learn that you have lost some fingers,
+Mr. Gilmore.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='138'/><anchor id='Pg138'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hope it will not interfere much with my efficiency,
+sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think not,</q> the admiral said; <q>I have received the
+surgeon’s report this morning. In it he stated that your
+wound had from the first gone on most favourably, and that
+they had really kept you in hospital a fortnight longer than
+was absolutely necessary, lest in your anxiety to rejoin you
+might do yourself harm. Three days since a cutter of about
+a hundred tons was sent in by the <name type="ship">Sylph</name>. She was a pirate,
+and, like all vessels of that class, very fast, and would most
+likely have outsailed the <name type="ship">Sylph</name> had she not caught her up
+a creek. I have purchased her for the government service,
+and I propose to place you in command.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will gave a start of surprise. At his age he could not
+have expected for a moment to be given an independent
+command.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have noted your behaviour here, and have looked through
+the records of your service since you joined, and I am convinced
+that you will do credit to the post. I shall give you
+a midshipman junior to yourself from the <name type="ship">Thetis</name>, and you will
+have forty hands before the mast. The <name type="ship">Hawke</name> is expected
+in in a few days, so you can pick five men from her. The
+rest I will make up from the other ships. The cutter will be
+furnished with four twelve-pounders, and the long sixteen as a
+bow gun, which she had when she was captured. Your duty
+will be to police the coasts and to overhaul as many craft as
+you may find committing depredations, of course avoiding a
+combat with adversaries too strong for you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I thank you most heartily, sir, for selecting me for this
+service, and will do my best to merit your kindness.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='139'/><anchor id='Pg139'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is all right, Mr. Gilmore. I have acted, as I believe,
+for the good of the service, and to some extent as an incentive
+to other young officers to use their wits.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will went out with his head in a whirl. He could hardly
+have hoped, within a year of his term of service as a midshipman,
+to obtain a separate command, and he could have shouted
+with joy at this altogether unexpected promotion. The first
+thing he did was to take a boat and row off in it to his new
+command. She was a handsome boat, evidently designed to
+be fast and weatherly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>These beggars know how to build boats much better than
+how to fight them,</q> he said, when he had examined her.
+<q><corr sic="no quote">Assuredly</corr> in anything like a light wind she would run away
+from the <name type="ship">Sylph</name>. The admiral was right when he said that
+it was only by chance that she was caught. I hope the fellow
+who is going with me is a good sort. It would be awkward
+if we did not pull well together. At any rate, as the admiral
+seems to have picked him out for the service, he must be worth
+his salt. Of course I shall have Dimchurch as my boatswain;
+he will take one watch and the youngster the other. It will
+be hard if we don’t catch something.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having rowed round the cutter two or three times he
+returned to the shore. As the little vessel had been taken by
+surprise, and had not been able to offer any resistance to a
+craft so much more powerful than herself, she was uninjured,
+and was in a fit state to be immediately recommissioned. She
+was called <name type="ship">L’Agile</name>, a name which Will thought very suitable
+for her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Forty men will be none too strong for her,</q> he said, <q>for
+we shall have to work two guns on each side and that long
+<pb n='140'/><anchor id='Pg140'/>one in the bow.</q> He went to bed that night and dreamt of
+fierce fights and many captures, and laughed at himself when
+he awoke. <q>Still,</q> he said, <q>I shall always be able to tackle
+any craft of our own size and carrying anything like our
+number of men.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three days later the <name type="ship">Hawke</name> came in. Will at once rowed
+off to her and had a chat with his friends. When he mentioned
+his new command his news was at first received with
+absolute incredulity, but when at last his messmates came to
+understand that he was not joking, he was heartily congratulated
+on his good fortune. Afterwards he was not a little
+chaffed on the tremendous deeds he and his craft were going
+to perform. When at last they became serious, Latham, the
+master’s mate, remarked: <q>But what is your new command
+like?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is a cutter of about a hundred tons, carrying four
+twelve-pounders, and a sixteen-pounder long pivot gun at the
+bow. I am to have forty men and a young midshipman from
+the <name type="ship">Thetis</name>.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>A very tidy little craft, I should say, Gilmore, and you
+will probably get a good deal more fun out of her than from
+a frigate or line-of-battle ship. You will want a good
+boatswain to take charge of one of the watches.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I shall have one, for I am to take five men out of the
+<name type="ship">Hawke</name>, and you may be sure I shall take Dimchurch as boatswain.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You could not have a better man,</q> Latham said; <q>he is
+certainly one of the smartest fellows on board the ship. He
+is very popular with all the men, and is full of life and go,
+and always the first to set an example when there is any work
+<pb n='141'/><anchor id='Pg141'/>to be done. I suppose we shall also lose the services of that
+boy Tom?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think so,</q> Will laughed; <q>I should be quite lost without
+so faithful a hand, and indeed, though he still ranks as a boy,
+he is a big powerful fellow, and a match for many an A.B. at
+hauling a rope or pulling an oar.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are right. He is as big round the chest as many of
+the men, and though perhaps not so active, quite as powerful.
+When will you hoist your pendant?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have to get the crew together yet. I am to have small
+drafts from several of the ships, and it may be a few days
+before they can be collected.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning the <name type="ship">Thetis</name> arrived, and the young midshipman
+came on shore an hour later to report himself to Will.
+He looked surprised for a moment at the age of his new commander,
+but gravely reported himself for service. Will was
+pleased with his appearance. He was a merry-faced boy, but
+with a look on his face which indicated pluck and determination.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are surprised at my age, no doubt, Harman,</q> Will
+said, <q>and I cannot be more than a year older than yourself,
+but I have been fortunate enough to be twice mentioned in
+despatches, indeed have had wonderful luck. I feel sure
+that we shall get on well together, and I hope both do well.
+We are to act as police on the coast of Cuba; it swarms with
+pirates, and it will be hard if we don’t fall in with some of
+them. You will, of course, keep one watch, and the boatswain,
+who is a thoroughly good man, will take the other. I
+need hardly say that we shall have no nonsense about commanding
+officer. Except when on duty, I hope we shall be
+<pb n='142'/><anchor id='Pg142'/>good chums, which means, of course, that when an enemy
+is in sight or the weather is dirty I must be in absolute
+command.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, sir!</q> Harman said. <q>These are good terms,
+and I promise to obey your commands as readily as if you
+were old enough to be my father.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is good. Now I have dinner ordered and I hope
+you will share it with me. We can then talk over matters
+comfortably.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before dinner was over, the lad was more than satisfied with
+his new chief, and felt sure that at any rate the cruise would
+be a pleasant one. Just as they had finished, Dimchurch and
+Tom came in to see Will. On finding that he was engaged
+they would have withdrawn, but Will called them in. <q>Sit
+down and join Mr. Harman and myself in a chat. This,
+Harman, is Bob Dimchurch, who is going to be our boatswain,
+and Tom Stevens, whom I have known since we were
+five years old, and although I have gone over his head we are
+as good friends as ever. Dimchurch took me under his wing
+when I first joined, and since then has fought by my side on
+several occasions.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We came to wish you success in your new command, sir,</q>
+Dimchurch said, <q>and should not have intruded had we known
+that you were not alone.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is no intrusion at all, Dimchurch. There is no man
+whose congratulations can be more pleasing to me. Have you
+seen the cutter?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir. Tom and I noticed what a smart, likely craft
+she was when we came in and dropped anchor. I little
+thought that it was you who had command of her, but I have
+<pb n='143'/><anchor id='Pg143'/>no fear but that you will do her full justice. I could hardly
+believe my ears when I was told this afternoon, and Tom was
+ready to jump out of his clothes with joy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is wonderfully good fortune, Dimchurch; I can hardly
+believe it myself yet.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am sure you deserve it, sir. It was you who recaptured
+that prize in the Mediterranean; it was you who saved the
+first lieutenant’s life; and it was you who suggested a plan by
+which we accounted for those three pirates. If that didn’t
+deserve promotion, it is hard to say what would.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I owe no small portion of it, Dimchurch, to the fact that
+I was able to take an observation so soon after I had joined,
+and that was due to the kindness of my good friend Miss
+Warden.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, that goes for something, no doubt, but there is a
+good deal more than that in it.</q> After some further talk both
+of the past and the future, Dimchurch sprang to his feet,
+saying: <q>Well, sir, I wish you success. But it is time we
+were off. I am told we are to remove our duds on board the
+new craft to-morrow.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, we are going to start manning her at once; I shall
+be on board with Mr. Harman directly after breakfast. I
+have not put foot upon her yet, and am most anxious to do
+so.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The craft fully answered Will’s expectations. Her after-accommodation
+was exceedingly good; the cabin was handsomely
+fitted, and there were two state-rooms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We shall be in clover here, Harman,</q> he said; <q>no one
+could wish for a better command. I must set to work to get
+stores shipped at once. How many of the crew are on board?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='144'/><anchor id='Pg144'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Twenty-three, sir, and I believe we shall have our full
+complement before night.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they spoke a boat laden with provisions came alongside,
+and all hands were at once engaged transferring her load to
+the cutter. In the course of the forenoon the remainder of the
+men came on board in twos and threes. After dinner Will
+called the crew together and read out his commission. Then
+he made his maiden speech.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My lads,</q> he said, <q>I wish this to be a comfortable ship,
+and I will do my best to make it so. I shall expect the ready
+obedience of all; and you may be assured that if possible I
+will put you in the way of gaining prize-money. There are
+plenty of prizes to be taken, and I hope confidently that many
+of them will fall to our share.</q> The men gave three cheers,
+and Will added: <q>I will order an extra supply of grog to be
+served out this evening.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the following day <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> dipped her ensign to the
+admiral and set off on her voyage. Will was well pleased
+with the smartness the crew displayed in getting under
+weigh, and more than satisfied with the pace at which she
+moved through the water. For a month they cruised off the
+coast of Cuba, during which time they picked up eight small
+prizes. These were for the most part rowing-galleys carrying
+one large lateen sail. None of them were sufficiently strong to
+show fight; they were not intended to attack merchantmen, but
+preyed upon native craft, and were manned by from ten to
+twenty desperadoes. Most of them, when overhauled, pretended
+to be peaceful fishermen or traders, but a search always
+brought to light concealed arms, and in some cases captured
+goods. The boats were burned, and their crews, mostly
+<pb n='145'/><anchor id='Pg145'/>mulattoes, with a sprinkling of negroes—rascals whose countenances
+were sufficiently villainous to justify their being
+hanged without trial,—were put ashore; for the admiral had
+given instructions to Will not to burden himself with prisoners,
+who would have to be closely guarded, and would
+therefore weaken his crew, and, if brought to Port Royal,
+would take up prison accommodation.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last one day a schooner rather bigger than themselves
+was sighted. Her appearance was rakish, and there was little
+doubt as to her character. All sail was at once crowded on
+<name type="ship">L’Agile</name>. The schooner was nearly as fast as she was, and at
+the end of a six hours’ chase she was still two miles ahead.
+Suddenly she headed for the shore and disappeared among
+the trees. <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> proceeded on her course until opposite the
+mouth of the inlet which the pirate had entered. It was
+getting dark, and Will decided to wait until morning, and
+then to send a boat in to reconnoitre.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have not forgotten,</q> he said to Harman, <q>the way in
+which those two French frigates I have told you of ran into a
+trap, and I don’t mean to be caught so if I can help it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<name type="ship">L’Agile</name> remained hove to during the night, and in the
+morning lowered a boat, with four hands, commanded by
+Dimchurch, who was ordered to row in until he obtained a
+fair view of the enemy, and observe as far as possible what
+preparation had been made for defence. He was absent for
+half an hour, and then returned, saying that the schooner was
+lying anchored with her sails stowed at the far end of the
+inlet, which was about half a mile long and nearly as wide,
+with her broadside bearing on the entrance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>If it is as large as that,</q> Will said, <q>there will be plenty
+<pb n='146'/><anchor id='Pg146'/>of room for us to manœuvre. Did you make out what number
+of guns she carried?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, she mounted four guns on each side; I should say
+they were for the most part ten-pounders.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think we can reckon upon taking her. Our guns are of
+heavier metal than hers, and the long-tom will make up for our
+deficiency in numbers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<name type="ship">L’Agile</name> was put under as easy sail as would suffice to give
+her manœuvring powers, and then headed for the mouth of
+the inlet. She was half-way through when suddenly two
+hidden batteries, each mounting three guns, opened upon her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Drop the anchor at once,</q> Will shouted; <q>we will finish
+with these gentlemen before we go farther.</q> The schooner at
+the same time opened fire, but at half a mile range her guns
+did not inflict much damage upon the cutter. Lying between
+the two batteries she engaged them both, her broadside guns
+firing with grape, while the long-tom sent a shot into each
+alternately. In a quarter of an hour their fire was silenced,
+three of the guns were dismounted, and the men who had been
+working them fled precipitately.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Take a boat and spike the remaining guns, Dimchurch,</q>
+Will said; <q>I don’t want any more bother with them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a few minutes Dimchurch returned to the cutter, having
+accomplished his mission. The anchor was then got up again,
+and she proceeded to attack the schooner. <name type="ship">L’Agile’s</name> casualties
+had been trifling; only one had been killed and three wounded,
+all of them slightly. As she sailed up the inlet she replied
+with her pivot-gun to the fire of the enemy. At every shot
+the splinters were seen to fly from the schooner’s side, much
+to the discomfiture of the pirate gunners, whose aim became
+<pb n='147'/><anchor id='Pg147'/>so wild that scarcely a shot struck <name type="ship">L’Agile</name>. When within a
+hundred yards of the schooner the helm was put down, and
+the cutter swept round and opened fire with her two broadside
+guns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The shots had scarcely rung out when Harman touched
+Will on the shoulder. <q>Look there, sir,</q> he said. Will
+turned and saw a vessel emerging from a side channel, which
+was so closed in with trees that it had been unperceived by
+anybody aboard the cutter. Her aim was evidently to get
+between them and the sea. She was a cutter of about the
+same size as <name type="ship">L’Agile</name>, but carried six ten-pounders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The schooner has enticed us in here,</q> Will said, <q>there is no
+doubt about that, and now there is nothing to do but to fight it
+out. Take her head round,</q> he said, <q>we will settle it with the
+cutter first. The schooner cannot come to her assistance for
+some minutes as she has all her sails furled.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly he ranged up to the new-comer, and a furious
+contest ensued. He engaged her with two broadside guns
+and the long-tom, and at the same time kept his other two
+guns playing upon the schooner, the crew of which were busy
+getting up sail. The long-tom was served by Dimchurch himself,
+and every shot went crashing through the side of the pirate
+cutter, the fire of the two broadside guns being almost equally
+effective.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Keep it up, lads,</q> Will shouted; <q>we shall finish with her
+before the other can come up.</q> As he spoke a shot from the
+long-tom struck the cutter’s mainmast, which tottered for a
+moment and then fell over her side towards <name type="ship">L’Agile</name>, and the
+sails and hamper entirely prevented the crew from working
+her guns. For another five minutes the fire was kept up;
+<pb n='148'/><anchor id='Pg148'/>then the crew were seen to be leaping overboard, and presently
+a man stood up and shouted that she surrendered. The
+schooner was now coming up fast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Don’t let her escape,</q> Will shouted; <q>she has had enough
+of it, and is trying to get away. Run her aboard!</q> In a
+minute the two vessels crashed together, and headed by Will,
+Harman, and Dimchurch, <name type="ship">L’Agile’s</name> crew sprang on board the
+schooner.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The pirate crew were evidently discouraged by the fate of
+their consort and by the complete failure of their plan to
+capture <name type="ship">L’Agile</name>. The captain, a gigantic mulatto, fought
+desperately, as did two or three of his principal men. One of
+them charged at Will while he was engaged with another,
+and would have killed him had not Tom Stevens sprung forward
+and caught the blow on his own cutlass. The sword
+flew from the man’s hand, and Tom at once cut him down.
+Dimchurch engaged in a single-handed contest with the great
+mulatto captain. Strong as the sailor was he could with
+difficulty parry the ruffian’s blows, but skill made up for inequality
+of strength, and after a few exchanges he laid the
+man low with a clever thrust. The fall of their leader completed
+the discomfiture of the pirates, most of whom at once
+sprang overboard and made for the shore, those who remained
+being cut down by the sailors.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When at last they were masters of the ship the crew gave
+three lusty cheers. But Will did not permit them to waste
+precious time in rejoicing. He knew that, though they had
+accomplished so much, there was still a great deal to be done,
+for the prizes might even yet be recaptured before they got
+them out to sea. Without a moment’s delay, therefore, he
+<pb n='149'/><anchor id='Pg149'/>sent a boat to take possession of the cutter. The sail and
+wreckage were cleared away, and the boat proceeded to tow
+her out of the inlet. In the meantime a warp was taken
+from <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> to the schooner, the sails of the latter were
+lowered, and Will sailed proudly out with his second prize in
+tow. Once fairly at sea the crew began to repair damages.
+Five men in all had been killed and eleven were wounded.
+Several of the latter, however, were able to lend a hand. The
+shot-holes in <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> were first patched with pieces of plank,
+then covered with canvas, and afterwards given a coat of paint.
+Then the schooner was taken in hand, and when she was got
+into something like ship-shape order her sails were hoisted
+again, and ten men under Harman placed on board to work
+her. The cutter was taken in tow, only three men being left
+on board to steer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was late in the afternoon before all the repairs were completed.
+Before sailing, a rough examination was made of the
+holds of the two vessels, and to the great satisfaction of
+<name type="ship">L’Agile’s</name> crew both were found to contain a considerable
+amount of booty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is probable that there is a storehouse somewhere,</q> Will
+said; <q>but as we have under thirty available men it would
+be madness to try to land, for certainly two-thirds of the
+scoundrels escaped by swimming, and as each craft must have
+carried nearly a hundred men we should have been altogether
+overmatched. Well, they had certainly a right to count upon
+success; their arrangements were exceedingly good. No
+doubt they expected us to leave the batteries alone, and from
+the position in which they were placed they could have
+peppered us hotly while we were engaged with the schooner;
+<pb n='150'/><anchor id='Pg150'/>in which case they would probably have had an easy victory.
+It was a cleverly-laid trap and ought to have succeeded.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And it would, sir,</q> Dimchurch said, <q>if you had not turned
+from the schooner and settled with the cutter before the
+other could come to her assistance.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The credit is largely due to you,</q> Will said; <q>that shot
+of yours that took the mast out was the turning-point of
+the fight. It completely crippled her, and as it luckily fell
+towards us it altogether prevented them from returning our
+fire.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Very proud were Will and his crew when they sailed into
+Port Royal with their two prizes. Will at once rowed to the
+flagship, where he received a very hearty greeting. <q>You
+have not come empty-handed, I see, Mr. Gilmore,</q> the admiral
+said; <q>you were lucky indeed to take two ships of your own
+size one after the <corr sic="no quote">other.</corr></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We took them at the same time, sir,</q> Will said, <q>as you
+will see by my report.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The admiral gave a look of surprise and opened the document.
+First he ran his eye over it, then he read it more
+attentively. When he had finished he said: <q>You have
+fought a most gallant action, Mr. Gilmore, a most gallant
+action. It was indeed long odds you had against you, two
+vessels each considerably over your own size and manned by
+far heavier crews, besides the two batteries. It was an excellent
+idea to leave the vessel with which you were first engaged and
+turn upon the second one. If you had tried to fight them
+both at once you would almost certainly have been overcome,
+and you succeeded because you were cool enough to grasp the
+fact that the schooner at anchor and with her sails down
+<pb n='151'/><anchor id='Pg151'/>would not be able to come to her friend’s assistance for some
+minutes, and acted so promptly on your conclusions. The
+oldest officer in the service could not have done better. I
+congratulate you very heartily on your conduct. What are
+the contents of the cargoes of the prizes?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I cannot say, sir. With three vessels on my hands I had
+no time to examine them, but they certainly contain a number
+of bales of various sorts. I opened one which contained
+British goods.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then no doubt they are the pick of the cargoes they
+captured,</q> the admiral said; <q>I will go off with you myself
+and ascertain. I have nothing else to do this afternoon, and
+it will be a matter of interest to me as well as to you. You
+may as well let your own gig row back and I will take mine.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly the gig was sent back to <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> with orders
+for two boats to be lowered and twenty of the men to be
+ready to go to the two prizes. As soon as the admiral came on
+board the hatchways were opened, and the men brought up a
+number of the bales. These were found to contain fine cloths,
+material for women’s dresses, china, ironmongery, carpets, and
+other goods of British manufacture. The other vessel contained
+sugar, coffee, ginger, spices, and other products of the
+islands. <q>That is enough,</q> said the admiral; <q>I don’t think
+we shall be far wrong if we put down the value of those two
+cargoes at £10,000. The two vessels will sell for about £1000
+apiece, so that the prize-money will be altogether about
+£12,000, and even after putting aside my portion you will
+all share to a handsome amount in the proceeds. That is the
+advantage of not belonging to a squadron. In that case your
+share would not be worth anything like what it will now
+<pb n='152'/><anchor id='Pg152'/>be. By the way, since you have been absent I have received
+the account of the prize-money earned by the <name type="ship">Furious</name> in the
+Mediterranean and by the capture of the French frigates. It
+amounts in all to £35,000. Of course as a midshipman your
+share will not be very large; probably, indeed, it will not
+exceed £250, so, you see, pirate-hunting in the West Indies,
+in command even of a small craft, pays enormously better than
+being a midshipman on board a frigate.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It does indeed, sir, though £250 would be a fortune to a
+midshipman.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, if our calculations as to the value of the cargoes and
+ships are correct, you will get more than ten times that
+amount now. And as there are only the flag and one other
+officer to share with you, the men’s portion will be something
+like £100 apiece. A few more captures like this,</q> and he
+laughed, <q>and you will become a rich man.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then rowed away to his own ship, and Will returned to
+<name type="ship">L’Agile</name> and gladdened the hearts of Harman and the crew
+with the news of the value of their captures. <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> remained
+another week in harbour, during which time all signs
+of the recent conflict were removed, and he received a draft
+of men sufficient to bring his crew up to its former level.
+Then she again set sail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had cruised for about a fortnight when one morning,
+just as Will was getting up, Dimchurch ran down and reported
+that they had sighted two sails suspiciously near each other.
+<q>One,</q> he said, <q>looks to me a full-rigged ship, and the other
+a large schooner.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will have a look at them,</q> Will said, and, putting on his
+clothes, he ran on deck.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='153'/><anchor id='Pg153'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, it certainly looks suspicious,</q> he said, when he had
+examined them through his telescope; <q>we will head towards
+them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She looks to me a very large schooner, sir,</q> said Dimchurch.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, she is larger than these pirates generally are, but
+there is very little doubt as to her character. How far are
+they off, do you think?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ten miles, sir, I should say; but we have got the land-breeze
+while they are becalmed. By the look of the water
+I should say we should carry the wind with us until we are
+pretty close to them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Every sail the cutter could carry was hoisted, and she
+approached the two vessels rapidly. They were some four
+miles from them when the sails of the schooner filled and she
+began to move through the water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It will be a long chase now,</q> Will said; <q>but the cutter
+has light wings, so we have a good chance of overhauling
+her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The sails of the ship are all anyhow, sir,</q> Harman said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So they are, Mr. Harman; foul play has been going on
+there, I have not the least doubt. The fact that the crew
+are not making any effort to haul in her sheets and come to
+meet us is in itself a proof of it. I think it is our duty to
+board her and see what has taken place. Even if we allow
+the schooner to escape we shall light upon her again some
+day, I have no doubt.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is very low in the water,</q> he said, after examining
+the merchantman carefully through his telescope, <q>and either
+her cargo is of no value to the pirates, and they have allowed
+it to remain in her, or they have scuttled her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='154'/><anchor id='Pg154'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am afraid it is that, sir,</q> Dimchurch said, <q>for she is
+certainly lower in the water than when I first saw her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are right, Dimchurch, the scoundrels have scuttled
+her. Please God we shall get to her before she founders!
+Oh for a stronger wind! Do you think we could row there
+quicker than we sail?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir. The gig might go as fast as the cutter, but the
+other boat would not be able to keep pace with her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, make all preparations for lowering. Heaven only
+knows what tragedy may have taken place there.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After all had been got ready, every eye on board the cutter
+was fixed on the vessel. There was no doubt now that she was
+getting deeper in the water every minute. When they got
+within a quarter of a mile of the ship she was so low that
+it was evident she could not float many minutes longer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>To the boats, men,</q> Will cried, <q>row for your lives.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A moment later three boats started at full speed. The
+gig, in which Dimchurch and Tom were both rowing, was
+first to search the sinking ship. Will leapt on board at once,
+and as he did so he gave an exclamation of horror, for the
+deck was strewn with dead bodies. Without stopping to look
+about him he ran aft to the companion and went down to the
+cabin, which was already a foot deep in water. There he
+found some fifteen men and women sitting securely bound
+on the sofas. Will drew his dirk, and running along cut
+their thongs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Up on deck for your lives,</q> he cried, <q>and get into the
+boats alongside; she will not float three minutes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the farther end of the cabin a young girl was kneeling
+by the side of a stout old lady, who had evidently fainted.
+</p>
+<pb n='155'/><anchor id='Pg155'/>
+<p>
+<q>Come,</q> Will said, going up to her, <q>it is a matter of life
+and death; we shall have the water coming down the companion
+in a minute or two.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can’t leave her,</q> the girl cried.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will attempted to lift the old lady, but she was far too
+heavy for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I cannot save her,</q> he said, and raised a shout for Dimchurch.
+It was unanswered. <q>There,</q> he said, <q>the water
+is coming down; she will sink in a minute. I cannot save
+her—indeed she is as good as dead already—but I can save
+you,</q> and snatching the girl up he ran to the foot of the
+companion. The water was already pouring down, but he
+struggled up against it, and managed to reach the deck; but
+before he could cross to the side the vessel gave a sudden
+lurch and went down. He was carried under with the suck,
+but by desperate efforts he gained the surface just as his
+breath was spent. For a moment or two he was unable to
+speak, but he was none the less ready to act. Looking round he
+saw a hen-coop floating near, and, swimming to it, he clung
+to it with one arm while he held the girl’s head above water
+with the other. Then, when he had recovered his breath, he
+shouted <q>Dimchurch!</q> Fortunately the gig was not far
+away, and his hail was at once answered, and a moment later
+the boat was alongside the hen-coop.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: THE RESCUE]</p>
+</then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill04"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill04.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend="font-size: small">THE RESCUE</hi></head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: THE RESCUE</figDesc></figure></p>
+</else></pgIf>
+<p>
+<q>Take this young lady, Dimchurch, and lay her in the
+stern-sheets. She can’t be dead, for she was sensible when
+the ship went down, and we were not under water a minute.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the girl had been laid down, Will was helped in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Did we save them all?</q> he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir; at least I think so. They all came running on
+<pb n='156'/><anchor id='Pg156'/>deck and jumped straight into the boats. I was busy helping
+them, and did not notice that you were missing. As the last
+seemed to have come up, I called to the other boats to make
+off, for I saw that she could only float a minute longer, and
+as it was we had only just got clear when she went down.
+Indeed we had a narrow escape of it, and the men had to
+row. I was standing up to look for you, and had just discovered
+that you were not in any of the boats, when I heard
+you call. It gave me a bad turn, as you may guess, sir, and
+glad I was when I saw you were holding on to that hen-coop.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, let us try and bring this young lady round,</q> Will
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They turned her over first upon her face and let the water
+run out of her mouth. Then they laid her flat on her back
+with a jersey under her head, and rubbed her hands and feet
+and pressed gently at times on her chest. After five minutes
+of this treatment the girl heaved a sigh, and shortly afterwards
+opened her eyes and looked round in bewilderment at
+the faces of the men. Then suddenly she realized where she
+was and remembered what had happened.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Oh, it was dreadful!</q> she murmured. <q>Poor Miss Morrison
+was lost, was she not?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>If that was the name of the lady you were kneeling
+by I regret to say that she was. It was impossible to save
+her; for though I tried my best I could not lift her. As you
+call her Miss Morrison I presume she is not a close relation.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, she had been my governess since I was a child, and
+has been a mother to me. Oh, to think that she is dead
+while I am saved!</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='157'/><anchor id='Pg157'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>You must remember that it might have been worse,</q> Will
+said; <q>you certainly cannot require a governess many more
+years, and will find others on whom to bestow your affection.
+How old are you?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am fourteen,</q> the girl said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, here is my ship, and we will all do our best to
+make you comfortable.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Your ship!</q> the girl said in surprise; <q>do you mean to
+say that you are in command of her? You do not look more
+than a boy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am not much more than a boy,</q> he said with a smile,
+<q>but for all that I am the commander of this vessel, and this
+young gentleman is my second in command.</q>
+</p>
+</div><div n="8">
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER VIII</head>
+
+<head type="sub">A SPLENDID HAUL</head>
+
+<p>
+When all were got on board, and the boats hoisted to the
+davits, Will conducted the ladies down to the cabin,
+which he handed over to them. Then, having ordered the
+cook to prepare some hot soup for the girl he had rescued, he
+came on deck again and questioned the male passengers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We were all dressing for dinner,</q> one said, <q rend="post: none">when we
+heard a shouting on deck. Almost immediately there was
+a great bump, which knocked most of us off our feet, and we
+thought that we had been run into, but directly afterwards
+we heard a great tumult going on above us, and we guessed
+that the ship had been attacked by pirates. The clashing of
+<pb n='158'/><anchor id='Pg158'/>swords and the falling of bodies went on for two or three
+minutes, and then there was a loud savage yell that told us
+that the pirates had taken the ship. Next moment the
+ruffians rushed down upon us, took away any valuables we
+had about our persons, and then tied us up and threw us on
+the sofas. After scouring all the cabins they left us, and by
+the noise that followed we guessed that they had removed
+the hatches and were getting up the cargo.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This continued all night, and some time this morning we
+heard the brutes going down to their boats, and thanked God
+that they had spared our lives. Presently all became still;
+but after a time we saw the water rising on the floor, and the
+dreadful thought struck us that they had scuttled the ship
+and left us to perish. One of us managed, in spite of his
+bonds, to make his way up the companion and endeavour to
+open the door. He found, however, to his horror that it was
+fastened outside. Time after time he flung himself against
+it, but it would not yield. The water rose higher and higher,
+and we were waiting for the end when, to our delight, we
+heard a bump as of a boat coming alongside the vessel, then
+the sound of someone running along the deck and of the
+companion door being hurriedly opened. You know the rest.
+The ship was the <name type="ship">Northumberland</name> of Bristol.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank God we arrived in time!</q> Will said. <q>It was an
+affair of seconds. If we had been two minutes later you
+would all have been drowned.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What has become of that terrible pirate?</q> asked one of
+the passengers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There he is, six miles away. I hope some day to avenge
+the murder of your captain and crew.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='159'/><anchor id='Pg159'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>But his ship looks a good deal larger than yours.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes,</q> Will said, <q>but we don’t take much account of size.
+We captured two pirates in one fight, both of them bigger
+than ourselves.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And your ship looks such a small thing, too, in comparison
+with our vessel!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, your ship could pretty well take her up and carry
+her. Weight doesn’t go for much in fighting.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And are you really her commander?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have that honour. I am a midshipman, and before I
+got command of <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> I was on board His Majesty’s ships
+<name type="ship">Furious</name> and <name type="ship">Hawke</name>. I had a great deal of luck in several
+fights we came through, and as a result was entrusted by the
+admiral with the command of this vessel. As you say, she is
+small, but her guns are heavy for her size, and are more than
+a match for most of those carried by the pirates.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, in the name of myself and all my fellow-passengers
+I offer you my sincerest thanks for the manner in
+which you saved our lives. How close a shave it was is shown
+by the fact that you were yourself unable to get off the ship
+in time and were carried down with her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It was all in the way of business,</q> Will laughed. <q>We
+were after the pirates, and when we saw the state of your
+vessel we reluctantly gave up the chase in order to see if we
+could be of any assistance. I expect the schooner wouldn’t
+have run away from us had she not been so full of the cargo
+she got from your ship. They could not have had time to
+stow it all below, and it would have hampered them in working
+their guns, besides probably affecting their speed. I shall
+know her again when I see her, and then will try if these
+<pb n='160'/><anchor id='Pg160'/>scoundrels are as good at fighting as they are at cold-blooded
+murder.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Where are you going now, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am cruising at present, and am master of my own movements,
+so if you will let me know where you are bound for, I
+will try to set as many of you down at your destination as
+I can.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Most of us are bound for Jamaica, sir, and the others will
+be able to find their way to their respective islands from there.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, then, I will head for Jamaica at once. In the
+meantime my cabin and that of my second in command are
+at the service of the ladies. There are the sofas, too, in the
+saloon, and if these are not enough I will get some hammocks
+slung. I shall myself sleep on deck, and those of you who
+prefer it can do the same; for the others I will have hammocks
+slung in the hold.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Most of the ladies soon came up, but the girl Will had
+saved did not appear till the next morning. She was very
+pretty, and likely to be more so. If he had allowed her she
+would have overwhelmed him with thanks, but he made light
+of the whole affair. He learned from the other passengers
+that she was the daughter of one of the richest merchants in
+Jamaica. At the death of her mother, when she was five
+years old, she was sent home to England in charge of the
+governess who had been drowned in the <name type="ship">Northumberland</name>, and
+when this catastrophe occurred had been on her way to rejoin
+her father. Although saddened by the death of her old friend,
+she soon showed signs of a disposition naturally bright and
+cheerful. She bantered Will about his command, and professed
+to regard <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> as a toy ship, expressing great
+<pb n='161'/><anchor id='Pg161'/>wonder that it was not manned by boy A.B.’s as well as
+boy officers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It must surely seem very ridiculous to you,</q> she said, <q>to
+be giving orders to men old enough to be your father.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can quite understand that it seems so to you,</q> he said,
+<q>for it does to me sometimes; but custom is everything, and
+I don’t suppose the men give the matter a thought. At any
+rate they are as ready to follow me as they are the oldest
+veteran in the service.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will carried all the sail he could set, as he was anxious to
+get the craft free from passengers and to be off in search of
+the schooner that had escaped him. He was again loaded
+with thanks by the passengers when they landed, and after
+seeing them off he went and made his report to the admiral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How is this, Mr. Gilmore?</q> the admiral said as he entered
+the cabin; <q>no prizes this time? And who are all those people
+I saw landing just now?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will handed in his report; but, as usual, the admiral insisted
+on hearing all details.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But your uniform looks shrunk, Mr. Gilmore,</q> he said
+when Will had finished. <q>You said nothing about being in
+the water!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will was then obliged to relate how he had rescued the girl
+from the cabin.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well done again, young sir! it is a deed to be as proud
+of as the capturing of those two pirates. Well done, indeed!
+Now I suppose you want to be off again?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, I should like to sail as soon as possible; in the first
+place, because I am most anxious to fall in with that schooner
+and bring the captain and crew in here to be hanged.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='162'/><anchor id='Pg162'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a very laudable ambition. And why in the second
+place?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Because I want to get off before a lot of people come to
+thank me for saving their relatives, and so on, sir. If I get
+away at once, then I may hope that before I come back again
+the whole thing will be forgotten.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It oughtn’t to be, for you acted very wisely and gallantly.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, I don’t want a lot of thanks for only doing what
+was my duty.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very good, Mr. Gilmore, I understand your feelings, but
+I quite expect that when you do return you will have to go
+through the ordeal of being presented with a piece of plate,
+and probably after that you will have to attend a complimentary
+ball. Now, you can go back to your ship at once.
+Here is a letter to the chief of the store department instructing
+him to furnish you with any stores you may want without
+waiting for my signature.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you very much, sir! I hope, when I return, that I
+shall bring that pirate in tow. Can I have three months from
+the present time?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly, and I hope you will be able to make good use
+of it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Returning to his ship, Will at once made out the list of the
+stores he required, and sent Harman on shore with it, telling
+him to take two boats and bring everything back with him.
+At five o’clock in the afternoon the two boats returned, carrying
+all the stores required. The water-tanks had already been
+filled up, and a quarter of an hour later the cutter was under
+sail and leaving the harbour.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will, of course, had nothing whatever to guide him in his
+<pb n='163'/><anchor id='Pg163'/>search for the schooner beyond the fact that she was heading
+west at the time when he last saw her. At that time they
+were to the south of Porto Rico, so he concluded that she was
+making for Cuba. Every day, therefore, he cruised along the
+coast of that island, sometimes sending boats ashore to examine
+inlets, at other times running right out to sea in the hope that
+the pirate, whose spies he had no doubt were watching his
+movements, might suppose he had given up the search and was
+sailing away. Nevertheless, he could not be certain that she
+would endeavour to avoid him should she catch sight of him,
+for with a glass the pirate captain could have made out the
+number of guns <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> carried, and would doubtless feel
+confident in his own superiority, as he would not be able to
+discover the weight of the guns. Will felt that if the pirate
+should fight, his best policy would be at first to make a pretence
+of running, in the hope that in a long chase he might
+manage to knock away some of the schooner’s spars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day he saw the boats, which had gone up a deep inlet,
+coming back at full speed<corr sic=".+dq">.</corr>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We saw a schooner up there,</q> Harman reported; <q>I think
+she is the one we are in search of. When we sighted her she
+was getting up sail.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That will just suit me. We will run out to sea at once;
+that will make him believe we are afraid of him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Scarcely had the boats been got on board, and the cutter’s
+head turned offshore, when the schooner was seen issuing
+from the inlet. Will ordered every sail to be crowded on,
+and had the satisfaction of seeing the schooner following his
+example. He then set the whole of the crew to shift the long-tom
+from the bow to the stern. Its muzzle was just high
+<pb n='164'/><anchor id='Pg164'/>enough to project above the taffrail, and in order to hide it
+better he had hammocks and other material piled on each side
+of it so as to form a breastwork three feet high.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They will think,</q> he said, <q>that we have put this up as a
+protection against shot from his bow-chasers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After watching the schooner for a quarter of an hour, Will
+said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t think she gains upon us at all; lower a sail over
+the bow to deaden her way. A small topsail will do; I only
+want to check her half a knot an hour.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was an hour before the schooner yawed and fired her
+bow-guns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is good,</q> Will said to Dimchurch; <q>it shows that
+she doesn’t carry a long-tom. I thought she didn’t, but they
+might have hidden it, as we have done. Don’t answer them
+yet; I don’t want to fire till we get within half a mile of her;
+then they shall have it as hot as they like.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The schooner continued to gain slowly, occasionally firing
+her bow-chasers. When she had come up to within a mile of
+<name type="ship">L’Agile</name> the cutter was yawed and two broadside guns fired;
+they were purposely aimed somewhat wide, as Will was
+anxious that the pirates should not suspect the weight of
+his metal, and did not wish, by inflicting some small injury,
+to deter her from continuing the chase. The schooner evidently
+depended upon the vastly superior strength of her
+crew to carry the cutter by boarding, and so abstained from
+attempting to injure her, as the less damage she suffered the
+better value she would be as a prize.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They are not more than half a mile off now, I think, sir,</q>
+Dimchurch said at last.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='165'/><anchor id='Pg165'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well then, we will let her have it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The gun was already loaded, so Dimchurch took a steady
+aim and applied the match. All leapt upon the bulwarks to
+see the effect of the shot, and a cheer broke from the crew as
+it struck the schooner on the bow, about four feet above the
+water. In return the schooner yawed so as to bring her whole
+broadside to bear on the cutter, and six tongues of flame
+flashed from her side. At the same moment <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> swung
+round and fired her two starboard guns. Both ships immediately
+resumed their former positions, and as they did so
+Dimchurch fired again, his shot scattering a shower of splinters
+from almost the same spot as the other had struck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You must elevate your gun a little more, Dimchurch,</q>
+said Will, <q>and bring a mast about their ears. Get that sail
+on board!</q> he shouted; <q>I don’t want the schooner to get
+any nearer.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The order was executed, and the difference in the speed of
+the cutter was at once manifest. Again and again Dimchurch
+fired. Several of the shot went through the schooner’s foresail,
+but as yet her masts were untouched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>A little more to the right, Dimchurch.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This time the sailor was longer than usual in taking aim,
+but when he fired the schooner’s foremast was seen to topple
+over, and her head flew up into the wind, thus presenting her
+stern to the cutter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is a lame duck now,</q> Will said, <q>but we may as well
+take her mainmast out of her too. Fire away, and take as
+good aim as you did last time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Ten more shots were fired, and with the last the pirate’s
+mainmast went over the side.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='166'/><anchor id='Pg166'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well done, Dimchurch! Now we have her at our mercy.
+We will sail backwards and forwards under her stern and
+rake her with grape. I don’t want to injure her more than
+is necessary, but I do want to kill as many of the crew as
+possible; it is better for them to die that way than to be
+taken to Jamaica to be hanged.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For an hour the cutter kept at work crossing and recrossing
+her antagonist’s stern, and each time she poured in a volley
+from two broadside guns and the long-tom. The stern of
+the schooner was knocked almost to pieces, and the grape-shot
+carried death along her decks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am only afraid that they will blow her up,</q> Will said;
+<q>but probably, as they have not done so already, her captain
+and most of her officers are killed, for it would require a
+desperado to undertake that job.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At last the black flag was hoisted on a spar at the stern,
+and then lowered again. When they saw this the crew of
+<name type="ship">L’Agile</name> stopped firing, and sent up cheer after cheer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now we must be careful, sir,</q> Dimchurch said; <q>those
+scoundrels are quite capable of pretending to surrender, and
+then, when we board her, blowing their ship and us into the
+air.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are right, Dimchurch. They might very well do
+that, for they must know well enough that they can expect
+no mercy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Bringing the cutter to within a hundred yards of the
+schooner, Will shouted:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Have you a boat that can swim?</q> and receiving a reply in
+the negative, shouted back: <q>Very well, then, I will drop one
+to you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='167'/><anchor id='Pg167'/>
+
+<p>
+He then placed the cutter exactly to windward of the
+schooner, and, lowering one of the boats, to which a rope was
+attached, let it drift down to the prize.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now,</q> he shouted, <q>fasten a hawser to that boat; the
+largest you have.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was evidently some discussion among the few men
+gathered on the deck of the pirate, and, seeing that they hesitated,
+Will shouted:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do as you are ordered, or I will open fire again.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This decided the pirates, and in a short time the end of a
+hawser was tied to one of the thwarts of the boat. The boat
+was then hauled back to <name type="ship">L’Agile</name>, and when the cable was got
+on board it was knotted to their own strongest hawser.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That will keep them a good bit astern,</q> Will said; <q>otherwise,
+if the wind were to drop at night, they might haul their
+own vessel up to us, and carry out their plan of blowing us
+up.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is wise to take every precaution, sir,</q> Harman said;
+<q>but I don’t think any trick of that sort would be likely to
+succeed. You may be sure we should keep too sharp a watch
+on them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+While the hawsers were being spliced, Will shouted to the
+pirates to cut away the wreckage from their ship, and when
+this was done he started with his prize in tow. As soon as
+they were fairly under weigh he hailed the prisoners through
+his speaking-trumpet and questioned them about their casualties.
+They replied that at the beginning of the engagement
+they had had one hundred and twenty men on board. The
+captain had been killed by the first volley of grape, and the
+slaughter among the crew had been terrible, all the officers
+<pb n='168'/><anchor id='Pg168'/>being killed and eighty of the men. The remainder had run
+down into the hold, and remained there until, after a consultation,
+one of them crawled up on deck and hoisted and lowered
+the black flag.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I suppose,</q> Will said, <q>your intention was to blow the
+ship and yourselves and us into the air as soon as we came
+on board.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is just what we did mean,</q> one of them shouted
+savagely; <q>if we could but have paid you out we would not
+have minded what became of ourselves.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is well, indeed, Dimchurch, that you suggested the possibility
+of their doing this to us. But for that we should
+certainly have lost nearly all our number, for, not knowing
+how many of the crew survived, I could not have ventured to
+go on board without pretty nearly every man. It will be a
+lesson to me in future, when I am fighting pirates, to act as if
+they were wild beasts.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, I don’t know that they are altogether to be
+blamed; it is only human nature to pay back a blow for a
+blow, and with savages like these, especially when they know
+that they are bound to be hanged, you could hardly expect
+anything else.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I suppose not, Dimchurch, and certainly for myself I would
+rather be blown up than hanged. I suppose the reason why
+they did not blow up the ship when they found their plan
+had failed was that they clung to life even for a few days.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I expect it is that, sir; besides, you know, each man may
+think that although no doubt the rest will be hanged, he himself
+may get off.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I dare say that has something to do with it,</q> Will
+<pb n='169'/><anchor id='Pg169'/>agreed. <q rend="post: none">I don’t think it likely, however, that any one of
+them will be spared after that affair of the <name type="ship">Northumberland</name>,
+and very probably that was only one of a dozen ships destroyed
+in the same way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, Harman, we will put her head round and sail
+back.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Sail back, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly; I think there is no doubt that that inlet is the
+pirates’ head-quarters, and that they are certain to have storehouses
+there choke-full of plunder. Some of their associates
+will in that case be on shore looking after it, and if their ship
+doesn’t return they will divide the most valuable portion of
+these stores among themselves, and set fire to all the rest.
+We have done extremely well so far, but another big haul
+will make matters all the pleasanter.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But what will you do with the prize?</q> asked Harman.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will cast her off eight or ten miles from the shore; they
+have no boats, and the schooner is a mere log on the water.
+When we see what plunder they have collected I shall be able
+to decide how to act. The cutter can hold a great deal, but if
+we find more than she can carry we must load the schooner
+also.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But what would you do with the pirates in that case, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should try to make them come off in batches, and then
+iron them; but if they would not do that, I should be inclined
+to tow the schooner to within half a mile of the shore, and so
+give all that could swim the chance of getting away. Those
+of them that are unable to do so would probably manage to
+get off on spars or hatchways. They have been richly punished
+already, and I fancy the admiral would be much better pleased
+<pb n='170'/><anchor id='Pg170'/>to see the schooner come in loaded with valuable plunder than
+if she carried only forty scoundrels to be handed over to the
+hangman.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But if we were to let them escape we should have to take
+great care on shore while we were rifling the storehouse.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You may be sure that I should do that, Harman. The
+fellows could certainly take no firearms on shore, and I should
+keep ten men with loaded muskets always on guard, while
+those who are at work would have their firearms handy to
+them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They towed the schooner to within seven or eight miles of
+the shore, and then cast her off and made for the creek from
+which the pirates had come out. As they entered the inlet,
+which was two miles long, they could see no signs of houses,
+so they sailed as far as they could and anchored. Will then
+landed with a party of ten well-armed men, and at once began
+to make a careful examination of the beach. In a short time
+they found a well-beaten path going up through the wood.
+Before following this, however, Will took the precaution to
+have fifteen more men sent ashore, as it was, of course, impossible
+to say how many of a guard had been left at the
+head-quarters. When the second party had landed, all advanced
+cautiously up the path, holding their muskets in
+readiness for instant action. They met, however, with no
+opposition; the pirates were evidently unaware of their presence.
+They had gone but a very short distance when they
+came to a large clearing, in the middle of which they saw
+several large huts and three great storehouses. They went
+on at the double towards them, but they had gone only a
+short distance when they heard a shout and a shot, and saw
+<pb n='171'/><anchor id='Pg171'/>a dozen men and a number of women issue from the backs of
+the huts and make for the wood.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, my lads,</q> shouted Will, <q>break open the doors of
+those storehouses; there is not likely to be much that is of
+value in the huts. You had better take four men, Dimchurch,
+and set fire to them all; of course you can just look in and
+see if there is anything worth taking before you apply a light.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will himself superintended the breaking open of the storehouses.
+When he entered the first he paused in amazement;
+it was filled to the very top with boxes and bales. The other
+two were in a similar condition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is enough to fill the cutter and the prize a dozen
+times,</q> Will said. <q>I expect they trade to some extent with
+the Spaniards, but they evidently had another intention in
+storing these goods. Probably they proposed, when they had
+amassed sufficient, to charter a large ship, fill her up to the
+hatchways, and sail to some American port or some other place
+where questions are not usually asked.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was a safe in the corner of one of the storehouses;
+this they blew open, and when Will examined its contents
+he found that they consisted of the papers and manifests of
+cargoes of no fewer than eleven ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My conjecture was right,</q> he said. <q>They intended, no
+doubt, to keep some large merchantman they had captured,
+fill her with the contents of their prizes, and then with the
+papers and manifests of cargo they could go almost anywhere
+and dispose of their ill-gotten goods.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have no doubt that is so, sir,</q> Dimchurch said; <q>I only
+wonder they did not set about it before.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is quite possible they have done so already,</q> Will said,
+<pb n='172'/><anchor id='Pg172'/><q>but they may have taken prizes quicker than they could
+dispose of them, which would account for this immense accumulation.
+Now, Dimchurch, I will sit down and go through
+those bills of lading and pick out the most valuable goods.
+We will then take these off to begin with, and can leave it
+to the admiral to send a man-of-war or charter some merchantman
+to bring the rest. The schooner should carry between
+two and three hundred tons, and we could manage to cram
+eighty or a hundred into our hold. If we get all that safely
+to Jamaica, we need not grieve much if we find that the rest
+of the goods have been burned before the ships can come to
+fetch them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It took him three hours to go through the bills of lading,
+making a mark against all the most valuable goods. Then
+some of the men were set to sort these out. There was no
+great difficulty about this, as the goods had been very neatly
+stored, those belonging to each ship being separated by narrow
+passages from the rest. The remainder of the men except two
+were meanwhile brought from the cutter. Sentries were then
+placed to watch all the approaches to the storehouses, and
+while ten men got out the bales and boxes, the remaining
+twenty-six carried them down the path. At night half the
+men remained in the storehouses, the other half returning to
+the cutter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before sunset Will went with a small escort to the top of a
+neighbouring hill to see that all was well with the hulk of the
+schooner. With the aid of his telescope he could see her
+plainly, and to his great satisfaction noted that she had made
+but little drift.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning the work was resumed, and was carried
+<pb n='173'/><anchor id='Pg173'/>on all day with only short breaks for meals, and so on the
+following two days. At the end of that time as much had
+been put on board the cutter as she could carry. Ten men
+were then left to guard the stores, and the rest, going on board,
+sailed out to the schooner and towed her in. They did not,
+as was at first intended, stop a mile outside the inlet, but came
+right into it and anchored opposite the path, as the labour of
+continually loading the cutter and then transferring her cargo
+to the hulk would have been very great. The next morning
+a party of twelve men went on board her, and found, as Will
+had expected, that she was entirely deserted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They will be too happy at having made their escape to do
+anything for the next day or two,</q> Will said, <q>so we can go
+on working as usual. Fortunately the fellows who were left
+in the huts were taken so completely by surprise that they
+bolted at once and left their guns behind. If, therefore, they
+are joined by their friends from the schooner, and attack us, they
+will have no firearms with them, for, as the hulk is anchored
+about two hundred yards from shore, it would require a
+marvellously good swimmer to carry his musket and ammunition
+ashore with him. In future, however, we will leave
+twenty men to guard the storehouses at night; there is no
+boat in the inlet by means of which they could attack the
+cutter, and they are not likely to try to do so by swimming.
+At any rate, Harman, I will place you in command of her,
+and shall therefore feel perfectly confident that we shall not
+be taken by surprise.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You can trust me for that, sir; I promise you that I will
+sleep with one eye open, though I don’t think they would be
+likely to attempt such an enterprise. They are much more
+<pb n='174'/><anchor id='Pg174'/>likely to attack you at the stores. I think it would be advisable
+to take twenty-five men with you and leave me with
+fifteen, which would be ample. I should divide them into
+two watches, so that there would always be seven on deck.
+Jefferson, who is an uncommonly sharp fellow, would be in
+charge of one of the watches, and Williams of the other; and
+as I should myself be up and down all night, there would be
+no chance of our being caught napping.</q> Will agreed to this
+arrangement.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The prize was now brought close inshore, the water being
+deep enough to allow of this. It was a great advantage, as
+the goods could be put on board direct, and the work was
+thereby greatly accelerated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Behind a pile of goods another safe was discovered, and this
+was found to contain £8500 in money, nearly a hundred
+watches, and a large amount of ladies’ jewellery. Many
+watches had also been found in the huts before these were
+burned. The bales and boxes contained chiefly spices, silks
+and sateens, shawls, piece-goods, and coffee.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the night of the fourth day after the escape of the
+prisoners one of the sentries perceived a dark mass moving
+from the wood. He at once fired his musket, and in a minute
+Will and Dimchurch, with their five-and-twenty men, were all
+in readiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, my men,</q> Will said, <q>these fellows will attempt to
+rush us. We will divide into three parties and will fire by
+volleys; one party must not fire till they see that all are
+loaded. In that way we shall always have sixteen muskets
+ready for them. I have no fear of the result, and even if they
+close with us our cutlasses will be more than a match for their
+<pb n='175'/><anchor id='Pg175'/>knives. Here they come! Get ready, the first section, and
+don’t fire till I tell you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The enemy, fully sixty strong, came on with fierce cries,
+knowing that the garrison were on guard, although they
+could not see them in the shadow of the storehouses. When
+they got within fifty yards Will gave the order to fire, and
+the first eight muskets flashed out. The second eight fired
+almost immediately after, and the third eight, waiting only
+till the first section had reloaded, followed suit. Nearly every
+shot told, and the shock was so great that it caused the
+advancing enemy to hesitate for a moment. This gave the
+second and third sections time to reload, so that, when the
+pirates again advanced, three more deadly volleys were poured
+into them in quick succession. The effect of these was instantaneous.
+Fully five-and-thirty had been brought to the
+ground by the six volleys; the remainder halted, swayed for a
+moment, then turned and fled at full speed, pursued, however,
+before they reached the wood, by another general discharge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will was well pleased with the tremendously heavy punishment
+he had inflicted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Out of the sixty men who attacked us,</q> he said to Harman
+the next morning, <q>I calculate that forty belonged to
+the schooner. I don’t suppose they were worse than the other
+twenty; but we had ourselves seen some of the crimes they
+had committed. We have accounted for forty in all, so of
+those who escaped from the schooner probably some five- or
+six-and-twenty have been killed. After such a thrashing they
+are not likely to make another attempt.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was right. The work now went on undisturbed, and
+at the end of a fortnight the schooner was laden. All the
+<pb n='176'/><anchor id='Pg176'/>hatches had been closed and made water-tight; and so full
+was she that her deck was only two feet and a half above
+the water, although her guns had been thrown overboard or
+landed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now I think we are all ready to sail,</q> Harman said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ready to sail! We have a fortnight’s hard work before
+us,</q> said Will. <q>You don’t suppose I am going to leave all
+these hogsheads of sugar, puncheons of rum, and bales of goods
+to be burnt or destroyed by those scoundrels.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How can you prevent it?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very easily. There are plenty of materials on the spot to
+form four batteries, one on each side of the storehouses. We
+will drag up eight of the schooner’s guns and mount two on
+each battery; they shall be loaded and crammed to the muzzle
+with grape-shot. The batteries shall be built clear of the
+storehouses and in echelon, so that if one is attacked it can
+be supported by the others. As a garrison I will leave sixteen
+men under Dimchurch.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dimchurch was called up and the matter explained to him,
+and he readily agreed to take charge.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Two men,</q> he said, <q>can be on watch in each battery
+while the others sleep; so there will be no chance of being
+taken by surprise, and you may be quite sure that, no matter
+how strong a mob may come down, they won’t stand the discharge
+of eight cannon loaded as you say. I suppose, sir, you
+mean to form the batteries of bales of cotton. There is a
+whole ship-load of them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is my intention, Dimchurch; I have had it in my
+mind all the time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The whole strength of the crew, with the exception of two
+<pb n='177'/><anchor id='Pg177'/>to watch on board the cutter, now went up to the storehouses,
+and the men, delighted to know that all this booty was not
+to be lost, set to work with great vigour. Will marked out
+the sites for the batteries, and the bales of cotton were rolled
+to them and built up into substantial walls. It took ten days
+of hard labour to do this and haul up the guns.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the work was completed Dimchurch chose sixteen
+of the crew. There was an ample supply of provisions, which
+had been taken out of the huts before they were burnt; so
+it was not necessary to draw upon the stores of the cutter.
+When all was ready the two parties said good-bye, and, with
+a mutual cheer, the cutter’s crew went on board.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is a hazardous business, I admit,</q> Will said, as, having
+got up sail, they moved down the inlet with the schooner in
+tow. <q>Of course I shall be a little uneasy until we can
+return from Jamaica and relieve Dimchurch; but I feel convinced
+that he will be able to hold his own and to give another
+lesson to the pirates if necessary. When they see us
+sail out they will naturally conclude that no great number can
+be left to guard the stores. Still, we may be sure that they
+have kept a watch on our doings from the edge of the forest,
+and that the sight of the guns will inspire a wholesome dread
+in them. I cannot but think that eight discharges of grape
+and langrage will send them to the right-about however strong
+they may be. Besides, we have given the men three muskets
+each, in addition to their own, from those we found on board
+the schooner; so if the enemy press on they will be able
+to give them a warm reception. And then, even if the attack
+is too much for them, they have still a resource, for we have
+left an exit in the rear of each battery by which they can
+<pb n='178'/><anchor id='Pg178'/>retire to the storehouses. I have instructed them to carry
+all their muskets back with them; sixteen men with four
+muskets apiece could make a very sturdy defence. As you
+know, I had the doors repaired and strengthened and loopholes
+cut in the walls. Still, I don’t think they will be needed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How much do you think the prize will be worth?</q> Harman
+asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have really no idea, but I am sure that what we have
+got here and in the schooner must be worth some thousands of
+pounds. What we have left behind must be the contents of
+about ten vessels, as all we have been able to take is only a
+full cargo for one good-sized <corr sic="no quote">ship.</corr></q>
+</p>
+</div><div n="9">
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER IX</head>
+
+<head type="sub">A SPELL ASHORE</head>
+
+<p>
+Ten days later they arrived at Jamaica, and Will at once
+went to make his report to the admiral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well,</q> the admiral said heartily, <q>you have brought in
+another prize, Mr. Gilmore. She looks a mere hulk, and is
+remarkably deep in the water. What is she?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is the schooner that sank the <name type="ship">Northumberland</name>.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You must have knocked her about terribly, for she is
+evidently sinking.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir, she is all right except that the stern is shattered.
+We have covered it over with tarpaulins backed by battens;
+otherwise she is almost uninjured.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='179'/><anchor id='Pg179'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am glad, indeed, to hear that you have caught that
+scoundrel, Mr. Gilmore, but I hardly think she can be worth
+towing in.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is worth a good deal, sir, for both she and the cutter
+are choke-full of loot.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Indeed!</q> the admiral said in a tone of gratification. <q>In
+that case she must be valuable; but let me hear all about it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have stated it in my report, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But you always leave out a good deal in your report.
+Please give me a full account of it. First, how many guns
+did she carry?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Six guns a-side, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then you must have done wonders. Now tell me all
+about it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will modestly gave a full account of the fight and of the
+steps he had afterwards taken to prevent them from playing
+a treacherous trick upon him, and of the land fight and the
+arrangements made to secure the goods he found at their head-quarters.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And now, what have you brought home this time?</q> the
+admiral asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is the list, sir. I took it from the bills of lading
+which we found at the pirate head-quarters. Altogether the
+storehouses contained the cargoes of eleven ships. We picked
+out the most valuable goods and loaded the cutter and schooner
+with them, but that was only a very small portion of the total.
+I have left nearly half my crew there to guard the storehouses
+until you could send some ships from here to bring home
+their contents. With the cutter to navigate and the schooner
+to tow I dared not weaken myself further. I have left
+six<pb n='180'/><anchor id='Pg180'/>teen of my men there under my boatswain, and have erected
+four batteries with cotton bales, each mounting two guns,
+which are charged to the muzzle with grape and langrage.
+I have every confidence, therefore, that the little garrison will
+be able to hold its own against a greatly superior force.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It was a great risk,</q> the admiral said gravely.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am aware of that, sir, but it was worth running the risk
+for such a splendid prize. The value of nearly eleven cargoes
+must be something very great.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Indeed it must,</q> the admiral said; <q>what are they composed
+of?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You will see the entire list in the bills of lading, sir. I
+should say that nearly half the goods are sugar, rum, and
+molasses; the other half are bales and boxes, of which the
+details are given. Those we have brought home are silks,
+satins, cloth, shawls, and other materials of female dress,
+coffee, and spices.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, Mr. Gilmore, this certainly appears to be the richest
+haul that has ever been made in these islands, at any rate
+since the days of the Spanish galleons. I will lose no time
+in chartering some ships. How many do you think will be
+necessary?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should say, sir, that if you had five vessels you could do
+it in two trips. Meanwhile I wish you would give me another
+thirty men to strengthen the garrison.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly I will do so. There are several vessels in the
+harbour which have discharged their cargoes and have not
+yet taken fresh ones on board, but are waiting to sail for
+England under a convoy. They will, no doubt, be glad of
+a job in the meantime.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='181'/><anchor id='Pg181'/>
+
+<p>
+Four days later the cutter again put to sea, with five
+merchantmen and a frigate, which was charged to act as a
+convoy. When they arrived off the inlet Will went ashore,
+and to his delight found the storehouses intact, and the little
+garrison all well. The crews of all the ships were at once
+landed, and in a short time the place was a scene of bustle
+and activity. In spite, however, of their exertions it was a
+fortnight before all the ships were loaded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Before setting sail again Will told off the thirty additional
+men to remain, and Harman was left in command. Dimchurch
+had reported that only once had the pirates shown in force.
+He had allowed them to come within a hundred yards of the
+battery they were facing, and then poured the contents of both
+guns into them, whereupon they had at once fled, leaving
+ten killed behind them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the little fleet arrived at Jamaica again, Will found
+that the goods which he had brought in the cutter and schooner
+were valued at a far higher price than his estimate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The merchantmen were unloaded as fast as possible, and
+started again for Cuba without delay. All was well with the
+garrison at the inlet. A serious attack had been made on the
+forts the day after the fleet had sailed for Jamaica, but the
+garrison had repulsed it so effectually that they had not seen
+a sign of the enemy since. Even the hope of plunder was not
+strong enough to induce the negroes to make another attempt,
+and as for the pirates, they had been almost entirely wiped out.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the storehouses had been emptied they were burned,
+and Harman and his party returned to the cutter, and the
+fleet once more sailed for Jamaica.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will immediately started again on a short cruise. This
+<pb n='182'/><anchor id='Pg182'/>time he met with no adventures. At the end of three weeks
+he returned, and when he went to make his report the admiral
+told him that the total value of the capture amounted to
+£140,000.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I must congratulate you,</q> he said, <q>as well as myself, on
+this haul. I should say it would make you the richest
+midshipman in the service. My share, as you know, is an
+eighth. You, as officer in command, and altogether independent
+of the fleet, will get one quarter. Mr. Harman’s
+share will be an eighth, and the rest will be divided among
+the crew, the boatswain getting four shares.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am astounded, sir,</q> Will said, <q>it seems almost impossible
+that I can be master of so much money.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You have the satisfaction at any rate, Mr. Gilmore, of
+knowing that you have earned it by your own exertions,
+courage, and skill. I think now that it is only fair that
+I should send you back to your ship when she next comes
+in, and give someone else a chance.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I agree with you, sir, and I cannot but feel deeply
+indebted to you for having put me in the way of making
+a fortune.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I little knew what was coming of it,</q> the admiral said,
+<q>when I gave you the command of that little craft. If I
+had had the slightest notion I should assuredly have given
+it to an older officer.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will returned to the cutter in a state of bewilderment
+at his good fortune. When he came on deck a little later
+he found waiting for him a gentleman who advanced with
+open arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Mr. Gilmore,</q> he said, <q>my name is Palethorpe. I am
+<pb n='183'/><anchor id='Pg183'/>the father of the young girl whose life you so gallantly saved
+when the <name type="ship">Northumberland</name> sank. I have been trying to catch
+you ever since, but I live up among the hills, except when
+business calls me down here, and your stay here has always
+been so short that I never before heard of your arrival until
+you had started again. I cannot say, sir, how intensely grateful
+I feel. She is my only child, and you may guess what a
+terrible blow it would have been to me had she been lost.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I only did my duty, sir, and I am glad indeed that I was
+able to save your daughter’s life. Pray do not say anything
+more about it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But, my dear sir, that is quite impossible. One man
+cannot render so vast a service to another and escape without
+being thanked. I have driven down here to carry you off to
+my home whether you like it or not. I called on the admiral
+this morning, and he said that he would willingly grant you
+a week’s leave or longer, and, in fact, that you would be unemployed
+until the <name type="ship">Hawke</name> came in, as a master’s mate would
+take over your command.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will felt that he could not decline an invitation so heartily
+given. Accordingly he packed up his shore-going kit, left
+Harman in temporary command, and went with his new friend
+ashore. A well-appointed vehicle with a pair of fine horses
+was waiting for them, and as soon as they were seated they
+at once started inland. After leaving the town they began
+to mount, and were soon high among the mountains. The
+scenery was lovely, and Will, who had not before made an
+excursion so far into the interior, was delighted with his drive.
+So much so, indeed, that Mr. Palethorpe gradually ceased speaking
+of the subject nearest his heart, and suffered Will to enjoy
+<pb n='184'/><anchor id='Pg184'/>the journey in silence. At last they drove up to a handsome
+house which was surrounded by a broad veranda covered
+with roses and other flowers. As they stopped, a girl of
+fourteen ran out. Will would scarcely have recognized her.
+She was now dressed in white muslin, and her hair was tied
+up with blue ribbon, while a broad sash of the same colour
+encircled her waist. She had now also recovered her colour,
+which the shock of her adventure had driven from her cheeks,
+and she looked the picture of health and happiness.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Oh, you dear boy!</q> she cried out, and to Will’s astonishment
+and consternation she threw her arms round his neck
+and kissed him. <q>Oh, how much you have done for us! If
+it hadn’t been for you father would have had no one to pet
+him and scold him. It would have been dreadful, wouldn’t
+it, daddy?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It would indeed, my child,</q> her father said gravely; <q>it
+would have taken all the joy out of my life, and left me a
+lonely old man.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have told you before,</q> she said, <q>that you are not to
+call yourself old. I don’t call you old at all; I consider that
+you are just in your prime. Now come in, Mr. Gilmore, I
+have all sorts of iced drinks ready for you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alice and Will soon became excellent friends. She took
+him over the plantations and showed him the negro cabins,
+fed him with fruit until he almost fell ill, and, as he said,
+treated him more like a baby than as an officer in His
+Majesty’s service.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The stars don’t look so bright to-night,</q> Will said, as he
+stood on the veranda with Mr. Palethorpe on the last evening
+of his visit.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='185'/><anchor id='Pg185'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, I have been noticing it myself, and I don’t like the
+look of the weather at all.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No!</q> Will repeated in surprise; <q>it certainly looks as if
+there was a slight mist.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, that is what it looks like, but at this time of year we
+don’t often have mists. I am afraid we are going to have
+a hurricane; it is overdue now by nearly a month. October,
+November, and the first half of December are the hurricane
+months, and I fear that, as it is late, we shall have a heavy
+one.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have seen one since I came out, and then we were at sea
+and were nearly wrecked. I saw its effects on land, however,
+for we spent some weeks ashore in consequence of it. The
+forest was almost levelled. I certainly should not care to see
+another one.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, it is not a thing that anyone would wish to see a
+second time. Words cannot describe how terrible they are.
+I hope, however, if we have one, that it will be a light one,
+but I am rather afraid of it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nothing more was said on the matter till they retired to
+bed, when Mr. Palethorpe said, half in fun and half in
+earnest: <q>I should advise you to have your clothes handy by
+your bedside, Mr. Gilmore, for you may want them quickly
+and badly if a hurricane comes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will laughed to himself at the warning, but nevertheless
+took the advice. He had been asleep for an hour when he
+felt the whole house rock. A moment later the roof blew
+bodily from over his head, and at the same time there was
+a roar so terrible that he did not even hear the crash of the
+falling timber. He leapt out of bed, seized his clothes, and
+<pb n='186'/><anchor id='Pg186'/>hurried down. He met Mr. Palethorpe coming from his
+daughter’s room, carrying her wrapped up in her bed-clothes.
+They went down together to the front door. Will turned
+the handle, and the door was blown in with a force that
+knocked him to the floor. He struggled to his feet again
+and tried to get out, but the force of the wind was so tremendous
+that for some time he could not stem it. When he
+did manage to get through the doorway he saw Mr. Palethorpe
+standing some distance from the house. He fought his
+way towards him against the wind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Are you not going to get into shelter?</q> he shouted in the
+planter’s ear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is safer here in the open,</q> the planter said; <q>I dare not
+get below a tree, but I will put my daughter in a place where
+she will be safe.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Struggling along against the gale he led the way to a
+small shed where the gardener’s tools were kept. It was
+about six feet long and three broad, and was built of bricks.
+The floor was some feet below the surface of the ground, so in
+entering one had to descend a short flight of steps.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Just hold my daughter on her feet,</q> the planter said,
+<q>while I clear this place out.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Much as he tried, Will was unable to keep the girl upright,
+and after a vain effort he allowed her to sink down on her
+knees and then knelt by her side. As soon as he had cleared
+away the tools Mr. Palethorpe came up and carried her down
+into the shed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think we are quite safe here,</q> he said; <q>the wall is
+only two feet above the ground, so even this gale will not
+shake us. The roof is strongly put together to keep out
+<pb n='187'/><anchor id='Pg187'/>marauders. Now, Mr. Gilmore, there is room for us to crouch
+inside; it is the only place of safety I know of, for even in
+the open we might be struck by the flying branches torn from
+the trees. Besides, it will be a comfort to Alice to know that
+we are in safety beside her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They spoke only occasionally, for the roar of the tempest
+was deafening. Every now and then they would hear a crash
+as some tree yielded to the force of the hurricane. Towards
+morning the gale abated, and soon after sunrise the wind
+suddenly stilled. When they looked out a scene of terrible
+devastation met their eyes. Some trees had been torn up by
+the roots, and branches twisted from others were strewed
+upon the ground everywhere. The house was a wreck; the
+whole of the roof was gone, and parts of the wall had been
+blown down. Inside there was utter confusion; the furniture
+was scattered about in all directions, and even looking-glasses
+had been torn from the walls and smashed. The planter,
+however, wasted but little time in looking at the wreck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You had better go up and dress at once, Alice,</q> he said,
+<q>though you will have some trouble in finding your clothes.
+I have no doubt that all the loose ones are scattered about
+everywhere, and that some of the things are miles away. I
+will go down with Will at once to the slave-huts; I am afraid
+the damage and loss of life there has been great.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During his passage from the house to the shed the wind had
+several times threatened to tear Will’s clothes from his arms,
+but he had clung to them with might and main, and succeeded
+in carrying them safely into shelter. He had therefore been
+able to dress while they waited for the storm to abate. Mr.
+Palethorpe had felt so sure that a hurricane was impending that
+<pb n='188'/><anchor id='Pg188'/>he had simply lain down on his bed without taking off his
+clothes. Accordingly they started at once for the slave-huts.
+As they had expected, the destruction there was complete.
+Every hut had been blown down. The negroes, who had fled
+to various places for shelter, were just returning, and Mr.
+Palethorpe soon learned from them that many were missing.
+He at once set all hands to remove the fallen timbers, and
+after two hours’ work sixteen dead bodies were recovered, for
+the most part children, and nearly as many injured. Some,
+also, of those who had come in had broken limbs.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alice came down as soon as she was dressed, and brought
+a bundle of sheets, needles, and thread, and Mr. Palethorpe
+took off his coat and set to work to bind and bandage the
+limbs and wounds. Alice suggested that a man on horseback
+should be sent down to the town for a surgeon, but her father
+pointed out that it would be absolutely useless to do so, as,
+judging by what they could see, the destruction wrought in
+the town would be terrible. Every surgeon would have his
+hands full, and certainly none would be able to spare time to
+come into the country. He decided to have all the worst
+cases carried down to the town and seen to there; slighter
+cases he could deal with himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t know much about bandaging wounds,</q> he said,
+<q>but I know a little, and some of the native women are very
+good at nursing.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Alice, aided by the negresses, tore up the linen into strips
+and sewed these together to make bandages. Canes split up
+formed excellent splints. Will rendered all the assistance in
+his power. Now he held splints in position while Mr. Palethorpe
+wound the bandages round them, and now he helped
+<pb n='189'/><anchor id='Pg189'/>to distribute among the wounded the soothing drinks that the
+servants of the house brought down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What are you going to do now?</q> he asked as the last
+bandage had been applied.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will drive down to the town and see how things are
+doing there. Peter tells me that two of my horses are killed,
+but the other two seemed to have escaped without injury,
+as the part of the stable in which they stood was sheltered
+by a huge tree, which lost its head, but was fortunately
+otherwise uninjured. You had better come down with us,
+Alice; we must stop at our house in town till things are put
+straight here. I will, of course, ride backwards and forwards
+every day.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Can’t I be of some help here, father?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>None at all; by nightfall the slaves will have built temporary
+shelters of canes and branches of trees. The overseer
+is among those who were killed; he was on his way from his
+house to the huts when a branch struck him on the head and
+killed him on the spot. I will put Sambo in his place for
+the present; he is a very reliable man, and I can trust him to
+issue the stores to the negroes daily. I am afraid it will be
+some time before we get the house put right again, as there
+will be an immense demand for carpenters in the town. We
+may feel very thankful, however, that we have got a house
+there. It is a good strong one, built of stone, so we may
+hope to find it intact.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The carriage was brought round and they took their seats
+in it. The planter ordered two strong negroes to get axes
+and to stand on the steps, and when all was ready they started.
+The journey was long and broken; at every few yards trees
+<pb n='190'/><anchor id='Pg190'/>had fallen across the road, and these had to be chopped through
+and removed before the carriage could pass. It was therefore
+late in the day before they reached the town. Will could
+not help grieving at the terrible destruction wrought in the
+forest. In some places acres of ground had been cleared of
+the trees, in others the trunks and branches lay piled in an
+inextricable chaos. All the huts and cottages they passed on
+their way were in ruins, and their former inhabitants were
+standing listlessly gazing at the destruction. Mr. Palethorpe
+had placed in the carriage two gallon jars of spirits and a
+large quantity of bread, and these he had distributed among
+the forlorn inhabitants while his men were chopping a road
+through the trees.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they arrived in the town they beheld a terrible scene
+of devastation. The streets occupied by the dwellings of
+well-to-do inhabitants had, for the most part, escaped, but
+in the suburbs, where the poorer part of the population dwelt,
+the havoc was something terrible. Parties of soldiers and
+sailors were hard at work here, clearing the ruins away and
+bringing out the dead and injured. Will, after saying good-bye
+to his friends at their door, joined one of these parties, and
+until late at night laboured by torchlight. At midnight he
+went to Mr. Palethorpe’s house, to which he had promised
+to return, and slept till morning. Two long days were occupied
+in this work, and even then there was much to be done
+in the way of clearing the streets of the debris and restoring
+order. Not until this was finished did Will cease from his
+labours. He then drove up with Mr. Palethorpe to his estate.
+They found that a great deal of progress had been made there,
+and that a gang of workmen were already engaged in preparing
+<pb n='191'/><anchor id='Pg191'/>to replace the roof and to restore the house to its former condition.
+The slaves were still in their temporary homes, but
+with their usual light-heartedness had already recovered from
+the effects of their shock and losses, and seemed as merry and
+happy as usual.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On his return to Port Royal, Will was the object of the
+greatest attentions on the part of the other passengers of the
+<name type="ship">Northumberland</name>, and received so many invitations to dinner
+that he was obliged to ask the admiral to allow him to give
+up his leave and to take another short cruise in <name type="ship">L’Agile</name>,
+promising that if he did so he would take good care not to
+capture any more prizes. The admiral consented, and in a
+few days the cutter set sail once more.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After they had been out a month Will found it necessary
+to put in to get water. He chose a spot where a little stream
+could be seen coming down from the mountains and losing
+itself in the shingle, and he rowed ashore and set some of his
+men to fill the barrels. When he saw the work fairly under
+weigh he started to walk along the shore with Dimchurch and
+Tom. They had gone but a short distance when a number of
+negroes rushed suddenly out upon them. Will had just time
+to discharge his pistols before he was knocked senseless by a
+negro armed with a bludgeon. Tom and Dimchurch stood
+over him and made a desperate defence, and just before they
+were overpowered Dimchurch shouted at the top of his voice:
+<q>Put off, we are captured,</q> for he saw that the number of
+their assailants was so great that it would only be sacrificing
+the crew to call them to their assistance. They were bound
+and carried away by the exulting negroes.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <q>TOM AND DIMCHURCH MADE A DESPERATE DEFENCE</q>]</p>
+ </then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill05"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill05.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend="font-size: small"><q>TOM AND DIMCHURCH MADE A DESPERATE DEFENCE</q></hi></head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: <q>TOM AND DIMCHURCH MADE A DESPERATE DEFENCE</q></figDesc>
+ </figure></p>
+ </else></pgIf>
+<p>
+<q>This is a bad job,</q> Will said when he came to his senses.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='192'/><anchor id='Pg192'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>A mighty bad job, Master Will. Who are these niggers,
+do you think?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I suppose they are escaped slaves; there are certainly
+many of them in the mountains of Cuba. I suppose they saw
+us sailing in, and came down from the hills in the hope of
+capturing some of us. It is likely enough they take us for
+pirates, who are a constant scourge to them, capturing them
+in their little fishing-boats and either cutting their throats or
+forcing them to serve with them. I am afraid we shall have
+but very little opportunity of explaining matters to them, for,
+of course, they don’t speak English, and none of us understand
+a word of Spanish.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were carried up the hill and thrown down in a small
+clearing on the summit. Will in vain endeavoured to address
+them in English, but received no attention whatever.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What do you think they are going to do with us, sir?</q>
+Dimchurch asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I should say that they are most likely going to burn
+us alive, or put us to death in some other devilish way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, I don’t think these niggers know much about
+tying ropes. It seems to me that I could get free without
+much trouble.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Could you, Dimchurch? I can’t say as much, for mine
+are knotted so tightly that I cannot move a finger.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That won’t matter, sir. If I can shift out of mine I have
+got my jack-knife in my pocket, and can make short work of
+your ropes and Tom’s.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, try then, Dimchurch. Half those fellows are away
+in the wood, and by the sounds we hear they are cutting
+brushwood; so there is no time to lose.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='193'/><anchor id='Pg193'/>
+
+<p>
+For five minutes no remark was made, and then Dimchurch
+said: <q>I am free.</q> Immediately afterwards Will felt his
+bonds fall off, and half a minute later an exclamation of
+thankfulness from Tom showed that he too had been liberated.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now we must all crawl towards the edge of the forest,</q>
+Will said, <q>and then, instead of going straight down the hill
+we will turn off for a short distance. They are sure to miss
+us immediately, and will believe that we have made direct for
+the sea.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had barely got into the shelter of the forest when
+they heard a sudden shout, so they at once turned aside and
+hid in the brushwood. A minute or two later they had the
+satisfaction of hearing the negroes rushing in a body down the
+hill. They waited until their pursuers had covered a hundred
+yards, and then they jumped to their feet and held on their
+way along the hillside for nearly a quarter of a mile, after
+which they began to descend. Just as they changed their
+course they heard an outburst of musketry <corr sic='fire."'>fire.</corr>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Hooray!</q> Dimchurch exclaimed, <q>our fellows are coming
+up the hill in search of us. That’s right, give it them hot! I
+guess they’ll go back as quick as they came.</q> They now
+changed their direction, taking a line that would bring them
+to the rear of their friends. The firing soon ceased, the
+negroes having evidently got entirely out of sight of the
+sailors, but by the shouting they had no difficulty in ascertaining
+the position of the party, who were pushing on up the hill,
+and presently Will hailed them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is the captain’s voice,</q> one of the party exclaimed,
+and then a general cheer broke from the seamen. In another
+<pb n='194'/><anchor id='Pg194'/>two minutes they were among their friends. Harman had
+landed with three-and-thirty men, leaving only five on board
+<name type="ship">L’Agile</name>. Great was their rejoicing on finding that the three
+missing men were all safe.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We had better fall back now,</q> Will said. <q>There must be
+at least three hundred negroes at the top, and though I don’t
+say we would not beat them we should certainly suffer some
+loss which might well be avoided. There is no doubt they
+took us for pirates and believed they were going to avenge
+their own wrongs. So we may as well make our way down
+before their whole force gathers and attacks us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They retired at once to the shore, and had but just taken
+their places in the boats when a crowd of negroes rushed down
+to the beach. Four or five shots were fired, but by Will’s
+order no reply was made. They pushed off quietly and in a
+few minutes reached the cutter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That has been a narrow escape,</q> Will said when he
+and Harman were together again on the quarter-deck; <q>as
+narrow as I ever wish to experience. If it hadn’t been for
+Dimchurch I don’t think you would have arrived in time, for
+they were cutting brushwood for a fire on which they intended
+to roast us. Fortunately he was not so tightly bound as we
+were, and so managed to free himself and us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I cannot say how thankful I was when I heard your voice.
+Of course we were proceeding only by guesswork, and could
+only hope that we should find you at the top of the hill. If
+they had carried you any farther away we could not have
+followed. I was turning this over in my mind as we advanced,
+when we heard the rushing of a large number of men down
+the hill towards us, and we at once concluded that you had
+<pb n='195'/><anchor id='Pg195'/>escaped and that they were in pursuit, and as soon as the
+negroes appeared we opened fire.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, all is well that ends well. It was very foolish of me
+to wander away from the men. Of course there was nothing
+whatever to tell us that we were being watched, but I ought
+to have assumed that there was a possibility of such a thing
+and not to have run the risk. I’ll be mighty careful that I
+don’t play such a fool’s trick again. It was lucky that Dimchurch
+shouted when he did to the watering-party, otherwise
+we should have lost the whole of them, and with ten gone you
+would have found it very hazardous work to land a sufficiently
+strong party.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should have tried if I had only had a dozen men. I
+concluded that it must have been negroes who had carried
+you off, and my only thought was to rescue you before they
+set to work to torture you in some abominable manner.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I expect it would soon have been over, Harman,
+but certainly it would have been a very unpleasant ending.
+To fall in battle is a death at which none would grumble,
+but to be burnt by fiendish negroes would be horrible. Of
+course every man must run risks and take his chances, but
+one hardly bargains for being burnt alive. It makes my flesh
+creep to think of it, more now, I fancy, than when I was face
+to face with it. When I was lying helpless on the hill, there
+seemed something unreal about it, and I could not appreciate
+the position, but now that I think of it in cold blood it makes
+me shiver. I will take your watch to-night; I am quite sure
+that if I did get to sleep I should have a terrible nightmare.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can quite understand that you would rather be on deck
+than lying down and trying to sleep. I am sure I should
+<pb n='196'/><anchor id='Pg196'/>do so myself, and even now the thought of the peril you were
+in makes me shudder.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a time <name type="ship">L’Agile</name> cruised off the shore of Cuba, effecting
+a few small captures, but none of importance. Finally she
+fell in with three French frigates and was chased for two
+days, but succeeded in giving her pursuers the slip by running
+between two small islands under cover of night. The
+passage was very shallow, and the Frenchmen were unable
+to follow, and before they could make a circuit of the islands
+<name type="ship">L’Agile</name> was out of sight. When the cutter at length returned
+to Jamaica the admiral decided to lay her up for a
+time, and the crew was broken up and retransferred to the
+vessels to which they belonged.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will was greeted with enthusiasm when he rejoined the
+<name type="ship">Hawke</name>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You certainly have singular luck, Gilmore,</q> said Latham,
+who was the <name type="ship">Hawke’s</name> master’s mate. <q>Here we have been
+cruising and cruising, till we are sick of the sight of islands,
+without picking up a prize of importance, while you have been
+your own master, and have made a fortune. And now, just
+as there is a rumour that we are to go home you rejoin.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A few weeks after this conversation the <name type="ship">Hawke</name> received
+orders to sail for Portsmouth, and after a long and wearisome
+voyage arrived home late in the summer of the year 1793.
+</p>
+
+</div><div n="10">
+<pb n='197'/><anchor id='Pg197'/>
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER X</head>
+
+<head type="sub">BACK AT SCARCOMBE</head>
+
+<p>
+The news of their destination had created great satisfaction
+among the crew, as there was little honour or prize-money
+to be gained, and the vessel had been for some time incessantly
+engaged in hunting for foes that were never found. Not the
+least pleased was Will. He had left England a friendless
+ship’s-boy; he returned home a midshipman, with a most
+creditable record, and with a fortune that, when he left the
+service, would enable him to live in more than comfort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On arriving at Portsmouth the crew were at once paid off,
+and Will was appointed to the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>, a thirty-four gun frigate.
+On hearing the name of the ship, Dimchurch and Tom Stevens
+at once volunteered. They were given a fortnight’s leave; so
+Will, with Tom Stevens, determined to take a run up to Scarcombe,
+and the same day took coach to London. Dimchurch
+said he should spend his time in Portsmouth, as there was no
+one up in the north he cared to see, especially as it would take
+eight days out of his fortnight’s leave to go to his native place
+and back.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the fourth day after leaving London the two travellers
+reached Scarborough. Tom Stevens started at once, with his
+kit on a stick, to walk to the village, while Will made enquiries
+for the house of Mrs. Archer, which was Miss Warden’s
+married name. Without much trouble he made his way to it;
+and when the servant answered his knock he said: <q>I wish to
+see Mrs. Archer.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='198'/><anchor id='Pg198'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>What name, sir?</q> the girl said respectfully, struck with
+the appearance of the tall young fellow in a naval uniform.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I would rather not say the name,</q> Will said. <q>Please
+just say that a gentleman wishes to speak to her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Will you come this way?</q> the girl said, leading him to
+a sitting-room. A minute later Mrs. Archer appeared. She
+bowed and asked: <q>What can I do for you, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then you do not know me, madam?</q> said Will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She looked at him carefully. <q>I certainly do not,</q> she
+said, and after a pause: <q>Why, it can’t be!—yes, it is—Willie
+Gilmore!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is, madam, but no doubt changed out of all recognition.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have from time to time got your letters,</q> said Mrs.
+Archer, <q>and learned from them with pleasure and surprise
+that you had become an officer, but never pictured you as
+grown and changed in this way. I hope you have got my
+letters in return?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I only got one, Mrs. Archer, and it reached me just before
+we sailed from the Mediterranean two years ago. I was not
+surprised, however, for of course the post is extremely uncertain.
+It is only very seldom that letters reach a ship on a
+foreign station.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Dear, dear, you have lost some fingers!</q> Mrs. Archer
+cried, suddenly noticing Will’s left hand. <q>How sad, to be
+sure!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is quite an old story, Mrs. Archer. I lost them at
+the attempt to capture St. Pierre, and am so accustomed to the
+loss now that I hardly notice it. It is surprising how one can
+do without a thing. I have to be thankful, indeed, that it was
+<pb n='199'/><anchor id='Pg199'/>the left hand instead of the right, as, had it been the other
+way, I should probably have had to leave the navy, which
+would have meant ruin to me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is all very well to make light of it,</q> she said, <q>but you
+must feel it a great drawback.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, you see, Mrs. Archer, the loss of three fingers is of
+course terrible for a sailor, who has to row, pull at ropes,
+scrub decks, and do work of all sorts; but an officer does not
+have to do manual work of any kind, and hardly feels such
+a loss, except, perhaps, at meals. I am going to sea again
+almost directly, but the first time I have a long holiday I shall
+have some false fingers fitted on, more for the sake of avoiding
+being stared at than for anything else.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I am more than pleased at seeing you again, Willie.
+It is so natural for me to call you that, that it will be some
+time before I can get out of it. So you have got on very
+well?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none">Entirely owing to you, Mrs. Archer, as I told you in the
+first letter I wrote to you after I got my promotion. You
+taught me to like study, and were always ready to help me on
+with my work, and it was entirely owing to my having learned
+so much, especially mathematics, that I was able to attract the
+attention of the officers and to get put on the quarter-deck.
+I have, I am happy to say, done very well, and I am sure
+of my step as soon as I have passed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I had the extraordinary good fortune,</q> he said, after
+chatting for some time, <q>to be put in command of a prize that
+had been taken from some pirates, and was thus able to earn
+a good deal of prize-money. But nothing has given me greater
+pleasure since I went away than the purchasing of this little
+<pb n='200'/><anchor id='Pg200'/>present for you as a token, though a very poor one, of my
+gratitude to you for your kindness;</q> and he handed her a little
+case containing a diamond brooch, for which he had paid one
+hundred and fifty pounds as he came through London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Willie!</q> she exclaimed in surprise as she opened it, <q>how
+could you think of buying such a valuable ornament for me?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should have liked to buy something more valuable,</q> he
+said. <q>If I had paid half my prize-money it would only have
+been fair, for I should never have won it but for you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have nothing nearly so valuable,</q> she said. <q>Well, now,
+you must take up your abode with us while you stay here.
+How long have you?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have a fortnight’s leave, but it has taken me four days
+to come down here, and of course I shall have to allow as
+many for the return journey. I have therefore six days to
+spare, and I shall be very pleased indeed to stay with you. I
+must, of course, spend one day going over to the village to
+see John Hammond and his wife. I am happy to say that I
+shall be able to make their declining days comfortable. Your
+father is, I hope, well, Mrs. Archer?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, he is going on just as usual. I was over there a fortnight
+ago. I am sure he will be very glad to see you; he
+always enquires, when I go over, whether I have had a letter
+from you, and takes great interest in your progress.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Tom Stevens has come back with me, and has gone on
+to-day to the village. I told him not to mention about my
+coming, as I want to take the old couple by surprise.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That you certainly will do. Of course they have aged a
+little since you went away, but there is no great change in
+them. Ah, there is my husband’s knock! Lawrence,</q> she
+<pb n='201'/><anchor id='Pg201'/>said, as he entered, <q>this is the village lad I have so often
+spoken to you about. He has completely changed in the
+three years and a half he has been away. We heard, you
+remember, that he had become an officer, but I was quite
+unprepared for the change that has come over him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am glad to see you, Mr. Gilmore. My wife has talked
+about you so often that I quite seem to know you myself,
+but, of course, as I did not know you in those days I can
+hardly appreciate the change that has come over you. One
+thing I can say, however, and that is that you bear no resemblance
+whatever to a fisher lad.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will was soon quite at home with Mr. and Mrs. Archer,
+who introduced him with pride as <q>our sailor boy</q> to many
+of their friends. On the third day of his stay he hired a gig
+and drove over to Scarcombe. Alighting at the one little inn,
+he walked to John Hammond’s cottage, watched on the way
+by many enquiring eyes, the fisher folk wondering whether
+this was a new revenue officer. He knocked at the door,
+lifted the latch, and entered. The old couple were sitting
+at the fire, and looked in surprise at the young officer standing
+at the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir,</q> John asked, <q>what can I do for you? I have
+done with smuggling long ago, and you won’t find as much as
+a drop of brandy in my house.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So I suppose, John,</q> Will said; <q>your smuggling didn’t
+do you much good, did it?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, I don’t see as that is any business of yours,</q> the
+old man answered gruffly. <q>I don’t mind owning that I have
+handled many a keg in my time, but you can’t bring that
+against me now.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='202'/><anchor id='Pg202'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have no intention of doing so, John. I dare say you
+gave it up for good when that dirty little boy who used to
+live with you chucked it and got into trouble for doing so.
+You recollect me, don’t you, mother?</q> he said, as the old
+woman sat staring at him with open eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Why, it is Willie himself!</q> she exclaimed; <q>don’t you
+know him, John, our boy Willie, who ran away and went to
+sea?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You don’t say it is Will!</q> the old man said, getting up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is Will sure enough,</q> the lad said, holding out his
+hand first to one and then to the other. <q>He has come back,
+as you see, an officer.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, Parson told us that. Well, well! Why, it was only
+two days ago that Tom Stevens came in. He has growed to
+be a fine young fellow too, and he told us that you were well
+and hearty and had been through lots of fights. But he didn’t
+say nothing about your having come home.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, here I am, John; and what is better, I have brought
+home some money with me, and I shall be able to allow you
+and the mother a guinea a week as long as you live.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You don’t mean it, lad!</q> the old man said with a gasp of
+astonishment; <q>a guinea a week! may the Lord be praised!
+Do you hear that, missis? a guinea a week!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Lord, Lord, only to think of it; why, we shall be downright
+rich!</q> said his wife. <q>Plenty of sugar and tea, a bit of
+meat when we fancy it, and a drop of rum to warm our old
+bones on Saturday night. It is wonderful, John. The Lord
+be praised for His mercies! But can you afford it, Will? We
+wouldn’t take it from you if you can’t, not for ever so.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can afford it very well,</q> Will said, <q>and it will give me
+<pb n='203'/><anchor id='Pg203'/>more pleasure to give it you than to spend it in any other
+way. Now, mother, let us say no more about it. Here is a
+guinea as a start, and I wish you would go to the shop and
+get some tea and sugar and bread and butter and a nice piece
+of bacon, and let us have a meal just as we used to do when
+we had made a good haul, or taken a hand in a successful
+run.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is three years and a half since I saw a golden guinea,</q>
+the old woman said as she put on her bonnet, <q>and they won’t
+believe their eyes at the shop when I go in with it. You
+are sure you would like tea better than beer?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Much better, though if John would prefer beer, get it for
+him; but I think we had better put that off till this evening,
+then we will have a glass of something hot together before I
+start.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are not going away so soon as that, Will, surely?</q>
+the old man said when his wife had left them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, John, this is a short visit. I have only four days,
+and am staying with Miss Warden; that is to say, Miss
+Warden that was. I must go in and see her father for a few
+minutes. We’ll have plenty of time to talk over everything
+before I leave, which I won’t do till eight o’clock. I don’t
+suppose you have much to tell me, for there are not many
+changes in a place like this. This man, perhaps, has lost his
+boat, and that one his life, but that is about all. Now I have
+gone through a big lot, and have many adventures to tell
+you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But how did you come to be made an officer, Will? That
+is what beats me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Entirely owing to my work at books, which you used
+<pb n='204'/><anchor id='Pg204'/>always to be raging about. But for that I should have
+remained before the mast all my life. Now in a couple of
+years or so I’ll be a lieutenant.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, well! one never knows how things will turn out.
+I did think you were wasting your time in reading, and
+reading, and reading. I didn’t see what good so much book-learning
+would do you; but if it got you made an officer, there
+is no doubt that you were right and I was wrong. But you
+see, lad, I was never taught any better.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It has all turned out right, John, and there is no occasion
+for you to worry over the past. I felt sure that it would do
+me good some day, so I stuck to it in spite of your scolding,
+and you will allow that I was never backward in turning out
+when you wanted me for the boat.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will allow that, Will, allow it hearty; for there was no
+better boy in the village. And so you have been fighting,
+I suppose, just like Tom Stevens.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Just the same, father. We have been together all the
+time, and we have come back together.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And he didn’t say a word about it!</q> the old man said.
+<q>He talked about you just as if you were somewhere over the
+sea.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I told him not to tell,</q> Will said, <q>as I wanted to take
+you by surprise.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But he is not an officer, Will. He is just a sailor like those
+revenue men. How does that come about? Didn’t he fight
+well?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, no one could fight better. If he had had as much
+learning as I had he would have been made an officer too; but,
+you see, he can hardly read or write, and, fight as he may, he
+<pb n='205'/><anchor id='Pg205'/>will always remain as he is. A finer fellow never stepped;
+but because he has no learning he must always remain before
+the mast.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And you have lost some fingers I see, Will.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, they were shot off by a musket-ball in the West
+Indies. Luckily it was my left hand; so I manage very well
+without them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hope you blew off the fingers of the fellow that shot
+you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, I can’t say who did it, and indeed I never felt anything
+at all until some little time after.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I wish I had been there,</q> John said, <q>I would have had
+a slap at him with a musket. That was an unlucky shot, Will.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I have always considered it a lucky one, for if it
+had gone a few inches on one side it would have probably
+finished me altogether.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, well, it is wonderful to me. Here am I, an old man,
+and never, so far as I can remember, been a couple of miles
+from Scarcombe, and you, quite a young chap, have been
+wandering and fighting all over the world.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Not quite so much as that, John, though I have certainly
+seen a good deal. But here is mother.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mrs. Hammond entered with a face beaming with delight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none">You never saw anyone so astonished as Mrs. Smith when
+I went in and ordered all those things. Her eyes opened
+wider and wider as I went on, and when I offered her the gold
+I thought she would have a fit. She took it and bit it to
+make sure that it was good, and then said: <q>Have you found
+it, Mrs. Hammond, or what good fortune have you <corr sic="extra double quote">had?</corr></q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q rend="post: none"><q><corr sic="missing single quote">The</corr> best of fortunes, Mrs.
+ <corr sic="double quote instead of single quote">Smith,</corr></q> says I.
+ <q><corr sic="double quote instead of single quote">My</corr> boy
+<pb n='206'/><anchor id='Pg206'/>Will has come back from the wars a grand officer, with his
+pocket lined with gold, so you will find I’ll be a better customer
+to you than I have <corr sic="double quote instead of single quote">been.</corr></q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q><q>You don’t say so, Mrs. Hammond!</q> says she. <q>I always
+thought he was a nice boy, well spoken and civil. And so he
+is an officer, is he? Only to think of it! Well, I am mighty
+pleased to hear it,</q> and with that I came off with my basket
+full of provisions. The whole village will be talking of it
+before nightfall. Mrs. Smith is a good soul, but she is an
+arrant gossip, and you may be sure that the tale will gain by
+the telling, and before night people will believe that you have
+become one of the royal family.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In half an hour a meal was ready—tea, crisp slices of fried
+bacon, and some boiled eggs—and never did three people sit
+down to table in a more delighted state of mind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My life,</q> the old woman said, when at last the meal was
+finished, <q>just to think that we’ll be able to feed every day of
+the year like this! Why, we’ll grow quite young again, John;
+we sha’n’t know ourselves. We had five shillings a week
+before, and now we’ll have six-and-twenty. I don’t know
+what we’ll do with it. Why, we didn’t get that on an average,
+not when you were a young man and as good a fisherman as
+there was in the village. We did get more sometimes when
+you made a great haul, or when a cargo was run, but then,
+more often, when times were bad, we had to live on fish for
+weeks together.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, missis, clear away the things and reach me down
+my pipe from the mantel, and we’ll hear Will’s tales. I’ll
+warrant me they will be worth listening to.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the table was cleared the old woman put some more
+<pb n='207'/><anchor id='Pg207'/>coal on the fire and they sat round it, the old folk one on
+each side, with Will in the middle. Then Will told his adventures,
+the fight with the French frigate, the battle with
+the three Moorish pirates, how he had had the luck to save
+the first lieutenant’s life and so obtained his promotion, and
+how the next prize they took was recaptured, but that he
+and a portion of the crew again overcame the Moors. Then
+he related how he had had the good fortune to obtain the
+command of a prize, with forty men and another midshipman
+under him, and gave a vivid account of the adventures he
+had gone through while cruising about in her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, well!</q> John Hammond said, when he brought his
+story to a conclusion, <q>you have had goings-on. To think
+that a boy like you should command a vessel and forty men,
+and should take three pirates.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But the most awful part of it all,</q> the old woman said, <q>is
+about them black negroes that carried you off and were going
+to burn you alive. Lor’, I’ll dream of it at nights.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hope not, missis,</q> John said. <q>You dream more than
+enough now, and wake me up with your jumps and starts,
+and give me a lot of trouble to pacify you and convince you
+that you have only been dreaming. I am sorry, Will, that
+you told us about those niggers. I know I’ll have lots of
+trouble over it. Generally all she has had to dream about
+has been that my boat was sinking, or that the revenue officers
+had taken me and were going to hang me; but that will be
+nothing to this ’ere negro business.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They are terrible creatures these negroes, ain’t they?</q> the
+old woman said. <q>I have heard tell that they have horns
+and hoofs like the devil.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='208'/><anchor id='Pg208'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, no, mother, they are not so bad as that, and they don’t
+have tails, either. They are not good-looking men for all that,
+and they look specially ugly when they are gathering firewood
+to make a bonfire of you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>For goodness sake don’t say more about them; it makes
+me all come over in a sweat to think about them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Just at this moment Tom Stevens came in and sat and
+chatted for some time. Will asked him to come in again
+later and to bring with him a bottle of the best spirits he
+could find in the village.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I’ll warrant I will get some good stuff,</q> Tom said. <q>There
+are plenty of kegs of the best hidden away in the village, and
+I think I know where to lay my hand on one of them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will then went to the rectory and had a chat with Mr.
+Warden, who was unaffectedly glad to see him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I never quite approved,</q> he said, <q>of my daughter’s hobby
+of educating you, but I now see that she was perfectly right.
+I thought myself that at best you would obtain some small
+clerkship, and that your life would be a happier one as a
+fisherman. It has, however, turned out admirably well, and
+she has a right to be proud of her pupil. After the way you
+have begun there is nothing in your own line to which you
+may not attain.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I wanted to ask you, Mr. Warden, what you could remember
+about my father. My own recollection of him is
+very dim. I am going to sea again in a week, but next time
+I return I’ll have a longer spell on shore, and I am resolved
+to make an effort to discover who he was.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I fear that is quite hopeless, but I will certainly tell you
+all I know about him. I saw him, of course, many times in
+<pb n='209'/><anchor id='Pg209'/>the village. He was a tall thin man with what I might call a
+devil-may-care, and at the same time a mournful expression.
+I have no doubt that had his death not been so sudden he would
+have told you something about himself. I have his effects
+tied up in a bundle. I examined them at the time, but there
+was nothing of any value in them except a signet-ring. It
+bore a coat-of-arms with a falcon at the top. I intended to
+hand this to you when you grew up, but of course you left so
+suddenly that I had no opportunity to do so. I will give you
+the bundle now.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you very much, sir! That ring may be the means
+of discovering my identity. Of course I have no time to make
+enquiries now, but when I next return I will advertise largely
+and offer a reward for information. It is not that I want to
+thrust myself on any family, or to raise any claim, but I should
+like, for my own satisfaction, to know that I come of a
+decent family.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is very natural,</q> the clergyman said; <q>but were I
+you I should not hope to be successful. You see, nearly
+thirteen years have elapsed since his death, and he may have
+been wandering about for three or four years before. That
+is a long time to elapse before making any enquiries.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That may be so, but if these arms belong, as I suppose,
+to a good family, there must be others bearing them, and an
+advertisement of a lost member of it might at once catch
+their eye, and might very possibly bring a reply. Besides,
+surely there must be some place where a record is kept of
+these things.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I do not know that, but I am sure I wish you success in
+your search, and can well understand that, now you are an
+<pb n='210'/><anchor id='Pg210'/>officer in His Majesty’s navy, you would like to claim relationship
+with some big family.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Quite so, sir. Of course I cannot imagine how it was my
+father came to be in such reduced circumstances.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should say, Will, that he quarrelled with his father, perhaps
+over his marriage, and left home in a passion. He was
+a man who, I could well imagine, when he once quarrelled,
+would not be likely to take the first step to make it up.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Perhaps that was it, sir. Well, I am exceedingly obliged
+to you, and will, you may be sure, investigate the contents of
+the bundle carefully.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Returning to the cottage, Will found Tom Stevens already
+there with a small keg of brandy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is good stuff, Will,</q> he said; <q>it has been lying hidden
+for eight years, and was some of the choicest landed. I got it
+as a favour, and had to pay pretty high for it; but I knew you
+would not stick at the price.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly not, I wanted the best that could be got. Now,
+mother, mix us three good stiff tumblers, and take a glass for
+yourself.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is twenty year since I tasted spirits,</q> the old woman
+said, <q>though John has often got a drop after a successful
+run; but this afternoon I don’t mind if I do try a little, if
+it is only to put the thought of them bonfiring negroes out of
+my mind.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hope it will have that effect,</q> Will laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, John, I told you about my adventures; let me hear
+a little village gossip.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+John’s tale was not a very long, nor, it must be owned, a very
+interesting one. Mary Johnson, Elizabeth Cruikshank, Mary
+<pb n='211'/><anchor id='Pg211'/>Leaper, and Susie Thurston had all had boys, while there had
+been five girls born. It was not necessary, however, to specify
+the names of their mothers, as girls were considered quite
+secondary persons in Scarcombe. One small cargo had been
+run, but the revenue people were so sharp that the French
+lugger had given up making the village a landing-place.
+John Mugby and his two sons had been drowned, and John
+Hawkins’s boat had been smashed up. As a result of the
+decline of smuggling there had been a revulsion of the feeling
+against Will, and the four men who had been the ringleaders
+in the movement had made themselves so generally obnoxious
+that they had had to leave the village.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At seven o’clock Will said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, father, I must be moving. Here are fifty guineas.
+They will last you for nearly a year. I’ll hand another fifty
+to Mr. Archer, and ask him to send you twenty pounds at a
+time. I’ll probably be back in England before it has all gone,
+and if not I will manage to find a means of sending more over
+to you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I sha’n’t sleep,</q> the old woman said; <q>I never shall sleep
+with all that money in the house. It is sure to get known
+about, and I should never feel safe.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, mother, take the money up to Mr. Warden,
+and ask him to hand you a guinea every Monday.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Tom Stevens,</q> said the old woman, <q>I will ask you to go
+up to the rectory with me this very evening. I daren’t keep
+it here, and I daren’t carry it through the village, for there
+might be a pedlar about, and everybody knows that pedlars
+are apt to be thieves.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well,</q> Tom said with a smile, <q>I will go with you,
+<pb n='212'/><anchor id='Pg212'/>missis, when Will has left. I am big enough to tackle a pedlar
+if we meet one on the way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you very heartily, Tom! I’ll be comfortable now;
+but I should never get a wink of sleep with fifty gold guineas
+in the house.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will had noticed that the old couple’s clothes were sorely
+patched, and the next morning he purchased a complete
+new outfit for both. These he sent over by a carrier, with a
+note, saying: <q>My dear father, it is only right that you should
+start with a fair outfit, and I therefore send you and the missis
+a supply that will last you for some time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Tom Stevens came over two days later, and he and Will
+started together for London. On their arrival at Portsmouth
+they at once joined the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>, which was quite ready to sail,
+and which was under orders to join Lord Hood’s fleet in the
+Mediterranean.
+</p>
+</div><div n="11">
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER XI</head>
+
+<head type="sub">CAPTIVES AMONG THE MOORS</head>
+
+<p>
+A week later the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> proceeded to the Mediterranean.
+One morning after cruising there for some weeks, when
+the light mist lifted, a vessel was seen some three miles away.
+The captain looked at her through his telescope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a suspicious-looking craft,</q> he said to the first
+lieutenant, Mr. Roberts. <q>We will lower a cutter and overhaul
+her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The cutter’s crew were at once mustered. Will was the
+<pb n='213'/><anchor id='Pg213'/>midshipman in charge of her, and took his place by the side
+of the third lieutenant, Mr. Saxton. The lieutenant ordered
+the men to take their muskets with them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>May I take Dimchurch and Stevens?</q> Will asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, if you like. There is room for them in the bow,
+and two extra muskets may be useful.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The two men, who were standing close by, took their places
+when they heard the permission given.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I certainly don’t like her appearance, Gilmore,</q> the lieutenant
+said. <q>I cannot help thinking that she is an Algerine
+by her rig; and though every Algerine is not necessarily
+a pirate, a very large number of them are. I fancy
+a breeze will spring up soon, and in that case we may have
+a long row before we overtake her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The breeze came presently, and the Algerine began to slip
+away. It was, however, but a puff, and the boat again began
+to gain on her. When they were five miles from the ship
+they were within a quarter of a mile from the chase.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Confound the fellow!</q> the lieutenant muttered; <q>but I
+think I was mistaken, for there are not more than half a dozen
+men on her deck.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At length the boat swept up to the side of the craft. As the
+men leapt to their feet a couple of round shot were thrown into
+the boat, one of them going through the bottom. The cutter
+immediately began to fill, and the men as they climbed up
+were confronted by fully a hundred armed Moors. Lieutenant
+Saxton was at once cut down, and most of the sailors
+suffered the same fate. As usual, Will, Dimchurch, and
+Stevens held together and fought back to back. The contest,
+however, was too uneven to last, and the Moorish captain
+<pb n='214'/><anchor id='Pg214'/>came up to them and signed to them that they must lay down
+their arms.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do it at once,</q> Will said. <q>They evidently prefer to
+take us prisoners to killing us, which they could do without
+difficulty. We have been caught in a regular trap, and must
+make the best of <corr sic="no quote">it.</corr></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So saying he threw down his cutlass, and the others followed
+his example.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were taken down below with three other unwounded
+sailors, and the wounded and dead were at once thrown overboard.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is the worst affair we have been in together,</q> said
+Dimchurch, <q>since we fell into the hands of those negroes.
+Unless the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> overtakes us I am afraid we are in for a
+bad time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am afraid so, Dimchurch, and I fear that there is little
+chance indeed of the frigate overtaking us. In such a light
+wind this craft would run away from her, and with fully five
+miles start it would be useless for the boats to try to overtake
+her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What are they going to do with us?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is very little doubt about that. They will make
+slaves of us, and either set us to work on the fortifications
+or sell us to be taken up-country.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t expect they will keep us long,</q> Dimchurch said
+grimly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t know; they have great numbers of Christians
+whom they hold captive, and it is rare indeed that one of
+them escapes. I suppose some day or other we’ll send a fleet
+to root them out, but our hands are far too full for anything
+<pb n='215'/><anchor id='Pg215'/>of that sort at present. If we have a chance of escape you
+may be sure that we’ll take it, but we had better make up
+our minds at once to make the best of things until opportunity
+offers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I only hope we’ll be kept together, sir. I could put up
+with it if that were so, but it would be awful if we were separated;
+for even if one saw a chance for escape he could not let
+the others know.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You may be sure, Dimchurch, that whatever opportunity
+I might see I would not avail myself of it unless I could take
+you both off with me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The same here, sir,</q> Dimchurch said; and the words were
+echoed by Tom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Six days later they heard the anchor run down, and presently
+the hatchway was lifted and they were told to come
+on deck. They found, as they had expected, that the craft
+was lying in the harbour of Algiers. At any other time they
+might have admired the city, with its mosques and minarets,
+its massive fortifications, and the shipping in the port, but
+they were in no humour to do so now. They regarded it
+as their jail. They and the three sailors were put into a
+boat and rowed ashore, the captain of the craft going with
+them. They were met at the wharf by a Moor, who was
+evidently an official of rank. He and the captain held an
+animated conversation, and by their laughter Will had no
+doubt whatever that the captain was telling the clever manner
+in which he had effected their capture. Then the official said
+something which was not altogether pleasing to the captain,
+who, however, crossed his hands on his breast and bowed
+submissively. The official then handed the six prisoners over
+<pb n='216'/><anchor id='Pg216'/>to some men who had accompanied him, and they were immediately
+marched across to a large barrack-like building,
+which was evidently a prison. Two hours afterwards a great
+troop of captives came in. These were so worn and wearied
+that they asked but few questions of the new-comers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Don’t talk about it,</q> one said in answer to a question
+from Will. <q>There is not one of us who would not kill himself
+if he got the chance. It is work, work, work from daybreak
+till sunset. We have enough to eat to keep us alive;
+we are too valuable to be allowed to die. We get food before
+we start in the morning, again at mid-day, and again when
+we get back here. Oh, they are very careful of us, but they
+don’t mind how we suffer! The sun blazes down all day, and
+not a drop of drink do we get except at meals. In spite of
+their care we slip through their hands. Sunstroke and fever
+are always thinning our ranks. That is the history of it,
+mate, and if I were to talk till morning I could not tell you
+more. I suppose by your cut that you are a man-of-war’s-man?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You’re right,</q> Dimchurch said. <q>We got caught in a
+trap, and our nine mates were killed without having a chance
+to fire a shot.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah!</q> the man said with a sigh, <q>I wish I had had their
+luck, and you will wish so too before you have been here
+long.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rough food was served out, and then the slaves, after
+eating, lay down without exchanging a word, anxious only
+to sleep away the thought of their misery. The three friends
+lay down together. To each prisoner a small rug had been
+served out, and this was their only bedding.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='217'/><anchor id='Pg217'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>We are certainly in a bad corner,</q> Dimchurch said, <q>but
+the great point will be to keep up our spirits and make the
+best of it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so,</q> Will agreed. <q rend="post: none">I am convinced that, however
+sharp a watch they may keep, three resolute men will find
+some way of escape. We’ll know a little more about it to-morrow.
+If there are windows to this building we ought to
+be able to get out of them, and if it is surrounded by walls we
+ought to be able to scale them. Besides, if we are set to work
+in the city we might find an opportunity of evading the diligence
+of our guards. For one thing, we must assume an air
+of cheerfulness while we work. In time, when they see that
+we do our work well and are contented and obedient, their
+watch will relax. Above all, we must not, like these poor
+fellows, make up our minds that our lot is hopeless. If we
+once lose hope we shall lose everything. At any rate, for the
+present we must wait patiently. We have still got to find
+out everything; all we know is that we are confined in a
+prison, and that we shall have to do some work or other
+during the day.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We have got to find out the plan of the city and its
+general bearings, to learn something, if we can, of the surrounding
+country, and to see how we should manage to
+subsist if we got away. Of course the natural idea would
+be to make for the sea and steal a boat. But we came up
+from the shore through an archway in the wall; it was
+strongly guarded, and I fear it would be next to impossible
+to get down to the port. Our best plan, I think, would be
+to take to the country if we can, and go down to the shore
+some distance from the city. We might then light upon
+<pb n='218'/><anchor id='Pg218'/>a boat belonging to some fisherman. Of course all this is
+pure conjecture, and all we can arrange is that we shall
+keep our eyes about us, and look for an empty house in
+which we might hide and discover how we might leave the
+town on the land side, where it is not likely the fortifications
+will be nearly so strong as on the sea-face.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning the captives were deprived of their
+clothes, and in their place were given dirty linen jackets
+and loose trousers. Their shoes were also taken away.
+They then fell in with the rest of the captives. On leaving
+the prison they were formed into companies, each of which,
+under a strong guard, marched off in different directions.
+The three friends kept close together, and were assigned to
+a company which was told off to clean the streets of a certain
+quarter of the town. They were furnished with brooms and
+brushes, and were soon hard at work. As the morning went
+on, the heat became tremendous. Several men fell, but the
+overseers lashed them until they got upon their feet again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My eye! this is like working in an oven,</q> Dimchurch
+muttered; <q>the dust is choking me. We must certainly get
+out of this as soon as we can, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I agree with you, Dimchurch. I feel as if I were melting
+away. If I were to put a bit of food in my mouth I believe
+the heat would bake it in no time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I couldn’t swallow anything,</q> Tom said, <q>not even a mackerel
+fresh out of the sea.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You know we agreed that we must make the best of
+everything,</q> Will said. <q>If we work as we are doing we
+can’t but please our overseers, and shall save ourselves from
+blows.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='219'/><anchor id='Pg219'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>They had better not strike me,</q> Dimchurch said; <q>the
+man that did it would never live to strike another.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That might be,</q> Will said, <q>but it would be a small
+satisfaction to you if you were to be flogged to death afterwards.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, I suppose not, sir; but flesh and blood can’t stand
+such a thing as being struck by one of these yellow hounds.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At twelve o’clock the gang returned, and the men drank
+eagerly from a fountain in the courtyard of the prison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Take as little as you can,</q> Will said; <q>if you drink much
+it will do you harm. You can drink often if you like, provided
+that you only take a sip at a time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is easy to say, Mr. Gilmore, but it is not so easy to
+do. I feel as if I could drink till I burst.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I dare say you do; I feel the same myself; but I am sure
+that to take a lot of water just now would do us harm instead
+of good.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Their abstinence so far benefited them that they felt their
+work in the afternoon less than they had done in the morning,
+though the heat was, if anything, greater.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+That evening they examined their prison. It consisted of
+one great hall supported by rows of pillars. Here the whole
+of the prisoners were confined. It was lighted by windows
+five-and-twenty feet from the ground. There was no guard
+inside, but fifty men, some of whom were always on sentry,
+slept outside the hall. It was clear to them, therefore, that
+no escape could be made after they were once locked up,
+and that if they were to get away at all they must make the
+attempt when they were employed outside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the third day one of the sailors from the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>, who
+<pb n='220'/><anchor id='Pg220'/>had disregarded Will’s advice to drink sparingly, fell down
+dead after drinking till he could drink no more. Scarcely a
+day passed without one or more of the captives succumbing;
+some of them went mad and were at once despatched by their
+guards.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After working for a fortnight in the streets the gang were
+marched in another direction, and were put to labour on the
+fortifications. This was a great relief. They were now free
+from the choking dust of the streets, and obtained a view of
+the surrounding country. The three, as usual, laboured
+together, and showed so much zeal and activity that they
+pleased the head of their guard. They had the great advantage
+that they were accustomed to work together, while the
+majority of the gang had no such experience. There were
+men of all nationalities—French, Spanish, Italians, Maltese,
+and Greeks, and though most of them were accustomed to a
+warm climate, they had nothing like the strength of the three
+Englishmen. In moving heavy stones, therefore, the three
+friends were able to perform as much work as any dozen
+other prisoners. They were the only Englishmen in the
+gang, for the other two sailors had been from the first placed
+with another party.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the march to their work they passed by a palace of
+considerable extent, surrounded by grounds which were entered
+on that side by a small postern gate. <q>I would give a good
+deal to know if that gate is locked,</q> Will said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What good would that do, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, if we could get in there we might hide in the shrubbery,
+and stop there till the first pursuit was over. No one
+would think of searching there. I should say we might, if we
+<pb n='221'/><anchor id='Pg221'/>had luck, seize and bind three of the gardeners or attendants,
+and so issue from one of the gates dressed in their clothes
+without exciting suspicion.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What should we do for grub, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, for that we must trust to chance. There are houses
+that might be robbed, and travellers who might be lightened
+of their belongings. I can’t think that three active men,
+though they might be unarmed, would allow themselves to
+starve. Of course we should want to get rid of these clothes,
+and find some weapons; but the great point of all is to discover
+whether that door is locked.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>All right, sir! I am ready to try anything you may suggest,
+for I am sick to death of this work, and the heat, and the
+food, and the guard, and everything connected with it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They looked at the door with longing eyes each time they
+passed it. At last one day a man came out of the gateway
+just as they were passing, and, pulling the gate to behind
+him, walked away without apparently thinking of locking it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That settles that point,</q> Will said. <q>The next most
+important question is, Are there people moving about inside?
+Then how are we to slip away unseen? To begin with, we
+will manage always to walk in the rear of the gang. There
+are often rows; if some poor wretch goes mad and attacks
+the guard there is generally a rush of the others to his assistance.
+If such a thing were to happen near this gate we
+might manage to slip in unnoticed. Still, I admit the chances
+are against anything of the sort taking place just at that
+point, and I expect we must try and think of something
+better.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A fortnight later, just as they were passing the door, a
+<pb n='222'/><anchor id='Pg222'/>small party of cavalry, evidently the escort to some great
+chief, came dashing along at full speed. The road being
+somewhat narrow the slaves and guards scattered in all
+directions, several of them being knocked down.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now is our chance!</q> Will exclaimed; and the three ran to
+the gate and entered the garden. There was no one in sight;
+evening was coming on, and any men who might have been
+working in the garden had left. They closed the gate behind
+them and turned the key in the lock, then ran into a shrubbery
+and threw themselves down. They trusted that in the
+confusion their absence would not be noticed, and this seemed
+to be the case, for they heard loud orders given and then all
+was quiet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So far so good,</q> Will said. <q>The first step is taken, and
+the most difficult one. To-morrow, when the gardeners come,
+we will spring upon three of them and bind them. I should
+not think that there will be more than that.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortune favoured them, however, for an hour later three
+servants came along, laughing and talking together. The
+sailors prepared to act, and as the men passed their hiding-place
+Will gave the word, and, leaping out upon them, they
+hurled them to the ground. Tom and Dimchurch both
+stunned their men, and then aided Will to secure the one
+he had knocked down. Without ceremony they stripped off
+the clothes of the fallen men, tore up their own rags, and
+bound the captives securely, shoving a ball of the material
+between the teeth of each, and then secured them to three
+trees a short distance apart.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is good,</q> said Will, as they put on the servants’
+clothes; <q>they are safe till they are found in the morning.
+<pb n='223'/><anchor id='Pg223'/>In these clothes we can boldly venture out from the town
+gate as soon as it is opened. There is always the risk that
+our colour may betray us, but we are all burnt nearly as
+dark as mahogany and may very well pass.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Shall we start now, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, they will find out when they get to the prison that
+we are missing, and there will be a keen hunt for us. And
+now I come to think of it, the guards at the gate will be
+warned of our escape, and will probably question us, particularly
+as these bright-coloured garments would attract their
+attention. I really think our best plan would be to go out
+into the town at once and try to get hold of other disguises.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It would be a good thing if we could do so, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Dear me, how stupid I am!</q> exclaimed Will after a pause.
+<q>You know that wall we were repairing to-day? It was only
+about fourteen feet above the ground outside, so we should
+have no difficulty in dropping down.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so, sir. It is an easy drop, and by leaving in that
+way we’ll avoid being questioned, and get well away before
+the alarm is given.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then we will lose no time,</q> said Will. <q>We have to
+pass through a busy quarter, but if we go separately we shall
+attract no notice, though no doubt by this time the search will
+have begun. They will be looking, however, for three men
+together. Of course they will not so much as cast an eye
+upon the servants of this palace, for they will know nothing
+of our doings here till to-morrow morning. I will go first
+when we get into the street. You, Dimchurch, follow me forty
+or fifty yards behind, and Tom the same distance behind you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hardly think they will be in search of us yet,</q>
+Dim<pb n='224'/><anchor id='Pg224'/>church said. <q>It is little more than an hour since we
+escaped, and they won’t find out till they get to the prison
+and count the gang. When they have done that they would
+have to see who it was that was missing, and then they would
+take some time to organize the <corr sic="no quote">search.</corr></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so, Dimchurch; still, we will take every precaution.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So saying they started. When they were half-way to the
+wall they saw a number of soldiers and convict guards come
+running along, questioning many people as they passed. They
+trembled lest they should be discovered, but fortunately no
+question was put to any of them, and they kept on their way.
+Presently Will emerged upon the open space of ground between
+the wall and the houses, and when Dimchurch and Tom
+had come up they went together along the foot of the wall
+until they came to the place where they had been working.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Keep your eyes open,</q> Will said as they climbed up,
+<q>there are crowbars and hammers lying about, and, where the
+stone-cutters were working, chisels. A crowbar or a heavy
+hammer is a weapon not to be despised.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a few minutes each was armed with a chisel and a light
+crowbar. They then went to the edge of the wall, and, throwing
+these weapons down, lowered themselves as far as they
+could reach and dropped to the ground.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank God we are out of that place!</q> Will said fervently;
+<q>we won’t enter it again alive. Now, the first thing is to get
+as far away as possible, keeping as nearly parallel to the line
+of the coast as we can, but four or five miles back, for we
+may be sure that when they cannot find us in the town they
+will suspect that we have made for the coast, and a dozen
+<pb n='225'/><anchor id='Pg225'/>horsemen will be sent out to look for us along the shore.
+It is no use our thinking of trying to get to sea until the
+search has been given up. Our principal difficulty will be
+to live. From the walls the country looked well cultivated
+in parts, and even if we have to exist on raw grain we shall
+not be much worse off than when we were in <corr sic="no quote">prison.</corr></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t care what it is,</q> Tom said, <q>so long as there is
+enough of it to keep us alive; but we must have water.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t think there will be much difficulty about that,
+Tom, as every one of the houses scattered over the plain
+will have wells and fountains in their gardens. Thank goodness,
+they won’t miss any we take, and we could go every
+night and fetch water without exciting any suspicion that we
+had been there!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>One of the first things we must do,</q> said Will, <q>is to
+dirty these white jackets and trousers so that we may look
+like field labourers, for then if anyone should catch sight of us
+in the distance we should attract no attention.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They walked all night, and just as morning was breaking
+they saw a large country house with the usual garden. They
+climbed over the wall, which was not high, and drew some
+water in a bucket which they found standing at the mouth of
+the well.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This bucket we will confiscate,</q> Will said; <q>we can hardly
+lie hidden all day without having a drink. Of course they
+will miss it; but when they cannot find it they will suppose
+that it has been mislaid or stolen. One of the gardeners will
+probably get the blame, but we can’t help that. Now we
+will go another mile and then look for a hiding-place. There
+are a lot of sand-hills scattered about, and if we can’t find
+<pb n='226'/><anchor id='Pg226'/>a hole that will suit us we must scoop one out. I believe
+they are pretty hard inside, but our crowbars will soon make
+a place large enough.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After an hour’s walk they fixed upon a spot on the shady
+side of a hill and began to make a cave that would allow the
+three to lie side by side. The work was completed in less
+than an hour, and they crawled in and scraped up some of
+the fallen sand so as partially to close the mouth behind them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank goodness, we have got shelter and water!</q> Will
+said. <q>As for food, we must forage for it to-night.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am quite content to go without it for to-day,</q> Dimchurch
+said, <q>and to lie here and sleep and do nothing. I
+don’t think anything would tempt me to get up and walk a
+mile farther, not even the prospects of a good dinner.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, as we are all so tired we shall probably sleep till
+evening.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a few minutes all were asleep. Once or twice in the
+course of the day they woke up and took a drink from the
+bucket and then fell off again. At sunset all sat up quite
+refreshed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I begin to feel that I have an appetite,</q> Will said; <q>now
+I think, for to-night, we will content ourselves with going
+into one of the fields and plucking a lot of the ears of maize.
+Messages may have been sent out all over the country, and
+the people may be watchful. It will be wise to avoid all risk
+of discovery. We can gather a few sticks and make a fire in
+there to roast the maize; there are sand-hills all round, so
+what little flame we make would not be <corr sic="noticed.'">noticed.</corr></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But how about a light?</q> Dimchurch asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I picked up a piece of flint as we came along this
+morn<pb n='227'/><anchor id='Pg227'/>ing,</q> Will said, <q>and by means of one of these chisels we
+ought to be able to strike a light; a few dead leaves, finely
+crumbled up, should do instead of tinder.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is a good thing to keep one’s eyes open,</q> Dimchurch
+remarked. <q>Now if I had seen that piece of stone I should
+not have given it a thought, and here it is going to give us a
+hot dinner!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As there were numbers of fields in the neighbourhood they
+soon returned with an armful of maize each. Dried weeds
+and sticks were then collected, and after repeated failures a
+light was at last obtained, and soon the grain was roasted. A
+jacket was stretched across the entrance of their den so that,
+should anyone be passing near, they would not observe the light.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now,</q> Will said as they munched some maize the next
+evening, <q>we must start foraging. We will go in opposite
+directions, and each must take his bearing accurately or we’ll
+never come together again.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were out for some hours, and when they returned it
+was found that Will had come across four fowls, Tom had
+gathered a variety of fruit, consisting chiefly of melons and
+peaches, while Dimchurch, who was the last to come in,
+brought a small sheep.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We only want one thing to make us perfect,</q> Will said,
+<q>and that is a pipe of ’bacca.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, that would be a welcome addition,</q> Tom admitted,
+<q>but it does not do to expect too much. I should not be at
+all surprised if we were to light upon some tobacco plants in
+one of the gardens, but of course it could hardly be like a
+properly dried leaf. I dare say, though, we could make something
+of it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='228'/><anchor id='Pg228'/>
+
+<p>
+So they lived for a month, sometimes better, sometimes
+worse, but with sufficient food of one sort or another. So far
+as they knew no suspicion of their presence had been excited,
+though their petty robberies must have been noticed. One evening,
+however, Will, on going to the top of the sand-hill, as he
+generally did, saw a large detachment of soldiers coming along,
+searching the ground carefully. He ran down at once to his
+companions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Take your weapons, lads,</q> he said, <q>and make off; a
+strong party of soldiers are searching the country, and they
+are coming this way. No doubt they are looking for us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had run but a few hundred yards when they heard
+shouts, and, looking round, they saw a Moorish officer waving
+his hands and gesticulating. This was alarming, but they
+reckoned that they had fully five hundred yards start.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Keep up a steady pace,</q> Will said; <q>I don’t expect the
+beggars can run faster than we can. It will be pitch dark in
+half an hour, and as, fortunately, there is no moon, I expect
+we’ll be able to give them the slip.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As they advanced they found that the vegetation became
+scarcer and scarcer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am afraid we are on the edge of a desert,</q> Will said,
+<q>which means that there are no more fowls and fruit for us.
+I see, Dimchurch, that you have been the most thoughtful this
+time. That half sheep and those cakes will be very valuable
+to us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I wasn’t going to leave them for the soldiers if I knew it,
+sir; they wouldn’t have gone far among them, while they will
+last us some time with care.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They changed their course several times as soon as it
+<pb n='229'/><anchor id='Pg229'/>became quite dark, and presently had the satisfaction of
+hearing the shouts of their pursuers fade away behind them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now we can take it quietly, lads. We can guide ourselves
+towards the sea by means of the stars. I fancy it
+must be fully twenty miles away. We must hold on till we
+get to it, and then gradually work our way along among
+the sand-hills or clumps of bush bordering it till we come
+to a village. Then we must contrive to get a good supply of
+food and water, steal a boat, and make off. If galleys were
+sent out to search for us they must have given it up long ago.
+As for other craft, we’ll have to take our chance with them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They kept steadily north and at last came down to the
+coast. As it was still dark they lay down till morning. When
+the sun rose they thought they could make out a village some
+eight miles away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now it will be quite safe to cook our breakfast,</q> Dimchurch
+said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I think so,</q> Will answered, <q>but we must be sparing
+with the mutton; that is our only food at present, and it may
+be some little time before we get hold of anything else.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After breakfast they lay down among the bushes and slept
+till evening. Then they started along the shore towards the
+village. When they got within half a mile of it they halted.
+They could see some boats on the shore, so they felt that the
+only difficulty in their way was the question of provisions.
+When it was quite dark they went into the village and started
+to forage, but on meeting again they had very little to show.
+Between them they had managed to take five fowls; but the
+village was evidently a poor place, for with the exception of a
+few melons there was no fruit.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='230'/><anchor id='Pg230'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>The beggars must have grain somewhere,</q> said Will.
+<q>They can’t live on fowls and melons.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I expect, sir, they live very largely on fish.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is likely enough,</q> Will agreed. <q>Let us put down
+these fowls and melons under this bush, and have a nap for a
+couple of hours, till we are sure that everyone is asleep. We
+can then go down and have a look at the boats. Those of
+them that come in late may probably leave some of their catch
+on board.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they went down to the boats they found that three
+of them contained a fair quantity of fish. They helped themselves
+to some of these, and then retreated some distance from
+the village, picking up the other provisions on the way, and
+then, going into a clump of bushes, cooked a portion of the fish.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That pretty well settles the question of provisions,</q> Will
+said. <q>We must choose a night when there is a good wind
+blowing offshore, so that we may run a good many miles before
+morning. Then we must trust to falling in with one of our
+cruisers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Fish won’t keep long in this climate,</q> suggested Tom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No,</q> said Will, <q>but we can dry some of them in the sun
+and they will then keep good for some time. Then we might
+clean half a dozen fowls and cook them before we start.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The great difficulty will be water.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, but we can get over that by stripping the gardens
+clean of their melons. They weigh four or five pounds apiece
+and would supply us with fluid for a week easily.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next evening they went down and made a more careful
+examination of the boats. One in particular attracted their
+attention. She was nearly new, and looked likely to be
+<pb n='231'/><anchor id='Pg231'/>faster than the rest. She was anchored some fifty yards
+from the shore. Three more evenings were spent in prowling
+about the village collecting food. It was evident that the
+villagers were alarmed at their depredations, for on the third
+evening they were fired at by several men. In consequence
+of this they moved a mile farther away, in case a search should
+be made, and the next night carried the provisions down to
+the shore. As they were all expert swimmers they were soon
+alongside the chosen craft. They pushed the provisions before
+them on a small raft, and when they had put them on board
+they made a trip to one or two of the other boats and brought
+away some twenty pounds of fish. Then they cut the hawser
+and hoisted sail. As they did so they heard a great tumult
+on shore, and the villagers ran down to the water’s edge and
+opened fire upon them. The shooting, however, was wild, and
+they were very soon out of range. Several boats put off in
+pursuit. This caused them some uneasiness, and they watched
+them somewhat anxiously, for the wind, though favourable,
+was light, and they felt by no means certain that they would
+be able to keep ahead of the rowers. The stolen craft, however,
+proved unexpectedly fast, and the boats, after following
+fifteen miles without sensibly gaining, at last gave up the
+chase. About this time, too, the wind, to their great relief,
+became stronger, and the little vessel flew more and more
+rapidly over the sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is a fine craft,</q> Dimchurch said; <q>these Moors certainly
+know how to build boats. It would require a smart
+cutter to hold her own with us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dimchurch kept at the helm and the other two investigated
+their capture. She was three parts decked. In the cabin
+<pb n='232'/><anchor id='Pg232'/>they came upon a lantern and flint and steel, and soon had
+light, which helped them greatly in their work. In the bow
+ropes were stored away, while in a locker they found some
+bread, which, although stale, was very acceptable. They also
+unearthed two or three suits of rough sea clothes with which
+they were glad to replace the light clothes they had carried
+away with them from the palace grounds, for though the
+weather on shore was warm the sea-breeze was chilly. Among
+other useful things they also discovered several long knives,
+and axes, and a flat stone for cooking upon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now it is all a question of luck,</q> Will said; <q>the danger
+will be greater when we get a bit farther out. All vessels
+going up and down the Mediterranean give the Barbary coast
+a wide berth. Of course those pirate fellows are most
+numerous along the line of traffic, but they are to be found
+right up to the Spanish, French, and Italian coasts, though of
+late, I fancy, they have not been so active. There are too
+many of our cruisers about for their taste, and the Spaniards,
+when they get a chance, show the scoundrels no mercy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When morning broke not a sail was visible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think, sir,</q> Dimchurch said, <q>that there is going to be
+a change of weather, and that we are in for a gale.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It does not matter much. I fancy this boat would go
+through it however severe it might be.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, but it would check our progress, and we want to
+run north as fast as we can. I see, by the line you are
+making, that you are aiming at Toulon, and at our present
+pace it would take us something like four days to get there.
+If we are caught in a gale we may take two days longer.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so,</q> Will agreed; <q>but on the other hand, if the
+<pb n='233'/><anchor id='Pg233'/>wind becomes much stronger we’ll have to take in sail, and
+in that case we should have more chance of escaping notice if
+we come near any of those Moorish craft. Besides, if the sea
+were really rough it would be difficult for them to board us
+even if they did come up with us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are right, sir; still, for myself, I should prefer a
+strong southerly wind and a clear sky.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I am afraid you will not get your wish, for the
+clouds certainly seem to be banking up from the north, and
+we’ll get a change of wind ere long.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By night the wind was blowing fiercely and the sea rapidly
+rising. The sails were closely reefed, and even then they
+felt with pleasure that the little craft was making good way.
+The wind increased during the night, and was blowing a gale
+by morning. Just at twelve o’clock a craft was seen approaching
+which all were convinced was an Algerine. She changed
+her course at once and bore down upon them, firing a gun as
+a signal for them to stop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is rather faster than we are,</q> Dimchurch said, <q>but
+we’ll lead her a good dance before she gets hold of us. She
+could not work her guns in this sea, and if she is the faster,
+at least we are the handier.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For three hours the chase continued. Again and again the
+Algerine came up on them, but each time the little boat, turning
+almost on her heel, so cleverly was she handled, glided
+away from underneath the enemy’s bows. Each time, when
+they saw the chase slipping away from them, the angry Moors
+sent a volley of musketry after her, but the fugitives took
+refuge in the cabin, or lay down on the deck close under the
+bulwarks, and so escaped.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='234'/><anchor id='Pg234'/>
+
+<p>
+Soon the Moors were so intent on the chase that they
+began to take great risks with their own vessel. In fact, they
+became positively reckless. For this they paid very heavily.
+After many disappointments they felt that the fugitives were
+at last in their clutches, and were preparing to board her
+when suddenly Dimchurch put down his helm sharply. He
+nearly capsized the little craft, and indeed they would rather
+have gone down with her than fall into the hands of the
+Moors again, but she righted immediately, and once more
+skimmed away from her pursuers. In the excitement of the
+moment the Moorish steersman attempted the same manœuvre.
+If he had succeeded he would probably have run down the
+cockle-shell that had baffled him so long. But at that moment
+a violent squall struck his ship with its full force, and her
+mainmast snapped a few feet above the deck. The three
+fugitives jumped to their feet and cheered, and then calmly
+proceeded on their way.
+</p>
+</div><div n="12">
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER XII</head>
+
+<head type="sub">BACK ON THE <q>TARTAR</q></head>
+
+<p>
+The next morning broke fair. Their late foe had dropped
+out of sight on the previous evening, but now, when the
+sun rose, Tom made out the top-sails of a large ship on the
+horizon.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is coming towards us, lads, and by the course she is
+steering she will pass within three miles of us. Is she English
+or French?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='235'/><anchor id='Pg235'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is too far away yet to be certain,</q> Dimchurch said,
+<q>but I can’t help thinking she is French.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>At any rate, Dimchurch, our best course will be to lower
+the sail, shake the reef-points out, and have it ready for
+hoisting at a moment’s notice. Now that the wind is light
+again I should fancy we could get away from her; with a
+start of two or three miles she would have no chance whatever
+of catching us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Suddenly Tom Stevens exclaimed:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is a sail coming up from behind. She looks to me
+close-hauled. If both ships come on they are bound to meet;
+if one is French and the other is English they are likely to
+have a talk to each other. In that case we should be able to
+tell friend from foe by the colours, and could then make
+for the English ship.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They sat anxiously watching the two ships, and soon they
+saw that the point of meeting must be very near their own
+position. Presently their hulls became visible, and Dimchurch
+pronounced one to be a thirty-two-gun frigate, and the other
+a forty or forty-two. They then made out that the one coming
+up from the south was flying the white ensign, and at once
+they hoisted their sail and made for her. Equally intent
+upon a fight, the two vessels approached each other without
+paying the slightest attention to the little craft.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The Frenchman means fighting, and as he has ten guns
+to the good he may well think he is more than a match for
+our ship. Do you know her, Dimchurch?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think she is the <name type="ship">Lysander</name>, sir, though I can’t be sure;
+there are so many of these thirty-twos.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The vessels, as they passed, exchanged broadsides. Then
+<pb n='236'/><anchor id='Pg236'/>both tacked, but the Englishman was the quicker, and he
+raked the French frigate as she came round. Then they
+went at it hammer and tongs. The Frenchman suffered very
+heavily in spars and rigging, but at last the foremast of the
+English ship fell over her side. The Frenchman at once
+closed with her, and after pouring in a broadside, tried to
+board her.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The little boat bore up to the stern of the English ship.
+A desperate conflict was going on at that point, and failing
+to get up they moved along the side. Here a rope, which
+had been cut by the French fire, was hanging overboard,
+and, grasping this, they climbed up to a port-hole. The deck
+was deserted, all hands having rushed up to meet the attack
+of the French boarders. Without a moment’s delay they
+snatched cutlasses from a rack and ran up the companion
+to the upper deck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Here things were going somewhat badly. The French were
+much more numerous than the English, and were forcing them
+back by sheer weight of numbers. The new-comers rushed at
+once into the fray, and laid about them lustily. The force
+and suddenness of the onslaught caused the enemy to hesitate,
+and at the same time it had the effect of inspiring to fresh
+efforts the English crew, who, having lost their captain and
+first lieutenant, were beginning to lose heart. They answered
+the cheers of their strangely-clad allies, and with one accord
+charged to meet them. At that moment Dimchurch almost
+severed the French captain’s head from his body by a sweeping
+blow, and the French, being disheartened by the loss
+of their leader, gave way. The English sailors redoubled
+their efforts, and after ten minutes of desperate fighting
+<pb n='237'/><anchor id='Pg237'/>succeeded in driving their foes back to their own ship.
+Then the men ran to their guns again and the cannonade
+recommenced. But the spirit of the two crews had changed.
+The French were discouraged by their failure, and the British
+were exultant over their success. Consequently the guns
+of the English ship were fired with far more rapidity and
+precision than those of the French. Several of the port-holes
+of the French ship were knocked into one, and when
+at last her mainmast, which had been hit several times, fell
+over her side, her flag was run down amidst tremendous cheering
+from the English ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Immediately all hands were engaged in disarming and securing
+the French prisoners. When these had been sent
+below, the decks of both ships were cleared of the dead.
+Then the bulk of the crew set to work to cut away the
+wreckage, secure damaged spars, and stop holes near the
+water’s edge. At last the second lieutenant, who was now
+in command, had time to turn to the strangers. Will was
+superintending the work, while Dimchurch and Tom were
+working hand in hand with the crew.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>May I ask,</q> said the lieutenant, addressing Will, <q>who it
+is that has so mysteriously come to our assistance?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly,</q> said Will, laughing; <q>I had quite forgotten
+that I am clothed in strange garments. I am a midshipman
+belonging to the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>. One of my companions is a boatswain’s
+mate, and the other is an A.B. on the same ship. We
+were sent with a lieutenant and ten men to overhaul a craft
+which, though she was somewhat suspicious looking, seemed
+to have but a small crew. When we got alongside her, however,
+we found to our disgust that she was manned by at least
+<pb n='238'/><anchor id='Pg238'/>a hundred Algerines. The lieutenant and seven of the crew
+were killed, and three others, my two companions, and myself
+were made prisoners and carried to Algiers. We three escaped,
+and, capturing the small craft which you will see lying by the
+side of your ship, made for the open sea. An Algerine nearly
+recaptured us in the gale yesterday, but fortunately she
+carried away her mast and we again escaped. This morning
+we saw two ships approaching us, and when we made out
+their nationalities we knew there was bound to be a fight.
+Naturally we made for your ship, and when we found that the
+French had boarded you we did our best to aid you to drive
+them back. My name is Gilmore.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, Mr. Gilmore, I have to thank you most heartily for
+the very efficacious aid you have rendered us. Things were
+going very badly, but your unexpected appearance, your
+strange attire, and the strength and bravery with which you
+fought, quite turned the tables. I think,</q> he said with a
+laugh, <q>the French must have taken you for three devils
+come to our assistance, and certainly you could not have
+fought harder if you had been. You will, I hope, give us
+your assistance until we reach Malta, to which port, of course,
+I shall carry the prize. Our third lieutenant is severely
+wounded, and I have lost two of my midshipmen.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly, sir, and I will place myself at once under your
+orders.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The two midshipmen who have fallen were the seniors,</q>
+the lieutenant said, <q>and as you must be two or three years
+older than the others I’ll appoint you acting-lieutenant. Our
+first duty here will be to rig up a jury foremast. I’ll appoint
+you, however, temporary commander of the <name type="ship">Camille</name>, which is,
+<pb n='239'/><anchor id='Pg239'/>I see, the name of our prize. I can only spare you forty men.
+We have lost forty-three killed and at least as many wounded,
+and I have therefore only a hundred and ten altogether fit
+for service, and must retain seventy for the work of refitting.
+I should not attempt to get up a jury mainmast on the <name type="ship">Camille</name>.
+It will be better to clear away the wreckage and secure her
+other two masts in case we meet with another squall.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I understand, sir. If either of the midshipmen that have
+been killed is about my size, I should be glad to rig myself
+out with a suit from his chest, for my appearance at present
+is rather undignified for a British officer. I should also be
+glad if the purser’s clerk would issue a couple of suits for my
+two men. I may tell you that they have been with me in
+every ship in which I have served, and indeed entered the
+navy with me. I therefore regard them quite as personal
+friends. The bigger of the two held the position of boatswain
+under me in a small craft of which I had command
+in the West Indies, as well as on the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, then, by all means give him the temporary
+rank of boatswain on board the <name type="ship">Camille</name>, and you can appoint
+the other as boatswain’s mate.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, sir! I am very much obliged. It would be
+difficult to find two better men.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In ten minutes Will was attired in a midshipman’s uniform,
+and his two companions, to their great relief, in the clothes
+of British seamen. They then crossed to the <name type="ship">Camille</name> with the
+forty men whom the lieutenant had told off as a prize crew.
+Work was at once begun, and before sundown the fore and
+mizzen masts were as firmly secured as if the mainmast were
+still in its place. Will felt that they could now meet a storm
+<pb n='240'/><anchor id='Pg240'/>without uneasiness. Next morning the repairs to the hull
+were begun, pieces of plank covered with tarred canvas being
+nailed over the shot-holes, and ere the day was done the
+<name type="ship">Camille</name> had a fairly presentable appearance. Meanwhile
+the crew of the <name type="ship">Lysander</name> had been hard at work, and had
+got the jury-foremast into position and securely stayed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You have made a very good job of the prize, Mr. Gilmore,</q>
+the lieutenant said. <q>Of course she is a lame duck
+without her mainmast, but we’ll sail together, and so will
+show a good face to any single ship we may meet.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should certainly think so, sir. Should any ship heave
+in sight I will get all the guns loaded on both broadsides.
+Of course, I should only be able to work one side at a time,
+but with forty good men I could keep up a pretty hot fire.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will give you ten more, Mr. Gilmore. Now that our
+repairs are finished I can manage that easily, and as the
+<name type="ship">Camille</name> is a bigger ship than the <name type="ship">Lysander</name> you ought certainly
+to have as many as can be spared.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, sir! I am sure I could make a good fight
+with that number, and as we have covered all the shot-holes
+with canvas, and so do not appear to be injured in the hull,
+I don’t think any one ship would think of meddling with
+us, unless, of course, she were a line-of-battle ship. In that
+case our chance would be a small one, although, by presenting
+a resolute front, we might cause her to sheer off without engaging
+us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortunately they fell in with no enemy on their way to
+Malta. When they arrived in port the lieutenant went to
+the flag-ship with his report. The admiral was greatly
+pleased at the capture, and he was specially interested when
+<pb n='241'/><anchor id='Pg241'/>he learned the share that Will and his two companions had
+taken in the fight, and the manner in which Will had performed
+his duties while in command of the <name type="ship">Camille</name>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Gilmore?</q> he asked. <q>That is the name of a young midshipman
+who was on board the <name type="ship">Furious</name>. Is that the man?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I believe he is, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, tell him to come and see me when he is disengaged.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lieutenant reported this when he returned, and a little
+later Will went on board the flag-ship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, Mr. Gilmore,</q> said the admiral, <q>so you are still
+to the fore. I read some time ago the official report of a midshipman
+of your name in the West Indies who had captured
+two vessels, each larger than the craft he commanded, and I
+wondered whether it was the lad I had met here.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will acknowledged that he had commanded on that
+occasion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It shows that the admiral there was as struck as I was
+myself with your doings, that he should have appointed you
+to command that craft, when he must have had so many
+senior midshipmen to select from. What had you done?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It was really nothing, sir. We were lying off a pirate
+stronghold, but could not get at it, as our ship was too deep
+for the shallow approaches. In the course of conversation in
+the midshipmen’s mess I happened to suggest that if we got
+hold of some native craft we might be able to beard the lion
+in his den, and one of the elder midshipmen reported the
+idea to one of the lieutenants, who passed it on to the captain,
+who put it into execution. The result was that we
+captured two vessels and a very large amount of plunder
+which they had stored on an island. I got a great deal more
+<pb n='242'/><anchor id='Pg242'/>credit than was due to me, for I had only suggested the plan
+when joking with my companions, and the captain improved
+upon it greatly in carrying it out. It was very good of
+him to mention in his report that the original idea was mine.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It was a good plan,</q> the admiral said, <q>and you well
+deserve the credit you got. And so it was for that that you
+got the command of the cutter! Tell me about the capture of
+those two pirate vessels.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will related the story of the trap that had been formed for
+<name type="ship">L’Agile</name>, and the manner in which he had captured his two
+ <corr sic='opponents."'>opponents.</corr>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Admirably managed, Mr. Gilmore,</q> the admiral said.
+<q>How much longer have you to serve?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have another year yet, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, a commission is to sit here next week to pass
+midshipmen. I will direct them to examine you, and will
+see that you get your step the day you finish your term
+of service. If I had the power I would pass you at once,
+but that is one of the things an admiral cannot do. But how
+was it that you got on board the <name type="ship">Lysander</name>?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will related the story of his captivity with the Algerines
+and his escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Just what I should have expected of you,</q> the admiral
+said. <q>I fancy it would take a very strong prison to hold
+you. Well, tell Lieutenant Hearsey that I shall expect him
+to dinner to-day, and that he is to bring you with him. I’ll
+ask two or three other officers to meet you, and you shall then
+tell the story of your adventures.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A post-captain and three other captains dined that evening
+with the admiral, and when Will had modestly related his
+<pb n='243'/><anchor id='Pg243'/>adventures they complimented him highly. Two of them
+happened to be on the examining committee, and consequently
+Will passed almost without question. A few days later he
+was appointed temporarily to a ship bound for the blockading
+fleet of Toulon, where he was informed he would probably find
+his own ship. When he and his two companions rejoined the
+<name type="ship">Tartar</name> they were warmly congratulated on their escape from
+Algiers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am sorry for the loss of Lieutenant Saxton,</q> the captain
+said, when Will had reported the manner in which they had
+been captured. <q rend="post: none">He was a good officer, and in this case he
+was not to blame. With our telescopes we could only see a
+few men on board the Algerine, and they must have kept up
+the deception till the last. It is to be regretted that you
+followed her so far out of reach of our guns, though, so far
+as his fate was concerned, we could not have altered it even
+if we had been within easy range.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>At any rate, Mr. Gilmore, you were by no means to blame
+in the affair, and I congratulate you on having effected your
+escape with your two followers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had only rejoined the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> a short time when, on the
+5th February, 1794, the captain was signalled to proceed with
+a small squadron that was to sail, under Captain Linzee of the
+<name type="ship">Alcide</name>, as commodore, to Corsica, where a force under General
+Paoli had asked for assistance in their endeavours to regain
+their freedom.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The chief strongholds of that island were the fortified towns
+of San Fiorenzo, Bastia, and Calvi. These towns are near
+each other, and as the troops scornfully rejected his summons
+to surrender, the commodore was placed in a difficulty. The
+<pb n='244'/><anchor id='Pg244'/>force under his command was not strong enough to blockade
+the three forts at once, while they were so near each other
+that to blockade one or two and leave the entrance to the
+other open would have been useless. He determined at first
+to take Forneilli, a fortified place two miles from San Fiorenzo,
+but when he opened the attack he found that it was so much
+more strongly fortified than he had anticipated that its capture
+could not be effected without more loss than the gain of the
+position would justify.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lord Hood then placed a squadron of frigates under Captain
+Nelson’s command to cruise off the north-western coast of the
+island so as to prevent supplies being introduced, and he also
+sailed there himself with some of his seventy-fours and a body
+of soldiers under Major-general Dundas. Before he arrived,
+Nelson had done something towards facilitating his enterprise,
+for, having learned that the French in San Fiorenzo drew their
+supplies of flour from a mill near the shore, he landed a body
+of seamen and soldiers and burnt the mill, threw into the sea
+all the flour contained in it and in a large storehouse close to
+it, and regained his ship without the loss of a man.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When Lord Hood arrived he ordered Nelson to land on
+the island to prevent supplies from getting into Bastia, and
+took charge of the siege of San Fiorenzo himself. On his
+way Nelson captured the town of Maginaggio, routed the
+garrison, and destroyed a great quantity of provisions which
+were being prepared for a number of French vessels in the
+harbour. Lord Hood commenced the siege by attacking the
+town of Mortella. The garrison fought with great bravery
+and inflicted heavy loss upon the <name type="ship">Fortitude</name>, seventy-four guns,
+to which the task of battering was assigned. As she was
+<pb n='245'/><anchor id='Pg245'/>evidently getting the worst of it the <name type="ship">Fortitude</name> was withdrawn,
+but the shore batteries were more successful, and the place
+being set on fire the garrison surrendered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Convention redoubt was the next place to be attacked.
+It was fortified in a most formidable manner, and indeed was
+so strongly constructed as to withstand any ordinary attack.
+A short distance away, however, was a rock rising seven
+hundred feet above the level of the sea, which entirely commanded
+it. This the enemy had left unfortified and unguarded
+because they believed it was inaccessible. In many
+places it was almost perpendicular, and though there was a
+path leading to the summit, this was in very few places wide
+enough to allow more than one person to ascend at a time.
+Admiral Hood in person reconnoitred and decided that a
+battery could be formed on the summit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day Will was on shore in command of a party
+of thirty men who were to start getting up the guns. The
+sailors looked at the rock and at the guns in dismay.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>La, Mr. Gilmore,</q> one of them said, <q>we can never get
+them up there! In the first place it is too steep, and in the
+second it is too rough. It would take two hundred men to
+do it, and even they would not be much good, for the path
+winds and twists so much that they could not put their
+strength on together.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will looked at the path, and at the hill on which the new
+battery was to be formed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You see, sir,</q> another said, <q>the path would have to be
+blasted in lots of places to make room for the guns, and we
+have got no tools for the job.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will did not answer. He saw that what the men said was
+<pb n='246'/><anchor id='Pg246'/>correct. Presently, however, his eye fell upon an empty rum
+puncheon, and at once his thoughts flashed back to the West
+Indies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Wheel that puncheon here, men.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Much surprised, the men did as they were ordered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now knock out both ends, and when you have tightened
+the hoops again, fill the barrel about a third full with sticks,
+grass, bits of wood, anything you can come across.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men scattered at once to collect the ballast, with some
+doubts in their minds as to whether the midshipman had not
+gone out of his senses. In about fifteen minutes they had
+carried out his instructions.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Dismount the gun,</q> he then ordered, <q>and put it inside
+the barrel.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When this had, with some difficulty, been accomplished,
+and the barrel surrounded the centre of the gun, he said:
+<q>Now fill up the barrel with the rest of that rubbish.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors had now caught the idea, and very soon they
+had the gun tightly packed into its novel carriage. Two long
+ropes were then passed round the puncheon, the ends being
+carried a little way up the hill. This formed a parbuckle,
+and when the men hauled upon the upper lengths of the ropes
+the cask easily rolled up to the ends of the lower lengths.
+This operation was repeated again and again, and gradually
+the cask moved up the rock. At places it had to be hauled
+up lengthways, boards being placed underneath it to give it
+a smooth surface over which to glide instead of the rough
+rock, and men encouraging it from behind with levers. While
+they were at work Nelson came up and stood watching them
+for some minutes without speaking.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='247'/><anchor id='Pg247'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Where did you learn how to do that?</q> he said to Will
+at last.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I heard of it at the siege of St. Pierre, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, you profited by your lesson. It is a pleasure to
+see a young fellow use his wits in that way. But for your
+sharpness I question whether we should ever have got the
+guns up there. I was looking at it myself yesterday, and I
+doubted then whether it was at all practicable. You have
+settled the question for me, and I’ll not forget you. What is
+your name, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Gilmore of the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nelson made a note of it and walked away.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The work took two days of tremendous labour, the seamen
+being relieved three times a day. Will was constantly on
+the spot directing and superintending the operations, and
+had the satisfaction at last of seeing six guns placed on the
+summit of the rock.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Next morning the besieged were astonished when the guns
+opened fire upon them from the rock, for, the path being at
+the back, they had not seen what was going on. As they
+could obtain no shelter from this attack, and there was no
+possibility of silencing the guns, they hastily abandoned the
+post and retreated on San Fiorenzo. The battery on the rock,
+however, also commanded the town, which, accordingly, had
+to be abandoned on the following day, the garrison retiring
+to the adjoining ridge of ground and to Bastia, which was
+considered the strongest place in the island.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The capture of San Fiorenzo was the more valuable, inasmuch
+as in the harbour were two frigates, the <name type="ship">Minerve</name> and <name type="ship">La
+Fortunée</name>, both of which became our prizes. The <name type="ship">Minerve</name>,
+thirty-<pb n='248'/><anchor id='Pg248'/>eight guns, was sunk by the French, but was weighed by our
+men and taken into the service, when she was renamed the
+<name type="ship">San Fiorenzo</name>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nelson was immensely pleased with the manner in which
+the operation of getting the guns up the rock had been performed,
+and requested the captain of the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> that Will
+should be permanently stationed on shore to act as his own
+aide-de-camp, a request which was, of course, complied with.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the meantime Nelson had reconnoitred Bastia and the
+neighbouring coast, and recommended that troops and cannon
+be disembarked, for he was convinced that a land force of
+about a thousand, in co-operation with a few ships, would be
+sufficient to reduce the place. Unfortunately the general
+commanding the troops was one of the most irresolute of
+men, and when, after a few days, he resigned the command,
+in consequence of his differences with Lord Hood, his successor,
+General D’Aubant, was still more incapable. He pronounced
+at once that, though the force at his command was almost
+double that which Nelson asked for, it was insufficient for the
+work required of it. Nelson, burning with indignation, decided
+that the attempt to take Bastia must be made, and that
+if the army would not do it the navy must.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lord Hood agreed with him, but even when it was decided
+to undertake the siege, D’Aubant insisted on their doing without
+a single soldier or a single cannon, and, retiring to San
+Fiorenzo, kept his men inactive while the sailors were performing
+the work. On the 17th of February, 1794, the fortified
+town of Mareno, a little to the north of Bastia, was captured,
+and four days later a reconnaissance was made. Nelson’s ship,
+the <name type="ship">Agamemnon</name>, was supported by the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> and the frigate
+<pb n='249'/><anchor id='Pg249'/><name type="ship">Romulus</name>. As they passed slowly in front of the town thirty
+guns opened upon them with shot and shell. Nelson lowered
+his sails, and for an hour and three-quarters peppered the forts
+so warmly that at last the French garrison deserted their
+guns. One battery, containing six guns, was totally destroyed.
+The citizens of Bastia were eager to surrender, but the
+governor declared that he would blow up the city if such a
+step were taken. Two days later Nelson was preparing to
+repeat the blow, but a sudden calm set in, and he could not
+get near the town. In a short time the opportunity for carrying
+the place by assault passed away, as the French officers
+were indefatigable in strengthening their fortifications, and
+soon rendered the town practically impregnable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nelson, however, maintained the blockade in spite of heavy
+weather, and in the middle of March provisions were so short
+in the place that a pound of bread was selling for half a crown.
+Nelson himself was almost as much straitened for provisions,
+but the admiral contrived to send him a supply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nelson pitched a tent on shore and personally superintended
+all the operations. A considerable body of seamen
+were landed, and worked like horses, dragging guns up heights
+that appeared inaccessible, making roads, and cutting down
+trees with which to build abattis.
+</p>
+
+</div><div n="13">
+<pb n='250'/><anchor id='Pg250'/>
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER XIII</head>
+
+<head type="sub">WITH NELSON</head>
+
+<p>
+One day during the siege Nelson said to Will: <q>I’ll be glad,
+Mr. Gilmore, if you will accompany me on an excursion
+along the shore. I have my eye on a spot from which, if we
+could get guns up to it, we should be able to command the
+town. From what I have seen of you I believe you know
+more about mounting guns than anyone here, so I’ll be glad
+to have your opinion of the position.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will of course expressed his willingness to go, and they at
+once started in the gig. They rowed on for some time, keeping
+a sharp look-out for suitable landing-places. At last
+Nelson bade the men lie on their oars, and pointed to the
+ridge of which he had spoken.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, what do you say?</q> he asked, after Will had made
+a careful examination of it from the boat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am afraid it would not be possible, sir, to carry out your
+plan. The labour of getting the guns up from the shore
+would be enormous, and considering the rugged state of the
+country I question if they could be taken across to the ridge
+when they were up.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No; I agree with you. I did not examine it so closely before;
+and at any rate, underhanded as we are, we could not spare
+enough men for the business. We may as well, however, row
+a bit along the shore. I am convinced that if we could land
+three or four hundred men within five or six miles of the town,
+and attack it simultaneously on both sides, we should carry it
+<pb n='251'/><anchor id='Pg251'/>without much trouble. The French have been fighting well,
+but they must have been losing heart for some time. A Frenchman
+hates to be cornered, and as they see our batteries rising
+they cannot but feel that sooner or later they must give in.
+I fancy by this time they are asking each other what use it is
+to keep on being killed when they must surrender in the end.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had rowed on for a couple of hours without fixing on
+a suitable place, when Nelson exclaimed: <q>We are going to be
+caught in a fog. That is distinctly unpleasant. Have we a
+compass in the boat?</q> he said, turning to the <anchor id="corr251"/><corr sic="coxwain">coxswain</corr>.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir. I thought you were only going to row out to the
+ship, and did not think of bringing one with me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Never forget a compass, my man,</q> Nelson said, <q>for
+though the sky may be blue when you start, a sudden storm
+may overtake you and blow you far from your ship. However,
+it can’t be helped now.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In less than ten minutes the boat was enveloped in a dense
+fog. The position was decidedly awkward. Had there been
+any wind they could have steered by the sound of the surf
+breaking at the foot of the cliffs, but the sea was absolutely
+calm, and they could hear nothing. They rowed on for some
+time, and then Nelson said: <q>Lay in your oars, men, we may
+be pulling in the wrong direction for all we know. We’ll
+have to remain here till this fog lifts, even if it takes a week
+to clear. This is a northerly fog,</q> he said to Will. <q>Cold
+wind comes down from the Alps and condenses when it reaches
+the sea. These fogs are not very common, but they sometimes
+last for a considerable time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The afternoon passed, and presently night fell. There was
+no food of any kind in the boat. The men chewed their quids,
+<pb n='252'/><anchor id='Pg252'/>but the two officers could not indulge in that relief. At night
+Nelson and Will wrapped themselves in their boat-cloaks and
+made themselves as comfortable as they could, getting uneasy
+snatches of sleep. Morning broke and there was no change;
+a white wall of fog rose all round the boat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is awkward,</q> Nelson said. <q>I wish one of the
+batteries would fire a few guns; that might give us some
+indication as to our position, though I am by no means sure
+that in this thick atmosphere the sound would reach so far.
+I think we were about eleven miles away when the fog caught
+us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the afternoon a breeze sprang up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>God grant that it may continue!</q> Nelson said. <q>Slight
+as it is, two or three hours of it might raise <anchor id="corr252"/><corr sic="as well">a swell</corr>, and we
+might then hear the wash of the waves on the rocks.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Hour after hour passed, but at last the coxswain said: <q>I
+think I hear a faint sound over on the right.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have thought so some little time,</q> Will said, <q>but I
+would not speak until I was sure.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Out oars,</q> Nelson ordered, <q>and row in that direction.</q>
+The sound became more and more distinct as they proceeded,
+and soon they were satisfied that they were heading for the
+land. In a quarter of an hour the boat ran up on a sandy
+beach.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have not seen this spot before, it must therefore be farther
+away from the town than the point we had reached, and as
+we have been nearly twenty-four hours in the fog the current
+may have taken us a good many miles. However, we will
+land. I am parched with thirst, and you must be the same,
+lads. Leave two men in the boat; the rest of us will go in
+<pb n='253'/><anchor id='Pg253'/>search of water and bring some down to those left behind
+when we find it. I think we had better scatter and look for
+some way up the cliff. If we can find a path we must follow
+it until we come to some house or other. Where there is a
+house there must be water. Mr. Gilmore and I will go to
+the right. If any of you find water, shout; we will do the
+same. But whether you find water or not, come down to the
+boat in three hours’ time. Thirsty or not thirsty we must row
+back to the town this evening. Now, Mr. Gilmore, we will
+walk along the beach until we come to a path, or at any rate
+some place where we can climb. I hope, as we get higher,
+the fog will become less dense.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For an hour they groped their way along the foot of the
+cliff, and then, finding a place where it seemed not so steep as
+elsewhere, began to climb. When they had reached a height
+of some three or four hundred feet they emerged from the fog
+into bright sunshine. Below them stretched a white misty
+lake. On all sides rose hill above hill, for the most part
+covered to the top by foliage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I see some smoke rising from among the trees over there
+to the right, sir, a mile or a mile and a half away.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will take your word for it, Mr. Gilmore. As you know,
+my sight is not at all in good condition. Let us be off at
+once, for the very thought of water makes me thirstier than
+ever.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Half an hour’s walking brought them to the hut of a peasant.
+The owner came to the door as they approached. He was a
+rough-looking man in a long jacket made of goat-skin, coarse
+trousers reaching down to the knee, and his legs bound with
+long strips of wadding. <q>Who are you,</q> he asked in his own
+<pb n='254'/><anchor id='Pg254'/>language, <q>and how come you here?</q> As neither of the
+officers understood one word of the patois of the country they
+could only make signs that they wanted something to eat and
+drink. The peasant understood, and beckoned to them to
+come into the hut. As they entered he gave some instructions
+to a boy, who went out and presently returned with a jug of
+water. While the officers were quenching their thirst the boy
+went out again, and the man brought from a cupboard some
+black bread and goats’-milk cheese, which he set before them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t altogether like that man’s movements, sir. He
+crawls about as if he were trying to put away as much time
+as possible. The boy, too, has disappeared.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Perhaps he has gone to get some more water,</q> Nelson
+suggested.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He could have gone a dozen times by now, sir. It is
+possible that he takes us for French officers. A peasant living
+in such a spot as this, sixteen or twenty miles from a town,
+might not even know that there are English troops in the
+country.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Having satisfied their hunger and thirst, they tried to make
+the man understand that they were willing to buy all the
+bread and cheese he had, together with a large jar for carrying
+water.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man showed a prodigious amount of stupidity, and
+although his eyes glistened when Nelson produced gold, he
+still seemed unable to understand that, having had as much
+as they could eat, they wanted to buy more. At last Nelson,
+in a passion, said: <q>Look here, my man, there is a sovereign,
+which is worth at least twenty times your miserable store of
+bread and cheese. If you don’t choose to accept the money
+<pb n='255'/><anchor id='Pg255'/>you needn’t, but we will take the food whether or no,</q> and
+he pointed to his store. As he spoke there was a sound of
+footsteps outside, and a moment later the door was darkened
+by the entry of a dozen wild figures, who flung themselves
+upon the two officers before they had time to make any effort
+to defend themselves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In vain Nelson attempted in French and Italian to make
+himself understood. The men would not listen, but poured
+out objurgations upon them whenever they attempted to speak.
+The word Français frequently occurred in their speeches,
+mixed up with what were evidently expressions of hatred.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is awkward, Mr. Gilmore,</q> Nelson said quietly as
+they lay bound together in a corner of the hut. <q>A more
+unpleasant situation I was never in.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I was in one as bad once before. I was captured by a band
+of negroes in Cuba, and they were preparing to burn me alive
+when I managed to escape.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should not be at all surprised if that is what these gentlemen
+are preparing to do now, Gilmore. I am sorry I have
+brought you into this.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It cannot be helped, sir,</q> Will said cheerfully; <q>and if
+they do kill us, my loss to the nation will be as nothing compared
+with yours. There is no doubt they take us for French
+officers who have lost their way in the mountains, and they
+are preparing to punish us for the misdeeds of our supposed
+countrymen. There are only two things that could help us
+out of this plight so far as I can see. One is the arrival of a
+priest; I suppose they have priests hereabouts with a knowledge
+of French or Italian. The other is the appearance on the
+scene of our boat’s crew.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='256'/><anchor id='Pg256'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Both are very unlikely, I am afraid. The crew, you know,
+all went the other way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir; but it is just possible that they may have seen
+the smoke of this hut also, and be making their way here.
+Though I looked carefully on all sides I could see no other
+signs of life.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is possible,</q> Nelson said; <q>but for my part I think the
+priest the more likely solution, if there is to be a solution.
+Well, it is a comfort to know that we have eaten a hearty
+meal and shall not die hungry or thirsty. It was foolish of
+us to come up here alone, knowing what wild savages these
+people in the mountains are. It would have been better to
+have gone on suffering ten or twelve hours longer, and to have
+made our way to the fleet by following close in by the foot of
+the rocks.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t think we could have done it in that time, sir. We
+should have had to keep within an oar’s-length of the rocks,
+and so must have progressed very slowly. Besides, we might
+have staved in the boat at any moment.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so. Still, we were only drifting for about twenty-four
+hours, and we shouldn’t have taken so long to go back.
+Even twenty-four hours of hunger and thirst would have been
+better than this. It is useless, however, to think of that now.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the meantime the men were engaged in a noisy talk, each
+one apparently urging his own view. At last they seemed to
+come to an agreement, and four of them, going to the corner,
+dragged the two officers to their feet, and hauled them out of
+the cottage. Then they bound them to trees seven or eight
+feet apart, and piled faggots round them. When this was
+done they amused themselves by dancing wildly round their
+<pb n='257'/><anchor id='Pg257'/>prisoners, taunting them and heaping execrations upon
+them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The sooner this comes to an end the better,</q> Nelson said
+quietly. <q>Well, Mr. Gilmore, we have both the satisfaction
+of knowing that we have done our duty to our country. After
+all, it makes no great difference to a man whether he dies in
+battle or is burnt, except that the burning method lasts a little
+longer. But it won’t last long in our case, I fancy. Do you
+notice that these faggots are all lately cut? We’ll probably be
+suffocated before the flames touch us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I see that, sir, and am very grateful for it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The dance was finished, and two men brought brands from
+the cottage.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Listen, Mr. Gilmore,</q> said Nelson at this moment. <q>I
+think I can hear footsteps; I am sure I heard a branch crack.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Brands were applied to the faggots, but these were so
+green that at first they would not catch. At this, several of
+the peasants rushed into the cottage, and were returning
+with larger brands, when some figures suddenly appeared at
+the edge of the little clearing in the direction from which
+Nelson had heard sounds. They stood silent for a minute,
+looking at the scene, and then with a loud shout they rushed
+forward with drawn cutlasses and attacked the natives. Four
+or five of the peasants were cut down, and the remainder fled
+in terror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank God, your honour, we have arrived in time!</q> the
+coxswain said as he cut Nelson’s bonds, while another sailor
+liberated Will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank God indeed! Now, my lads, we have not a moment
+to lose. Those fellows are sure to gather a number of their
+<pb n='258'/><anchor id='Pg258'/>comrades at the nearest village, and I have no wish to see any
+more of them. Go into that hut; you will find enough bread
+and cheese there to give you each a meal, and there is a spring
+of water close by.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The sailors scattered at once, and were not long in discovering
+the spring. There they knelt down and drank long and
+deeply. Then they went into the cottage and devoured the
+bread and cheese, which, although far from being sufficient to
+satisfy them, at least appeased their hunger for a time. After
+they had finished they all went back to the spring for another
+drink. Then, taking some bread and cheese and a large jug
+of water for the boat keepers, they followed Nelson and Will
+from the place which had so nearly proved fatal to their officers.
+They went down the hill at a brisk pace until they reached
+the top of the fog. After this they proceeded more cautiously.
+They had no longer any fear of pursuit, for, once in the fog,
+it would require an army to find them. At last they reached
+the strand and found the boat. When the two men who had
+been left in charge had finished their share of the food and
+water, Nelson said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, my lads, we must row on. If we keep close to the
+foot of the rocks, that is, within fifty yards of them, the noise
+of the waves breaking will be a sufficient guide to prevent our
+getting too far out to sea.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>May I be so bold as to ask how far we’ll have to row?</q> the
+coxswain said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is more than I can tell you. It may be a little over
+eleven miles, it may be twice or even three times that distance.
+Now, however, that you have had something to eat and drink
+you can certainly row on until we reach the ships.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='259'/><anchor id='Pg259'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>That we can, sir. We feel like new men again, though
+we did feel mighty bad before.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So did we, lads. Now it is of no use your trying to row
+racing pace; take a long, quiet stroke, and every hour or two
+rest for a few minutes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It will be dark before very long,</q> Nelson remarked quietly
+to Will when the men began to row; <q>but fortunately that
+will make no difference to us, as we are guided not by our
+eyes but by our ears. There is more wind than there was,
+and on a still night like this we can hear the waves against
+the rocks half a mile out, so there is no fear of our losing our
+way, and it will be hard indeed if we don’t reach the ships
+before daylight. The boat is travelling about four knots an
+hour. If the current has not carried us a good deal farther
+than we imagine, five or six hours ought to take us there.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The hours passed slowly. Sometimes the men had to row
+some distance seaward to avoid projecting headlands. At last,
+however, about twelve o’clock, Will exclaimed:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hear a ripple, sir, like the water against the bow of a
+ship.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Easy all!</q> Nelson said at once.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The order was obeyed, and all listened intently. Presently
+there was a general exclamation as the sound of footsteps was
+heard ahead.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a marine pacing up and down on sentry. Give
+way, lads.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a few minutes a black mass rose up close in front of
+them. The coxswain put the helm down, and the boat glided
+along the side of the ship. As she did so there came the
+sharp challenge of a sentry:
+</p>
+
+<pb n='260'/><anchor id='Pg260'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Who goes there? Answer, or I fire.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is all right, my man; it is Captain Nelson.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Wait till I call the watch, Captain Nelson,</q> the sentry
+replied in the monotonous voice of his kind.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, sentry, you are quite right to do your duty.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In half a minute an officer’s voice was heard above, and a
+lantern was shown over the side.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Is it you, sir?</q> he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes; what ship is this?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The <name type="ship">Romulus</name>.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Can you lend me a compass?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, I will fetch one in a moment.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you!</q> Nelson said when the officer returned with
+the instrument. <q>I have lost my bearings in the fog, and I
+want to get to my tent on shore. I know its exact bearings,
+however, from this ship.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Twenty minutes’ row brought them to the landing-place.
+Nelson’s first thought was for the crew, and, going to the
+storehouse close at hand, he knocked some of the people up,
+and saw that they were supplied with plenty of food and
+drink. Then he went into his tent. Here the table was
+spread, with various kinds of food standing on it. His servant
+being called up, a kettle was boiled, and he and Will sat down
+to a hearty meal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do you know what has been said about us in our absence,
+Chamfrey?</q> Nelson asked his servant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir; everything has been upset by this fog. They sent
+down from the batteries to enquire where you and Mr. Gilmore
+were, and we could only say that we supposed you were on
+board the ship. They sent from the ships to ask, and we
+<pb n='261'/><anchor id='Pg261'/>could only say that we didn’t know, but supposed that you
+were somewhere up in the batteries. Some thought, when
+you did not return this afternoon, that you had lost your
+way in the fog; but no one seemed to think that anything
+serious could have happened to you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Nelson got up and went to where the boat’s crew were
+sitting after having finished their meal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Coxswain, here are two guineas for yourself and a guinea
+for each of the men. Now I want every man of you to keep
+his mouth tightly shut about what has happened. I promise
+you that if any man blabs he will be turned out of my gig.
+You understand?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir,</q> they replied together. <q>You can trust us to
+keep our mouths shut. We will never say a word about it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a good thing,</q> Nelson remarked when he returned
+to Will. <q>If what has happened came to be known, I should
+get abused by Lord Hood for having gone so far away and
+run so great a risk. Of course, as you and I are aware, there
+would have been no risk at all if that fog had not set in and
+we had not forgotten to bring a compass. But, you know,
+a naval man is supposed to foresee everything, and I should
+have been blamed just as much as if I had rowed into the fog
+on purpose. I should have had all the captains in the fleet
+remonstrating with me, and they would be saying: <q>I knew,
+Nelson, the way you are always running about, that you would
+get into some scrape or other one of these days.</q> A report,
+indeed, might be sent to England, enormously magnified, of
+course, with the headings: <q>Captain Nelson lost in a fog!</q>
+<q>Captain Nelson roasted alive by Corsican brigands!</q> I
+would not have the news get about for five hundred guineas.
+<pb n='262'/><anchor id='Pg262'/>I don’t suppose my absence was noticed the first day. It was
+known, of course, that I went off in my gig; but as I sometimes
+sleep here and sometimes on board my ship, the fact
+that I was not in either place would not cause surprise. As
+for to-day, if any questions are asked, I’ll simply say that
+I lost my way in the fog and did not return here until late
+at night, a tale which will have the advantage of being true.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You may be sure, sir, that no word shall pass my lips on
+the matter.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am quite sure of that, Mr. Gilmore. I shall never
+forget this danger we have shared together, nor how well you
+bore the terrible trial. I shall always regard you as one of
+my closest comrades and friends, and when the time comes will
+do my best to further your interests. I have not much power
+at present, as one of Lord Hood’s captains, but the time may
+come when I shall be able to do something for you, and I can
+assure you that when that opportunity arrives I shall need no
+reminder of my promise.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By the 11th of April, 1794, the three batteries were completed,
+and they at once opened fire on the town. The garrison
+vigorously replied with hot shot, which set fire to a ship that
+had been converted into a battery. Still D’Aubant remained
+inactive. The sailors, fired with indignation, worked even
+harder than before. Nelson now felt confident of success.
+He predicted that the place would fall between the 11th and
+17th of May, and his prediction was fulfilled almost to the
+letter, for at four o’clock on the afternoon of the 11th a boat
+came out from the town to the <name type="ship">Victory</name> offering to surrender.
+That afternoon, General D’Aubant, having received some reinforcements
+from Gibraltar, arrived from San Fiorenzo only to
+<pb n='263'/><anchor id='Pg263'/>find that the work he had pronounced impracticable had been
+done without his assistance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will had spent the whole of his time during the siege on
+shore. He had laboured incessantly in getting the guns up
+to their positions, and had been placed in command of one of
+the batteries. Nelson specially recommended him for his services,
+and Lord Hood mentioned him in his despatches to the
+Admiralty at home.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner had Bastia fallen than the admiral determined
+to besiege Calvi, the one French stronghold left in the island.
+The news came, however, that a part of the French fleet had
+broken out of Toulon, and Lord Hood at once started in pursuit,
+leaving Nelson to conduct the operations.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Taking the troops, which were now commanded by General
+Stuart, a man of very different stamp from D’Aubant, Nelson
+landed them on the 19th June without opposition at a narrow
+inlet three miles and a half from the town. A body of seamen
+were also landed under Will. These instantly began, as at
+Bastia, to get the guns up the hills to form a battery.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The enemy were strongly protected with four outlying forts.
+There were also in the harbour two French frigates, the <name type="ship">Melpomene</name>
+and the <name type="ship">Mignonne</name>. The proceedings resembled those at
+Bastia. The work accomplished was tremendous, and batteries
+sprang up as if by magic.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At the end of June Lord Hood returned from watching the
+French, and the work proceeded even more vigorously than
+before. As at Bastia, Nelson animated his men by his
+energy and example. He himself was wounded by some
+stones which were driven up by a shot striking the ground
+close to him, and lost the sight of his right eye for ever.
+<pb n='264'/><anchor id='Pg264'/>But although his suffering was very severe he would not
+interrupt his labours for a single day. Presently the batteries
+opened fire, and one by one the outlying forts were stormed,
+and the town itself attacked. At last, on the 1st of August,
+the enemy proposed a capitulation. This was granted to them
+on the terms that if the Toulon fleet did not arrive in seven
+days they would lay down their arms, and surrender the two
+frigates. The Toulon fleet was, however, in no position to risk
+a battle with Lord Hood’s powerful squadron, and accordingly
+on the 10th the garrison surrendered and marched out of the
+great gate of the town with the honours of war. Nelson
+was exultant at the thought that the capture of this town, as
+well as Bastia, was the achievement of his sailors, that the
+batteries had been constructed by them, the guns dragged up
+by them, and with the exception only of a single artillery-man
+all the guns also fought by them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will gained very great credit by his work. He had a
+natural gift for handling heavy weights, and he had thoroughly
+learnt the lesson that the power and endurance of English
+sailors could surmount obstacles that appeared insuperable.
+</p>
+</div><div n="14">
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER XIV</head>
+
+<head type="sub">THE GLORIOUS FIRST OF JUNE</head>
+
+<p>
+It was while besieging Calvi that the news came of the great
+sea-battle fought in the Channel by Lord Howe, and very
+much interested were the sailors on shore in Corsica at hearing
+the details of the victory. A vast fleet had assembled at
+Spit<pb n='265'/><anchor id='Pg265'/>head under the command of the veteran Lord Howe. It had
+two objects in view besides the primary one of engaging the
+enemy. First, the convoying of the East and West India and
+Newfoundland merchant fleets clear of the Channel; and next,
+of intercepting a French convoy returning from America laden
+with the produce of the West India Islands. It consisted of
+thirty-four line-of-battle ships and fifteen frigates, while the
+convoy numbered ninety-nine merchantmen.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On 2nd May, 1794, the fleet sailed from Spithead, and
+on the 5th they arrived off the Lizard. Here Lord Howe
+ordered the convoys to part company with the fleet, and
+detached Rear-admiral Montagu with six seventy-fours and
+two frigates with orders to see the merchantmen to the latitude
+of Cape Finisterre, where their protection was to be
+confided to Captain Rainier with two battle-ships and four
+frigates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lord Howe now proceeded to Ushant, where he discovered,
+by means of his frigates, that the enemy’s fleet were quietly
+anchored in the harbour of Brest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He therefore proceeded in search of the American convoy.
+After cruising in various directions for nearly a fortnight he
+returned to Ushant on the 18th May, only to find that Brest
+harbour was empty. News was obtained from an American
+vessel that the French fleet had sailed from that harbour a
+few days before. It afterwards turned out that the two fleets
+had passed quite close to each other unseen, owing to a dense
+fog that prevailed at the time. They were exactly the same
+strength in numbers, but the French carried much heavier
+guns, and their crews exceeded ours by three thousand men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For more than a week the two fleets cruised about in the
+<pb n='266'/><anchor id='Pg266'/>Bay of Biscay, each taking many prizes, but without meeting.
+At last, early on the morning of the 28th of May, they came
+in sight of each other. The French were to windward, and,
+having a strong south west wind with them, they came down
+rapidly towards us, as if anxious to fight. Presently they
+shortened sail and formed line of battle. Howe signalled to
+prepare for battle, and having come on to the same tack as
+the French, stood towards them, having them on his weather
+quarter. Soon, however, the French tacked and seemed to
+retreat. A general chase was ordered, and the English ships
+went off in pursuit under full sail. Between two and three
+o’clock the <name type="ship">Russell</name>, which was the fastest of the seventy-fours,
+began to exchange shots with the French, and towards evening
+another seventy-four, the <name type="ship">Bellerophon</name>, began a close action
+with the <name type="ship">Révolutionnaire</name>, one hundred and ten guns. The
+<name type="ship">Bellerophon</name> soon lost her main top-mast, and dropped back;
+but the fight with the great ship was taken up, first by the
+<name type="ship">Leviathan</name> and afterwards by the <name type="ship">Audacious</name>, both seventy-fours,
+which, supported by two others, fought her for three hours.
+By that time the <name type="ship">Révolutionnaire</name> had a mast carried away and
+great damage done to her yards, and had lost four hundred
+men. When darkness fell she was a complete wreck, and it was
+confidently expected that in the morning she would fall into
+our hands. At break of day, however, the French admiral
+sent down a ship which took her in tow, for her other mast
+had fallen during the night, and succeeded in taking her in
+safety to Rochefort. The <name type="ship">Audacious</name> had suffered so severely
+in the unequal fight that she was obliged to return to Plymouth
+to repair damages.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the night the hostile fleets steered under press of
+<pb n='267'/><anchor id='Pg267'/>canvas on a parallel course, and when daylight broke were still
+as near together as on the previous day, but the firing was of
+a desultory character, Lord Howe’s efforts to bring on a general
+engagement being thwarted by some of the ships misunderstanding
+his signals. The next day was one of intense fog,
+but on the 31st the weather cleared, and the fleets towards
+evening were less than five miles apart. A general action
+might have been brought on, but Lord Howe preferred to
+wait till daylight, when signals could more easily be made out.
+Our admiral was surprised that none of the French ships
+showed any damage from the action of the 29th. It was
+afterwards found that they had since been joined by four
+fresh ships, and that the vessels that had suffered most had
+been sent into Brest.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the 31st various manœuvres had been performed,
+which ended by giving us the weather-gage; and the next
+morning, the 1st of June, Lord Howe signalled that he intended
+to attack the enemy, and that each ship was to steer
+for the one opposed to her in the line. The ships were
+arranged so that each vessel should be opposite one of equal
+size. The <name type="ship">Defence</name> led the attack, and came under a heavy
+fire. The admiral’s ship, the <name type="ship">Queen Charlotte</name>, pressed forward,
+replying with her quarter-deck guns only to the fire of some
+of the French ships which assailed her as she advanced, keeping
+the fire of her main-deck guns for the French admiral,
+whom he intended to attack. So close and compact, however,
+were the French lines that it was no easy matter to pass
+through. As the <name type="ship">Queen Charlotte</name> came under the stern of the
+<name type="ship">Montagne</name> she poured in a tremendous fire from her starboard
+guns at such close quarters that the rigging of the two vessels
+<pb n='268'/><anchor id='Pg268'/>were touching. The <name type="ship">Jacobin</name>, the next ship to the <name type="ship">Montagne</name>,
+shifted her position and took up that which the <name type="ship">Queen Charlotte</name>
+had intended to occupy. Lord Howe then engaged the two
+vessels, and his fire was so quick that ere long both had to
+fall out of the fight. A furious combat followed between the
+<name type="ship">Queen Charlotte</name> and the <name type="ship">Juste</name>, in which the latter was totally
+dismasted. The former lost her main-topmast, and as she had
+previously lost her fore-topmast she became totally unmanageable.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus almost single-handed, save for the distant fire of the
+<name type="ship">Invincible</name>, Lord Howe fought these three powerful ships. At
+this time a fourth adversary appeared in the <name type="ship">Républicain</name>, one
+hundred and ten guns, carrying the flag of Rear-admiral
+Bouvet. Just as they were going to engage, however, the
+<name type="ship">Gibraltar</name> poured in a broadside, bringing down the main and
+mizzen-masts of the Frenchman, who bore up and passed
+under the stern of the <name type="ship">Queen Charlotte</name>, but so great was the
+confusion on board her that she neglected to rake the flagship.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <name type="ship">Montagne</name>, followed by the <name type="ship">Jacobin</name>, now crowded on all
+sail; and Lord Howe, thinking they intended to escape, gave
+the order for a general chase, but they were joined by nine
+other ships, and wore round and sailed towards the <name type="ship">Queen</name>.
+This craft was almost defenceless, owing to the loss of her
+mainmast and mizzen-topmast.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Seeing her danger, Lord Howe signalled to his ships to
+close round her, and he himself wore round and stood to her
+assistance.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was followed by five other battle-ships, and Admiral
+Villaret-Joyeuse gave up the attempt and sailed to help his
+own crippled ships, and, taking five of them in tow, made off.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='269'/><anchor id='Pg269'/>
+
+<p>
+Six French battle-ships were captured, and the <name type="ship">Vengeur</name>,
+which had been engaged in a desperate fight with the <name type="ship">Brunswick</name>,
+went down ten minutes after she surrendered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The British loss in the battle of the 1st of June, and in
+the preliminary skirmishes of the 28th and 29th of May, was
+eleven hundred and forty-eight, of whom two hundred and
+ninety were killed and eight hundred and fifty-eight wounded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French placed their loss in killed and mortally wounded
+at three thousand, so that their total loss could not have been
+much under seven thousand.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Decisive as the victory was, it was the general opinion in
+the fleet that more ought to have been done; that the five
+disabled ships should have been taken, and a hot chase instituted
+after the flying enemy. Indeed, the only explanation of
+this inactivity was that the admiral, who was now an old man,
+was so enfeebled and exhausted by the strain through which
+he had gone as to be incapable of coming to any decision or
+of giving any order.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One of the most desperate combats in this battle was that
+which took place between the <name type="ship">Brunswick</name>, seventy-four guns,
+under Captain John Harvey, and the <name type="ship">Vengeur</name>, also a seventy-four.
+The <name type="ship">Brunswick</name> had not been engaged in the battles of
+the 28th and 29th of May, but she played a brilliant part on
+the 1st of June. She was exposed to a heavy fire as the fleet
+bore down to attack, and she suffered some losses before she
+had fired a shot. She steered for the interval between the
+<name type="ship">Achille</name> and <name type="ship">Vengeur</name>. The former vessel at once took up a
+position closing the gap, and Captain Harvey then ran foul
+of the <name type="ship">Vengeur</name>, her anchors hooking in the port fore channels
+of the Frenchman.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='270'/><anchor id='Pg270'/>
+
+<p>
+The two ships now swung close alongside of each other, and,
+paying off before the wind, they ran out of the line, pouring
+their broadsides into each other furiously.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The upper-deck guns of the <name type="ship">Vengeur</name> got the better of those
+of the <name type="ship">Brunswick</name>, killing several officers and men, and wounding
+Captain Harvey so severely as to compel him to go
+below.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this moment the <name type="ship">Achille</name> bore down on the <name type="ship">Brunswick’s</name>
+quarter, but was received by a tremendous broadside, which
+brought down her remaining mast, a foremast. The wreck
+prevented the <name type="ship">Achille</name> from firing, and she surrendered; but
+as the <name type="ship">Brunswick</name> was too busy to attend to her, she hoisted a
+sprit-sail—a sail put up under the bowsprit—and endeavoured
+to make off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Meantime the <name type="ship">Brunswick</name> and <name type="ship">Vengeur</name>, fast locked, continued
+their desperate duel. The upper-deck guns of the former
+were almost silenced, but on the lower decks the advantage
+was the other way. Alternately depressing and elevating
+their guns to their utmost extent, the British sailors either
+fired through their enemy’s bottom or ripped up her decks.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Captain Harvey, who had returned to the deck, was again
+knocked down by a splinter, but continued to direct operations
+till he was struck in the right arm and so severely
+injured as to force him to give up the command, which now
+devolved on Lieutenant Cracroft, who, however, continued to
+fight the ship as his captain had done.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After being for some three hours entangled, the two ships
+separated, the <name type="ship">Vengeur</name> tearing away the <name type="ship">Brunswick’s</name> anchor. As
+they drifted apart, some well-aimed shots from the <name type="ship">Brunswick</name>
+smashed her enemy’s rudder-post and knocked a large hole
+<pb n='271'/><anchor id='Pg271'/>in the counter. At this moment the <name type="ship">Ramillies</name>, sailing up,
+opened fire at forty yards’ distance at this particular hole. In
+a few minutes she reduced the <name type="ship">Vengeur</name> to a sinking condition,
+and then proceeded to chase the <name type="ship">Achille</name>. The <name type="ship">Vengeur</name> now
+surrendered. The <name type="ship">Brunswick</name>, however, could render no assistance,
+all her boats being damaged, but, hoisting what sail she
+could, headed northward with the intention of making for port.
+During the fight the <name type="ship">Brunswick</name> lost her mizzen, and had her
+other masts badly damaged, her rigging and sails cut to pieces,
+and twenty-three guns dismounted. She lost three officers
+and forty-one men killed; her captain, second lieutenant, one
+midshipman, and one hundred and ten men wounded. Captain
+Harvey only survived his wounds a few months.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The greater portion of the crew of the <name type="ship">Vengeur</name> were taken
+off by the boats of the <name type="ship">Alfred</name>, <name type="ship">Culloden</name>, and <name type="ship">Rattler</name>, but she
+sank before all could be rescued, and two hundred of her
+crew, most of whom were wounded, were drowned. Among
+the survivors were Captain Renaudin and his son. Each was
+ignorant of the rescue of the other, and when they met by
+chance at Portsmouth their joy can be better imagined than
+described.
+</p>
+<pgIf output="txt"><then><p><milestone unit="tb" rend="stars: 5"/></p></then><else><p><milestone unit="tb"/></p></else></pgIf>
+<p>
+The <name type="ship">Tartar</name> returned to the blockade of Toulon after the
+work in Corsica was done. When she had been there some
+time she was ordered to cruise on the coast, where there were
+several forts under which French coasting-vessels ran for shelter
+when they saw an English sail approaching, and she was, if
+possible, to destroy them. There was one especially, on one of
+the Isles d’Hyères, which the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> was particularly ordered
+to silence, as more than any other it was the resort of coasters.
+<pb n='272'/><anchor id='Pg272'/>The <name type="ship">Tartar</name> sailed in near enough to it to exchange shots,
+and so got some idea of the work they had to undertake;
+then, having learned all she could, she stood out to sea again.
+All preparations were made during the day for a landing;
+arms were distributed, and the men told off to the boats.
+After nightfall she again sailed in, and arrived off the forts
+about midnight. The boats had already been lowered, and
+the men took their places in them while the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> was still
+moving through the water, and, dividing into three parties,
+made respectively for the three principal batteries.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dimchurch was not in the boat in which Will had a place,
+as he rowed stroke of the first gig and Will was in the launch.
+Tom was also in another boat, but was in the same division.
+No lights were to be seen, and absolute silence reigned.
+Noiselessly the men landed and formed up on the beach.
+To reach the batteries they had to climb the cliff by a zigzag
+pathway, up which they were obliged to go in single file.
+They arrived at the summit without apparently creating
+a suspicion of their presence, and then advanced at a run.
+Suddenly three blue lights gleamed out, illuminating the whole
+of the ground they had to traverse, and at the same moment
+a tremendous volley was fired from the battery. Simultaneously
+fire opened from the other batteries, showing that the
+boats’ crews had all arrived just at the same instant, and
+that while the French were supposed to be asleep they were
+awake and vigilant. Indeed, from the heaviness of the fire
+there was little question that the force on the island had
+been heavily reinforced from the mainland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Numbers of the men fell, but nevertheless the sailors rushed
+forward fearlessly and reached the foot of the fort. This was
+<pb n='273'/><anchor id='Pg273'/>too high to be climbed, so, separating, they ran round to endeavour
+to effect an entrance elsewhere. Suddenly they were
+met by a considerable body of troops. The first lieutenant,
+who commanded the division, whistled the order for the sailors
+to fall back. This was done at first slowly and in some sort
+of order, but the fire kept up on them was so hot that they
+were compelled to increase their pace to a run. A stand was
+made at the top of the pass, as here the men were only able
+to retreat in single file. At length the survivors all reached
+the beach and took to the boats again under a heavy fire
+from the top of the cliffs, which, however, was to some extent
+kept down by the guns of the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>. The other divisions
+had suffered almost as severely, and the affair altogether cost
+the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> fifty killed and over seventy wounded. Will was
+in the front rank when the French so suddenly attacked
+them, and was in the rear when the retreat began. Suddenly
+a shot struck him in the leg and he fell. In the confusion
+this was not noticed, and he lay there for upwards of an hour,
+when, the fire of the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> having ceased, the French came
+out with lanterns to search for the wounded. Will was lifted
+and carried to some barracks behind the fort, where his wound
+was attended to. They asked whether he spoke French, and
+as, though he had studied the language whenever he had had
+time and opportunity and had acquired considerable knowledge
+of it, he was far from being able to speak it fluently, he
+replied that he did not, a French officer came to him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What is your name, monsieur?</q> he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>William Gilmore.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What is your rank?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Midshipman.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='274'/><anchor id='Pg274'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Age?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Nearly nineteen.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Nationality, English</q> was added.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What ship was that from which you landed?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There was no reason why the question should not be
+answered, and he replied: <q>The <name type="ship">Tartar</name>, thirty-four guns.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, you have made a bad evening’s business, monsieur!</q>
+the officer said. <q>When the ship was seen to sail in and sail
+away again, after firing a few shots, we felt sure that she
+would come back to-night, and five hundred men were brought
+across from the mainland to give you a hot reception. And,
+parbleu, we did so.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You did indeed,</q> Will said, <q>a desperately hot reception.
+I cannot tell what our loss was, but it must have been very
+heavy. You took us completely by surprise, which was what
+we had intended to do to you. Well, it is the fortune of war,
+and I must not grumble.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You will be sent to Toulon as soon as you can be moved,
+monsieur.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three other wounded officers had fallen into the hands of
+the enemy, and these were placed in the same room as Will.
+One was the third lieutenant, another the master’s mate, and
+the third was a midshipman. They were well treated and cared
+for and were very cheery together, with the exception of the
+lieutenant, whose wound was a mortal one, and who died two
+days after the fight.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A month after their reception into the hospital all were able
+to walk, and they were taken across in a boat to the mainland
+and sent to Toulon. They were all asked if they would give
+their parole, and though his two companions agreed to do so,
+<pb n='275'/><anchor id='Pg275'/>Will refused. He was accordingly sent to a place of confinement,
+while the other two were allowed to take quarters in
+the town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will was privately glad of this, for, though both were
+pleasant fellows, he thought that if he were to make his
+escape it must be alone, and had the others been quartered
+with him he could not well have left them. His prison was a
+fort on a hill which ran out into the sea, and Will could see
+the sails of the blockading vessels as they cruised backwards
+and forwards. He also commanded a view over the town,
+with its harbour crowded with shipping, its churches, and
+fortifications. He longed continually for the company of his
+two faithful followers, Dimchurch and Tom. They had been
+with him in all his adventures, and he felt that if they were
+together again they would be able to contrive some plan of
+escape. At present no scheme occurred to him. The window
+of the room in which he was confined was twenty feet
+from the ground, and was protected by iron bars. In front
+was a wall some twelve feet high, enclosing a courtyard in
+which the garrison paraded and drilled. At night sentinels
+were planted at short intervals, from which Will concluded
+that there must be many other prisoners besides himself in
+the fort. He was attended by an old soldier, with whom he
+often had long chats.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They certainly know how to make prisons,</q> he grumbled
+to himself. <q>If it was not that I shall never lose hope of
+something turning up, I would accept my parole.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After he had been there for three months he was one day
+led out and, with three other midshipmen, taken down to a
+prison in the town. He had no doubt that prisoners of more
+<pb n='276'/><anchor id='Pg276'/>importance had arrived, and that he and the others had been
+moved to make way for them. A month later they were
+again taken out, and, having been joined by a hundred other
+prisoners under a strong guard, were marched out of the town.
+There were five officers among them, and the rest were seamen.
+All were glad of the change, though it was not likely
+to be for the better. Will was sorry, inasmuch as at Toulon
+he could always hope that if he escaped from prison he would
+be able to get hold of a boat and row out to the blockading
+squadron. Inland he felt that escape would be vastly more
+difficult. Even if he got out of prison he knew but little
+French, and therefore could hardly hope to make his way across
+country. They trudged along day after day, each according
+to his fancy, some sullen and morose, others making the best
+of matters and trying to establish some speaking acquaintance
+with their guards, who evidently regarded the march as a sort
+of holiday after the dull routine of life in a garrison town.
+Will, who had during his imprisonment at Toulon studied to
+improve his French to the best of his ability by the aid of
+some books he had obtained and by chatting with his jailer,
+worked his hardest to add to his knowledge of the language,
+and as the French soldiers were quite glad to beguile the time
+away by talking with their captives, he succeeded at the end
+of the journey, which lasted nearly a month, in being able to
+chat with a certain amount of fluency. Verdun was one of
+the four places in which British prisoners were confined. At
+that time France had fifteen thousand prisoners, England
+forty thousand. By an agreement between the governments
+these were held captive in certain prisons, so that they could,
+when occasion offered, be exchanged; but owing to the vastly
+<pb n='277'/><anchor id='Pg277'/>greater number of English prisoners the operation went on
+very slowly. The health of the prison was bad, the large
+number confined in the narrow space, and the lack of sanitary
+arrangements, causing a vast amount of fever to prevail.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he got to Verdun, Will continued to devote himself
+to the study of French. He knew that, should he escape, he
+could have no hope of finding his way across country unless he
+could speak the language fluently, and accordingly he passed
+the whole day in conversation with the guards and others
+employed about the prison. These were inclined to regard
+his anxiety to become proficient in the language as a national
+compliment. Some of the prisoners also knew French well, so
+that at the end of four months he could talk with perfect
+fluency. He was a good deal laughed at by the English officers
+for the zeal he was displaying in studying French, for, as
+they said, he might as well try to get to the moon as out
+of Verdun. He accepted their chaff good-humouredly, and
+simply said: <q>Time will show, but for my part I would as
+soon be shot as continue to live as prisoner here.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many of the prisoners passed their time in manufacturing
+little trifles. The sailors, for the most part, made models of
+ships; some of them were adepts at sewing patchwork quilts,
+and got their warders to purchase scraps of various materials
+for the purpose. The soldiers were also, many of them, skilled
+in making knick-knacks. These were sold in the town, chiefly
+to country people who came in to market, and so their makers
+were able to purchase tobacco and other little luxuries. A few
+of the prisoners were allowed every day to go into the town,
+which, being strongly walled, offered no greater facility for
+escape than did the prison itself. They carried with them
+<pb n='278'/><anchor id='Pg278'/>and sold their own manufactures and those of other prisoners,
+and with the proceeds purchased the things they required.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Several times Will was one of those allowed out, and he
+set himself to work to make the acquaintance of some of
+the townspeople. As he was one of the few who could
+speak French, he had no difficulty in getting up a chatty
+acquaintance with several people, among them a young girl
+living in a house close to the wall. She had looked pitifully
+at him the first time he had come out with a small load of
+merchandise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, my poor young fellow,</q> she said in French, <q>how
+hard it is for you to be thus kept a prisoner far from all your
+friends!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, mademoiselle,</q> he said, <q>but it is the fortune
+of war, and English as well as French must submit to it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You speak French!</q> she said. <q>Yes, yes, monsieur, I
+feel it as much as any. There is one who is very dear to me
+a prisoner in England. He is a soldier.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, mademoiselle, it is a pity that they don’t exchange
+us. We give a lot of trouble to your people, and the French
+prisoners give a lot of trouble to ours, so it would be much
+better to restore us to our friends.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah! that is what I say. How happy I should be if my
+dear Lucien were restored to me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+So the acquaintance became closer and closer, and at last
+Will ventured to say: <q>If I were back in England, mademoiselle,
+I might perhaps get your Lucien out. You could
+give me his name and the prison in which he is confined,
+and it would be hard if I could not manage to aid him to
+escape.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='279'/><anchor id='Pg279'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, monsieur, that would be splendid!</q> the girl said,
+clasping her hands. <q>If you could but get away!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, mademoiselle, I think I could manage to escape if I
+had but a little help. For example, from the top window of
+this house I think I could manage to jump upon the wall, and
+if you could but furnish me with a rope I could easily make
+my escape. Of course I should want a suit of peasant’s clothes,
+for, you see, I should be detected at once if I tried to get
+away in this uniform. I speak French fairly now, and think
+I could pass as a native.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You speak it very well, monsieur, but oh, I dare not help
+you to escape!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am not asking you to, mademoiselle; I am only saying
+how it could be managed, and that if I could get back to
+England I might aid your lover.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl was silent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It could never be,</q> she murmured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am not asking it, mademoiselle; and now I must be
+going on.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next time he came she said: <q>I have been thinking
+over what you said, monsieur, and I feel that it would be
+cowardly indeed if I were to shrink from incurring some little
+danger for the sake of Lucien. I know that he would give
+his life for me. We were to have been married in a fortnight,
+when they came and carried him off to the war. Now tell me
+exactly what you want me to do.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I want a disguise, the dress of a travelling pedlar. I
+could give you two English sovereigns, which would be ample
+to get that. I want also a rope forty feet long. Then you
+must let me go up through your house to the top story. I
+<pb n='280'/><anchor id='Pg280'/>have been looking at it from behind, and see that from the
+upper window I could climb up to the roof, and I am sure
+that from there I could easily jump across the narrow lane to
+the wall.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will do it, monsieur, partly for Lucien and partly because
+you are kind and gentle and,</q> she added with a little
+blush and laugh, <q>good-looking.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I thank you with all my heart, mademoiselle, and I swear
+to you that when I get to England I will spare no pains to
+find Lucien and aid him to escape.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>When will you be out again, monsieur?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This day week.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will have everything ready by that time,</q> she said.
+<q>You will come as late as you can?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I will come the last thing before we all have to return
+to the prison. It will be dark half an hour later.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But there are sentries on the walls,</q> she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, but not a large number. The prison is strongly
+guarded at night, but not the outer walls; I have often
+watched. There is one other thing which I shall want, and
+that is a sack in which to put this long box. I carry it,
+as you see, full of goods, but to-day I have intentionally
+abstained from selling any of them. I will leave the things
+with you if you have any place in which to hide them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will put them under my bed,</q> the girl said. <q>My grand’mère
+never goes into my room. Besides, she is generally
+away at the time you will arrive, and if she is not she will not
+hear you go upstairs, as she is very deaf. My father is one of
+the warders of the prison, and only comes home once a week.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will then returned to the prison. When the appointed day
+<pb n='281'/><anchor id='Pg281'/>arrived he put only a few small articles into his box. For
+these he paid cash. Then he said good-bye to four or five of
+the officers with whom he was most friendly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are mad to try to escape,</q> one of them said, <q>there
+is no getting over the walls.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am going to try at any rate. I am utterly sick of this
+life.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But you may be exchanged before long.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is most improbable,</q> he said. <q>Only a few are exchanged
+at a time, and as I have not a shadow of influence my
+name would not be included in the list.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But how are you going to attempt it?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now that I must keep to myself. A plan may succeed
+once, but may fail if it is tried again. I really think I have
+a chance of getting through, but of course I may be caught.
+However, I am going to take the risk.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I wish you luck, but I can hardly even hope that
+you will succeed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After going about the town as usual, without making any
+serious effort to sell his goods, Will made his way, towards the
+end of the day, to the house in the lane. Marie was standing
+at the door. As he approached she looked anxiously up and
+down the street, to be certain that there was no one there, and
+then beckoned to him to enter quickly. He obeyed at once,
+and she closed the door behind him. <q>Are you sure no one
+saw you enter, monsieur?</q> she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes,</q> he said, <q>I am quite certain.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now,</q> said Marie, <q>you must go at once up to the attic
+in case my grand’mère should come in. I have everything
+ready for you there. It will be dark in half an hour. I hear
+<pb n='282'/><anchor id='Pg282'/>the prison bell ringing for the return of the prisoners who are
+out, but the roll-call is not made until all have returned to
+their cells and are locked up for the night, which will not be
+for an hour and a half, so you have plenty of time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I thank you with all my heart, mademoiselle.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went up with her to the attic and looked out at the wall.
+The lane was only some twelve feet across, and he was convinced
+that he could leap it without difficulty. He emptied
+his box and repacked it, selecting chiefly articles which would
+take up the smallest amount of room. He made quite sure
+how he could best climb from the window to the roof above
+it, then he waited with what patience he could until it was
+absolutely dark. When he was ready to start he fastened the
+rope firmly round the box and said good-bye to Marie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His last words were: <q>I will do my very best for Lucien,
+and when the war is over I will send you a gold watch to
+wear at your wedding.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then he got upon the window-sill, with the end of the rope
+tied round his waist, and with some little difficulty climbed to
+the roof of the house, and when he had got his breath began
+to pull at the rope and hoisted up the box. He had, before
+starting, put on the disguise Marie had bought for him, and
+handed her the remains of his uniform, telling her to burn it
+at once, and to hide away the buttons for the present, and
+throw them away the first time she left the town. <q>There
+will be a strict search,</q> he said, <q>for any signs of me, and
+those buttons would certainly betray you if they were found.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he got the box up he listened attentively for a little,
+and as, to his great joy, he could not hear the footsteps of a
+sentinel, he threw it on to the wall and jumped after it. He
+<pb n='283'/><anchor id='Pg283'/>landed on his feet, and, picking up the box, ran along the wall
+till he came to a gun. He tied the end of the rope round this
+and slipped down. Then without a moment’s delay he slung
+the box over his shoulder and walked away. He had two or
+three outworks to pass, but luckily there were no guards, so
+he made his way through them without difficulty. All night
+he tramped on, and by morning was forty miles away from
+Verdun. He did not want to begin to ply his assumed trade
+till he was still farther away, so he lay down to sleep in a
+large wood. He had saved from his rations during the week
+a certain amount of bread, and he had bought a couple of
+loaves while wandering with his wares through the town. He
+slept for the best part of the day, and started again at night.
+Beyond making sure that he was going west he paid but little
+attention to the roads he followed, but, keeping steadily in
+that direction, he put another forty miles between him and
+Verdun by the following morning. Then after a few hours’
+sleep he boldly went into a village and entered an inn.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are a pedlar,</q> the landlord said, <q>are you not?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes,</q> he said, <q>I am selling wares manufactured by the
+prisoners at Verdun.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The news spread and the villagers flocked in to look at these
+curiosities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I bought them at a low price, and will sell at the same.
+They could not be made by ordinary labour at ten times the
+price I charge for them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The bait took, and soon a good many small articles were
+sold. Two hours later he again started on his way.
+</p>
+
+</div><div n="15">
+<pb n='284'/><anchor id='Pg284'/>
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER XV</head>
+
+<head type="sub">ESCAPED</head>
+
+<p>
+So he travelled across France, avoiding all large towns.
+Once or twice he got into trouble with a pompous village
+official on account of his not holding a pedlar’s permit; but
+the feeling of the people was strong in favour of a man who
+was selling goods for the benefit of poor prisoners, and, of
+course, he always had some plausible story ready to account
+for its absence. At last he came to Dunkirk. He had saved
+money as he went, and on his arrival there had eight louis
+in his pocket. He took up a lodging at a little cabaret, and,
+leaving his box, which was now almost empty, strolled down
+to the harbour. Fishing-boats were coming in and going out.
+Observing that they were not very well manned, probably
+because many of the men had been drafted into the navy, he
+selected one which had but four men, a number barely sufficient
+to raise the heavy lug-sail, and when she made fast alongside
+the quay he went on board.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do you want a hand?</q> he said, <q>I am not accustomed to
+the sea, but I have no doubt I could haul on a rope as well as
+others.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Where do you come from,</q> one asked, <q>and how is it
+that you have escaped the conscription?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am exempt,</q> he said, <q>as the only son of my mother.
+I come from Champagne.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But why have you left?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I came away because the girl I was engaged to jilted me
+<pb n='285'/><anchor id='Pg285'/>for a richer suitor, and I could not stop there to see her
+married; I should have cut his throat or my own. So I have
+tramped down here to see if I can find some work for a time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are a fool for your pains,</q> the skipper said. <q>No
+girl is worth it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, you never could have been jilted! If you had been
+you wouldn’t think so lightly of it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, mates, what do you say? Shall we take this young
+fellow? He looks strong and active, and I dare say will
+suit us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>At any rate we can give him a trial for a voyage or two.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, you may begin by helping us up into the town with
+our fish. We have had a heavy catch to-day.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will at once shouldered a basket and went up with them
+to the market-place.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We are going to get a drink,</q> the fisherman said. <q>Let
+us see how well you can sell for us. You must get a franc a
+kilogramme. Here are scales.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For a couple of hours Will sold fish, attracting, by his
+pleasant face, buyers who might otherwise have passed him;
+and when the fishermen returned they were pleased to find
+that he had almost sold out their stock, and accounted for his
+take to the last sou.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have been watching you all the time,</q> the captain said,
+<q>though you did not know. I wanted to see if you were
+honest, and, now that I have a proof of it, will take you
+willingly. The pay is twelve francs a week and a tenth share
+in the sales. The boat takes a third, I take two, and the
+sailors take one apiece, and you will have half a share besides
+your pay till you know your business. Do you agree to that?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='286'/><anchor id='Pg286'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes,</q> Will said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Accordingly he settled down to the work of a fisherman,
+and gave great satisfaction. His mates were indeed astonished
+at the rapidity with which he learned his work, and congratulated
+themselves upon the acquisition of so promising a
+recruit.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A month after he had joined the smack a ship-of-war was
+seen sailing along three miles from shore. The fishermen were
+half-way between her and the land, and paid no great attention
+to her, knowing that British men-of-war did not condescend
+to meddle with small fishing-boats. Will waited until
+the captain and one of the men were below; then, suddenly
+pushing the hatch to and throwing a coil of rope over it, he
+produced from his pockets a brace of pistols which he had
+bought at Dunkirk out of the stock of money he had had in
+his pocket when he was captured, and ordered the man at the
+helm to steer for the frigate. The man let go the tiller at
+once, and he and his companion prepared to make a rush upon
+Will. But the sight of the levelled pistols checked them.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <q>HE ORDERED THE MAN AT THE HELM TO STEER
+ FOR THE FRIGATE</q>]</p>
+ </then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill06"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill06.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend="font-size: small"><q>HE ORDERED THE MAN AT THE HELM TO STEER
+ FOR THE FRIGATE</q></hi></head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: <q>HE ORDERED THE MAN AT THE HELM TO STEER FOR THE FRIGATE</q></figDesc></figure></p>
+ </else></pgIf>
+<p>
+<q>You will come to no harm,</q> Will said. <q>You have but
+to put me on board, and I warrant you shall be allowed to
+depart unmolested. I am an English officer. Now, down
+with the helm without hesitation, or I will put a bullet
+through your head; and do you, Jacques, sit down by his
+side.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Sullenly the men obeyed his orders, and the boat went
+dancing through the water in a direction which, Will calculated,
+would enable him to cut off the frigate. In the meantime
+the captain and his companion, unable to understand
+what was going on, were thumping at the hatchway. Will,
+<pb n='287'/><anchor id='Pg287'/>however, paid no attention to them, but stood on it, keeping
+his eye upon the men in the stern. Twenty minutes brought
+them close to the frigate, which, on seeing a small boat making
+for her, threw her sails aback to wait for it. As they came
+close a rope was thrown; Will grasped it and swung himself
+up the side, leaving the boat to drift away. The sailors stood
+looking in surprise at him, but Will went straight up to the
+first lieutenant.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I beg to report myself as having come on board, sir. I
+am, or rather was, a midshipman on board the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>. I
+have just escaped from Verdun.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do you really mean it?</q> the lieutenant said. <q>I thought
+only one or two English prisoners had ever made their escape
+from there.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so, sir, and I am one of the fortunate ones.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But how on earth have you managed to pass right through
+France?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I was detained three months at Toulon, sir, and there was
+allowed to buy some French books. I was then a month on
+the way to Verdun, and five months there. During that time
+I practised French incessantly, and picked up enough to pass
+muster. At last, thanks to a French girl, I succeeded in
+getting a disguise and climbing over the wall, and passed
+through France as a pedlar with wares made by the
+prisoners.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Come with me to the captain’s cabin. He will, I am sure,
+be glad to hear your story. How were you captured?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>In the attack the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> made on a battery on one of the
+Isles d’Hyères I was shot through the leg and left behind in
+the retreat.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='288'/><anchor id='Pg288'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I heard of that affair, and a most unfortunate one it
+was. You caught it hot there, and no mistake!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain listened to the story with great interest, and
+then said: <q>Well, Mr. Gilmore, I congratulate you very
+heartily on getting out of that terrible prison. I am rather
+short of officers, and will rate you as midshipman until I have
+an opportunity of sending you home. I have no doubt your
+brother officers will manage to rig you out.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lieutenant went out with Will and introduced him to
+the officers of the ship, to whom he had again to tell the tale
+of his adventure. <q>Now come down below to our berth,</q> the
+senior midshipman said, <q>and we will see what we can do to
+rig you out. We lost one of our number the other day, and I
+have no doubt the purser’s clerk will let you take what you
+require out of his kit if you give him a bill on your paymaster.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Fortunately the clothes fitted Will, so he took over the
+whole of the effects, as there was sufficient standing to his
+account on the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> to pay for them, in addition to the pay
+that would accrue during the time of his captivity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He learned that they were on their way to the Texel, where
+they were to cruise backwards and forwards to watch the
+flotilla of boats that Napoleon was accumulating there for the
+invasion of England. It was arduous work, for the heavy
+fogs rendered it necessary to use the greatest caution, as there
+were many dangerous shoals and currents in the vicinity.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One dark night, when they thought that they were in
+deep water, the ship grounded suddenly. The tide was
+running out, and though they did everything in their power
+they could not get her off.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='289'/><anchor id='Pg289'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>If we have but another couple of hours,</q> the first lieutenant
+said, <q>we shall float, as the tide will be turning very
+soon. But it is getting light already, and we are likely to
+have their gun-boats out in no time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+His anticipation turned out correct, for six gun-boats were
+soon seen making their way out of the Texel. When within
+range they opened fire. The <name type="ship">Artemis</name> replied with such guns
+as she could bring to bear on them. She suffered a good deal of
+damage, but the tide had turned and was flowing fast. Hawsers
+had been run out at the stern and fastened to the capstan,
+and the bars were now manned, and the sailors put their whole
+strength into the work. At last there was a movement; the
+ship quivered from stem to stern, and then slipped off into
+deep water. A joyous cheer burst from the crew. But they
+did not waste time. They ran at once to their guns, and
+opened a broadside fire on the gun-boats. One was disabled
+and taken in tow by two others; and the rest, finding themselves
+no match for the frigate, sheered off and re-entered the
+Texel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <name type="ship">Artemis</name> continued to cruise to and fro for upwards of a
+month. One evening the first lieutenant said to Will: <q>The
+captain is worried because we were told to expect a messenger
+with news as to the state of affairs at Amsterdam and in
+Holland generally, and none has arrived. There is no doubt
+that they are adding to the number of gun-boats there, and
+also to the flat-bottomed boats for the conveyance of troops.
+The delay is most annoying, especially as we have orders to
+sail for England with the news as soon as we get it, and we
+are all heartily sick of this dull and dreary work.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will volunteer to land and communicate with some of
+<pb n='290'/><anchor id='Pg290'/>the country-people near Amsterdam,</q> Will said, <q>if the captain
+would like it. We know that their sympathies are all with
+us, and I have no doubt that I could get what information is
+required. If my offer is accepted I should greatly prefer to
+go in uniform, for, while I am quite ready to run the risk of
+being taken prisoner, I have certainly no desire to be captured
+out of uniform, as I should be liable to be hanged as a spy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first lieutenant mentioned the matter to the captain,
+who at once embraced the offer, for he, too, was sick of the
+work, in which no honour was to be obtained, and in which
+the risks were great, as the coast was a dangerous one. He
+sent for Will and said: <q>I hear, Mr. Gilmore, that you are
+willing to volunteer to land and gain information. Have you
+considered the risks?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I know that, of course, there is a certain amount of danger,
+sir, but do not consider it to be excessive. At any rate I am
+ready to try it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am very much obliged to you,</q> the captain said, <q>for we
+are all anxious to get away from this place; but mind, I cannot
+but consider that the risk is considerable. With our glasses
+we constantly see bodies of horsemen riding along the sands,
+and have sometimes noticed solitary men, no doubt sentinels;
+and it is probably because of them that the messenger we
+expected has not been able to put out. I will give you his
+address. He lives within half a mile of Amsterdam, in a
+house near the shore of the Texel. When are you prepared
+to start?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This evening if you wish it, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I think the sooner you go the better. If you land
+to-night I will send the boat ashore to the same spot to-morrow
+<pb n='291'/><anchor id='Pg291'/>night. They will lie off two or three hundred yards, and
+come to your whistle.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will had no preparations to make for his journey. He received
+a letter from the captain authorizing the man to give
+every information in his power to the bearer, and with this in
+his pocket he took his place in the boat after dark and was
+rowed towards the shore. The <name type="ship">Artemis</name> was four miles from
+the land when he embarked in the gig, the oars were muffled,
+and the men were enjoined to row with the greatest care when
+they approached the land. An officer went in charge, and the
+<name type="ship">Artemis</name> was to show a light an hour after they started, so
+that they could find their way back to her. Will chatted in
+a whisper to the officer till they were, he judged, within half
+a mile of the land. Then they rowed on in perfect silence till
+the keel grated on the sands. At that moment a musket shot
+was heard from a sand-hill a couple of hundred yards away.
+Will leapt out and ran at full speed for some little distance,
+and then threw himself down. The shots were repeated from
+point to point, and men ran down to the water’s edge and fired
+after the retiring boat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Presently the noise ceased. Whether he had been seen or
+not he could not say, but he hoped that, although the sentinel
+had made out the boat against the slight surf that broke on
+the beach, he had not been able to see him leave it. He got
+up cautiously, and, stooping low, moved off until he was quite
+certain that he was well beyond the line of sentries. Once
+or twice he heard the galloping of parties of men, evidently
+attracted by the sound of firing, but none of them came very
+near him, and he ran on without interruption. In two hours
+<pb n='292'/><anchor id='Pg292'/>he saw lights before him, and knew that he was approaching
+Amsterdam. He turned to the right, and went on until he
+came to a wide sheet of water, which must, he knew, be the
+Texel. Then he lay down and slept for some hours. At the
+first gleam of dawn he was on his feet again, and made his
+way to a farmhouse which exactly agreed with the description
+that had been given him. He knocked at the door, and it
+was presently opened by a man in his shirt-sleeves.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Are you Meinheer Johan Van Duyk?</q> he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am,</q> the man said. <q>Who are you?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am the bearer of this letter from the captain of the
+<name type="ship">Artemis</name>, who had expected you to communicate with him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Come in,</q> the man said. <q>We are early risers here, and
+it is advisable that no one should see you. Yes,</q> he went on
+when the door was closed, <q>I have been trying to communicate,
+but the cordon of sentries along the shore has been so
+close, and the watch so vigilant, that it has been quite impossible
+for me to come out. I suppose you are an officer of
+that ship?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Do you speak Dutch?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, I speak French.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man read the letter.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is all right; I can furnish you with all these particulars
+when you leave to-night, but of course in that uniform
+you must lie dark until then. For some reason or other the
+French have suspicions of me, and they have paid me several
+visits. Were you seen to land last night?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I do not know. They fired on the boat, and I expect
+they have a shrewd idea that somebody was put on shore.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='293'/><anchor id='Pg293'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>In that case,</q> the man said, <q>it is probable that they will
+search my house to-day. By this time they know every little
+corner of it, so I cannot see where I am to conceal you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I observed a stack behind your house,</q> suggested Will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, there is one.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, if you would at once get a ladder, and take off some
+of the thatch and make a hole, I could get into it, and you
+could then replace the thatch long before the soldiers are likely
+to come out from Amsterdam.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I could do that, and I could hand you in a bottle
+of schnapps and some water and bread and meat.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That will do very well. I suppose you have men?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I have two, and both of them are true Dutchmen, and
+may be trusted. I will give you at once the list of the gun-boats
+and flat-boats I have made ready to send on the first
+opportunity. I shall be glad to get it out of the house, for,
+though it is well hidden, they search so strictly that they
+might find it. They broke all my wainscots, pulled up the
+flooring, and almost wrecked the house the last time they
+came; and I don’t suppose they will be less vigilant this time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He went to the cupboard and brought out some food and
+drink.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, sir,</q> he said, <q>if you will eat this I will call up my
+two men and set to work at once to get your hiding-place
+made, so that you may be safely lodged in it before any people
+are about.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will was by no means sorry to take breakfast. He ate the
+food leisurely, and just as he had finished Van Duyk came in
+to say that the place was ready for him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not a large hole, but sufficient to let him lie down at
+<pb n='294'/><anchor id='Pg294'/>full length under the thatch. He climbed up the ladder the
+men had used and got into his nest, and after Van Duyk had
+handed him in the provisions he had promised, the two men
+set to work with all speed to replace the thatch. It was
+made thin, so that he had no difficulty in raising it, and could
+even with his finger make a tiny opening through which he
+could look. The hay that had been removed to make room
+for him was carried away and thrown down in the mangers for
+the cows, so that there was nothing to show that the stack had
+recently been touched.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two hours later Will heard the trampling of horses, and
+two officers, with a troop of cavalry, rode up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I bear a warrant to search your house, Van Duyk,</q> Will
+heard one of them say.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You have searched it three times already, meinheer, but
+you can, of course, search it again if you wish. You will certainly
+find no more now than you did then.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>A spy landed last night, Van Duyk, and it is more than
+probable that he is taking shelter here.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t know why you should suspect me more than anyone
+else. I am a quiet man, meddling in no way with public
+matters, and attending only to my own business.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is all very well to say that; we have certain information
+about you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am well known to my neighbours as a peaceable man,</q>
+Van Duyk repeated, <q>and think it monstrous that I should
+be so interfered with and harried.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, we don’t want any talk. Now, men, set to work
+and search every corner of the house, not only where a man
+could be hidden, but even a paper. These Dutchmen are
+<pb n='295'/><anchor id='Pg295'/>traitors to a man, and if this fellow is no worse than others he
+is at least as bad.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+For an hour and a half Will, in his hiding-place, heard the
+sound of smashing panels and furniture, and the pulling up
+of floors. At the end of that time the troopers left the house
+and mounted, the officer saying: <q>You have deceived us this
+time, old traitor, but we will catch you yet.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Catch me if you can. I tell you that if you level the
+house to the ground you will find nothing.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After they had ridden off, Van Duyk went out to the haystack.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They have gone for the present, meinheer, but you had
+better stay where you are. They are quite capable of coming
+back again in the hope that you may have come out from some
+hiding-place they may have overlooked.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, an hour later the troop galloped up again, only
+to find the Dutchman smoking placidly on a seat before his
+house. Another search was made, but equally without success,
+and then, with much use of strong language, the party rode off.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think you can come down safely now,</q> the Dutchman
+said to Will.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, but I don’t wish to run the least risk. I will
+remain where I am till it gets dark; I can very well sleep the
+time away till then. I sha’n’t get much sleep to-night.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Not until it was quite dark did Van Duyk and his men
+come with a ladder to remove the thatch again. It took but
+a minute to extricate Will from his hole.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We will get that filled up and mended before morning,</q>
+Van Duyk said. <q>Now, can I let you have a horse?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, thank you, I have but twelve miles to walk. I noted
+<pb n='296'/><anchor id='Pg296'/>the road as I came, and can find the spot where I landed without
+difficulty.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With thanks for the Dutchman’s kindness, and handing him
+the reward with which the captain had entrusted him, Will
+started on his walk. When he approached the spot it was
+still four hours from the time at which the boat was to arrive,
+and seeing a light in a cottage he went and looked in at the
+window. Only a girl and an old woman were there, so he
+lifted the latch and went in. <q>I am an English officer,</q> he
+said, <q>will you let me sit down by your fire for a couple of
+hours? The cold is piercing outside.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old woman answered in broken French, bidding him
+welcome, and he sat down and began to talk to her. Her
+stock of French was small, and the conversation soon languished.
+Presently the girl leapt to her feet and exclaimed
+in Dutch: <q>Soldiers!</q> The old woman translated, and Will
+then heard the trampling of horses. He jumped up, snatched
+a long cloak of the old woman’s from the wall, and threw it
+round him. He also took one of her caps that hung there
+and put it on his head. It was large, with frills, and almost
+covered his face. He had but just time to reseat himself by
+the fire and cower over it, as if warming his hands, when the
+door opened and a French officer entered. At the sight of the
+two apparently old women bending over the fire, and the girl
+sitting knitting, he stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Madam,</q> he said courteously, <q>it is my duty to search
+your house. It is believed that a spy who landed here last
+night may be returning to-night.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You can look,</q> the old woman said in her quavering voice,
+<q>as much as you like; you will not find any spy here.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='297'/><anchor id='Pg297'/>
+
+<p>
+As the cottage consisted of only two rooms the search was
+quickly effected.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, madam!</q> the French officer said; <q>I am quite
+satisfied, and am sorry I have incommoded you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a civil fellow,</q> Will said, as the sound of the
+retreating hoofs was heard. <q>Some of these fellows would
+have blustered and sworn and turned the whole place upside
+down. Well, madam, I am deeply obliged to you for the
+shelter you have given me and the risk you have run for my
+sake. Here is a guinea; it is all the gold I have with me,
+but it may buy some little comfort for you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It will buy me enough turf to last me all the winter,</q> the
+old woman said. <q>My son is a fisherman who is sometimes
+weeks from home, and our supply of turf is running low.
+Thank you very much! though I would gladly have done it
+without reward, for we all hate the French.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will went out cautiously and made his way down to the
+shore, listening at every step for some sound that would tell
+of the presence of a sentry. He lay down near the edge of the
+sea and watched. At last he saw a dim shape lying stationary
+a hundred yards out. He gave a low whistle, but this was
+almost instantaneously followed by the report of a musket
+within fifty yards of him. He did not hesitate, but with a
+shout to the boat ran into the water and struck out towards
+it. Another musket was fired, fifty yards to the left, and the
+signal was, as before, repeated by sentry after sentry till the
+sound died away in the distance. Almost immediately the
+galloping of horses could be heard. The boat rowed in to
+meet him, and as he scrambled on board a volley of carbines
+rang out from the shore. The sailors bent to their oars and,
+<pb n='298'/><anchor id='Pg298'/>although the firing continued for some time, they knew that
+the enemy had lost sight of them. A quarter of an hour later
+the sound of oars was heard. <q>Stop rowing,</q> the lieutenant
+in command of the boat ordered, <q>and don’t move.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In about three minutes a large rowing-boat, manned by
+a number of oars, could be made out passing across ahead of
+them. The ship’s boat, however, was so small an object in
+comparison that it remained unnoticed. They waited till the
+beat of oars ceased in the distance and then rowed on again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That was a narrow escape,</q> the lieutenant muttered.
+<q>Evidently she was lying in wait to catch you, and if she
+had been fifty yards nearer to us she must have made us out.
+I think we are safe now, for the course she was taking will
+not carry her anywhere near the frigate. At any rate we
+have a good start, and I have a lantern here to show in case
+we are chased.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They had rowed two miles farther when they again heard
+the sound of oars.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We must row for it now,</q> the lieutenant said. <q>The
+frigate is not much more than a mile away.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The men bent to their oars, and the lieutenant raised and
+lowered his lantern three times. This signal was almost
+immediately answered by the boom of a gun from the frigate.
+For a time the enemy continued the pursuit, but on a
+second gun being fired they ceased rowing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They must know that the frigate can’t see them,</q> the
+lieutenant said, <q>but they have no doubt come to the conclusion
+that they cannot overtake us before we get to her.
+Anyhow it is certain that they have given it up as a bad job.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In ten more minutes they were alongside the frigate.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='299'/><anchor id='Pg299'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Is Mr. Gilmore with you?</q> a voice asked from above.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I am here, sir, safe and sound.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is good news,</q> the first lieutenant said, as Will stepped
+on deck. <q>The captain was afraid, after he had let you go,
+that he had sacrificed you, and that, going as you did in your
+uniform, you would be certain to be captured.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir; I had two narrow escapes, but got off all right,
+and have brought you the list of gun-boats and row-boats that
+you required. I am afraid, though, that it will require careful
+opening, for I had to swim off to the boat.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That will not matter as long as we can read it,</q> the
+lieutenant said. <q>Now you had better come to the captain
+and hand it to him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am heartily glad to see you, Mr. Gilmore,</q> the captain
+said. <q>I have been very uneasy about you, and I really hardly
+expected you to return to-night. We knew that the boat
+was being chased, by the lights Lieutenant Falcon showed, but
+I feared that she was coming back without you. Now tell
+me what has happened to you. We knew by the firing that
+French sentries saw the boat come to land last night.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will gave a full account of his adventures.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well done indeed, Mr. Gilmore! I shall have much
+pleasure in reporting your conduct. Now let us examine
+the list.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The words were a good deal blurred by water, but were
+still quite legible.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>They are stronger in gun-boats than I expected,</q> the
+captain said when he had read it. <q>If they had had an ounce
+of pluck about them they would have come out and fought us.
+A thirty-two-gun frigate is no match for sixteen gunboats.
+<pb n='300'/><anchor id='Pg300'/>Well, now that we have got this despatch, we can make for
+Sheerness at once. Have her headed for that port, Mr. Falcon,
+if you please. We won’t lose a moment before making for
+England.</q>
+</p>
+</div><div n="16">
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER XVI</head>
+
+<head type="sub">A DARING EXPLOIT</head>
+
+<p>
+On reaching Sheerness the captain at once went ashore,
+accompanied by Will, and they proceeded to London.
+Will took up his quarters at the Golden Cross, and next day
+called at the Admiralty, where he sent in his name to the First
+Lord.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have received a most favourable report from Captain
+Knowles of your conduct in landing on the coast of Holland,
+and of obtaining despatches of much value. How were
+you taken prisoner?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>At the attack by a force from the <name type="ship">Tartar</name> on some batteries
+on one of the Isles d’Hyères. I was hit in the leg, and, being
+left behind in the confusion of the retreat, fell into the hands
+of the French. I was imprisoned for four months at Toulon,
+and then sent to Verdun. Six months after leaving Toulon
+I effected my escape in a disguise procured for me by a French
+girl. I had learned the language while in prison, and, travelling
+through France in the disguise of a pedlar, reached Dunkirk.
+There I worked in a fishing-boat for a month, and then,
+seeing the <name type="ship">Artemis</name> cruising off the town, I shut up two of the
+<pb n='301'/><anchor id='Pg301'/>sailors in their cabin, and frightened the other two into taking
+me off to her.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>In consideration of the valuable services you have rendered
+I have much pleasure in appointing you master’s mate.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, sir! but I own I had rather hopes of obtaining
+a lieutenancy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>A lieutenancy!</q> the admiral said in a changed tone. <q>I
+am surprised to hear you say so, when you have had no
+service as a master’s mate. What makes you entertain such
+a hope?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My past services, sir,</q> Will said boldly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Captain Purfleet, will you hand me down the volume of
+services under the letter G. Ah! here it is.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He glanced at it cursorily at first, and then read it carefully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You were right, Mr. Gilmore, in entertaining such a hope.
+I see that you have been highly spoken of by the various
+officers under whom you have served; that you were most
+strongly recommended by the admirals both at Malta and in
+the West Indies for your singular services, and also by Lord
+Hood for your conduct in Corsica. You were in command
+of a small craft for nearly a year, and in that capacity you
+not only took a number of prizes, some of them valuable, but
+actually captured, in one hard-fought action, two pirates, each
+of which was stronger than yourself. You have, therefore,
+well shown your capacity to command. Captain Purfleet,
+have any appointments been made yet to the <name type="ship">Jason</name>?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, then appoint Mr. Gilmore to be second lieutenant
+of her. You need not thank me, sir; you owe your commission
+<pb n='302'/><anchor id='Pg302'/>to your own gallantry and good conduct. I don’t know that
+I have at any time seen such strong testimonials and so good
+a record for any officer of your age and standing. I am quite
+sure that you will do full justice to the appointment that I
+have made. As the <name type="ship">Jason</name> will not be ready for two months
+I can grant you six weeks leave.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+No sooner was this matter settled than Will took the coach
+to Fairham. Thence he drove to the village of Porchester,
+where Marie’s fiancé was confined. Here he put up at a little
+inn. He had, before starting from London, bought and put
+on the disguise of a countryman, as he could hardly have
+stayed in the village as a gentleman without exciting remark
+or suspicion. He had, however, brought other clothes with
+him, so that if necessary he could resume them, and appear
+either as a naval officer or as a civilian. His first step was to
+make a tour of the great wall which enclosed the castle and
+the huts in which the prisoners were confined. He saw at
+once that any attempt to scale the wall would be useless.
+At the inn he gave out that by the death of a relative he
+had just come into a few pounds and meant to enjoy himself.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The inn he had selected was scarcely more than a tavern,
+and he had chosen it because he thought it probable that
+it would be frequented by the soldiers whose camp stood
+near the walls, and who supplied the guards in the castle.
+This expectation was fulfilled a short time after his arrival by
+four or five soldiers coming in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Will you drink a glass with me?</q> he said. <q>I have been
+telling the landlord that I have come into a little brass, and
+mean to spend it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='303'/><anchor id='Pg303'/>
+
+<p>
+The soldiers, not unwillingly, accepted the invitation, and
+sat down at a table with him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It must be slow work,</q> he said, <q>keeping guard here, and
+I expect you would sooner be out at the war.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That we should,</q> one of them replied; <q>there is nothing
+to do here but to drill all day, and stare across the water
+when we are off duty, and wish we were at Portsmouth,
+where there is something to do and something to amuse one.
+This is the dullest hole I ever was quartered in. Cosham
+on one side and Fairham on the other are the only places
+that one can walk to. We expect, however, to be relieved
+before long, and I never want to see the place again.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I suppose you take recruits here?</q> Will said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Oh yes, we take recruits when we can get them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How long is a recruit before he begins to be a soldier, and
+takes his regular turn as guard and so on?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Two or three months,</q> the man said; <q>that is long enough
+to get them into something like shape.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should like to go in and have a look at the prisoners,</q>
+Will said after a little chat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, there is no chance of your doing that,</q> the soldier
+replied. <q>Orders are very strict, and only three or four
+hucksters are allowed to go in, to sell things to them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How many are there of them?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>About three thousand.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He chatted for some time, and then, after calling for another
+pint of beer all round, sauntered out, leaving the soldiers to
+finish it. He saw at once that his only possible plan in the
+time he had at his command was either to bribe some of
+the guards, which appeared to him too hazardous a plan to
+<pb n='304'/><anchor id='Pg304'/>adopt, and not likely to lead to success, or to get at one or
+other of the people who were allowed in.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He spent two days watching the gate of the prison. During
+that time five people in civilian dress went in. One of these
+was a short fat woman, who carried a large basket with cakes
+and other eatables. Another was similarly laden. A third, a
+man of about his own height, took in a variety of material
+used by the prisoners for making articles for sale. He had
+needles and thread, scraps of materials of many colours for
+making patchwork quilts, blocks of wood for carving out
+model ships, straw dyed various colours for making fancy
+boxes, glass beads, and other small articles. Will at once
+fixed on him as being the most likely of the visitors to serve
+his purpose. He spoke to him after he had left the prison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My friend,</q> he said, <q>do you want to earn fifty pounds?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man opened his eyes in surprise.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should certainly like to,</q> he said, <q>if I could see my
+way to do it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I will double that if you do as I tell you. I want
+you, in the first place, to find out the hut in which Lucien
+Dupres is confined, and give him a letter.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There will be no great difficulty about that,</q> the man
+said. <q>I only have to whisper to the first prisoner I meet
+that I want to find a man, and have got a letter from his
+friends for him, and if he doesn’t know him he will find
+him out for me. That is not much to do for a hundred
+pounds.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No; but in the next place I want you to keep out of the
+way for a week, and to lend me your clothes and pass. I
+want to go in and see the man.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='305'/><anchor id='Pg305'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, that is a more dangerous business. How could you
+pass for me?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think I could do that without fear. We are about the
+same height. I should have a wig made to imitate your hair,
+and should, I imagine, have no difficulty in getting my face
+made up so as to be able to pass for you. You must be so well
+known that they will do no more than glance at me as I go
+in. The only alternative to that will be for you to take to
+him a rope and other things I will give you. I tell you
+frankly I want to aid his escape. Mind, a hundred pounds is
+not to be earned without some slight risk.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Of the two things I would rather risk carrying the rope
+and the tools, if they are not too bulky. Mind you, it is
+a big risk, for I should be liable to be shot for aiding in the
+escape of a prisoner.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, look here,</q> Will said, <q>I will go into Portsmouth
+this afternoon and find some man who can fake me up. There
+are sure to be two or three men who make that their business,
+for young naval officers are constantly getting into scrimmages,
+and must want to have their eyes painted before they
+go back on board. Do you go to the prison to-morrow morning.
+Find out the man, and deliver this letter to him. Then
+come into Portsmouth in the coach. I will be waiting there
+till it arrives, and you can go with me, and when I have got
+myself made up you shall judge for yourself whether I shall
+pass muster for you. There will be no difficulty in getting
+whiskers to match yours.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well,</q> the man said, <q>I will be on the coach to-morrow.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will at once changed his clothes to an ordinary walking
+<pb n='306'/><anchor id='Pg306'/>suit, and went into town. On making enquiries he found
+that there was a barber who made it his business to paint
+black eyes and to remove the signs of bruises. He went to
+him and said: <q>I hear you are an artist in black eyes.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The man smiled.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You don’t look as if you wanted my services, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, not in that way, but I suppose you could make up
+a face so as to resemble another.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, I was at one time engaged at a theatre in London
+in making up the performers, and feel sure that I could accomplish
+such a job to your satisfaction.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have made a bet,</q> Will said, <q>that I could disguise
+myself as a certain man so well that I could take my friends
+in. Have you a sandy wig in your shop?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, half a dozen.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And whiskers?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have several sets, sir, and I dare say one would be the
+right colour.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, then, I will bring the man here to-morrow,
+and you shall paint me so as to resemble him as closely as
+possible. I don’t mind giving you a five-pound note for the
+job.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, if I am not mistaken I can paint you so that
+his own mother wouldn’t know the difference.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will took a bed at the George, and at mid-day went to
+the inn where the coach stopped. The man was on the
+outside.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, I have found the Frenchman, and given him the
+letter, so that part of the business is done.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is good. What is the number of the man’s hut?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='307'/><anchor id='Pg307'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Number sixty-eight;</q> and the man carefully described its
+position.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well. Now we will set about the second part.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When they arrived at the shop the barber seated them in
+two chairs next to each other, in a room behind the shop, and
+set to work at once. He first produced a wig and whiskers,
+which, with a little clipping, he made of the size and shape of
+the hair on the huckster’s face. Then he set to work with
+his paints, first staining Will’s face to the reddish-brown of
+the man’s complexion, and then adding line after line. After
+two hours’ work he asked them to stand together before a
+glass, and both were astonished; the resemblance was indeed
+perfect. Will’s eyebrows had been stained a grayish white,
+and some long hairs had been inserted so as to give them
+the shaggy appearance of the pedlar. A crow’s foot had been
+painted at the corner of each eye, and a line drawn from the
+nose to the corners of the lips. The chin and lower part of
+the cheeks had been tinted dark, to give them the appearance
+of long shaving. Both of them burst into a laugh as they
+looked at the two faces in the mirror.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You will do, sir,</q> the man said. <q>It would need a sharp
+pair of eyes to detect the difference between us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I think that will do,</q> Will said, <q>and to aid the
+deception I will, as I go in, use my handkerchief and pretend
+to have a bad cold.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Is there a basket-maker’s near?</q> Will asked the barber.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, first turning to the right, and first to the left,
+two or three doors down, there is a small shop.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I want you at once to go and choose one the size and
+shape of your own,</q> Will said to his companion. <q>When
+<pb n='308'/><anchor id='Pg308'/>you see one, set the man to work to weave a false bottom
+to it. I want it to lodge so as to leave a recess four or five
+inches deep. Have it made with two handles, so that it can
+be lifted in and out. How long would he be doing it, do you
+think?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>About an hour and a half, I should say.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well; order the man to send it round to the George,
+wrapped up in paper, to the address of Mr. Earnshaw. When
+you have done this, come back here. We cannot go into the
+street together; our singular resemblance would at once be
+noticed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now,</q> Will said to the pedlar when he returned, <q>meet
+me on the road a hundred yards from where it turns down
+to Porchester; bring a stock of goods with you, and I will
+put them in my basket. Of course you will bring your pass,
+and the clothes you now have on in a bundle. I will change
+there; as far as I have seen it is very seldom that anyone
+passes that way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will then went for a walk, and when it became quite dark
+he took off his wig and whiskers and went into the town
+again. Here he bought a long rope, very slender, but still
+strong enough to support a man’s weight, and a grapnel which
+folded up flat when not in use. Then he went to the George,
+having wrapped a muffler round his face as if he were suffering
+with toothache. His basket was standing in the <corr sic='hall."'>hall.</corr>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I shall not return this evening,</q> he said, <q>so I will pay
+my bill.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Then, having bought a suit of ready-made sailor’s clothes,
+with hat complete, he put them into his basket, hired a
+vehicle, and drove to Fairham. In the morning at nine
+<pb n='309'/><anchor id='Pg309'/>o’clock he walked along the main road towards Cosham till
+he reached the turning to Porchester, went down it a couple
+of hundred yards, and sat on a grassy bank till he saw the
+pedlar approaching.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is a foggy morning,</q> the huckster said when he came
+up.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So much the better. I hope it will last over to-morrow,
+and then they won’t be able to signal the news of the
+prisoner’s escape. It is only in clear weather that the
+semaphores can be made out from hill to hill.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The goods were changed from the pedlar’s basket to the
+one Will had brought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There, then, is the hundred pounds I promised you; I
+hope you are perfectly satisfied?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Perfectly, sir; it is the best two days’ work I have ever
+done.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now for my clothes,</q> Will said; and no one being in sight
+he quickly changed into the clothes the pedlar had brought.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We are more alike than ever,</q> the man said with a laugh,
+<q>but you will have to remember that I walk with a limp.
+I got a ball in my leg in the fighting at Trinidad, and was
+discharged as being unfit for service. But I got a small
+pension, and the right to sell things to the prisoners in Porchester
+Castle.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I noticed the limp when I saw you first,</q> Will said, <q>and
+there will be no great difficulty in copying it. I regarded it
+as rather fortunate, as when the soldiers see me limp along
+they will not look farther.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, I wish you luck. You are the freest-handed
+gentleman I ever came across.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='310'/><anchor id='Pg310'/>
+
+<p>
+Will hid his own clothes in a neighbouring bush, and
+then started, imitating the pedlar’s limp so exactly that
+the man laughed as he looked after him before starting for
+Fairham.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+There were few people in the streets of the quiet little
+village as Will passed through it. When he neared the castle
+he overtook the fat apple-woman, who hailed him as a friend,
+and they walked together into the castle. They showed their
+passes to the guard at the gate, but he scarcely looked at
+them. They then separated, and Will, stopping now and
+then to sell small articles, made his way at last to Lucien’s
+hut. He had in his letter informed Lucien of his reasons
+for trying to get him free, and had directed him to be leaning
+at that hour against the corner of the hut. When Lucien saw
+the pedlar approaching, if all was clear he was to retire into
+it, but if there were others inside he was to shake his head
+slightly. As Will approached the hut he saw a prisoner
+standing there according to his instructions, but he gave the
+danger signal and Will passed on. This he did twice, but
+when Will returned the third time the man went quietly into
+the hut.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>There is not a moment to lose,</q> Will said as he followed,
+and he at once lifted up the false bottom and pulled out the
+rope and grapnel. He had knotted the rope about every foot,
+to assist the prisoner in climbing, and had covered the iron
+of the grapnel with strips of flannel so that it would make no
+noise when it struck the wall.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Hide them in your bed. It will be a very dark night, and
+you must steal out and make your way to the middle of the
+south wall. There fling your grapnel up and scale the wall.
+<pb n='311'/><anchor id='Pg311'/>I shall be there waiting for you. It looks as if it will be very
+wet as well as very dark, so you ought to be able to avoid the
+sentinel.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At this moment he heard someone at the door, and adroitly
+changing his tone said: <q>You do not like these colours for
+a bed-quilt? Very well, I am getting a fresh stock from
+London in a few days, and I have no doubt you will be
+able to suit yourself. Good-morning!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then turned and offered some of his goods to the new-comer,
+who bought a block for carving out a ship, and some
+twine and other things for rigging her. When he left the
+hut he went about the yard till he had disposed of a considerable
+amount of his goods, and then left the prison and
+made his way back to the spot where he had hidden his clothes.
+On arriving there he changed at once, rubbed the pigment
+from his face, threw away the wig and whiskers, hid the
+basket in a place which he and the pedlar had agreed upon,
+with the clothes in it and the pass in one of the pockets,
+and then went back into the village, where he hired a chaise
+and drove to Fairham.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Landlord,</q> he said, as he drew up at the principal hotel,
+<q>I shall want a post-chaise to-night for London. I shall be at
+a party to-night and cannot say at what time I may get away,
+but have the horses ready to put in at twelve o’clock. If they
+have to wait an hour or two you shall not be the loser.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After ordering dinner, he strolled about the town till he
+thought it would be nearly ready. Then he asked for a room,
+and there changed into his naval uniform, which he had
+brought with him. He ate a good dinner, and then, putting
+on his cloak, started to walk back to Porchester, carrying
+<pb n='312'/><anchor id='Pg312'/>with him a bag in which was the sailor’s suit he had
+bought for Lucien. The night was pitch dark, and the rain
+had set in heavily, but although his walk was not an agreeable
+one he was in high spirits. In his letter to Lucien he
+had told him that if anything should prevent him from
+making his way to the wall that night he would expect
+him on the following one. Nevertheless he felt sure that
+in such favourable circumstances he would be able to get
+through the sentries without difficulty. He took up a position
+as near as he could guess at the centre of the south wall, on
+the narrow strip of ground between it and the lake. He had
+waited about an hour when he heard a slight noise a few yards
+on one side of him. He moved towards the sound, and was
+just in time to see Lucien alight. He grasped him by the
+hand.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <q>HE WAS JUST IN TIME TO SEE LUCIEN ALIGHT</q>]</p>
+</then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill07"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill07.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend="font-size: small"><q>HE WAS JUST IN TIME TO SEE LUCIEN ALIGHT</q></hi></head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: <q>HE WAS JUST IN TIME TO SEE LUCIEN ALIGHT</q></figDesc></figure></p>
+</else></pgIf>
+<p>
+<q>Thank heaven,</q> he said in French, <q>that I have got you
+free, as I promised your sweetheart I would! Now let us first
+make our way up the village. I have a suit of sailor’s clothes
+for you in this bag; you can change into them when we
+get beyond the houses, and throw those you are wearing
+into the pond there, with a few stones in them to make them
+sink.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, monsieur, how can I thank you?</q> Lucien said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am only paying a debt. Marie risked a good deal to
+aid me, and I promised solemnly that I would, if it were
+at all possible, get you out of prison in return, so there is
+no occasion for any thanks.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Few words passed between them as they walked through
+the village, and when they had left it behind, Lucien changed
+his clothes and disposed of his old ones as Will had suggested.
+</p>
+<pb n='313'/><anchor id='Pg313'/>
+<p>
+<q>It was necessary to get rid of them,</q> Will said, <q>because
+if they were found in the morning it would show that you
+had got a change, and instead of looking for someone in
+a well-worn uniform they would direct their attention to
+other people.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They tramped along to Fairham, and reached the hotel just
+as it was about to be shut up, the stage-coach having passed
+a few minutes before. They had some refreshments, and then
+took their seats in the chaise. At once the postilions cracked
+their whips, and the four horses started at a gallop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We are absolutely safe now,</q> Will said; <q>they will not
+discover that you have gone until the roll-call in the morning,
+and by that time we shall be within a few miles of London.
+In such weather as this they will be unable to signal. Before
+we arrive I will put on civilian clothes again, and as soon as
+we have discharged the chaise we will go to a clothier’s and
+get a suit for you. There are so many emigrants in London
+that your speaking French will attract no attention.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The journey was quickly accomplished. Will was very
+liberal to the postilions at the first stage, and these hurried
+up those who were to take the next, and so from stage to
+stage they went at the top of the horses’ speed, the ninety
+miles being covered in the very fast time, for the period,
+of ten hours. At the last stage Will asked for a room to
+himself for a few minutes and there changed his clothes.
+They were put down in front of a private house, and, having
+seen the post-chaise drive off, took their bags and walked on
+until they reached a tailor’s shop.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I want to put my man into plain clothes while he is
+with me in town,</q> Will said to the shopman.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='314'/><anchor id='Pg314'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir. What sort of clothes?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Oh, just private clothes, such as a valet might wear when
+out of livery!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lucien was soon rigged out in a suit of quiet but respectable
+garments, and, putting his sailor suit into his bag, they went on.
+They looked about for a considerable time before they found
+a suitable lodging, but at last they came upon a French hotel.
+Entering, Will asked in French for two rooms. They were at
+once accommodated, and after washing and dressing they went
+down to the coffee-room, where several French gentlemen were
+breakfasting. It had been arranged that Will should say that
+they were two emigrants who had just effected their escape
+from France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day they took the coach to Weymouth, the port
+from which at that time communication was kept open with
+France by means of smugglers and men who made a business
+of aiding the French emigrants who wanted to escape, or
+the Royalists who went backwards and forwards trying to get
+up a movement against the Republic. On making enquiries
+they heard of a man who had a very fast little vessel, and they
+at once looked him up. <q>This gentleman wants to go across,</q>
+Will said. <q>What would you do it for?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It depends whether he will wait till I get some more
+passengers or not.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He is pressed for time,</q> Will said; <q>what will you run
+him over for alone?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Fifty pounds,</q> the man said. Will thought it advisable
+not to appear to jump at the offer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is rather stiff,</q> he said; <q>I should think thirty-five
+would be ample.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='315'/><anchor id='Pg315'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>It seems a good sum,</q> the man said; <q>but you see there
+are dangers. I might be overhauled by a British cruiser.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You might,</q> Will said; <q>but when they learned your
+business they would not interfere with you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then there are the port authorities,</q> the man said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, but a few francs would prevent them from asking
+inconvenient questions. Besides, my friend is not a royalist,
+he is only going over to see his friends.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, we will say thirty-five,</q> the man said with a smile.
+<q>When will you want to start?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He doesn’t care whether he sails this evening or to-morrow
+morning.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, we will say to-morrow morning at daybreak.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Where will you land him?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>At Cherbourg or one of the villages near; most likely at
+Cherbourg if the coast is clear, for I have friends there who
+work with me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They went to an hotel for the night. In the morning Will
+gave Lucien a small package containing a very handsome
+gold watch and chain which he had bought in London.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Give this to Marie from me,</q> he said; <q>I promised that
+she should have one for her wedding-day. Here are a
+thousand francs of French money, which will carry you
+comfortably from Cherbourg to Verdun and give you a bit
+of a start there. No, you need not refuse it, I am a rich
+man, and can afford it without in the least hurting myself.
+Give my love to Marie,</q> he said, <q>and tell her that I shall
+never forget her kindness.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Lucien was profuse in his gratitude, but Will cut him short
+by hurrying him down to the boat, which was lying at the
+<pb n='316'/><anchor id='Pg316'/>quay with her sails already hoisted. Will watched the boat
+till it was well out to sea, and then took the next coach back
+to London, filled with pleasure that he had been able to carry
+out his plan and to repay the kindness that Marie had shown
+him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had given Lucien the address of his London agent, so
+that on his arrival at Verdun he could write him a letter
+saying how he had fared, and when he and Marie were to
+be married. This letter he received on his return from the
+next cruise. It contained the warmest thanks of Marie and
+her lover, and the information that they were to be married
+the following week, and that the young man had an offer
+of good employment in the town.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he reached London, Will obtained the address of a
+respectable solicitor, and called upon him to ask his advice
+as to advertising to try to discover a family bearing the arms
+on his seal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should advise you,</q> the lawyer said, <q>to leave the matter
+until you return from sea again. Questions of this sort always
+require a good deal of time to answer. You would have
+to be present to give information, and when the matter is
+taken up it should be pressed through vigorously. Of course
+there would be difficulties to face. The mere fact of this seal
+being in the possession of your father, that is, if he was your
+father, would not be sufficient to prove his identity, and there
+would be all sorts of investigations to make, which would, of
+course, take time. <corr sic="extra quote">If</corr> you will leave the matter in my hands
+I will cause enquiries to be made as to the arms. That will
+probably only take a day or two, and it would perhaps be a
+satisfaction to you to know the family with which you might
+<pb n='317'/><anchor id='Pg317'/>be connected. It will be in the subsequent steps that delays
+will occur.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, sir! I should certainly like to know, though
+I quite see that, as you say, it will be very difficult for me
+to establish my connection.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The lawyer then took down what particulars Will could
+give him of his early history. When he returned a week
+later the lawyer gave him a cordial reception.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I congratulate you, Mr. Gilmore,</q> he said. <q>The head of
+the family carrying those arms is Sir Ralph Gilmore, one of our
+oldest baronets. He has no male issue. He had one son who
+died six years ago. There was another son, a younger one, of
+whom there is no record. He may be alive and he may be
+dead; that is not known. It is, of course, possible that you
+were stolen as a child by your reputed father, and that he
+gave you the family name in order that when the time came
+he could produce you, but of course that is all guesswork.
+When you return from sea again I will set people to work to
+trace, if possible, the wanderings of this person; but as I said,
+this will take time, and as you will be going to sea in a fortnight
+the matter can very well stand over. So long as you
+are on board a ship your parentage can make very little
+difference to you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will had still a fortnight of his leave remaining. He
+wandered about London for a couple of days, but he found
+it rather dull now that he had finished his business, as he
+had no friends in town. On the second day he was walking
+along one of the fashionable streets of Bloomsbury,
+considering whether he should not go down by the next
+coach to Portsmouth, where he was sure of meeting friends,
+<pb n='318'/><anchor id='Pg318'/>when a carriage passed him, drawn by a pair of fine horses.
+A young lady who was sitting in it happened to notice him.
+She glanced at him carelessly at first, and then with great
+interest. She stopped the carriage before it had gone many
+yards, and when Will came up, looked at him closely. <q>Excuse
+me, sir,</q> she said as he was passing; <q>but are you not
+Mr. Gilmore?</q> Greatly surprised he replied in the affirmative.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I thought so!</q> she exclaimed. <q>Do you not remember
+me?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He looked at her hard. <q>Why—why,</q> he hesitated,
+<q>surely it is not—</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>But it is!</q> she cried. <q>I am Alice Palethorpe!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Miss Palethorpe!</q> he exclaimed, grasping the hand she
+held out. <q>Is it possible?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Not Miss Palethorpe,</q> she said. <q>To you I am Alice,
+as I was nearly four years ago. Get into the carriage. My
+father will be delighted to see you. We have talked of you
+so often. He made enquiries at the Admiralty when he came
+home, but found that you were a prisoner in France, and he
+has been trying to get your name down in the list of those
+to be exchanged, but he had so little interest that he could not
+succeed, and, indeed, for the past two years no exchange had
+taken place.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+By this time he was in the carriage, and they were driving
+rapidly along the busy streets. Presently they stopped before
+a large house in Bedford Square.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is our home, for the present at any rate,</q> she said.
+<q>Now come in.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+She ran upstairs before him and signed to him to wait at the
+<pb n='319'/><anchor id='Pg319'/>top. <q>Father,</q> she said, bursting into a room, <q>I have taken
+a captive; someone you certainly don’t expect to see. Now,
+you must guess.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How can I, my dear, when you say I don’t expect to see
+him? Is it—?</q> and he mentioned five or six of his friends in
+Jamaica, any of whom might be returning.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, father. You are out altogether.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then I give it up, Alice.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is Will,</q> she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will heard him spring to his feet and hurry to the door.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My dear young friend!</q> he exclaimed. <q>At least I
+suppose it is you, for you have grown out of all recognition.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, father!</q> the girl broke in. <q>You see, he hadn’t
+changed so much as to deceive me. I felt sure of him the
+moment I set eyes upon him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, then, your eyes do you credit,</q> her father said.
+<q>Certainly I should not have recognized him. He has grown
+from a lad into a man since we saw him last. He has widened
+out tremendously. He was rather one of the lean <anchor id="corr319"/><corr sic="kine">kind</corr> at that
+time.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Oh, father, how can you say so? I consider that he was
+just right.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, my dear, I quite understand that. At that time he
+was perfect in your eyes, but for all that he was lean.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are quite right, sir, I was, and I really wonder that
+I have put on flesh so much. The diet of a French prisoner
+is not calculated to promote stoutness. But your daughter
+was not only sharper-sighted than you, but even than myself.
+Till she spoke to me I had not an idea who she was. I saw
+that she thought she recognized me, but I was afraid it would
+<pb n='320'/><anchor id='Pg320'/>be rude on my part to look at her closely. Of course now I
+do see the likeness to the Alice I knew, but she has changed
+far more than I have. She was a little girl of fourteen then,
+very pretty, certainly, I thought, but still quite a girl—</q> and
+he stopped.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, you mean that I have grown into a young woman,
+and have lost my prettiness?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think your looking-glass tells you another story,</q> he
+laughed. <q>If it doesn’t, it must be a very bad one.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, now, do sit down,</q> her father said. <q>You must
+have an immense deal to tell us.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is a longish story,</q> Will replied, <q>too long to tell
+straight off. Besides, I want to ask some questions. When
+did you come home? Have you come for good? If not, how
+long are you going to stay? though I am sorry to say that the
+length of your visit can affect me comparatively little, for
+I am appointed second-lieutenant of the <name type="ship">Jason</name>, and must join
+in a few days.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I congratulate you very heartily, Will,</q> Mr. Palethorpe
+said. <q>You are fortunate indeed to get such promotion so
+early.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am most fortunate, sir. Though just at present I feel
+inclined to wish that it hadn’t come quite so soon.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>In answer to your question, Will, I can say that we are
+home for good. I have disposed of my estate and wound up
+my business, principally, I think, because this little girl had
+made up her mind that she should like England better than
+Jamaica.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am glad to hear that, sir. I shall have something to
+look forward to when I return to England.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='321'/><anchor id='Pg321'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Where are you staying?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>At the Golden Cross.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, then, you must go and fetch your luggage here at
+once. It would be strange indeed if you were to be staying
+at any house but mine while you are in London.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As he saw that the planter would not hear of a refusal, Will
+gladly accepted the invitation, and, taking a fly, drove to the
+hotel, paid his bill, and took his things away.
+</p>
+</div><div n="17">
+ <index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER XVII</head>
+
+<head type="sub">ON BOARD THE <q>JASON</q></head>
+
+<p>
+<q>I won’t ask you for your story till after dinner,</q> Mr.
+Palethorpe said. <q>To enjoy a yarn one needs to be
+comfortable, and I feel more at home in my arm-chair in the
+dining-room than I do in this room, with all its fal-lals. You
+see, I have taken the house furnished. When I settle down
+in a home of my own, I can assure you it will look very
+different from this. In fact I have one already building for
+me. It is at Dulwich, and will be as nearly as possible like
+my house in Jamaica. Of course there will be differences.
+I at first wished to have the same sort of veranda, but the
+architect pointed out that while in Jamaica one requires
+shade, here one wants light. So they are getting large
+sheets of glass specially made for putting in instead of wood
+above the windows. Then, of course, we want good fireplaces,
+whereas in Jamaica a fire is only necessary for a few
+<pb n='322'/><anchor id='Pg322'/>days in the year. There are also other little differences, but
+on the whole it will remind me of the place I had for so many
+years.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The house will have one advantage over that in Jamaica,
+Mr. Palethorpe.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What is that?</q> he asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You will be able to go to bed comfortably without fear
+of having the roof taken from over your head by a hurricane.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah! that is indeed a matter to which I have not given
+sufficient consideration, but it is certainly a very substantial
+advantage, as we have all good reason to know.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I never think of it without shuddering,</q> Alice said. <q>It
+was awful! It seemed as if there was an end of everything!
+I think it was the memory of that night that first set me
+thinking of going to England.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then I cannot but feel grateful to that hurricane, for if
+you had remained out there it is probable that I should never
+have met you again.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am having a large conservatory built so that we can have
+greenness and flowers all the year,</q> Mr. Palethorpe remarked
+presently.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should think that would be charming. I hope you will
+be settled at Dulwich long before I come back from my next
+cruise.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I don’t know that I can say the same, Will. I hope
+your next cruise will be a short one.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When dinner was over, the chairs were drawn up to the fire,
+and Will related his adventures since his return from the
+West Indies.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='323'/><anchor id='Pg323'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Have you heard of your two favourite sailors?</q> Alice
+interrupted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Dimchurch and Tom Stevens? No, I have not. I shall
+feel lost without them at sea, and sincerely hope that I may
+some day run against them, in which case I am sure, if they
+are free, they will join my ship.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>How terribly cut up they must have been,</q> the girl said,
+<q>when they got down to the beach and found that you were
+missing!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am sure they would be,</q> he replied. <q>I expect the rest
+of the men almost had to hold them back by force.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, go on. You were hit and made prisoner.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will went on with his story till he came to his escape from
+Verdun.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What was she like?</q> the girl asked. <q>I expect she was
+very pretty.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, not particularly so. She was a very pleasant-looking
+girl.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can imagine she seemed very pleasant to you,</q> the girl
+laughed; <q>and, of course, before you got out of the window
+and climbed to the top of the house you kissed her, didn’t
+you?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I did,</q> Will said. <q>Of course she expected to be
+kissed. I am not at all used to kissing. In fact, I only experienced
+it once before, and then I was a perfectly passive
+actor in the affair.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The girl flushed up rosily.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You drew that upon yourself, Alice,</q> her father said.
+<q>If you had left him alone he would not have brought up that
+old affair.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='324'/><anchor id='Pg324'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t care,</q> she said. <q>I was only thirteen, and he had
+saved my life.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You didn’t do it again, my dear, I hope, when you met
+him in the street to-day.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Of course not!</q> she exclaimed indignantly. <q>The idea of
+such a thing!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Very well, let this be a lesson to you not to enquire too
+strictly into such matters.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah! I will bear it in mind,</q> she said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can assure you, Alice, that it was a perfectly friendly
+kiss. She was engaged to be married to a young soldier who
+was a prisoner at Porchester, and during the past week I have
+been employed in setting him free, as you will hear presently.
+I promised her I would do so if possible, and of course I kept
+my word.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What! you, an English officer, set a French prisoner free!
+I am shocked!</q> Mr. Palethorpe said.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I would have tried to set twenty of them free if twenty
+of their sweethearts had united to get me away from prison.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They laughed heartily at the story of his escape as a pedlar,
+and were intensely interested in his account of the manner
+in which he succeeded in getting a despatch from the agent
+of the British Government at Amsterdam. He continued the
+narrative until his arrival in England.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now we shall hear, I suppose, how this British officer perpetrated
+an act of treason against His Most Gracious Majesty.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I suppose it was that in the eyes of the law,</q> Will
+laughed. <q>Fortunately, however, the law has no cognizance of
+the affair, at any rate not of my share in it. I don’t suppose it
+has been heard of outside Porchester. As His Gracious Majesty
+<pb n='325'/><anchor id='Pg325'/>has some forty thousand prisoners in England, the loss of one
+more or less will not trouble his gracious brain.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then related the whole story of Lucien’s escape.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I should have liked to see you dressed up like a pedlar,
+with your face all painted, and a wig and whiskers,</q> the girl
+said, <q>though I don’t suppose I should have recognized you in
+that disguise to-day.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It was a capitally-managed plan, Will, and had it been
+for a legitimate object I should have given it unstinted praise.
+And so you saw him fairly off from England?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes; and by this time I have no doubt he is on the top of
+a vehicle of some sort, going as fast as horses can gallop to
+join his sweetheart.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I wonder,</q> Alice said mischievously, <q>whether she will
+ever tell him of that kiss at the window.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I dare say she will,</q> laughed Will, <q>but perhaps not till
+they are married. I sent her the gold watch I promised her,
+and when she holds it up before his eyes I think he won’t
+grudge her the kiss. Still, I believe these things are not
+always mentioned.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, I suppose not,</q> she said, with an affectation of not
+understanding him. <q>Why should they be?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can’t say indeed, if you can’t.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I am not ashamed of it one little bit, though I own
+that I never have told anybody. But I don’t see why I
+shouldn’t. I am sure there were at least half a dozen ladies
+in Jamaica who would willingly have kissed you for what you
+did for them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you! I should certainly not have willingly submitted
+to the ordeal.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='326'/><anchor id='Pg326'/>
+
+<p>
+It was late when the story was finished, and they soon
+afterwards went to bed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will spent a delightful week with his friends. Alice had
+grown up into a charming young woman, full of life and
+vivacity, and even prettier than she had promised to be as a
+girl. They went about together to all the sights of London,
+for Mr. Palethorpe said that he didn’t care about going, and
+young people were best left to themselves. When the time
+came for parting, Will for the first time experienced a feeling
+of reluctance at joining his ship. He and Alice were now
+almost on their old footing, and Will thought that she was by
+far the nicest girl he had ever seen; but it was not until he
+was on the top of the Portsmouth coach that he recognized
+how much she was to him. <q>Well,</q> he said to himself, <q>I
+never thought I should feel like this. Some young fellows are
+always falling in love. I used to think it was all nonsense,
+but now I understand it. I do not know why her father
+should object to me, as I am fairly well off. I must see as
+much of her as I can when I land next time. I hope she
+won’t meet anyone in the meantime she likes better.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <name type="ship">Jason</name> was now lying out in the harbour, and the riggers
+had taken possession of her. Will at once reported himself
+and went on board. The other officers had not yet joined,
+but he at once took up his work with his usual zeal, and spent
+a busy fortnight looking after the riggers, and seeing that
+everything was done in the best manner. He was, however,
+somewhat angry to find that Alice’s face and figure were constantly
+intruding themselves into the cordage and shrouds.
+<q>I am becoming a regular mooncalf,</q> he said angrily to himself.
+<q>It is perfectly absurd that I can’t keep my thoughts
+<pb n='327'/><anchor id='Pg327'/>from wandering away from my work, and for a girl whom I
+can hardly dare hope to win. I shall be very glad when we
+are off to sea. I’ll then have, I won’t say something better, but
+something else to think of. If this is being in love, certainly
+it is not the thing a sailor should engage in. I have often
+heard it said that a sailor’s ship should be his wife, and I have
+no longer any doubt about it. But I know I’ll get over it
+when I hear the first broadside fired.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A week later the first lieutenant joined. His name was
+Somerville.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, Mr. Gilmore,</q> he said, <q>I see you have taken time by
+the forelock and given an eye to everything! I only received
+my appointment two days ago or I should have joined before.
+There is nothing like having an officer to superintend things,
+and I feel really very much obliged to you for not having
+extended your leave, which, of course, you could have done,
+especially as, so far as I know, no boatswain has yet been
+appointed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I was glad to get back to work, sir, and it is really
+very interesting seeing all the rigging set up from the very
+beginning.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so, but for all that men don’t generally want to
+rejoin,</q> the first lieutenant said with a smile. <q>The difficulty
+is to get young officers on board. They hang back, as a rule,
+till the very last moment. Well, if you will dine with me
+this evening, Mr. Gilmore, at the George, I shall be glad to
+hear of some of your services. That they are distinguished I
+have no doubt, for nothing but the most meritorious services
+or extraordinary interest could have gained you at your age
+the appointment of second lieutenant in a fine ship like this. I
+<pb n='328'/><anchor id='Pg328'/>think it a very good thing for the first lieutenant to know the
+antecedents of those serving with him. Such knowledge is very
+useful to him in any crisis or emergency.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After dinner that evening Will gave an account of his services,
+the lieutenant at times asking for more minute details,
+especially of the capture of the two pirates.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you very much!</q> Lieutenant Somerville said when
+he had finished. <q>Now I feel that I can, in any emergency,
+depend upon you to second me, which I can assure you is by
+no means commonly the case, for promotion goes so much by
+influence, and such incapable men are pushed up in the service
+that it is a comfort indeed to have an officer who knows
+his work thoroughly. I hope to goodness we shall have the
+captain so fine a ship deserves.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hope so indeed, sir. I have hitherto been extremely
+fortunate in having good captains, as good as one could wish
+for.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are fortunate indeed, then. I have been under two
+or three men who, either from ignorance or ill-temper or sheer
+indifference, have been enough to take the heart entirely out
+of their officers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the day when the <name type="ship">Jason</name> was ready for commission the
+captain came down to Portsmouth and put up at the George,
+and Mr. Somerville and Will called upon him there. He was
+a young man, some years younger than the first <corr sic='lieutenant."'>lieutenant.</corr>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Gentlemen,</q> he began, <q>I have pleasure in making your
+acquaintance. I saw the admiral this morning, and he assured
+me that I could not wish for better officers. I hope we shall
+get on pleasantly together, and can assure you that if we do
+not it will not be my fault. We have as fine a ship as men
+<pb n='329'/><anchor id='Pg329'/>could wish to sail in, and I will guarantee that you will not
+find me slack in using her. As you may guess by my age, I
+owe my present position partly to family interest, but my
+object will be to prove that that interest has not been altogether
+misplaced. I have already had command of a frigate,
+and we had our full share of hard service. I am afraid that
+with a seventy-four we shall not have quite so many opportunities
+of distinguishing ourselves, but shall generally have
+to work with the fleet and fight when other people bid us,
+and not merely when we see a good chance. There is, however,
+as much credit, if not as much prize-money, to be gained
+in a pitched battle as in isolated actions. I was kindly permitted
+by the admiral to read both your records of service,
+and I cannot say how gratified I was to find that I had two
+such able and active officers to second me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am sure we are much obliged to you, sir,</q> Lieutenant
+Somerville replied, <q>for speaking to us as you have done. I
+can answer for it that we will second you to the very best of
+our power, and I am glad indeed to find that we have a commander
+whose sentiments so entirely accord with our own.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Now, gentlemen, we have done with the formalities. Let
+us crack a bottle of wine together to our better acquaintance,
+and I hope I shall very often see you at my table on board,
+for while I feel that discipline must be maintained, I have
+no belief in a captain holding himself entirely aloof from his
+officers, as if he were a little god. On the quarter-deck a
+captain must stand somewhat aloof, but in his own cabin I
+cannot see why he should not treat his officers as gentlemen
+like himself.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They sat and chatted for an hour, and when they left,
+<pb n='330'/><anchor id='Pg330'/>Lieutenant Somerville said to Will: <q>If I am not much
+mistaken, we shall have a very pleasant time on board the
+<name type="ship">Jason</name>. I believe Captain Charteris means every word he says,
+and that he is a thoroughly good fellow. He has a very
+pleasant face, though a firm and resolute one, and when he
+gives an order it will have to be obeyed promptly; but he is
+a man who will make allowances, and I do not think the cat
+will be very often brought into requisition on board.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+One day Will was sauntering down the High Street when
+he saw two country-looking men coming along. One of them
+looked at him and staggered back in astonishment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Why,</q> he exclaimed, <q>it is Mr. Gilmore! We thought
+you were in prison in the middle of France, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>So I was, Dimchurch; but, as you see, I have taken leg-bail.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That was a terrible affair, sir, at them French batteries.
+When I got down to the shore, and found you were missing,
+it was as much as they could do to keep Tom here and me
+from going back. You mayn’t believe me, Mr. Gilmore, but
+we both cried like children as we rowed to the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am indeed glad to see you again, and you too, Tom.
+I guessed that if I ever came across the one I should meet the
+other also. What are you doing in those togs?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, we put them on because we did not want to be
+impressed by the first ship that came in, but preferred to
+wait a bit till we saw one to suit us. I see, sir, that you have
+shipped a swab. That means, of course, that you have got a
+lieutenancy. I congratulate you indeed, sir, on your promotion.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I got it a month ago, and to a fine ship, the <corr sic="no quote"><name type="ship">Jason</name>.</corr></q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='331'/><anchor id='Pg331'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is a fine ship, sir, and no mistake. Tom and I were
+watching her lying out in the harbour yesterday, and were
+saying that, though we have always been accustomed to
+frigates, we should not mind shipping in her if we found out
+something about the captain.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I can tell you, Dimchurch, that he is just the man
+you would like to serve under, young and dashing, and, I
+should say, a good officer and a fine fellow.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And who is the first lieutenant, sir, because that matters
+almost as much as the captain.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He is a good fellow too, Dimchurch, a man who loves his
+profession and has a good record.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And who is the second, sir? not that it matters much
+about him if the captain and first luff are all right. I suppose
+she has four on board, as she is a line-of-battle ship?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, she carries four. As to the second, I can only tell
+you that he is one of the finest fellows in the service, and you
+will understand that when I say that I am the second lieutenant.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>What, sir!</q> Dimchurch almost shouted, <q>they have made
+you second lieutenant on a line-of-battle ship! Well, that is
+one of the few times I have known promotion go by merit.
+I am glad, sir. Well, I will go and sign articles at once, and
+so, of course, will Tom; and what is more, I will guarantee to
+find you a score of first-rate hands, maybe more.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is good indeed,</q> Will said. <q>I will speak to the
+first lieutenant and get you rated as boatswain, if possible.
+You have already served in that capacity, and unless the
+berth is filled up, which is not likely, I have no doubt I can
+get it for you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='332'/><anchor id='Pg332'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, if you can, of course I shall be glad; but I would
+ship with you if it was only as loblolly boy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>The same here,</q> Tom said; <q>you know that, sir, without
+my saying it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Is there any berth that I could get you, Tom?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir, thank you! A.B. is good enough for me. I am
+not active enough to be captain of the top, but I can pull
+on a rope, or row an oar, or strike a good blow, with any
+man.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That you can, Tom; but I do wish I could get you a lift
+too. How about gunner’s mate?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, thank you, sir! I would rather stop A.B. I should
+like to be your honour’s servant, but, lor’, I should never do to
+wait in the ward-room. I am as clumsy as a bear, and should
+always be spilling something, and breaking glasses, and getting
+into trouble. No, sir, I will be A.B., but of course I should
+like to be appointed to your boat.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is a matter of course, Tom. Well, I will go round
+to the dockyard at once and see you sworn in, and then
+gladden the first lieutenant’s heart by telling him that you
+will bring a good number of men along with you, for at
+present we are very short-handed.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You trust me for that, sir. I know where lots of them
+are lying hid, not because they don’t want to serve, but
+because they want a good ship and a good captain. When I
+tell them that it is a fine ship, and a good captain, and a good
+first and second, they will jump at it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Dimchurch was as good as his word, and the following week
+persuaded thirty first-class seamen to sign on.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>At the same time, sir,</q> he said as they went towards
+<pb n='333'/><anchor id='Pg333'/>the harbour, <q>I would rather she had been a frigate. One
+has always a chance of picking up something then, as one
+gets sent about on expeditions, while on a battle-ship one is
+just stuck blockading.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is just what I think,</q> Tom said. <q>There are no
+boat expeditions, no chances of picking up a prize every two
+or three days, or of chasing a pirate. Still, though the <name type="ship">Tartar</name>
+was a frigate, we did not have much fun in her, except when
+we were on shore. That was good enough, though it would
+not have been half so good if the sailors had not done it alone.
+We wanted to show these redcoats what British seamen could
+do when they were on their metal. I know I never worked
+half so hard in my life.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I quite agree with you. It is more pleasant commanding
+a small craft than being second officer in a large one,
+although I must say I could not have had a more pleasant
+captain and first lieutenant than I have now if I had picked
+them out from the whole fleet. I am sorry that I cannot get
+leave at present, for I want to make researches about my
+father. According to what my lawyer said it is likely to be
+a long job. I hope, however, to get it well in trim on my
+next spell ashore. It makes really no difference to me now
+who or what my father was. I have a good position, and
+what with the prize-money I made before, and shall gain now
+by my share of the sale of the frigates we took at Corsica, to
+say nothing of the guns and stores we captured, I have more
+than enough to satisfy all my wants.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have done extraordinarily well too, Mr. Gilmore,</q> Dimchurch
+said. <q>I took your advice, and Tom and I have put
+all our prize-money aside. He has over a thousand saved, and
+<pb n='334'/><anchor id='Pg334'/>I have quite sufficient to keep me in idleness all my life,
+even if I never do a stroke of work again.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Mr. Somerville, on Will’s recommendation, at once appointed
+Dimchurch boatswain, and he soon proved himself
+thoroughly efficient. <q>He is a fine fellow, that sailor of yours,</q>
+the lieutenant said, <q>and will make a first-rate boatswain.
+He has done good service in bringing up so many hands, and
+good ones too, and he is evidently popular among the men.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He is a thoroughly good man, sir. He attached himself
+to my fortunes when I was but a ship’s boy, and has stuck to
+me ever since. He and Tom Stevens are, with one exception,
+the greatest friends I have ever had, and both of them would
+lay down their lives for me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>A good master makes a good man,</q> Lieutenant Somerville
+said with a smile. <q>Your greatest friend was, of course, the
+lady who pushed you on with your education.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, certainly I regard her as the best friend I ever
+had.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, there is no better friend for a lad than a good
+woman, Gilmore. In that sense my mother was my greatest
+friend. Most mothers are against their sons going to sea. In
+my case it was my father who objected, but my mother, seeing
+how I was bent upon it, persuaded him to let me go.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three weeks after being commissioned the complement of
+the <name type="ship">Jason</name> was complete, and she was ordered to proceed to
+the West Indies, to which place they made a fast passage. To
+their disappointment they fell in with none of the enemy’s
+cruisers on their way. The voyage, however, sufficed to give
+the crew confidence in their commander. He was prompt
+and quick in giving orders, and at the same time pleasant in
+<pb n='335'/><anchor id='Pg335'/>manner. He paid far more attention than most captains to
+the comfort of his crew, and, while he insisted upon the most
+perfect order and discipline, abstained from giving unnecessary
+work. In cases where punishments were absolutely necessary
+he punished severely, but when it was at all possible he let
+delinquents off with a lecture. So, while he was feared by
+the rougher spirits of the crew, he was regarded with liking
+and respect by the good men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On their arrival at Carlisle Bay, Barbados, they found that
+they were in time to join a naval expedition whose object was
+to recover the islands of St. Lucia, St. Vincent, and Grenada,
+which had been captured by the French the previous year.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A fleet had been sent from England under the command of
+Rear-admiral Christian, consisting of two ships of the line and
+five frigates, convoying a large fleet of transports with a strong
+body of troops on board under the command of Sir Ralph
+Abercrombie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At Carlisle Bay this fleet were joined by most of the ships
+on the West Indian station, and on the 21st April, 1796, the
+augmented fleet, under the command of Sir John Laforey,
+sailed to Marin Bay, Martinique, where they anchored. On
+the following day Sir John Laforey resigned his command to
+Admiral Christian and sailed for England. The fleet then
+stood across to St. Lucia. The troops were landed at three
+different points under the protection of the guns of the fleet.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The first point was protected by a five-gun battery. The
+fire of the ships, however, soon silenced it, and the first division
+made good its landing. The seventy-four-gun ship <name type="ship">Alfred</name>
+was to have led the second division, supported by the fifty-four-gun
+ship <name type="ship">Madras</name> and the forty-gun frigate <name type="ship">Beaulieu</name>, but
+<pb n='336'/><anchor id='Pg336'/>the attempt was thwarted by lightness of wind and a strong
+lee current. On the next day, however, a landing was effected
+with little opposition. Eight hundred seamen, under the
+command of Captains Lane of the thirty-two-gun frigate <name type="ship">Astrea</name>
+and Ryves of the bomb-vessel <name type="ship">Bulldog</name>, were landed to co-operate
+with the troops. Morne Chabot was attacked and carried
+that night with the loss of thirteen officers and privates killed,
+forty-nine wounded, and twelve missing.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 3rd of May an attempt was made to dislodge the
+enemy from their batteries at the base of the mountains, but
+was repulsed with loss, as was an attack on the 17th on the
+place called Vigie.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the meantime the men had been busy building batteries
+and planting guns, and when these opened fire on the evening
+of the 24th of May the enemy capitulated, two thousand
+marching out and laying down their arms. A great quantity
+of guns, together with stores of every description, were found
+in the different forts, and some small privateers and merchantmen
+were captured in the offing. Eight hundred seamen and
+three hundred and twenty marines had been landed from the
+ships of war, and had behaved with their usual courage and
+promptitude. The manner, indeed, in which they established
+batteries and planted guns in places deemed almost impracticable
+astonished the troops, unused as they were to exercises
+demanding strength and skill.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as St. Lucia had surrendered, the expedition moved
+to St. Vincent. The defence here was decidedly weak, and
+after some skirmishing, the enemy, composed chiefly of negroes
+and Caribs, capitulated. Our loss amounted to thirty-eight
+killed and one hundred and forty-five wounded. Grenada
+<pb n='337'/><anchor id='Pg337'/>offered a comparatively slight resistance. The monster, Fedon,
+who was in command there, massacred twenty white people
+who were in his power in full view of the British, who were
+on the plain below. He and his men, however, were hotly
+pursued through the forest by a detachment of German riflemen,
+and the greater portion of them killed without mercy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A detachment of British and colonial troops from the garrison
+of Port au Prince in St. Domingo proceeded to besiege
+the town of Leogane in that island. Covered by the guns of
+the fleet the troops were landed in two divisions, while the
+<name type="ship">Swiftsure</name>, seventy-four, cannonaded the town, and the <name type="ship">Leviathan</name>
+and <name type="ship">Africa</name> the forts. The place, however, was too strong
+for them, and at nightfall the ships moved off to an anchorage,
+while those who had landed were withdrawn on the following
+morning. Two of the frigates were so much damaged that
+they were compelled to return to Jamaica to refit. An attack
+was next made upon the fort of Bombarde, which stood at a
+distance of fifteen miles from the coast. Will and a detachment
+from his ship formed part of the force engaged. The
+road was extremely rough, and was blocked by fallen trees
+and walls built across it. The labour of getting the cannon
+along was prodigious.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I must say,</q> Will said to Dimchurch, who was one of the
+party, <q>I greatly prefer fighting on board to work like this.
+We have to labour like slaves from early morning till late in
+the evening; but I don’t so much mind that, as the fact that
+at night we have to lie down with only the food that remains
+in our haversacks, and what water we may have saved, for
+supper. Now in a fight at sea one at least gets as much to
+drink as one wants.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='338'/><anchor id='Pg338'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I quite agree with you, Mr. Gilmore. It’s dog’s work
+without dog’s food. I don’t mind myself working here with a
+chopper eight or ten hours a day, but I do like a good supper
+at the end of it. The worst of it is, that when it is all over
+it is the troops who get all the credit, while we poor beggars
+do the greater part of the work. The soldiers are well
+enough in their way, but they are very little good for hard
+work. How do you account for that, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can only suppose, Dimchurch, that while they get as
+much food as we do, they have nothing like the same amount
+of hard work to do.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That’s it, sir. Why, look at them at Portsmouth! They
+just go out of a morning and drill on the common for a bit,
+and then they have nothing else to do all day but to stroll
+about the town and talk to the girls. How can you expect
+a man to have any muscle to speak of when he never does
+a stroke of hard work? I don’t say they don’t fight well, for
+I own they do their duty like men in that line; but when it
+comes to work, why, they ain’t in it with a jack-tar. I do
+believe I could pull a couple of them over a line.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I dare say you could, Dimchurch, but you must remember
+that you are much stronger than an ordinary seaman.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, I grant I am stronger than usual, but I should be
+ashamed of myself if I could not tackle two of them soldiers.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, but don’t forget they have been cooped up on board
+a ship for a month, with nothing to keep them in health, and
+certainly no exercise, while you are constantly doing hard
+work. If you were to put these men into sailors’ clothes, and
+give them sailors’ work for six months, they would be just as
+strong and useful.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='339'/><anchor id='Pg339'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, if they are that sort of men why do they go
+and enlist in the army instead of becoming sailors. It stands
+to reason that it is because they know that they cannot do
+work.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Why, Dimchurch, I have heard that in the great towns
+girls think as much of soldiers as of sailors.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, that shows how little they know about them. In a
+seaport, what girl would look at a soldier if she were pretty
+enough to get a sailor for a sweetheart.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are a prejudiced beggar,</q> Will laughed, <q>and it is of
+no use arguing with you. If you had gone as a soldier instead
+of taking to the sea you would think just the other way.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the next morning the march was renewed, and in the
+evening they reached the fort. They had had several severe
+skirmishes during the day, losing eight killed and twenty-two
+wounded, but the garrison, consisting of three hundred, surrendered
+without further resistance as soon as the place was
+surrounded, and the sailors then rejoined their ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I am mighty glad I am back on board,</q> Dimchurch
+said to Will the evening they re-embarked. <q>This marching,
+and chopping trees, and being shot at from ambushes, doesn’t
+suit me. There is nothing manly or straightforward about it.
+Hand to hand and cutlass to cutlass is what I call a man’s
+work.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is all very well, Dimchurch, but though you may
+capture ships you will never get possession of islands or
+colonies in that way. If you want them you must land and
+fight for them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, that is all very good, but it seems to me that the
+hard work of making batteries and mounting guns falls on the
+<pb n='340'/><anchor id='Pg340'/>sailor, while the soldier gets all the credit. It is not our
+admiral who sends the despatches, it is the general. He may
+speak a few good words for the sailors, as a man speaks up
+for a dog, but all the credit of the fighting, and the surrender,
+and all that business goes to the soldiers. The sooner we sail
+away from here, and do some fighting nearer home, where
+there are no soldiers, and where the sailors get their due, the
+better pleased I shall be.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, Dimchurch, I hope our turn out here is nearly
+finished. We may have to take part in a few more attacks
+on French possessions, but as soon as that work is over I
+have great hopes that we shall get sailing orders for home
+again.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Indeed, late in August a fast cruiser arrived with orders
+that the <name type="ship">Jason</name> was at once to return to Brest and join the
+Channel fleet. To the great delight of everyone the wind
+continued favourable throughout the whole voyage, and after
+an exceptionally speedy passage they joined Admiral Bridport,
+who was cruising off Ushant on the look-out for the French
+fleet that was preparing for the invasion of Ireland.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The French fleet, under Admiral Morard-de-Galles, got
+under weigh from Brest on 26th December, 1796. It consisted
+of seventeen ships of the line, thirteen frigates, six
+corvettes, seven transports, and a powder-ship, forty-four sail
+in all, conveying eight thousand troops under the command of
+Generals Grouchy, Borin, and Humbert. Misfortune, however,
+dogged the fleet from the very commencement, for the
+<name type="ship">Séduisant</name>, a seventy-four-gun battle-ship, got on shore shortly
+after leaving Brest, and out of thirteen hundred seamen and
+soldiers on board six hundred and eighty were drowned.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='341'/><anchor id='Pg341'/>
+
+<p>
+They were noticed by Vice-admiral <anchor id="corr341"/><corr sic="Colpoy’s">Colpoys’</corr> fleet, who sent
+off two frigates to warn Lord Bridport, and after chasing the
+French for some distance himself, sailed for Falmouth to
+report the setting out of the expedition.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Admiral Bouvet, with thirty-two sail, managed to reach the
+mouth of Bantry Bay, but the weather was so tempestuous
+that he was unable to land his troops. After struggling for
+some days against this boisterous weather, the fleet scattered,
+and the majority of the ships returned to Brest. The rest
+reached the coast of Ireland, but not finding the main portion
+of their fleet there, they returned to France.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The failure of the expedition was as complete as was that
+of the Spanish Armada, and was due greatly to the same
+cause. Out of the forty-four ships that sailed from Brest
+only thirty-one managed to return to France. The British
+frigates, by the vigilance they displayed, had done good service,
+cutting off four transports and three ships of war; but
+the stormy weather had dispersed the expedition, and was accountable
+for the loss of two battle-ships, three frigates, and a
+transport. It was curious that although Lord Bridport’s fleet
+was constantly patrolling the Channel during this time, the
+two fleets never came in contact.
+</p>
+
+</div><div n="18">
+<pb n='342'/><anchor id='Pg342'/>
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER XVIII</head>
+
+<head type="sub">ST. VINCENT AND CAMPERDOWN</head>
+
+<p>
+On the 19th of January, 1797, Lord Bridport detached
+Rear-admiral Parker with five battle-ships—among them
+the <name type="ship">Jason</name>—and one frigate, to Gibraltar, and on the 6th of
+February they joined Admiral Sir John Jervis off Cape St.
+Vincent.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They were cruising along the Portuguese coast when, on
+the morning of the 13th of February, Nelson brought Admiral
+Jervis the long-expected news of the approach of the Spanish
+fleet. Its exact strength he had not discovered, but it was
+known to exceed twenty sail of the line, while Jervis had but
+fifteen, two of which had been greatly injured by a collision
+the night before. The repairs, however, were quickly executed,
+and they fell into their positions. Jervis made the
+signal to prepare for action. During the night the signal guns
+of the Spaniards were heard, and before daylight a Portuguese
+frigate came along and reported that they were about four
+leagues to windward. At that time the fleet were south-west
+of Cape St. Vincent. The Spaniards, who had hitherto been
+prevented by an adverse wind from getting into Cadiz, were
+ready to meet us, not knowing that the British admiral had
+been reinforced, and believing that he had but some ten ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The wind, however, changed during the night, and, acting
+in strict obedience to his orders, the Spanish commander-in-chief
+determined to set sail for Cadiz. When day broke, his
+fleet was seen about five miles off, the main body huddled
+<pb n='343'/><anchor id='Pg343'/>together in a confused group, with one squadron to leeward.
+It was then seen what a formidable fleet lay before us. The
+admiral’s flag was carried by the <name type="ship">Santissima-Trinidada</name>, one
+hundred and thirty, and he had with him six three-deckers of
+one hundred and twelve guns each, two of eighty, and eighteen
+seventy-fours. Our fleet had scarcely half the ships and
+guns. We had two ships of one hundred guns, three of
+ninety-eight, one of ninety, eight seventy-fours, and a sixty-four.
+There was, however, no comparison between the men.
+Our own were for the most part tried and trained sailors,
+while a considerable proportion of the Spaniards were almost
+raw levies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The morning of the 14th February was foggy, and neither
+the number nor the size of our ships could be made out by the
+Spaniards until we were within a mile of them. Then, as mid-day
+approached and the fog cleared off, they saw Jervis bearing
+down upon them in two lines. His object was to separate
+the Spanish squadron to leeward from the main body, and in
+this he completely succeeded.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <name type="ship">Culloden</name> led the way, and the greater part of the fleet
+followed, opening a tremendous fire as they came up with
+the Spaniards, and receiving their broadsides in return. The
+Spanish vice-admiral attempted to cut through the British line,
+but was thwarted by the rapid advance of the <name type="ship">Victory</name>, which
+forced the admiral’s ship, the <name type="ship">Principe de Asturias</name>, to tack close
+under her lee, pouring in a tremendous raking broadside as
+she did so. Fortunately at this moment Commodore Nelson
+was in the rear, and had a better view of the movements of
+the enemy than had the commander-in-chief. He perceived
+that the Spanish admiral was beginning to bear up before the
+<pb n='344'/><anchor id='Pg344'/>wind, with the object of uniting the main body with the second
+division. Accordingly he ordered his ship the <name type="ship">Captain</name> to
+wear.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Up to this time she had hardly fired a gun, but this movement
+gave her the lead of the fleet, and brought her at once
+into action with the enemy. In a few minutes she was attacked
+by no fewer than four first-raters and two third-raters.
+The <name type="ship">Culloden</name>, however, bore down with all speed to her assistance,
+and some time afterwards the <name type="ship">Blenheim</name> came up to take
+a share in the fight. Two of the Spanish ships dropped astern
+to escape the tremendous fire of the three British seventy-fours,
+but they only fell in with the <name type="ship">Excellent</name> coming up to support
+the <name type="ship">Captain</name>, and she poured so tremendous a fire into them
+both that one of them struck at once. She left the other to
+her own devices and pressed on to join Nelson, who greatly
+needed help, for the <name type="ship">Captain</name> was now little better than a
+wreck.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Her chief antagonist at this time was the <name type="ship">San Nicholas</name>.
+Into that ship she poured a tremendous fire, and then passed
+on to the <name type="ship">San Isidro</name> and <name type="ship">Santissima-Trinidada</name>, with which the
+<name type="ship">Captain</name> had been engaged from the beginning. The fire of the
+<name type="ship">Excellent</name> had completed the work done by the <name type="ship">Captain</name>, and
+the <name type="ship">San Nicholas</name> and the <name type="ship">San Josef</name> had collided with each
+other. Nelson, being in so crippled a state that he could no
+longer take an active part in the action, laid his ship alongside
+the <name type="ship">San Nicholas</name> and carried her by boarding; and after this
+was done the crew crossed to the <name type="ship">San Josef</name>, and carried her
+also. Other prizes had been taken elsewhere; the <name type="ship">Salvador Del
+Mundo</name> and <name type="ship">Santissima-Trinidada</name> surrendered, as did the <name type="ship">Soberano</name>.
+The <name type="ship">Santissima-Trinidada</name>, however, was towed away by
+<pb n='345'/><anchor id='Pg345'/>one of her frigates. Evening was closing in, and as the
+Spanish fleet still greatly outnumbered the British, Jervis
+made the signal to discontinue the action, and the next morning
+the fleets sailed in different directions, the British carrying
+their four prizes with them. Considering the desperate nature
+of the fighting the British loss was extraordinarily small, only
+seventy-three being killed and two hundred and twenty-seven
+wounded. Of these nearly a third belonged to the <name type="ship">Captain</name>,
+upon which the brunt of the fight had fallen. For this victory
+Admiral Jervis was made an earl, and two admirals baronets.
+Nelson might have had a baronetcy, but he preferred the
+ribbon of the Bath. Also, he shortly afterwards was promoted
+to the rank of Rear-admiral. Captain Calder received the
+ribbon of the Bath, and all the first lieutenants were promoted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The captain of the <name type="ship">Jason</name> had earned golden opinions from
+his crew by the manner in which he had fought his vessel and
+the careless indifference he had shown to the enemy’s fire as
+he walked up and down on the quarter-deck issuing what
+orders were necessary. Their losses had not been heavy, but
+among them, to Will’s deep regret, the first lieutenant had
+been killed by a cannon-ball.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am grieved indeed,</q> the captain said the next morning
+to Will, <q>at the death of Mr. Somerville. He was an excellent
+officer and a most worthy man. It is, however, a consolation
+to me that I have a successor so worthy to take his
+place. Since we have sailed together, Mr. Gilmore, I have
+always been gratified by the manner in which you have done
+your duty, and by the skill you have shown in handling the
+ship during your watch. It is a great satisfaction to me that
+I have so good an officer for my first lieutenant.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='346'/><anchor id='Pg346'/>
+
+<p>
+It was but a few months after the battle of St. Vincent that
+a greater danger threatened England than she had ever before
+been exposed to. The seamen in the navy had long been
+seething with discontent, and all their petitions had been
+neglected, their remonstrances treated as of no account.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Rendered desperate, they at last determined to mutiny, and
+the first outbreak occurred on the 15th April in the Channel
+fleet, which was at the time anchored at Spithead. On
+Admiral Lord Bridport giving the signal to weigh anchor, the
+seamen of the flagship, instead of proceeding to their stations,
+ran up the rigging and gave three cheers, and the crews of
+the rest of the ships at once did the same. The officers
+attempted to induce the men to return to their duty, but in
+vain. The next day two delegates from each ship met on the
+<name type="ship">Queen Charlotte</name>, the flagship, to deliberate, and the day after
+all the men swore to stand by their leaders, and such officers
+as had rendered themselves obnoxious to the men were put
+on shore.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The delegates then drew up two petitions, one to Parliament
+the other to the Admiralty, asking that their wages
+should be increased—they had remained at the same point
+since Charles II was king,—that the pound should be reckoned
+at sixteen ounces instead of fourteen, and that the food should
+be of better quality. Further, that vegetables should be
+occasionally served out, that the sick should be better attended
+and their medical comforts not embezzled; and, finally, that
+on returning from sea the men should be allowed a short
+leave to visit their friends.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 18th a committee of the Board of Admiralty arrived
+at Portsmouth, and in answer to the petition agreed to ask
+<pb n='347'/><anchor id='Pg347'/>the king to propose to Parliament an increase of wages, and
+also to grant them certain other privileges; but these terms
+the sailors would not accept, and expressed their determination
+not to weigh anchor till their full demands were granted.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The committee now sent, through Lord Bridport, a letter
+to the seamen granting still further concessions, and promising
+pardon to all concerned; but the sailors answered expressing
+their thanks for what had been granted, but reiterating their
+demands.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 21st Vice-admirals Sir Allen Gardner and Colpoys
+and Rear-admiral Pole went on board the <name type="ship">Queen Charlotte</name> to
+confer, but they were informed that until the reforms were
+sanctioned by the king and Parliament they would not be
+accepted as final. This so angered Admiral Gardner that he
+seized one of the delegates by the collar and swore he would
+hang the lot, and every fifth man in the fleet. The delegates
+at once returned to their ships, and the seamen of the fleet
+proceeded to load the guns. Watches were set as at sea, and
+the ships were put into a complete state of defence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 22nd Lord Bridport, having received a letter from
+the mutineers explaining the cause of the steps they had
+taken, went on board, and after a short deliberation his offers
+were accepted, and the men returned to their duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The fleet was detained at St. Helens by a foul wind until
+the 7th of May, when news was received that the French were
+preparing to sail. Lord Bridport made the signal to weigh,
+but the crews again refused to obey orders, alleging that the
+silence that Parliament had observed respecting their grievances
+led them to suspect that the promised redress was to be
+withheld.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='348'/><anchor id='Pg348'/>
+
+<p>
+For four days matters continued in the same state, but on
+the 14th Admiral Lord Howe arrived from London with full
+powers to settle all disputes with an Act of Parliament which
+had been passed on the 9th, and a proclamation granting the
+king’s pardon to all who should return at once to their duty.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After various discussions the men agreed to the terms, and
+on the 16th May, all matters having been amicably settled,
+Lord Bridport put to sea with his fleet of fifteen sail of the
+line.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Notwithstanding these concessions the sailors of the ships
+lying at the Nore broke into mutiny on the 20th of May,
+their ringleader being a seaman of the name of Richard
+Parker, one of a class of men denominated sea-lawyers. The
+delegates drew up a statement of demands containing eight
+articles, most of which were perfectly impossible, and the
+Admiralty replied by pointing out the concessions the Legislature
+had recently made, and refusing to accede to any more,
+but offering to pardon the men if they would at once return
+to their duty. The mutineers refused, and hoisted the red
+flag. They landed at Sheerness and marched through the
+streets, and in many ways went to greater lengths than their
+comrades at Spithead. They even flogged and otherwise ill-treated
+some of the officers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This outbreak now assumed the most alarming proportions.
+Eleven ships belonging to the North Sea fleet, on the way to
+blockade the Texel, turned back and joined Parker, and the
+greatest alarm was felt in London, the Funds falling to an
+unheard-of price. The Government acted, however, with
+vigour; buoys were removed, and the forts were manned and
+the men ordered to open fire should the fleet sail up the river.
+<pb n='349'/><anchor id='Pg349'/>Bills were rushed through Parliament in two days, authorizing
+the utmost penalties on the mutineers and on all who aided
+them.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This had the desired effect, and early in June the fleets at
+Portsmouth and Plymouth disavowed all complicity with
+Parker, and two ships—the <name type="ship">Leopard</name> and <name type="ship">Repulse</name>—hauled down
+the red flag and retreated up the Thames, being fired on by
+the rest of the fleet. The example was, however, contagious,
+and ship after ship deserted until, on the 14th, the crew of the
+<name type="ship">Sandwich</name> handed over Parker to the authorities.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was tried, convicted, and hanged on board that ship
+on the 29th of June. Some of the other leaders were also
+hanged, some were flogged through the fleet, and some sent
+to prison.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The mutiny was not confined to the ships on the home
+stations, but it never became serious at any point, and a
+display of timely severity soon brought matters back to their
+usual condition of discipline and obedience to orders.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A mutiny of a different character, as it was caused by the
+tyranny of the captain, and had very different results, took
+place in the West Indies.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the night of the 21st of September the thirty-two-gun
+frigate <name type="ship">Hermione</name> was cruising off Porto Rico. Its captain,
+Pigot, was known to be one of the most harsh and brutal
+officers in the navy. On the previous day, while the crew
+were reefing topsails, he had called out that he would flog the
+last man down. The poor fellows, knowing well that he would
+keep his word, hurried down; and two of them, in trying to
+jump over those below them, missed their footing and were
+killed. When this was reported to the captain he simply said:
+<pb n='350'/><anchor id='Pg350'/><q>Throw the lubbers overboard.</q> All the other men were
+severely reprimanded. The result of this, the last of a succession
+of similar acts of tyranny, was that the crew broke
+into mutiny. The first lieutenant went to enquire into the
+disturbance, but he was killed and thrown overboard. The
+captain, hearing the tumult, ran on deck, but he suffered the
+same fate as his second in command. The mutineers then
+proceeded to murder eight other officers, two lieutenants, the
+purser, the surgeon, the captain’s clerk, one midshipman, the
+boatswain, and the lieutenant of marines. The master, a midshipman,
+and the gunner were the only officers spared. They
+then carried the ship into the port of La Guayra, representing
+to the Spanish governor that they had turned their officers
+adrift. The real circumstances of the case were explained
+to the governor by the British admiral, but he insisted upon
+detaining the vessel and fitting her out as a Spanish frigate.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Many of the perpetrators of this horrible crime were afterwards
+captured and executed. Had they contented themselves
+with wreaking their vengeance on their captain, some excuse
+might have been offered for them when the catalogue of his
+brutalities was published, but nothing could be said in condonation
+of the cold-blooded murder of the other officers,
+including even a midshipman and the young captain’s clerk,
+neither of whom could have in any way influenced their
+commander’s conduct.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <name type="ship">Hermione</name>, however, was of but little use to the
+Spaniards. Sir Hyde Parker, in October, 1799, hearing that
+she was about to sail from Porto Cabello, in Havana, detached
+the <name type="ship">Surprise</name> under Captain Hamilton, to attempt to obtain
+possession of her. On arriving off Porto Cabello he found the
+<pb n='351'/><anchor id='Pg351'/><name type="ship">Hermione</name>, which was manned by four hundred men, moored
+between two strong batteries at the entrance to the harbour,
+but, nothing daunted, Captain Hamilton resolved to cut her
+out. At eight o’clock in the evening he pushed off from the
+<name type="ship">Surprise</name> with all his boats, manned by one hundred officers and
+men.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Undeterred by a heavy fire, the boats made for the <name type="ship">Hermione</name>
+and were soon alongside. The main attack at the gangways
+was beaten off, but the captain, with his cutter’s crew,
+made good his footing on the forecastle, and here he was
+joined by the crew of the gig and some of the men from the
+jolly-boat. He then fought his way to the quarter-deck,
+where he was soon reinforced by the crews of the boats that
+had at first been repulsed. In a very short time, after some
+desperate fighting, the <name type="ship">Hermione</name> was captured. The cables
+were now cut and the sails hoisted, and under a heavy fire
+from the batteries the frigate was brought off, though much
+damaged both in rigging and hull. A few days later she
+anchored in Port Royal.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This feat stands perhaps unparalleled in naval history for its
+audacity and success. The victors had only twelve wounded;
+the enemy lost one hundred and nineteen killed and ninety-seven
+wounded. Captain Hamilton was knighted for this
+achievement, the legislature of Jamaica presented him with a
+sword valued at three hundred guineas, and on his arrival in
+England after his exchange, for he was taken prisoner on his
+way home, the common council of London voted him the
+freedom of the city. He was, however, much injured in the
+attack, and was to the end of his life under medical treatment.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After the battle of St. Vincent the <name type="ship">Jason</name> required some
+<pb n='352'/><anchor id='Pg352'/>repairs to her hull, but as her spars were uninjured she was
+ordered by Admiral Jervis to proceed to Portsmouth with
+despatches. Here, to Will’s great joy, he was confirmed in
+his position as first lieutenant. He was unable to get leave,
+as it was found the repairs would take but a short time, and
+after ten days’ stay in port the <name type="ship">Jason</name> sailed to join Lord
+Bridport’s fleet. On doing so, she was at once despatched to
+reinforce the North Sea fleet under Admiral Duncan, then
+blockading the Texel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was while engaged in this monotonous work that the news
+came of Admiral Nelson’s disastrous attack on Santa Cruz.
+The expedition was a complete failure, one hundred and
+forty-one being killed or drowned, and one hundred and five
+wounded or missing. Among the wounded was Admiral
+Nelson himself, who lost his arm.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The news of the mutinies taking place at Spithead and the
+Nore was a source of great anxiety to the officers, but the men
+were so attached to them that there was no real cause for
+uneasiness with regard to their own ship, and when the eleven
+ships of Duncan’s fleet joined the mutineers at the Nore, the
+<name type="ship">Jason</name> was one of the few that remained with the admiral.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+During the equinoctial gales many of the ships were so
+badly strained that Admiral Duncan returned to Yarmouth
+Roads to gather and repair his fleet, leaving the <name type="ship">Jason</name> and
+two other ships to watch the enemy. De Winter lost not a
+moment in taking advantage of his absence, and on the 7th
+of October sailed out with his whole fleet, chasing the watch
+vessels before him. On their way, however, they met a
+squadron under Captain Trollope, consisting of Duncan’s ships
+which had been refitted. The Dutch fleet, on seeing them,
+<pb n='353'/><anchor id='Pg353'/>thought that the whole British fleet was behind, and not
+at the time wishing to engage, went about and steered again
+for the Texel. On the 9th the <name type="ship">Active</name> came in sight off
+Yarmouth Roads with the signal flying that the enemy were
+at sea. At once a general chase was ordered, and by the time
+the <name type="ship">Active</name> joined them the whole fleet was under way. Her
+captain was hailed and ordered to guide the fleet to the
+precise spot where he had last seen the enemy.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Captain Trollope had, as soon as the Dutch fleet went
+about, started in chase of them, and kept them in sight
+until they approached the Texel, when he steered to meet
+Admiral Duncan. He was therefore able to give the exact
+position of the enemy, and at once the fleet sailed towards
+them. On the morning of the 11th October, 1797, the admiral
+came in sight of the enemy about nine miles from shore and
+nearly opposite the village of Camperdown. The fleet, however,
+was greatly scattered owing to the different speeds of
+the ships. De Winter, as soon as he saw the British coming,
+got up his anchors and made for shore, hoping that he might
+be able to get so close in among its shoals and sand-banks,
+which were much better known to him than to his antagonists,
+as to deter Duncan from pursuing him. He was, above all
+things, anxious to avoid action; not so much because his
+fleet was slightly inferior to the British, as because his instructions
+enjoined him to regard his junction with the French
+at Brest as his chief object.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The British admiral, seeing his arrangements and divining
+his object, pressed on, regardless of the scattered state of his
+fleet, and made the signal for each ship to attack as she came
+up. Another signal intimated that he should attempt to
+<pb n='354'/><anchor id='Pg354'/>break the enemy’s line, so as to get between it and the land.
+But this signal was not generally seen by the fleet. It was,
+however, seen and acted upon by the second in command,
+Admiral Onslow, in the <name type="ship">Monarch</name>, who soon after led the
+larboard division through the Dutch line, three ships from
+the rear, and then closely engaged the <name type="ship">Jupiter</name>. Duncan’s own
+ship, the <name type="ship">Venerable</name>, the leading ship of the starboard division,
+marked out the <name type="ship">Vryhide</name>, De Winter’s flagship, as his own
+antagonist.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The Dutch ship <name type="ship">States-general</name>, the flagship of their rear-admiral,
+seeing his design, pressed so close up to his chief
+that the British admiral was compelled to change his course
+and pass astern of her; but as he did so he poured so terrible
+a fire into her stern that she was glad to fall back and leave
+the <name type="ship">Venerable</name> free to attack the <name type="ship">Vryhide</name>. Others of our ships
+followed the example of their chief, breaking the Dutch line
+at several points. At one o’clock the battle became general,
+and was carried on with unsurpassed courage on both sides.
+The two biggest Dutch frigates, which carried as heavy guns
+as the British line-of-battle ships, crept forward into the fight
+and fought gallantly, the <name type="ship">Mars</name> raking the <name type="ship">Venerable</name> severely
+while she was engaged with no fewer than three Dutch line-of-battle
+ships.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The crew of the <name type="ship">Venerable</name> had been particularly anxious to
+fight, their ship having been for the past five months engaged
+in the dreary work of blockading the Texel; and when they
+had seen the Dutch with their topsails bent, as if intending
+to come out, they had offered to advance into the narrow
+entrance to the Texel, and in that position stop the way
+against the whole fleet, or at least fight their ship till she
+<pb n='355'/><anchor id='Pg355'/>sank. Now they proved that their offer had been no empty
+boast, for, although fighting against overwhelming odds, they
+stuck to their guns with unexampled devotion.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+More than once every flag they hoisted was shot away, and
+at last one of the sailors went aloft and nailed the admiral’s
+colours to the stump of the main topgallant mast. The <name type="ship">Vryhide</name>
+also fought with desperate courage. Other British ships, however,
+came up, and the disparity in numbers turned the other
+way. The <name type="ship">Ardent</name> attacked her on the other side, and the
+<name type="ship">Triumph</name> and <name type="ship">Director</name> poured a raking fire along her decks.
+One after another her masts fell, and the wreck rendered half
+her guns unworkable. Her crew were swept away, until De
+Winter was left alone on her quarter-deck, while below there
+were hardly enough men left to man the pumps. Then the
+gallant admiral with his own hand hauled down his colours,
+having fought to the admiration of the whole British fleet.
+The <name type="ship">States-general</name>, almost disabled by the fruitless attempt to
+foul the <name type="ship">Venerable</name>, maintained a vigorous conflict for some
+time against a succession of adversaries, during which she lost
+above three hundred men killed and wounded, until at last her
+captain was compelled to strike. No one, however, attempted
+to take possession of her, and, gradually dropping astern until
+clear of both fleets, she rehoisted her colours and made off to
+the Texel.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <q>AT LAST HER CAPTAIN WAS COMPELLED TO STRIKE</q>]</p>
+ </then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill08"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill08.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend="font-size: small"><q>AT LAST HER CAPTAIN WAS COMPELLED TO STRIKE</q></hi></head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: <q>AT LAST HER CAPTAIN WAS COMPELLED TO STRIKE</q></figDesc>
+ </figure></p>
+ </else></pgIf>
+<p>
+Ship after ship struck, and of the whole Dutch fleet but six
+ships of the line and two frigates managed to reach the Texel,
+and this was only due to the fact that several of the Dutch
+vessels, knowing that the orders had been that they were not
+to fight, stood aloof and disregarded their admiral’s signal to
+engage. The entire casualties among our men exceeded a
+<pb n='356'/><anchor id='Pg356'/>thousand. Many of the ships were completely riddled by
+shot, and on some of them the men were employed day and
+night at the pumps to keep them afloat till they could cross
+the Channel to our own harbours. Two seventy-fours, five
+fifty-fours, two gun-ships, and two frigates remained in our
+hands, but all were so battered that not one of them could
+ever be made fit for service. The two fleets were nearly
+equal in strength, the British being about one-twelfth the
+stronger. Some of the Dutch ships took no share in the
+action, but the same is true of the British. Some of them
+arrived too late, the hazy weather having prevented the
+signals of the <name type="ship">Venerable</name> from being seen by them. For one
+of them, however, the <name type="ship">Agincourt</name>, no excuse could be found, so
+her captain was tried by court-martial and declared incapable
+of serving in the navy for the future.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The <name type="ship">Jason</name> had taken her share in the battle. She had at
+once placed herself alongside the <name type="ship">Brutus</name>, a battle-ship of the
+same size as herself. All the afternoon the duel was continued,
+and both ships lost some masts and spars and had their hulls
+completely shattered. It was not until the engagement had
+almost ceased elsewhere that the enemy hauled down her
+colours. The battle was a desperate one, and Will had felt
+the strain greatly; there was comparatively little for him to
+do, for both ships sailed along side by side, and there was no
+attempt at manœuvring. He had, therefore, simply to move
+about, encouraging the sailors and directing their fire. So
+incessant was the cannonade that it was with difficulty he could
+make his orders heard, and, cool as he was, he was almost
+confused by the terrible din that went on around. It was
+found, after the <name type="ship">Brutus</name> surrendered, that her loss had been
+<pb n='357'/><anchor id='Pg357'/>one hundred and twenty killed and wounded, while on board
+the <name type="ship">Jason</name> little over half that number had suffered.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+As soon as the prize surrendered, parties were put on board
+to take possession, while the rest of the men were engaged in
+attending to their own and the Dutch wounded. The next
+day jury-masts were got up, and the <name type="ship">Jason</name>, with her prize in
+tow, sailed with the rest of the fleet for England. When they
+arrived at Sheerness the <name type="ship">Jason</name> was found to require a complete
+refit. The crew were therefore ordered to be paid off, and
+Will was promoted to the rank of captain, and at once
+appointed to the command of the frigate <name type="ship">Ethalion</name>, thirty-four
+guns, which had just been fitted ready for sea.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He had no difficulty in manning his ship, as a sufficient
+number of the <name type="ship">Jason’s</name> old crew volunteered, and he was soon
+ready for service.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He was at once despatched to join Lord Bridport’s fleet,
+and for nearly nine months was engaged in the incessant
+patrolling which at that time the British frigates maintained
+in the Channel.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Towards the end of July, 1798, the vigilance of the frigates,
+if possible, increased, for it became known that two French
+squadrons were being prepared with the intention of landing
+troops in Ireland. On the 6th of August a small squadron
+slipped out of Rochefort, and, eluding the British cruisers,
+succeeded, on the 22nd, in landing General Humbert and
+eleven hundred and fifty men at Killala Bay, and then at
+once returned to Rochefort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The attempt ended in failure; the peasantry did not join as
+was expected, and on the 8th of September General Humbert
+surrendered at Ballinamuck to Lieutenant-general Lake.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='358'/><anchor id='Pg358'/>
+
+<p>
+Another fleet sailed from Brest on the 16th of September,
+1798, consisting of one ship of the line, the <name type="ship">Hoche</name>, and eight
+frigates, under Commodore Bompart. It had on board three
+thousand troops, a large train of artillery, and a great quantity
+of military stores. It had set sail for Ireland before the news
+of the failure of Humbert’s expedition had arrived, and it
+was certain that as soon as it reached its intended place of
+landing in Ireland it would endeavour to return without delay.
+Two or three days earlier the <name type="ship">Ethalion</name> and the eighteen-gun
+brig <name type="ship">Sylph</name> had joined the thirty-eight-gun frigate <name type="ship">Boadicea</name>,
+which was watching Brest. At daybreak a light breeze
+sprang up, and the French made sail. Leaving the <name type="ship">Ethalion</name>
+to watch the French fleet, the <name type="ship">Boadicea</name> sailed to carry the
+news of the start of the expedition to Lord Bridport.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+At two o’clock on the 18th the <name type="ship">Ethalion</name> was joined by the
+<name type="ship">Amelia</name>, a thirty-eight-gun frigate, and at daylight the French
+directed their course as if for the West Indies. At eight
+o’clock they bore up, and five of their frigates chased the
+English ships. Presently, however, finding that they did not
+gain, they rejoined the squadron, which bore away to the
+south-west. On the 20th the two frigates were joined by the
+forty-four-gun frigate <name type="ship">Anson</name>. At noon the French were nearly
+becalmed. There was now no doubt that the destination of
+the squadron was Ireland, and the news was despatched by
+the <name type="ship">Sylph</name> to the commander-in-chief of the Irish station.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On the 26th the French ships turned on the frigates, but
+gave this up about noon, and proceeded on their way. The
+sea now became so rough that all the ships shortened sail.
+On the 29th the weather moderated, and the French squadron
+again started in chase. About nine o’clock the French
+battle-<pb n='359'/><anchor id='Pg359'/>ship, the <name type="ship">Hoche</name>, sprung her main-topmast, and one of the
+French frigates carried away her top-sail yard. At this both
+the French and the British ships shortened sail. The French
+ships wore away to the north-west, and the British again
+followed them; but the <name type="ship">Anson</name> had sprung her topmast, and in
+the evening the <name type="ship">Hoche</name> lowered hers. The weather now became
+very bad, and the frigates hauled up and soon lost sight of the
+enemy. A week later the <name type="ship">Amelia</name> left them, but three days
+after, they fell in with the squadron that had been despatched
+from Cawsand Bay when the <name type="ship">Boadicea</name> arrived with news of
+the start of the French squadron from Brest. They were also
+joined by the frigates <name type="ship">Melampus</name> and <name type="ship">Doris</name>, which while at
+Lough Swilly had received news from the <name type="ship">Sylph</name> of the destination
+of the French squadron. The whole were under the
+command of Sir John Warren.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+With the hope that he had now shaken off his pursuers,
+Admiral Bompart bore away for Killala Bay, but as he neared
+the land his leading frigate signalled the appearance of the
+British squadron. Sir John Warren immediately gave the
+signal for a general chase, but a heavy gale set in that evening,
+during which the <name type="ship">Anson</name> carried away her mizzen-mast main-yard
+and main-topsail-yard. The <name type="ship">Hoche</name>, however, was even
+more unfortunate, for she carried away her main-topmast, and
+this in its fall brought down the fore and mizzen-topgallant-masts.
+A few hours later the <name type="ship">Résolue</name> signalled that she had
+sprung a leak which she could not stop, and the admiral
+signalled orders to her captain to sail towards the coast, and
+by burning blue lights and sending up rockets to endeavour
+to lead the British squadron after him, and so allow the rest
+of the fleet to make off.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='360'/><anchor id='Pg360'/>
+
+<p>
+Admiral Bompart now changed his course, but at daybreak
+found himself almost surrounded by the British vessels. Both
+squadrons waited, but with very different feelings, the order
+to commence action. The <name type="ship">Robust</name> led the way, followed closely
+by the <name type="ship">Magnanime</name>, and was received with a fire from the stern-chasers
+and the quarter guns of the French frigates <name type="ship">Embuscade</name>
+and <name type="ship">Coquille</name>. A few minutes later the <name type="ship">Robust</name> returned the
+fire, and bore down to leeward for the purpose of engaging
+the <name type="ship">Hoche</name>, which, like herself, was a seventy-four-gun ship.
+In half an hour all the French frigates that could get away
+were making off. The <name type="ship">Hoche</name> by this time was a mere wreck,
+having suffered terribly from the fire of the <name type="ship">Robust</name>; her hull
+was riddled with shot, she had five feet of water in her hold,
+twenty-five of her guns were dismounted, and a great portion
+of her crew were killed and wounded. After the battle had
+raged for three hours she struck her colours. The <name type="ship">Embuscade</name>
+had also surrendered. The other British vessels set out in
+pursuit of the fugitives. The <name type="ship">Coquille</name>, after a brave resistance,
+was forced to haul down her colours, and the <name type="ship">Ethalion</name> pursued
+and captured the <name type="ship">Bellone</name>. Five French frigates attempted to
+escape, and in doing so sailed close to the <name type="ship">Anson</name>, which had
+been unable to take part in the action owing to the loss of her
+mizzen-mast, and as they passed ahead of her, poured in such
+destructive broadsides that she lost her fore and main masts,
+and had much other serious damage. Of the ships that had
+escaped, the <name type="ship">Résolue</name> was captured two or three days later.
+The <name type="ship">Loire</name> made a good fight; she was pursued by the <name type="ship">Mermaid</name>,
+and <name type="ship">Kangaroo</name>. The latter, which was an eighteen-gun
+brig, engaged her, but lost her fore-topmast. The <name type="ship">Mermaid</name>,
+a thirty-two-gun frigate, continued the pursuit.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='361'/><anchor id='Pg361'/>
+
+<p>
+At daybreak the <name type="ship">Loire</name>, seeing that her pursuer was alone,
+shortened sail. As the <name type="ship">Loire</name> was a forty-gun ship the fight
+was a desperate one, and both vessels were so badly injured
+that by mutual consent they ceased fire. The <name type="ship">Mermaid</name> lost
+her mizzen-mast, main topmast, and had her shrouds, spars,
+and boats cut to pieces. She was also making a great deal of
+water, and was therefore necessarily obliged to discontinue the
+fight. The <name type="ship">Loire</name>, however, was out of luck, for a day or two
+later she fell in with the <name type="ship">Anson</name> and <name type="ship">Kangaroo</name>, and in consequence
+of her battered condition she had to surrender without
+resistance. Similarly, the <name type="ship">Immortalité</name>, while making her way
+to Brest, fell in with the <name type="ship">Fisgard</name>, a vessel of just the same
+size. The <name type="ship">Immortalité’s</name> fire was so well aimed that in a short
+time the <name type="ship">Fisgard</name> was quite unmanageable. Repairs, however,
+were executed with great promptness, and after a chase the
+action was recommenced. At the end of half an hour the
+<name type="ship">Fisgard</name> had received several shots between wind and water
+and she had six feet of water in her hold. Nevertheless
+she continued the fight, and at three o’clock the <name type="ship">Immortalité</name>,
+which was in a semi-sinking state, and had lost her captain
+and first lieutenant, hauled down her colours.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Thus seven out of the ten vessels under the command of
+Commodore Bompart were captured.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In the combat with the <name type="ship">Bellone</name> Will had been slightly
+wounded, and as he was most anxious to proceed with his
+investigation with regard to his relations, he applied for leave
+on his arrival at Portsmouth.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This was at once granted, and at the same time he received
+his promotion to post rank in consequence of his capture of
+the <name type="ship">Bellone</name>.
+</p>
+
+</div><div n="19">
+<pb n='362'/><anchor id='Pg362'/>
+<index index="toc"/><index index="pdf"/>
+<head>CHAPTER XIX</head>
+
+<head type="sub">CONCLUSION</head>
+
+<p>
+Will’s first visit, after arriving in London, was to Dulwich.
+He had visited the house with Mr. Palethorpe
+when it was in progress of building, and had been favourably
+impressed with it, but now that it was complete he thought
+it was one of the prettiest houses that he had ever seen. The
+great conservatory was full of plants and shrubs, which he
+recognized as natives of Jamaica, and the garden was brilliant
+with bright flowers.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am delighted to see you again, Will,</q> Mr. Palethorpe
+said, as he was shown in. <q>Alice is out at present, but she
+will be back before long. I must congratulate you on your
+promotion, which I saw in the <hi rend="italic">Gazette</hi> this morning.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir, my good fortune sticks to me, except for this
+wound, and it is nothing serious and will soon be right again.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Don’t say good fortune, lad. You have won your way by
+conduct and courage, and you have a right to be proud of
+your position. I believe you are the youngest captain in the
+service, and that without a shadow of private interest to push
+you on. I am very glad to hear that your wound is so slight.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You are not looking well, sir,</q> Will said, after they had
+chatted for a time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, I have had a shock which, I am ashamed to say,
+I have allowed to annoy me. I came home with £70,000.
+Of that I invested £40,000 in good securities, and allowed the
+rest to remain in my agent’s hands until he came upon some
+<pb n='363'/><anchor id='Pg363'/>good and safe security. Well, I was away with Alice in the
+country when he wrote to me to say that he strongly recommended
+me to buy a South Sea stock which everyone was
+running after, and which was rising rapidly. I must own that
+it seemed a good thing, so I told him to buy. Well, it went
+up like wildfire, and I could have sold out at four times the
+price at which I bought. At last I wrote to him to realize,
+and he replied that it had suddenly fallen a bit, and recommending
+me to wait till it went up again, which it was sure to
+do. I didn’t see a London paper for some days, and when I
+did get one I found, to my horror, that the bubble had burst,
+and that the stock was virtually not worth the paper on which
+it was printed. The blow has affected me a good deal. I
+admit now that it was foolish, and feel it so; but when a man
+has been working all his life, it is hard to see nearly half of
+the fortune he has gained swept away at a blow.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is hard, sir, very hard. Still, it was fortunate that you
+had already invested £40,000 in good securities. After all,
+with this house and £40,000 you will really not so very much
+miss the sum you have lost.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is exactly what I tell myself, Will. Still, you know,
+a dog with two bones in his mouth will growl if he loses one
+of them. Nevertheless £40,000 is not to be despised by any
+means, and I shall have plenty to give my little Alice a good
+portion when she marries.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That will be comfortable for her, sir, but I should say that
+the man would be lucky if he got her without a shilling.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, well, we’ll see, we’ll see. I have no desire to part
+with her yet.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That I can well understand, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='364'/><anchor id='Pg364'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, here she is!</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+A rosy colour spread over the girl’s face when she saw who
+her father’s visitor was.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I expected you in a day or two,</q> she said, <q>but not so
+soon as this. When we saw your name in the <hi rend="italic">Gazette</hi> we made
+sure that it would not be long before you paid us a visit. I
+am glad to see that your wound has not pulled you down
+much.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No indeed. I am all right; but it was certain that I
+should come here first of all.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And what are your plans now?</q> Mr. Palethorpe asked.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am going to set to work at once to discover my family.
+I have not been to my lawyer yet, so I don’t know how much
+he has done, but I certainly mean to go into the business in
+earnest.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, it doesn’t matter to you much now, Will, whether
+your family are dukes or beggars. You can stand on your
+own feet as a captain in the royal navy with a magnificent
+record of services.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, I see that, sir; but still I certainly do wish to be
+able to prove that I come of at least a respectable family. I
+have not the least desire to obtain any rank or anything of that
+kind, only to know that I have people of my own.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I do not say that it is not a laudable ambition, but I don’t
+believe that anyone would think one scrap better or worse of
+you were you to find that you were heir to a dukedom.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will slept there that night, and the next morning drove
+into the city to his lawyer’s office. <q>Well, Captain Gilmore?</q>
+said that gentleman as Will entered his private room. <q rend="post: none">I
+am glad to see you. I have been quietly at work making
+<pb n='365'/><anchor id='Pg365'/>enquiries since you were last here. I sent a man down to
+Scarcombe some months ago. He learned as much as he could
+there, and since then has been going from village to village
+and has traced your father’s journeyings for some months.
+Now that you are home I should suggest employing two or
+three men to continue the search and to find out if possible
+the point from which your father started his wanderings.
+Assuming, as I do, that he was the son of Sir Ralph Gilmore,
+I imagine that he must have quarrelled with his father at
+or about the time of his marriage. In that case he would
+probably come up to London. I have observed that most
+men who quarrel with their parents take that step first.
+There, perhaps, he endeavoured to obtain employment. The
+struggle would probably last two, or three, or four years. I
+take the last to be the most likely period, for by that time
+you would be about three years old. I say that because he
+could hardly have taken you with him had you been younger.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is evident that he had either no hope of being reconciled
+to his father or that he was himself too angry to make
+advances. I therefore propose to send men north from London
+to enquire upon all the principal roads. A man with a
+violin and a little child cannot have been altogether forgotten
+in the villages in which he stopped, and I hope to be able to
+trace his way up to Yorkshire. Again, I should employ
+one of the Bow Street runners to make enquiries in London
+for a man with his wife and child who lived here so many
+years ago, and whose name was Gilmore. I am supposing,
+you see, that that was his real name, and not one that he had
+assumed. I confess I have my doubts about it. A man who
+quits his home for ever after a desperate quarrel is as likely
+<pb n='366'/><anchor id='Pg366'/>as not to change his name. That of course we must risk.
+While these enquiries are being made I should like you to go
+back to your old home; it is possible that other mementoes
+of his stay there may have escaped the memory of the old
+people with whom you lived. Anything of that kind would
+be of inestimable value.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will go down,</q> Will said. <q>I am afraid there is little
+chance of my finding them both alive now. I fancy they were
+about fifty-five when I went to live with them, which would
+make them near eighty now. One or other of them, however,
+may be alive. I have not been to my agent yet, and therefore
+do not know whether he still sends them the allowance
+I made them.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+After leaving the lawyer he went to his agent and found
+that the allowance was still paid, and regularly acknowledged
+by a receipt from the clergyman. He supposed, therefore,
+that certainly one, if not both, of the old people were still
+alive. He went back to Dulwich and said that he had taken
+a seat on the north coach for that day week. <q>I could not
+bring myself to leave before,</q> he said, <q>and I knew you would
+keep me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly, my boy. I don’t think either Alice or myself
+would forgive you were you to run away the moment you
+returned.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When the time came Will started for the north, though he
+felt much reluctance to leave Alice. He acknowledged now
+to himself that he was deeply in love with her. Though from
+her father’s manner he felt that when he asked for her hand
+he would not be refused, about Alice herself he felt far less
+confident. She was so perfectly open and natural with him
+<pb n='367'/><anchor id='Pg367'/>that he feared lest she might regard him rather as a brother
+than as a lover, and yet the blush which he had noticed when
+he first met her on his return gave him considerable hope.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+On arriving at Scarborough he stopped for the night at the
+house of his old friend Mrs. Archer. She and her husband
+listened with surprise and pleasure to his stories of his adventures
+in spite of his assurances that these were very ordinary
+matters, and that it was chiefly by luck that he had got on.
+He was a little surprised when, in reply to this, Mrs. Archer
+used the very words Mr. Palethorpe had uttered. <q>It is of
+no use your talking in that way, Will,</q> she said. <q>No doubt
+you have had very good fortune, but your rapid promotion
+can only be due to your conduct and courage.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I may have conducted myself well,</q> he said warmly, <q>but
+not one bit better than other officers in the service. I really
+owe my success to the fortunate suggestion of mine as to the
+best method of attacking that pirate hold. As a reward for
+this the admiral gave me the command of <name type="ship">L’Agile</name>, and so,
+piece by piece, it has grown. But it was to my good fortune
+in making that suggestion, which really was not made in
+earnest, but only in reply to the challenge of another midshipman,
+that it has all come about. Above all, Mrs. Archer,
+I shall never forget that it was the kindness you showed me,
+and the pains you took in my education, that gave me my
+start in life.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next day he drove over to Scarcombe, and to his pleasure,
+on entering the cottage, found John and his wife both
+sitting just where he had last seen them. They both rose
+to greet him.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank God, Will,</q> John said, <q>that we have been spared
+<pb n='368'/><anchor id='Pg368'/>to see you alive again! I was afraid that our call might come
+before you returned.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Why, father, I don’t think you look a year older than you
+did when I last saw you. Both you and mother look good
+for another ten years yet.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>If we do, Will, it will be thanks to the good food you
+have provided for us. We live like lords; meat every day
+for dinner, and fish for breakfast and supper. I should not
+feel right if I didn’t have a snack of fish every day. Then
+we have ale for dinner and supper. There is no one in the
+village who lives as we do. When we first began we both
+felt downright fat. Then we agreed that if we went on like
+that we never could live till you came back, so we did with
+a little less, and as you see we both fill out our clothes a long
+way better than we did when you were here last.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well you certainly do both look uncommonly well, father.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And you ain’t married yet, Will?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, I’ve not done anything about that yet, though perhaps
+it won’t be very long before I find a wife. I am not
+going to apply to go on service again for a time, so I’ll
+have a chance to look round, though I really have one in
+my mind’s eye.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Tell us all about it, Will,</q> the old woman said eagerly;
+<q>you know how interested we must be in anything that
+affects you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, mother, among the many adventures I have been
+through I must tell you the one connected with this young lady.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He then told her of his first meeting, of his stay at her
+father’s house, and of the hurricane which they experienced
+together.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='369'/><anchor id='Pg369'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, mother, I met her again unexpectedly more than
+two and a half years ago in London. Her father had come
+over here to live, and has a fine house at Dulwich. I have
+just been staying there for a week, and I have some hope that
+when I ask her she will consent to be my wife.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Of course she will,</q> the old woman said quite indignantly.
+<q>How could she do otherwise? Why, if you were to ask the
+king’s daughter I am sure she would take you. Here you are,
+one of the king’s captains, have done all sorts of wonderful
+things, and have beaten his enemies all over the world, and
+you are as straight and good-looking a young gentleman as
+anyone wants to see. No one, who was not out of her mind,
+could think of saying <q>No</q> to you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Ah, mother, you are prejudiced! To you I am a sort
+of swan that has come out of a duck’s egg.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+They chatted for some time, and then Will said:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Are you quite sure, John, that the bundle the clergyman
+handed over to me contained every single thing my father
+left behind him?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, now I think of it, Will, there is something else.
+I never remembered it at the time, but when my old woman
+was sweeping a cobweb off the rafters the other day she said:
+<q>Why, here is Will’s father’s fiddle</q>, and, sure enough, there
+it was. It had been up there from the day you came into the
+house, and if we noticed it none of us ever gave it a thought.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I remember it now,</q> Will exclaimed. <q>When I was a
+young boy I used to think I should like to learn to play on it,
+and I spoke to Miss Warden about it. But she said I had
+better stick to my lessons, and then as I grew up I could
+learn it if I still had a fancy to do so.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='370'/><anchor id='Pg370'/>
+
+<p>
+He got on to a chair, and took it from the rafter on which
+it had so long lain. Then he carefully wiped the dust off it.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It looks a very old thing, but that makes no difference in
+its value to me. I don’t see in the least how this can be any
+clue whatever to my father’s identity. Still, I will take it
+away with me and show it to my lawyer, who is endeavouring
+to trace for me who my father was.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And do you think that he will succeed, Will?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I rather believe he will. At any rate he has found a gentleman,
+a baronet, who has the same name and bears the same
+coat of arms as is on the seal which was in my father’s bundle.
+We are trying now to trace how my father came down here,
+and where he lived before he started. You see I must get
+as clear a story as I can before I go to see this gentleman.
+Mind, I don’t want anything from him. He may be as rich
+as a lord for anything I care, and may refuse to have anything
+to do with me, but I want to find out to what family I really
+belong.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He must be a bad lot,</q> John said, <q>to allow your father
+to tramp about the country with a fiddle.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I would not say that,</q> Will said; <q>there are always two
+sides to a story, and we know nothing of my father’s reasons
+for leaving home. It may have been his fault more than his
+father’s, so until I know the rights and wrongs of the case
+I will form no judgment whatever.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is right, my boy,</q> the old woman said. <q>I have
+noticed that when a boy runs away from home and goes
+to sea it is as often his fault as his father’s. Sometimes it
+is six of one and half a dozen of the other; sometimes the
+father is a brute, but more often the son is a scamp, a
+worth<pb n='371'/><anchor id='Pg371'/>less fellow, who will settle down to nothing, and brings discredit
+on his family. So you are quite right, Will, not to
+form any hard judgment on your grandfather till you know
+how it all came about.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I certainly don’t mean to, mother. Of course I have so
+little recollection of my father that it would not worry me
+much if I found that it were his fault, though of course I
+would rather know that he was not to blame. Still, I should
+wish to like my grandfather if I could, and if I heard that my
+poor father was really entirely to blame I should not grieve
+much over it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can’t help thinking that he was to blame, Will. He
+was a curious-looking man, with a very bitter expression at
+times on his face, as if he didn’t care for anyone in the
+world, except perhaps yourself, and he often left you alone
+in the village when he went and wandered about by himself
+on the moor.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, well,</q> Will said, <q>it matters very little to me which
+way it is. It is a very old story now, and I dare say that
+there were faults on both sides.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will spent a long day with the old people and then returned
+to Scarborough, taking the violin with him. When he told
+how he had found it Mr. Archer took the instrument and
+examined it carefully.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I think really,</q> he said at last, <q>that this violin may
+prove a valuable clue, as valuable almost as that coat of arms.
+That might very well have been picked up or bought for
+a trifle at a pawnshop, or come into the hands of its possessor
+in some accidental way. But this is different; this,
+unless I am greatly mistaken, is a real Amati, and therefore
+<pb n='372'/><anchor id='Pg372'/>worth at least a couple of hundred guineas. That could
+hardly have come accidentally into the hands of a wandering
+musician; it must be a relic of a time when he was in very
+different circumstances, and may well have been his before
+he left the home of his childhood.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you very much for the information, Mr. Archer!
+I see at once that it may very well be a strong link in the
+chain.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Two days later he returned to London. Mr. Palethorpe
+was greatly pleased to hear that he had found so valuable
+a clue.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I don’t care a rap for family,</q> he said, <q>but at the same
+time I suppose every man would like his daughter—</q> Here
+he stopped abruptly. <q>I mean to say,</q> he said, <q>would like
+to have for his son-in-law a man of good family. I grant that
+it is a very stupid prejudice, still I suppose it is a general one.
+You told me, I think, that your lawyer had found out that
+this Sir Ralph Gilmore had only two sons, and that one of
+them had died suddenly and unmarried.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Then in that case, you see, if you prove your identity you
+would certainly be heir to the baronetcy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I suppose so, sir. I have never given the matter any
+thought. It is not rank I want, but family. Still, I might
+not be heir to the baronetcy, for even supposing that my
+father was really the other son, he might have had children
+older than I am who remained with their grandfather.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is possible,</q> Mr. Palethorpe said, <q>though unlikely.
+Why should he have left them behind him when he went out
+into the world?</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='373'/><anchor id='Pg373'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>He might not have wished to bother himself with them;
+he might have intended to claim them later. No one can
+say.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, on the whole, I should say that your chance of coming
+into the baronetcy is distinctly good. It would look well,
+you know—Captain Sir William Gilmore, R.N.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>We mustn’t count our chickens too soon, Mr. Palethorpe,</q>
+Will laughed; <q>but nevertheless I do think that the prospects
+are favourable. Still, I must wait the result of the search that
+my lawyer has been carrying on.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, you know my house is your home as long as you
+like to use it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Thank you, sir! but I don’t like to intrude upon your
+kindness too much, and I think that I will take a lodging
+somewhere in the West End, so that I may be within easy
+reach of you here.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, it must be as you like, lad. In some respects,
+perhaps, it will be best so. I may remind you, my boy, that
+it is not always wise for two young people to be constantly in
+each other’s society.</q> And he laughed.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will made no answer; he had decided to defer putting the
+question until his claim was settled one way or the other.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In a few days he again called upon his lawyer.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have found out enough,</q> the latter said, <q>to be certain
+that your father started from London with his violin and you,
+a child of three. I have considerable hopes that we shall, ere
+long, get a clue to the place where he lived while in London.
+The runner has met a woman who remembers distinctly such a
+man and a sick wife and child lodging in the house of a friend
+of hers. The friend has moved away and she has lost sight
+<pb n='374'/><anchor id='Pg374'/>of her, but she knows some people with whom the woman
+was intimate, and through them we hope to find out where
+she lives.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is good news indeed,</q> Will said. <q>I had hardly
+hoped that you would be so successful.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>It is a great piece of luck,</q> the lawyer said. <q>I have
+written to my other agents to come home. It will be quite
+sufficient to prove that he journeyed as a wandering musician
+for at least fifty miles from London. Of course if further
+evidence is necessary they can resume their search.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have found a clue too, sir,</q> Will said; and he then
+related the discovery of the Amati, the possession of which
+showed that the minstrel must at one time have been in
+wealthy circumstances.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is important indeed,</q> the lawyer said, rubbing his
+hands. <q>Now, sir, if we can but find out where the man
+lived in London I think the chain will be complete, especially
+if he was in comparatively good circumstances when he went
+there. The woman will also, doubtless, be able to give a
+description of his wife as well of himself, and with these
+various proofs in your hand I think you may safely go down
+and see Sir Ralph Gilmore, whom I shall, of course, prepare
+by letter for your visit.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Four days afterwards Will received a letter by an office-boy
+from his lawyer asking him to call.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>My dear sir,</q> he said as Will entered, <q>I congratulate
+you most heartily. I think we have the chain complete now.
+The day before yesterday the Bow Street runner came in to
+say that he had found the woman, and that she was now
+living out at Highgate. Yesterday I sent my clerk up to see
+<pb n='375'/><anchor id='Pg375'/>her, and this is his report. I may tell you that nothing could
+possibly be more satisfactory.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The document was as follows:
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I called on Mrs. Giles. She is a respectable person who
+lets her house in lodgings. Twenty-five years ago she had
+a house in Westminster, and let the drawing-room floor to a
+gentleman of the name of Gilmore. He was rather tall and
+dark, and very variable in his temper. He had his wife with
+him, and two months afterwards a child was born. It was
+christened at St. Matthew’s. I was its god-mother, as they
+seemed to have very few friends in the town. Mr. Gilmore
+was out a good deal looking for employment. He used to
+write of an evening, and I think made money by it. He
+was very fond of his violin. Sometimes it was soft music he
+played, but if he was in a bad temper he would make it shriek
+and cry out, and I used to think there was a devil shut up
+in it. It was awful! When he came to me he had plenty
+of money, but it was not long before it began to run short,
+and they lived very plain. He had all sorts of things, whips
+and books and dressing-cases. These gradually went, and a
+year after the child was born they moved upstairs, the rooms
+being cheaper for them. A year later they occupied one room.
+The wife fell ill, and the rent was often in arrears. He was
+getting very shabby in his dress too. The child was three
+years old when its mother died. He sold all he had left to
+bury her decently, and as he had no money to pay his arrears
+of rent, he gave me a silver-mounted looking-glass, which I
+understood his mother had given him, and he said: <q>Don't
+you sell this, but keep it, and one day or other I will come
+back and redeem it.</q></q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This is the glass, sir,</q> the lawyer said. <q>My clerk redeemed
+it after telling her that her lodger had died long ago.
+<pb n='376'/><anchor id='Pg376'/>He went round to St. Matthew’s Church and obtained the
+certificate of the child’s baptism. So I think now, Mr. Gilmore,
+that we have all the evidence that can be required.
+Mrs. Giles, on hearing that the child was alive, said she
+would be happy to come forward and repeat what she had
+said to my clerk. She seemed very interested in the affair,
+and is evidently a kindly good-hearted woman. I fancy the
+silver frame is of Italian workmanship, and will probably be
+recognized by your grandfather. At any rate, someone there
+is sure to know it. Now I think you are in a position to
+go down and see him, and if you wish I will write to him
+to-day. I shall not go into matters at all, and shall merely
+say that the son of his son, Mr. William Gilmore, is coming
+down to have an interview with him, and is provided with all
+necessary proofs of his birth.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The next morning Will took the coach and went down to
+Radstock, in Somersetshire. He put up at the inn on his
+arrival, and next morning hired a gig and drove to the house
+of Sir Ralph Gilmore. It was a very fine mansion standing
+in an extensive park.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Not a bad place by any means,</q> Will said to himself; <q>I
+should certainly be proud to bring Alice down here.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+He alighted at the entrance and sent in his name, and was
+immediately shown into the library, where a tall old man was
+sitting.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I understand, sir,</q> he said stiffly, <q>that you claim to be
+the son of my son, William Gilmore?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I do, sir, and I think the proofs I shall give you will
+satisfy you. You will understand, sir, please, before I do so,
+that I have no desire whatever to make any claim upon
+you; I simply wished to be recognized as a member of your
+family.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='377'/><anchor id='Pg377'/>
+
+<p>
+The old man looked him up and down, and then motioned
+him to take a seat.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And what has become of your father, supposing him to be
+your father?</q> he asked with an evident effort.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>He died, sir, nearly twenty years ago.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man was silent for some little time, and then he
+said: <q>And you, sir, what have you been doing since then?
+But first, in what circumstances did he die?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>In the very poorest. For the last two years of his life he
+earned his living and mine as a wandering fiddler.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And what became of you?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I was brought up, sir, by a fisherman in the village in
+Yorkshire in which my father died.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Your manner of speech does not at all agree with that,
+sir,</q> the old man said sharply.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>No, sir,</q> Will said quietly. <q>I had the good fortune to
+attract the interest of the clergyman’s daughter, and she was
+good enough to assist me in my education and urge me on
+to study.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And what is your trade or profession, sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have the honour, sir, to be post-captain in His Majesty’s
+navy.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>You a post-captain in His Majesty’s navy!</q> the old man
+said scornfully. <q>Do you think to take me in with such
+a tale as that? You might possibly be a very junior lieutenant.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am not surprised that you think so, sir. Nevertheless
+I am indeed what I say. My name appeared in the <hi rend="italic">Gazette</hi> a
+month ago.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I remember now,</q> the baronet said, <q>there was a William
+Gilmore appointed to that rank. The name struck me as
+I glanced through the <hi rend='italic'>Gazette</hi>. I had noticed it before on
+<pb n='378'/><anchor id='Pg378'/>several occasions, and I sighed as I thought to myself how
+different must have been his career from that of my unfortunate
+son. Now, sir, I beg that you will let me see your
+proofs.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>In the first place, sir, there is this seal with your armorial
+bearings, which was found upon him after his death.
+This is a looking-glass, one which I believe was given to him
+by his mother. This is the violin with which he earned his
+living.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The old man stretched his hand out for the violin, with
+tears in his eyes.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I gave it to him,</q> he said, <q>when he was eighteen. I
+thought it a great piece of extravagance at the time, but he
+had such a taste for music that I thought he deserved the
+best instrument I could get. The looking-glass I also recognize,
+and of course the seal. Is there anything more,
+sir?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>This, sir, is the certificate of my baptism at St. Matthew’s
+Church, Westminster. This is a statement of my lawyer’s
+clerk, who interviewed the woman in whose house my father
+and mother lived, and my mother died.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The baronet took it and read it in silence.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I can produce also,</q> Will went on, as the old man laid
+it down with a sigh, <q>the evidence of the lady who educated
+me, and to whom I owe all the good fortune that has befallen
+me. The old fisherman and his wife who brought me up are
+still alive, though very old. I have means of obtaining abundant
+evidence from my shipmates in the various vessels in
+which I have sailed that I am the boy who left that village
+at the age of fifteen, and entered as a ship’s boy in one of
+His Majesty’s vessels.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And you are now—?</q> the baronet asked.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='379'/><anchor id='Pg379'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am now twenty-three, sir.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And a captain?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is so, sir. I was made a midshipman before I had
+been three months on board, partly because I saved the first
+lieutenant’s life, and partly because I understood enough mathematics
+to take an observation. Of course I served my time as
+a midshipman, and a year after passing I was made a second
+lieutenant. By the death of my first lieutenant at the battle
+of St. Vincent I succeeded to his post, and obtained the rank
+of captain for my share in the battle of Camperdown. I
+received post rank the other day when, in command of the
+<name type="ship">Ethalion</name>, I brought the <name type="ship">Bellone</name>, a frigate of Admiral Bompart’s
+fleet, a prize to Portsmouth.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, sir, your career has indeed been creditable and successful,
+and I am proud to acknowledge, as my grandson and
+heir to my title, a young gentleman who has so greatly distinguished
+himself. For I do acknowledge you. The proofs
+you have given me leave no doubt in my mind whatever that
+you are the son of my second son. You were, of course, too
+young to remember whether he ever spoke to you of me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Yes, sir. I was but five at the time of his death, and have
+but a very faint recollection of him.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Of course, of course,</q> the baronet said; <q>it was a sad
+affair. Perhaps I was to blame to some extent, though I have
+never thought so. Your father was, as doubtless you know,
+a second son. Although somewhat eccentric in disposition,
+and given to fits of passion, I had no serious occasion to complain
+of him until he went up to Oxford. There he got into
+a wild and dissipated set, and became the wildest and most
+dissipated among them. His great talent for music was his
+bane. He was continually asked out. After being two years
+up there, and costing me very large sums in paying his debts,
+<pb n='380'/><anchor id='Pg380'/>he was sent down from the university. He would not turn
+his hands to anything, and went up to London with the idea
+of making his way somehow. He made nothing but debts,
+got into various scandalous affairs, and dragged our name
+through the dust. At last he came home one day and calmly
+informed me that he had married a woman in a rank of life
+beneath him. She was, I believe, the daughter of a horse-dealer
+of very doubtful character. He also said that he wanted
+£1200 to enable him to start fair. I lost my temper and said
+that he should not have another pound from me. We had
+a desperate quarrel, and he left the house, taking with him
+all his belongings. It was four years before I took any steps
+to bring him back. Then his elder brother died, and on that
+I took every means to find him out. That he would ever be
+a credit to me I did not even dare to hope, but at least he
+could not be allowed to live in poverty. I advertised widely
+and employed detectives for months, but all without result.
+I have long since given up any hopes of ever seeing him again.
+I am glad, indeed, to find that the title, at my death, will not
+go to a distant cousin, but to my grandson, a gentleman in
+every way worthy of it. You are not married, I hope?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am not married, sir; but I think, if you had asked the
+question, I should have replied that I was engaged, or rather
+had hopes of being engaged soon.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Who is she?</q> the baronet asked quickly.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>She is the only daughter of a successful West Indian
+planter, a man of the highest standing in the colony, who has
+now returned and settled here.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The baronet heaved a sigh of relief.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>That is well,</q> he said; <q>and considering that you have
+been all your life at sea, and have had no opportunity of
+making the acquaintance of ladies of titled families, it is better
+<pb n='381'/><anchor id='Pg381'/>than I could have expected. As I do not know the procedure
+in these matters I had better consult my lawyer as to the best
+way of using these relics and the proofs you have given me that
+you are my grandson. It may be that my recognition of you
+is sufficient, but it would be as well to make sure that at my
+death there will be no opposition to your succession. You
+will stop here for a day or two, I hope, before going up to
+town to arrange the little affair you spoke of, and I think if
+your chances were good before, they will be still better now
+that you are recognized as heir to a baronetcy and one of the
+finest estates in England.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have never thought of that, sir. I have my profession
+and nearly £40,000 of prize-money, which will enable us to
+live in great comfort; and indeed I anticipate that her father
+will wish us to reside with him, or, at any rate, that she shall
+do so while I am away on service.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I hope you will not think of remaining at sea. It would
+be monstrous for a man heir to £10,000 a year, besides very
+large accumulations, to be knocking about the world and running
+the risk of having his head taken off with a round-shot
+every day. I earnestly entreat you not to dream of such a
+thing.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I will think it over. I am fond of the sea, but shall
+certainly be fonder of my wife, and I feel that your wishes in
+the matter should weigh with me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I hope you will at least spend a portion of your
+time here. It will be your future home, and it is well that
+you should acquaint yourself with your duties. Besides, remember
+the years that I have been a lonely man.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I would rather not give a promise, but I shall certainly
+take your wishes into consideration.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, I am content with that, my boy. You will stay
+<pb n='382'/><anchor id='Pg382'/>here now a few days, I hope. I have so much to hear of
+your life, and of course I wish to become better acquainted
+with you.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Will remained a week, during which time he made a great
+advance in the baronet’s affections, and the old man seemed
+to gain some years of life as he walked in the garden and
+drove through the country with his young heir, whom he was
+delighted to introduce to everyone.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+When he returned to London he at once drove over to
+Dulwich.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Well, Will, what is the result of it all?</q> Mr. Palethorpe
+asked, for Will had purposely abstained from going to their
+house after his last interview with his lawyer. <q>Alice has
+been imagining all sorts of things: that you had been run
+over, or had run away with some girl.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Father! I never thought that for a moment,</q> his daughter
+said indignantly, <q>though I have been very anxious, for it is
+nearly a fortnight since he was here.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I have done a good deal in the time,</q> Will said. <q>I did
+not write to you, because I wanted to tell you. I am acknowledged
+as the grandson and heir to the title and estates
+of Sir Ralph Gilmore.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Both gave an exclamation of pleasure.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>And now,</q> he said, taking her hand, <q>I only need one
+thing to complete my happiness, and that is, that you will
+share my good fortune with me. May I hope that it will
+be so?</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>Certainly you may, Will. I think I have loved you ever
+since I was a little girl, and acknowledge that my principal
+reason for inducing father to come to live in England was
+that I believed I should have more chance of meeting you
+again here than in Jamaica.</q>
+</p>
+
+<pb n='383'/><anchor id='Pg383'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>I am heartily glad, too, that it is all settled,</q> Mr. Palethorpe
+said. <q>I have seen it coming on ever since you met us
+the first time in London, and I may say that I have seen it with
+pleasure, for there is no one to whom I would sooner trust
+her happiness than you. Now I will leave you to yourselves.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It need hardly be said that Alice was as anxious as Sir
+Ralph Gilmore that Will should quit the navy, and he consequently
+yielded to their entreaties. He wrote to his grandfather
+to tell him of his engagement, and the baronet wrote
+back by return of post to Mr. Palethorpe, begging him to
+come down with his daughter and Will for a time.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<q>I only half know him at present,</q> he said, <q>and as I understand
+that just at present he will not want to leave the young
+lady of his choice, you will gladden an old man if you will
+all three come down to stay with me.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Three months later the marriage took place from the house
+at Dulwich. Sir Ralph Gilmore came up for the ceremony,
+and the change that the three months had effected in him was
+extraordinary. He was the gayest of the party.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Among those present at the ceremony were also Will’s two
+devoted friends, Dimchurch and Tom Stevens. The baronet
+was greatly pleased with their affection and pride in Will, and
+offered both good posts on the estate. So none of the comrades
+went to sea again.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+The baronet gave into Will’s hands the entire management
+of the estate and house, so his death, seven years later, made
+practically no difference to Will’s position. Will took to
+country pursuits, and became one of the most popular landlords
+in Somersetshire, while his wife was quite one of the
+most popular ladies in the county. Her father, up to the time
+of his death, spent most of his time down there, and they used
+the house at Dulwich as their abode when they stayed in
+<pb n='384'/><anchor id='Pg384'/>London during the season. Mrs. Archer came more than once
+to stay with them, as their most honoured guest. Stevens and
+Dimchurch both married. The former became head-gamekeeper
+on the estate, a post in which he showed great talent. The
+latter took a small cottage with a bit of land just outside the
+park gates, for he was able to live very comfortably on the
+interest of his prize-money. He had no children of his own,
+and his great pleasure was to wander about with Will’s, telling
+them of their father’s adventures in the great war.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+It was not till well on in the sixties that Sir William Gilmore,
+captain, R.N., departed this life, a few weeks after the
+death of his wife, leaving behind him a large family to carry
+on the old name.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 4; text-align: center; font-size: small">
+THE END
+</p>
+
+</div></body>
+ <back>
+ <div rend="page-break-before: right">
+ <index index="pdf" level1="[Advertisements]"/>
+<pb n='A-1'/><anchor id='Pga01'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>English boys owe a debt of gratitude to Mr. Henty.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Athenæum</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-large; center">
+Blackie &amp; Son’s
+<lb/>
+Illustrated Story Books
+</p>
+
+<milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large">
+<hi rend='italic'>HISTORICAL TALES BY</hi>
+</p>
+<p rend="font-size: large">
+G. A. HENTY
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">With the Allies to Pekin:</hi>
+A story of the Relief
+of the Legations.
+Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Wal Paget</hi>. With a Map. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+On the outbreak of the Boxer movement Rex Bateman, by a daring
+stratagem, rescues some relatives from an outlying village, and conducts
+them into Pekin. Then he makes his way down to Tien-tsin and joins
+Admiral Seymour’s column. When the advance of this force is checked
+he pushes on alone to the capital, where his courage and ready invention
+are invaluable to the defenders. On the declaration of an armistice, however,
+he again succeeds in eluding the Boxer bands, goes through the
+storming of Tien-tsin, and marches with the allied army to Pekin.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+
+<q>The hero contrives and performs all kinds of exciting undertakings, and a clever
+story is woven into an accurate account of the various expeditions.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>School Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A boy could have no better guide to that story of British pluck and energy.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Spectator</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Through Three Campaigns:</hi>
+A Story of Chitral,
+the Tirah, and Ashanti. Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Wal Paget</hi>. With 3 Maps. 6<hi rend="italic">s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero of this story, the son of an officer, joins the Chitral expedition
+secretly as a private soldier, but the enormous difficulties which have to
+be overcome in the course of the march soon call forth his noble qualities,
+and before the end of the campaign he qualifies for a commission. His
+subsequent career is a series of brilliant successes. He takes part in the
+storming of the Dargai heights, is more than once captured by the enemy,
+and by a heroic sacrifice wins the V.C.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Every true boy will enjoy this story of plucky adventure.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Educational News</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Gives animation to recent history, and its confident art and abundant spirit will
+greatly satisfy the intelligent and spirited boy.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Dundee Advertiser</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-2'/><anchor id='Pga02'/>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">For the Temple:</hi>
+A Tale of the Fall of Jerusalem. Illustrated
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Solomon J. Solomon</hi>,
+A.R.A. With a Map. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Mr. Henty weaves into the record of Josephus an admirable and attractive
+plot. The troubles in the district of Tiberias, the marches of the legions,
+the sieges of Jotapata, of Gamala, and of Jerusalem, form an impressive
+historic setting to the figure of the lad who passes from the vineyard to the
+service of Josephus, becomes the leader of a guerrilla band of patriots, fights
+bravely for the Temple, and after a brief term of slavery at Alexandria returns
+to his Galilean home with the favour of Titus.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A good tale of early Bible times, told with a verve and vigour that keeps the
+interest sustained to the very end.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Academy</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—With Kitchener in the Soudan:</hi>
+A Tale
+of Atbara
+and Omdurman. With 10 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. Rainey, R.I.</hi>, and
+3 Maps. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+In carrying out various special missions with which he is entrusted the
+hero displays so much dash and enterprise that he soon attains an exceptionally
+high rank for his age. In all the operations he takes a distinguished
+part, and adventure follows so close on adventure that the
+end of the story is reached all too soon.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Mr. Henty has collected a vast amount of information about the reconquest of
+the Soudan, and he succeeds in impressing it upon his reader’s mind at the very time
+when he is interesting him most.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Literary World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—With the British Legion:</hi>
+A Story of the Carlist
+Wars. With 10 Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Wal Paget</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero joins the British Legion, which was raised by Sir de Lacy
+Evans to support the cause of Queen Christina and the Infant Queen
+Isabella, and as soon as he sets foot on Spanish soil his adventures begin.
+Arthur is one of Mr. Henty’s most brilliant heroes, and the tale of his
+experiences is thrilling and breathless from first to last.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>It is a rattling story told with verve and spirit.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Pall Mall Gazette</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The Treasure of the Incas:</hi>
+A Tale of Adventure
+in Peru.
+With 8 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Wal Paget</hi>, and a Map. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The heroes of this powerful story go to Peru to look for the treasure
+which the Incas hid when the Spaniards invaded the country. Their task
+is both arduous and dangerous, but though they are often disappointed,
+their courage and perseverance are at last amply rewarded.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The interest never flags for one moment, and the story is told with vigour.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>World</hi>.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: THE LATE G. A. HENTY]</p>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <hi rend='italic'>From WITH THE ALLIES TO PEKIN</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By G. A. Henty</hi> (See page 1)]</p>
+</then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill09"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill09.png" rend="width: 100%"><head>THE LATE G. A. HENTY</head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: THE LATE G. A. HENTY</figDesc></figure></p>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill10"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill10.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend='italic'>From WITH THE ALLIES TO PEKIN</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By G. A. Henty</hi> (See <ref target="Pga01">page 1</ref>)</head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: From WITH THE ALLIES TO PEKIN</figDesc></figure></p>
+</else></pgIf>
+<pb n='A-3'/><anchor id='Pga03'/>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">With Roberts to Pretoria:</hi> A Tale of the South
+African War. With
+12 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>William Rainey, R.I.</hi>, and a Map. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero takes part in the series of battles that end in the disaster at
+Magersfontein, is captured and imprisoned in the race-course at Pretoria,
+but escapes in time to fight at Paardeberg and march with the victorious
+army to Bloemfontein. He rides with Colonel Mahon’s column to the
+relief of Mafeking, and accomplishes the return journey with such despatch
+as to be able to join in the triumphant advance to Pretoria.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>In this story of the South African war Mr. Henty proves once more his incontestable
+pre-eminence as a writer for boys.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Standard</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Both Sides the Border:</hi> A Tale of Hotspur and
+Glendower. With 12 page
+Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Ralph Peacock</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero casts in his lot with the Percys, and becomes esquire to Sir
+Henry, the gallant Hotspur. He is sent on several dangerous and important
+missions in which he acquits himself with great valour.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>With boys the story should rank among Mr. Henty’s best.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Standard</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A vivid picture of that strange past ... when England and Scotland ... were
+torn by faction and civil war.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Onward</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Through Russian Snows:</hi> or, Napoleon’s Retreat
+from Moscow. With 8 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. H. Overend</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Julian Wyatt becomes, quite innocently, mixed up with smugglers, who
+carry him to France, and hand him over as a prisoner to the French.
+He subsequently regains his freedom by joining Napoleon’s army in the
+campaign against Russia.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The story of the campaign is very graphically told.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>St. James’s Gazette</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>One of Mr. Henty’s best books, which will be hailed with joy by his many eager
+readers.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Journal of Education</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Is full of life and action.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Journal of Education</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Out with Garibaldi:</hi> A Story of the Liberation of
+Italy. With 8 page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. Rainey, R.I.</hi>, and two Maps. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Mr. Henty makes the liberation of Italy by Garibaldi the groundwork of
+an exciting tale of adventure. The hero is an English lad who joins the
+expedition and takes a prominent part in the extraordinary series of operations
+that ended in the fall of the Neapolitan kingdom.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A first-rate story of stirring deeds.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Daily Chronicle</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Full of hard fighting, gallant rescues, and narrow escapes.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Graphic</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-4'/><anchor id='Pga04'/>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">At the Point of the Bayonet:</hi> A Tale of the
+Mahratta War.
+With 12 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Wal Paget</hi>, and 2 Maps. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Harry Lindsay is carried off to the hills and brought up as a Mahratta.
+At the age of sixteen he becomes an officer in the service of the Mahratta
+prince at Poona, and afterwards receives a commission in the army of
+the East India Company. His courage and enterprise are rewarded by
+quick promotion, and at the end of the war he sails for England, where
+he succeeds in establishing his right to the family estates.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A brisk, dashing narrative.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Bookman</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Under Wellington’s Command:</hi> A Tale of the Peninsular
+War. With 12 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Wal Paget</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+In this stirring romance Mr. Henty gives us the further adventures of
+Terence O’Connor, the hero of <hi rend='italic'>With Moore at Corunna</hi>. We are told
+how, in alliance with a small force of Spanish guerrillas, the gallant regiment
+of Portuguese levies commanded by Terence keeps the whole of the French
+army in check at a critical period of the war, rendering invaluable service
+to the Iron Duke and his handful of British troops.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>An admirable exposition of Mr. Henty’s masterly method of combining instruction
+with amusement.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—To Herat and Cabul:</hi> A Story of the first Afghan
+War. With 8 full-page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>C. M. Sheldon</hi>, and Map. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero takes a distinguished part in the defence of Herat, and subsequently
+obtains invaluable information for the British army during the first
+Afghan war. He is fortunately spared the horrors of the retreat from
+Cabul, and shares in the series of operations by which that most disastrous
+blunder was retrieved.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>We can heartily commend it to boys, old and young.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Spectator</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—With Cochrane the Dauntless:</hi> A Tale of
+his Exploits.
+With 12 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. H. Margetson</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+It would be hard to find, even in sensational fiction, a more daring leader
+than Lord Cochrane, or a career which supplies so many thrilling exploits.
+The manner in which, almost single-handed, he scattered the French fleet
+in the Basque Roads is one of the greatest feats in English naval history.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>As rousing and interesting a book as boys could wish for.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Saturday Review</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>This tale we specially recommend.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>St. James’s Gazette</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-5'/><anchor id='Pga05'/>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Redskin and Cow-Boy:</hi> A Tale Of the Western
+Plains. With 12 page
+Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Alfred Pearse</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Hugh Tunstall accompanies a frontiersman on a hunting expedition on
+the Plains, and then seeks employment as a cow-boy on a cattle ranch.
+His experiences during a <q>round up</q> present in picturesque form the toilsome,
+exciting, adventurous life of a cow-boy; while the perils of a frontier
+settlement are vividly set forth. Subsequently, the hero joins a wagon-team,
+and the interest is sustained in a fight with, and capture of, brigands.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A strong interest of open-air life and movement pervades the whole book.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Scotsman</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—With Buller in Natal:</hi> or, A Born Leader. With
+10 page Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>W. Rainey, R.I.</hi>, and a Map. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The heroic story of the relief of Ladysmith forms the theme of one of the
+most powerful romances that have come from Mr. Henty’s pen. When the
+war breaks out, the hero, Chris King, and his friends band themselves together
+under the title of the Maritzburg Scouts. From first to last the boy
+scouts are constantly engaged in perilous and exciting enterprises, from
+which they always emerge triumphant, thanks to their own skill and courage,
+and the dash and ingenuity of their leader.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Just the sort of book to inspire an enterprising boy.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Army and Navy Gazette</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—By England’s Aid:</hi> or, The Freeing of the Netherlands
+(1585–1604). With 10
+page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Alfred Pearse</hi>, and 4 Maps. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> &amp; 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Two English lads go to Holland in the service of one of <q>the fighting
+Veres</q>. After many adventures one of the lads finds himself on board a
+Spanish ship at the defeat of the Armada, and escapes from Spain only to
+fall into the hands of the Corsairs. He is successful, however, in getting
+back to Spain, and regains his native country after the capture of Cadiz.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Boys know and love Mr. Henty’s books of adventure, and will welcome his tale
+of the freeing of the Netherlands.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Athenæum</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Condemned as a Nihilist:</hi> A Story of Escape
+from Siberia. With
+8 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Wal Paget</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Godfrey Bullen, a young Englishman resident in St. Petersburg, becomes
+involved in various political plots, resulting in his seizure and exile to
+Siberia. After an unsuccessful attempt to escape, he gives himself up to the
+Russian authorities. Eventually he escapes, and reaches home, having
+safely accomplished a perilous journey which lasts nearly two years.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The escape from Siberia is well told and the description of prison life is very
+graphic.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Academy</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-6'/><anchor id='Pga06'/>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Lion of St. Mark:</hi> A Tale of Venice, with
+6 page Illustrations. Cloth
+elegant, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A story of Venice at a period when intrigue, crime, and bloodshed were
+rife. The hero, the son of an English trader, displays a fine manliness, and
+is successful in extricating his friends from imminent dangers. Finally he
+contributes to the victories of the Venetians at Porto d’Anzo and Chioggia.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Every boy should read The Lion of St. Mark.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Saturday Review</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The Dragon and the Raven:</hi> or, The Days
+of King Alfred.
+With 8 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>C. J. Staniland</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+In this story the author gives an account of the desperate struggle between
+Saxon and Dane for supremacy in England. The hero, a young
+Saxon, takes part in all the battles fought by King Alfred, and the incidents
+in his career are unusually varied and exciting.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>We have nothing but praise for this story, which is excellently written, and will
+make the history of the period to which it relates a reality to its readers.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>School Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The Bravest of the Brave:</hi> or, with Peterborough
+in Spain. With 8
+page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>H. M. Paget</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+There are few great leaders whose life and actions have so completely
+fallen into oblivion as those of the Earl of Peterborough. He showed a
+genius for warfare which has never been surpassed. Round the fortunes of
+Jack Stilwell, the hero, and of Peterborough, Mr. Henty has woven a
+brilliant narrative of the War of the Spanish Succession (1705–6).
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The adventures of the aide-de-camp, Jack, will probably be found to be no less
+interesting than the marvellous operations of the General himself, in which he takes
+a leading part.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Spectator</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—For Name and Fame:</hi> or, To Cabul with Roberts.
+With 8 page Illustrations.
+5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+After being wrecked and going through many stirring adventures among
+the Malays, the hero of this story finds his way to Calcutta, and enlists in
+a regiment proceeding to the Afghan Passes. He accompanies the force
+under General Roberts to the Peiwar Kotal, is wounded, taken prisoner,
+and carried to Cabul, whence he is transferred to Candahar, and takes
+part in the final defeat of the army of Ayoub Khan.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The book teems with spirited scenes and stirring adventures, and the boy who
+reads it attentively will acquire a sound knowledge on subjects that are of vital
+importance to our Indian Empire.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>School Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-7'/><anchor id='Pga07'/>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Maori and Settler:</hi> A Story of the New Zealand
+War. With 8 page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Alfred Pearse</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The Renshaws lose their property and emigrate to New Zealand. Wilfrid,
+a strong, self-reliant lad, is the mainstay of the household. The odds seem
+hopelessly against the party, but they succeed in establishing themselves
+happily in one of the pleasantest of the New Zealand valleys.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A book which all young people, but especially boys, will read with avidity.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Athenæum</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+ <hi rend="font-size: large">—Beric the Briton:</hi> A Story of the Roman Invasion of
+Britain. With 12 page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. Parkinson</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Beric is a boy-chief of a British tribe which takes a prominent part in
+the insurrection under Boadicea: and after the defeat of that heroic queen
+he continues the struggle in the fen-country. Ultimately Beric is defeated
+and carried captive to Rome, where he succeeds in saving a Christian maid
+by slaying a lion in the arena, and is rewarded by being made the personal
+protector of Nero. Finally, he escapes and returns to Britain, where he
+becomes a wise ruler of his own people.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>He is a hero of the most attractive kind.... One of the most spirited and well-imagined
+stories Mr. Henty has written.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Saturday Review</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>His conflict with a lion in the arena is a thrilling chapter.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>School
+Board Chronicle</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Full of every form of heroism and pluck.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Christian World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The Dash for Khartoum:</hi> A Tale of the Nile
+Expedition. With 10
+page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>John Schönberg</hi> and <hi rend='smallcaps'>J. Nash</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+In the record of recent British history there is no more captivating page
+for boys than the story of the Nile campaign, and the attempt to rescue
+General Gordon. For, in the difficulties which the expedition encountered,
+and in the perils which it overpassed, are found all the excitement of
+romance, as well as the fascination which belongs to real events.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The Dash for Khartoum is your ideal boys’ book.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Tablet</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>It is literally true that the narrative never flags a moment.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Academy</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The Dash for Khartoum will be appreciated even by those who don’t ordinarily
+care a dash for anything.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Punch</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—With Wolfe in Canada:</hi> or, The Winning of a
+Continent. With 12
+page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Gordon Browne</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Mr. Henty tells the story of the struggle between Britain and France for
+supremacy on the North American continent. The fall of Quebec decided
+that the Anglo-Saxon race should predominate in the New World; that
+Britain, and not France, should take the lead among the nations.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A moving tale of military exploit and thrilling adventure.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Daily News</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-8'/><anchor id='Pga08'/>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Held Fast for England:</hi> A Tale of the Siege of
+Gibraltar. With 8
+page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Gordon Browne</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The story deals with one of the most memorable sieges in history. The
+hero, a young Englishman resident in Gibraltar, takes a brave and worthy
+part in the long defence, and we learn with what bravery, resourcefulness,
+and tenacity the Rock was held for England.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>There is no cessation of exciting incident throughout the story.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Athenæum</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—In the Irish Brigade:</hi> A Tale of War in Flanders
+and Spain. With 12 page
+Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Charles M. Sheldon</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero is a young officer in the Irish Brigade, which for many years
+after the siege of Limerick formed the backbone of the French army. He
+goes through many stirring adventures, successfully carries out dangerous
+missions in Spain, saves a large portion of the French army at Oudenarde,
+and even has the audacity to kidnap the Prime Minister of England.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A stirring book of military adventure.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Scotsman</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—At Agincourt:</hi> A Tale of the White Hoods of Paris.
+With 12 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Wal
+Paget</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Sir Eustace de Villeroy, in journeying from Hampshire to his castle in
+France, made young Guy Aylmer one of his escort. Soon thereafter the
+castle was attacked, and the English youth displayed such valour that his
+liege-lord made him commander of a special mission to Paris. This he
+accomplished, returning in time to take part in the campaign against the
+French which ended in the glorious victory for England at Agincourt.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Cannot fail to commend itself to boys of all ages.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Manchester Courier</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—A Final Reckoning:</hi> A Tale of Bush Life in
+Australia. With 8 page
+Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. B. Wollen</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero, a young Englishman, emigrates to Australia, where he gets
+employment as an officer in the mounted police. A few years of active
+work gain him promotion to a captaincy. In that post he greatly distinguishes
+himself, and finally leaves the service and settles down as a squatter.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A stirring story capitally told.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+</div><div rend="page-break-before: always">
+<pb n='A-9'/><anchor id='Pga09'/>
+
+<p>
+<q>Young reader have no better friends than Blackie &amp; Son.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Westminster Gazette</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-large; center">
+Blackie &amp; Son’s<lb/>
+Story Books for Boys
+</p>
+
+ <milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large">
+G. MANVILLE FENN
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Quicksilver!</hi> or, The Boy with no Skid to his Wheel.
+With 6 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>F. Dadd</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Dr. Grayson has a theory that any boy, if rightly trained, can be made
+into a gentleman. He chooses a boy from the workhouse, with a bad
+reputation but with excellent instincts, and adopts him, the story narrating
+the adventures of the mercurial lad. The restless boyish nature, with its
+inevitable tendency to get into scrapes, is sympathetically and humorously
+drawn.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Quicksilver is little short of an inspiration. In it that prince of story-writers for
+boys—George Manville Fenn—has surpassed himself. It is an ideal book for a boy’s
+library.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Practical Teacher</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Not only a most engrossing story, but full of noble impulses and lessons.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Newcastle
+Journal</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—In the King’s Name.</hi> Illustrated. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New
+Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A spirited story of the Jacobite times, concerning the adventures of
+Hilary Leigh, a young naval officer on board the <name type="ship" rend="italic">Kestrel</name>, in the preventive
+service off the coast of Sussex. Leigh is taken prisoner by the adherents
+of the Pretender, amongst whom is an early friend and patron, who desires
+to spare his life, but will not release him. The narrative is full of exciting
+and often humorous incident.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Mr. Fenn has won a foremost place among writers for boys. This is, we think,
+the best of all his productions in this field.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Daily News</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The Golden Magnet:</hi> A Tale of the Land of the
+Incas. With 12 page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Gordon Browne</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The tale is of a romantic youth, who leaves home to seek his fortune in
+South America. He is accompanied by a faithful companion, who, in the
+capacity both of comrade and henchman, does true service, and shows the
+dogged courage of an English lad during their strange adventures.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>There could be no more welcome present for a boy. There is not a dull page,
+and many will be read with breathless interest.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Journal of Education</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-10'/><anchor id='Pga10'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+Capt. F. S. BRERETON, R.A.M.C.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Foes of the Red Cockade:</hi> A Story of the
+French Revolution. Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>William Rainey, R.I.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Two English lads, wrecked at St. Malo, are persecuted as Aristocrats.
+They see the Reign of Terror in all its horror, but fortunately escape to the
+château of an uncle in La Vendée. A quarrel with a cousin ensues, and
+fighting occurs at the same time with the Republicans. As a scout the
+elder does gallant service till captured and taken to Paris, where he confronts
+Robespierre and falls into his cousin’s hands. Again, however, he
+escapes, and after many exciting experiences finally reaches safety and friends.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Cannot fail to give great enjoyment to many boys and girls, and not a little
+profit.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Literary World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—In the Grip of the Mullah:</hi> A Tale of Adventure
+in
+Somaliland. Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Charles M. Sheldon</hi>. With a Map. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero organizes a search-party and advances into Somaliland to rescue
+his father, who has fallen into the hands of the Mullah. The little force is
+opposed from the outset, but undaunted they push forward, and in spite of
+many difficulties and dangers succeed in accomplishing their object. The
+interest increases as the story advances, and becomes intense when the hero
+penetrates alone into the heart of the Mullah’s camp.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A fresher, more exciting, and more spirited tale could not be wished for.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>British Weekly</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—One of the Fighting Scouts:</hi> A Tale of Guerilla
+Warfare in
+South Africa. Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Stanley L. Wood</hi>. With a Map. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This story deals with the guerrilla aspect of the Boer War, and shows
+how George Ransome is compelled to leave his father’s farm and take
+service with the British. He is given the command of a band of scouts
+as a reward for gallantry, and with these he punishes certain rebels for
+a piece of rascality, and successfully attacks Botha’s commando. Thanks
+to his knowledge of the veldt he is of signal service to his country, and
+even outwits the redoubtable De Wet.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Altogether an unusually good story.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Yorkshire Post</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Under the Spangled Banner:</hi> A Tale of the
+Spanish-American
+War. With 8 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Paul Hardy</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Hal Marchant is in Cuba before the commencement of hostilities. A
+Spaniard who has been frustrated in an attempt to rob Hal’s employer
+attacks the hacienda and is defeated, but turns the tables by denouncing
+Hal as a spy. The hero makes good his escape from Santiago, and
+afterwards fights for America both on land and at sea. The story gives a
+vivid and at the same time accurate account of this memorable struggle.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Just the kind of book that a boy would delight in.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Schoolmaster</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-11'/><anchor id='Pga11'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+HERBERT STRANG
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Tom Burnaby:</hi> A Story of Uganda and the Great
+Congo Forest. Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Charles
+M. Sheldon</hi>. With 3 Plans. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+Field-Marshal Lord Wolseley writes:—<q>It is just the sort of book I
+would give to any school-boy, for I know he would enjoy every page
+of it.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+The Rev. Dr. Wood, Head-master of Harrow, writes:—<q>I have read it
+through with interest. It is an excellent book for boys, full of vigour and
+romance.</q>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The fierce struggles between the Bahima and the Arabs, with their Manyema allies,
+are told with a vigour and enthusiasm that will stir the heart of any boy.... When
+we add that Mr. Strang gives us a really graphic and thrilling impression of travel in
+the forests of Africa, and an almost living acquaintance with Arab and Negro, it is
+scarcely necessary to recommend it to boys as a delightful story of African adventure.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Spectator</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+Dr. GORDON STABLES, R.N.
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">In the Great White Land:</hi> A Tale of the Antarctic
+Ocean. With
+6 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>J. A. Walton</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This is a most fascinating story from beginning to end. It is a true
+picture of what daring healthful British men and boys can do, written by
+an author whose name is a household word wherever the English language
+is spoken. All is described with a master’s hand, and the plot is just such
+as boys love.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The narrative goes with a swing and a dash from start to finish.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Public Opinion</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ERNEST GLANVILLE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">In search of the Okapi:</hi> A Story of Adventure
+in Central Africa. Illustrated
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>William Rainey, R.I.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Two school chums join an expedition into the unexplored reaches of
+the vast central forest which the Okapi inhabits. The search for the
+strange animal, however, serves merely as an excuse for the journey, and
+once the little party is afloat on the Congo they go whither fortune leads
+them, and many and exciting are their adventures in the unknown wilds.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A story to make a boy’s heart throb with eager interest.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Birmingham Gazette</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Diamond Seekers:</hi> A Story of Adventure in
+South Africa. With 8
+Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>William Rainey, R.I.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The discovery of the plan of the diamond mine, the dangers incurred in
+reaching the wild, remote spot in an armoured wagon, and the many
+incidents of farm and veldt life, are vividly described by an author who
+knows the country well.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>We have seldom seen a better story for boys.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-12'/><anchor id='Pga12'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+FREDERICK HARRISON
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Boys of Wynport College.</hi> With 6 Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Harold Copping</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero and his chums differ as widely in character as in personal appearance.
+We have Patrick O’Flahertie, the good-natured Irish boy;
+Jack Brookes, the irrepressible humorist; Davie Jackson, the true-hearted
+little lad, on whose haps and mishaps the plot to a great extent turns;
+and the hero himself, who finds in his experiences at Wynport College
+a wholesome corrective of a somewhat lax home training.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A book which no well-regulated school-boy should be without.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Whitehall
+Review</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+LÉON GOLSCHMANN
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Boy Crusoes:</hi> A Story of the Siberian Forest. Adapted
+from the Russian by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Léon Golschmann</hi>.
+With 6 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>J. Finnemore, R.I.</hi> 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Two Russian lads are so deeply impressed by reading <hi rend='italic'>Robinson Crusoe</hi>
+that they run away from home. They lose their way in a huge trackless
+forest, and for two years are kept busy hunting for food, fighting against
+wolves and other enemies, and labouring to increase their comforts, before
+they are rescued.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>This is a story after a boy’s own heart.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Nottingham Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+MEREDITH FLETCHER
+</p><p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Every Inch a Briton:</hi> A School Story. With 6
+page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Sydney
+Cowell</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This story is written from the point of view of an ordinary boy, who gives
+an animated account of a young public-schoolboy’s life. No moral is
+drawn; yet the story indicates a kind of training that goes to promote
+veracity, endurance, and enterprise; and of each of several of the characters
+it might be truly said, he is worthy to be called, <q>Every Inch a Briton</q>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>In Every Inch a Briton Mr. Meredith Fletcher has scored a <anchor id="corra12"/><corr sic="success">success.</corr></q>—<hi rend='italic'>Manchester
+Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+EDGAR PICKERING
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">In Press-Gang Days.</hi> With 4 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. S.
+Stacey</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+In this story Harry Waring is caught by the Press-gang and carried on
+board His Majesty’s ship <name type="ship" rend="italic">Sandwich</name>. He takes part in the mutiny of the
+Nore, and shares in some hard fighting on board the <name type="ship" rend="italic">Phœnix</name>. He is with
+Nelson, also, at the storming of Santa Cruz, and the battle of the Nile.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>It is of Marryat, that friend of our boyhood, we think as we read this delightful
+story; for it is not only a story of adventure, with incidents well-conceived and
+arranged, but the characters are interesting and well-distinguished.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Academy</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-13'/><anchor id='Pga13'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+FRED SMITH
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Boyhood of a Naturalist.</hi> With 6 page
+Illustrations.
+3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Few lovers of Nature have given to the world a series of recollections so
+entertaining, so vigorous, and so instinct with life as these delightful reminiscences.
+The author takes the reader with him in the rambles in which he
+spent the happiest hours of his boyhood, a humble observer of the myriad
+forms of life in field and copse, by stream and hedgerow.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>We cannot too highly recommend the book to all readers.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The World of Animal Life.</hi> Edited by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Fred
+Smith</hi>. Profusely
+Illustrated with Engravings after <hi rend="smallcaps">F. Specht</hi> and other
+eminent artists. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The aim of <hi rend='italic'>The World of Animal Life</hi> is to give in non-scientific language
+an account of those inhabitants of the land, sea, and sky with whose
+names we are all familiar, but concerning whose manner of life the majority
+of us have only the haziest conceptions.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>An admirable volume for the young mind enquiring after Nature.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Birmingham
+Gazette</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+J. CHALMERS
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Fighting the Matabele:</hi> A story of Adventure
+in Rhodesia. Illustrated
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Stanley L. Wood</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A story of the great Matabele rising in 1896. The hero and his friends
+are surprised by the revolted natives in the heart of the Matopo mountains,
+and after many stirring adventures make their way back to Buluwayo.
+The hero subsequently joins the Africander Corps, and distinguishes
+himself in the operations by which the insurrection is crushed.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The stormy times of the recent insurrection in Matabeleland are described with a
+piquantness which will ensure the book becoming a favourite.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Liverpool Courier</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+CLIVE PHILLIPPS-WOLLEY
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Gold, Gold in Cariboo:</hi> A Story of Adventure in
+British Columbia. With
+4 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>G. C. Hindley</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Ned Corbett, a young Englishman, and his companion set out with
+a pack-train in order to obtain gold on the upper reaches of the Fraser
+River. After innumerable adventures, and a life-and-death struggle with
+the Arctic weather of that wild region, they find the secret gold-mines for
+which they have toilsomely searched.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>It would be difficult to say too much in favour of <hi rend='italic'>Gold, Gold in Cariboo</hi>. We
+have seldom read a more exciting tale of wild mining adventure in a singularly
+inaccessible country. There is a capital plot, and the interest is sustained to the
+last page.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>The Times</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-14'/><anchor id='Pga14'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ROBERT LEIGHTON
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Wreck of the Golden Fleece.</hi>
+Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Frank Brangwyn</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The hero is apprenticed on board a Lowestoft fishing lugger, where he
+has to suffer many buffets from his shipmates. The storms and dangers
+which he braved are set forth with intense power. The narrative deals
+with a highway robbery, the trial of the accused fisherman, his escape,
+and the mad chase after the criminal out upon the high seas.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Excellent in every respect, it contains every variety of incident. The plot is very
+cleverly devised, and the types of the North Sea sailors are capital.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>The Times</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+S. BARING-GOULD
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Grettir the Outlaw:</hi> A Story of Iceland in the days
+of the Vikings. With 6 page
+Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>M. Zeno Diemer</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A narrative of adventure of the most romantic kind. No boy will be able
+to withstand the magic of such scenes as the fight of Grettir with the twelve
+bearserks, the wrestle with Karr the Old in the chamber of the dead, the
+combat with the spirit of Glam the thrall, and the defence of the dying
+Grettir by his younger brother.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Has a freshness, a freedom, a sense of sun and wind and the open air, which make
+it irresistible.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>National Observer</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+C. J. CUTCLIFFE HYNE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Captured Cruiser:</hi> or, Two Years from Land.
+With 6 page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>F. Brangwyn</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The central incidents deal with the capture, during the war between Chili
+and Peru, of an armed cruiser. The heroes and their companions break
+from prison in Valparaiso, board this warship in the night, overpower the
+watch, escape to sea under the fire of the forts, and finally, after marvellous
+adventures, lose the cruiser among the icebergs near Cape Horn.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The two lads and the two skippers are admirably drawn. Mr. Hyne has now
+secured a position in the first rank of writers of fiction for boys.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Spectator</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Stimson’s Reef:</hi> With 4 Page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. S.
+Stacey</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This is the extended log of a cutter which sailed from the Clyde to the
+Amazon in search of a gold reef. It relates how they discovered the
+buccaneer’s treasure in the Spanish Main, fought the Indians, turned aside
+the river Jamary by blasting, and so laid bare the gold of <hi rend='italic'>Stimson’s Reef</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Few stories come within hailing distance of <hi rend='italic'>Stimson’s Reef</hi> in startling incidents
+and hairbreadth ’scapes. It may almost vie with Mr. R. L. Stevenson’s <hi rend='italic'>Treasure
+Island</hi>.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <hi rend='italic'>From IN THE GRIP OF THE MULLAH</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Capt. F. S. Brereton</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See page 10)]</p>
+<p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <hi rend='italic'>From THE DISPUTED V.C.</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Frederick P. Gibbon</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See page 15)]</p>
+</then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill11"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill11.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend='italic'>From IN THE GRIP OF THE MULLAH</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Capt. F. S. Brereton</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See <ref target="Pga10">page 10</ref>)</head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: From IN THE GRIP OF THE MULLAH</figDesc></figure></p>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill12"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill12.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend='italic'>From THE DISPUTED V.C.</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Frederick P. Gibbon</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See <ref target="Pga15">page 15</ref>)</head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: From THE DISPUTED V.C.</figDesc></figure></p>
+</else></pgIf>
+<pb n='A-15'/><anchor id='Pga15'/>
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+PAUL DANBY
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Red Army Book.</hi> With many Illustrations
+in colour and in black-and-white. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This book includes chapters on the various branches of the regular army,
+and also on such attractive subjects as <q>Boys who have won the V.C.</q>,
+<q>Pets of the Regiment</q>, <q>The Colours</q>, <q>Famous War Horses</q>, &amp;c.
+Each chapter, besides dealing generally with its subject, is full of capital
+anecdotes, and the book as a whole is excellently illustrated with colour
+and black-and-white illustrations.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Every boy would glory in the keeping and reading of such a prize.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Daily
+Telegraph</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+FREDERICK P. GIBBON
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Disputed V.C.</hi> Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Stanley L.
+Wood</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A tale of the Great Mutiny which should stir a boy’s blood, and will tell him all
+he cares to know of that memorable death-struggle for our supremacy.... Even
+Lord Roberts scarcely gives a more spirited account of the defence of Delhi, of the
+difficulties to be overcome, and of the good service of the gallant little army which so
+long held stubbornly to the Ridge.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Times</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+A. J. CHURCH
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Two Thousand Years Ago.</hi> Illustrated. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+<hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Lucius Marius, a Roman boy, has a very chequered career, being now a
+captive in the hands of Spartacus, again an officer on board a vessel detailed
+for the suppression of the pirates, and anon a captive once more
+on a pirate ship. He escapes to Tarsus, is taken prisoner in the war with
+Mithridates, and detained in Pontus for a number of years.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Adventures well worth the telling. The book is extremely entertaining as well
+as useful, and there is a wonderful freshness in the Roman scenes and characters.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Times</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+OLIPHANT SMEATON
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">A Mystery of the Pacific.</hi> Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Wal
+Paget</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New
+Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The <name type="ship" rend="italic">Fitzroy</name>, a small sailing vessel, discovers an extraordinary island in
+the South Seas, that has been hidden for ages behind a wide belt of sea-weed.
+The country is peopled by descendants of colonists from Imperial
+Rome, and by a yet older race who trace their origin to the long-lost
+Atlantis. In graphic language the author describes the strange experiences
+that befell the crew of the <name type="ship" rend="italic">Fitzroy</name> among these remarkable people.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A tale of unprecedented adventure in unknown lands.... Boys will revel
+in the book.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Birmingham Gazette</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-16'/><anchor id='Pga16'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+R. STEAD
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Grit will Tell:</hi> The Adventures of a Barge-boy. With
+4 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>D. Carleton Smyth</hi>.
+Cloth, 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A lad whose name has been lost amidst early buffetings by hard fortune
+suffers many hardships at the hands of a bargeman, his master, and runs
+away. The various adventures and experiences with which he meets on
+the road to success, the bear-hunt in which he takes part, and the battle
+at which he acts as war correspondent, form a story of absorbing interest
+and after a boy’s own heart.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A thoroughly wholesome and attractive book.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Graphic</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+HARRY COLLINGWOOD
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Pirate Island.</hi> With 6 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>C.
+J. Staniland</hi> and <hi rend='smallcaps'>J. R. Wells</hi>.
+3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+By a deed of true gallantry the hero’s whole destiny is changed, and, going
+to sea, he forms one of a party who, after being burned out of their ship in
+the South Pacific, are picked up by a pirate brig and taken to the <q>Pirate
+Island</q>. After many thrilling adventures, they ultimately succeed in
+effecting their escape.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A capital story of the sea; indeed in our opinion the author is superior in some
+respects as a marine novelist to the better-known Mr. Clark Russell.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Times</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+FLORENCE COOMBE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Boys of the Priory School.</hi> With 4 page
+Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Harold Copping</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The interest centres in the relations of Raymond and Hal Wentworth,
+and the process by which Raymond, the hero of the school, learns that in
+the person of his ridiculed cousin there beats a heart more heroic than his
+own.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>It is an excellent work of its class, cleverly illustrated with <q>real boys</q> by Mr.
+Harold Copping.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Literature</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+JOHN C. HUTCHESON
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Afloat at Last:</hi> A Sailor Boy’s Log. With 6 page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. H. Overend</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+From the stowing of the vessel in the Thames to her recovery from the
+Pratas Reef on which she is stranded, everything is described with the
+accuracy of perfect practical knowledge of ships and sailors; and the incidents
+of the story range from the broad humours of the fo’c’s’le to the perils
+of flight from, and fight with, the pirates of the China Seas.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>As healthy and breezy a book as one could wish.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Academy</hi>.
+</p>
+
+</div><div rend="page-break-before: always">
+<pb n='A-17'/><anchor id='Pga17'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-large; center">
+Blackie &amp; Son’s
+<lb/>
+Story Books for Girls
+</p>
+
+<milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large">
+KATHARINE TYNAN
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">A Girl of Galway.</hi> With 8 full-page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>John H. Bacon</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+When Bertha Grace is on the threshold of young womanhood, she goes
+to stay with her grandfather in Ireland, with the trust from her mother of
+reconciling him and his son, Bertha’s father. Bertha finds her grandfather
+a recluse and a miser, and in the hands of an underling, who is his evil
+genius. How she keeps faith with her mother and finds her own fate,
+through many strange adventures, is the subject of the story.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Full of the poetic charm we are accustomed to find in the works of that gifted
+writer.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The Handsome Brandons.</hi> Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>G.
+D. Hammond, R.I.</hi>
+3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A delightful story of an ancient Irish family. Every one of the nine
+young Brandons was handsome, and every one was spirited and lovable.
+The shadows in the picture hang ominously over Castle Angry and its
+inmate, the vindictive Sir Rupert de Lacy. The story ends happily for
+<q>The Handsome Brandons</q> with the re-establishment of the family
+fortunes.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A really excellent piece of work, ... the literary quality of Miss Tynan’s
+work is its chief distinction.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Spectator</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+CAROLINE AUSTIN
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Cousin Geoffrey and I.</hi> With 6 full-page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. Parkinson</hi>.
+3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The only daughter of a country gentleman finds herself unprovided for at
+her father’s death, and for some time lives as a dependant upon her kinsman.
+Life is saved from being unbearable to her by her young cousin
+Geoffrey, who at length meets with a serious accident for which she is held
+responsible. She makes a brave attempt to earn her own livelihood, until
+a startling event brings her cousin Geoffrey and herself together again.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Miss Austin’s story is bright, clever, and well developed.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Saturday Review</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-18'/><anchor id='Pga18'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ELLINOR DAVENPORT ADAMS
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">A Queen among Girls.</hi> With 6 Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Harold Copping</hi>.
+Cloth, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Augusta Pembroke is the head of her school, the favourite of her teachers
+and fellow-pupils, who are attracted by her fearless and independent nature
+and her queenly bearing. She dreams of a distinguished professional
+career; but the course of her life is changed suddenly by pity for her
+timid little brother Adrian, the victim of his guardian-uncle’s harshness.
+The story describes the daring means adopted by Augusta for Adrian’s relief.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>An interesting and well-written narrative, in which humour and a keen eye for
+character unite to produce a book happily adapted for modern maidens.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Globe</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—A Girl of To-Day.</hi> With 6 page Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>G. D. Hammond, R.I.</hi> 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+<q>What are Altruists?</q> humbly asks a small boy. <q>They are only people
+who try to help others,</q> replies the Girl of To-Day. To help their poorer
+neighbours, the boys and girls of Woodend band themselves together into
+the <hi rend='italic'>Society of Altruists</hi>. That they have plenty of fun is seen in the
+shopping expedition and in the successful Christmas entertainment.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>It is a spirited story. The characters are true to nature and carefully developed.
+Such a book as this is exactly what is needed to give a school-girl an interest in the
+development of character.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Educational Times</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+FRANCES ARMSTRONG
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">A Girl’s Loyalty.</hi> With 6 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>John H.
+Bacon</hi>. Cloth, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New
+Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+When she was still but a child, Helen Grant received from her grandfather,
+on his death-bed, a secret message. The brief words remained
+fast in her memory, and dominated her whole career. She was loyal to
+her trust, however, and to her friends in the hour of their need. For the
+girl was possessed of that quick courage which leaps up in a shy nature
+when evil-doers have to be unmasked, and wrongs made right.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The one book for girls that stands out this year is Miss Frances Armstrong’s
+A Girl’s Loyalty.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Review of Reviews</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+MRS. HERBERT MARTIN
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Two Dorothys:</hi> A Tale for Girls. Illustrated.
+2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+In this story the shy, dreamy, unselfish Dorothy Heriot comes to live
+with her great-aunt, the other Dorothy. This old lady is kind enough, but
+her discipline is unsympathetic. But the younger Dorothy’s loving, unselfish
+nature wins upon the proud old lady, and the end is happiness.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Will not only interest and please all girls, but will also stimulate and encourage
+to better and higher things, youthful hopes and ambitions.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>The Lady</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-19'/><anchor id='Pga19'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ETHEL F. HEDDLE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Strangers in the Land.</hi> Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Harold
+Copping</hi>.
+6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Two old maiden ladies and their charming young friend, Elspeth Macdonald,
+voyage to the beautiful island of Java on a quest that involves a
+story of uncommon interest. In the course of a series of exciting adventures,
+Elspeth unwittingly makes a discovery which seriously affects her
+friends. Towards the close the narrative is darkened by tragedy, but a
+flood of sunshine is thrown on the final chapter by the happy ending of
+a pleasant love-story.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Apart from providing the best of entertainment, this book is noteworthy as
+stimulating high ideals of life and action, and renewing faith in lofty and chivalrous
+sentiment as a factor in human service.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Dundee Advertiser</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—An Original Girl.</hi> With 8 full-page Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Gordon Browne</hi>. 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Christobel Beauchamp makes her living by typewriting in an office till
+chance throws her across the path of Lady Anne Prideaux, her grandmother.
+Her mother had made a <hi rend='italic'>mésalliance</hi> by marrying an actor. Lady
+Anne desires to adopt Christobel, but the girl prefers to help her father.
+The story tells how the poor actor at last receives his <q>call</q>, and ends
+with the promise of good fortune for Christobel and her devoted lover.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A very clever, well-constructed tale is this, and we wish it success.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>British Weekly</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—A Mystery of St. Rule’s.</hi> With 8 Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>G. Demain
+Hammond, R.I.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The author has been amazingly successful in keeping her secret almost to the
+end. Yet the mystery attending a stolen diamond of great value is so skilfully
+handled that several perfectly innocent persons seem all but hopelessly identified
+with the disappearance of the gem. Cleverly, however, as this aspect of the story
+has been managed, it has other sources of strength.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Scotsman</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The chief interest ... lies in the fascinating young adventuress, who finds
+a temporary nest in the old professor’s family, and wins all hearts in St. Rule’s by
+her beauty and her sweetness.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Morning Leader</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+SARAH DOUDNEY
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Under False Colours.</hi> With 6 Illustrations. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A story which will attract readers of all ages and of either sex. The
+incidents of the plot, arising from the thoughtless indulgence of a deceptive
+freak, are exceedingly natural, and the keen interest of the narrative is sustained
+from beginning to end. <hi rend='italic'>Under False Colours</hi> is a book which will
+rivet the attention, amuse the fancy, and touch the heart.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>This is a charming story, abounding in delicate
+touches of sentiment and pathos.
+Its plot is skilfully contrived. It will be read with a warm interest by every girl who
+takes it up.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Scotsman</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-20'/><anchor id='Pga20'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ROSA MULHOLLAND (LADY GILBERT)
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Cynthia’s Bonnet Shop.</hi> With 8 Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>G. Demain Hammond,
+R.I.</hi> 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Cynthia, one of three charming lively sisters of an impoverished Connaught
+family, desires to make money for the sake of her delicate mother.
+Cynthia and her star-struck sister Befind go to London, the former to
+open a bonnet shop, which becomes a great success, and the other to
+pursue the study of astronomy. How both girls find new interests in
+life, more important even than bonnet shop or star-gazing, is described
+with mingled humour and pathos.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Just of the kind to please and fascinate a host of girl readers.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Liverpool
+Mercury</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The Girls of Banshee Castle.</hi> With 6 Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>John H. Bacon</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Three girls, with an old governess, migrate from Kensington to the
+West of Ireland. Belonging as they do to <q>the ould family</q>, the girls
+are made heartily welcome in the cabins of the peasantry, where they
+learn many weird and curious tales from the folk-lore of the district. An
+interesting plot runs through the narrative, but the charm of the story lies
+in its happy mingling of Irish humour and pathos.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Is told with grace, and brightened by a knowledge of Irish folk-lore, making it
+a perfect present for a girl in her teens.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Truth</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Giannetta:</hi> A Girl’s Story of Herself. With 6 full-page
+Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Lockhart Bogle</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The story of a changeling who is suddenly transferred to the position of
+a rich English heiress. She develops into a good and accomplished woman,
+and has gained too much love and devotion to be a sufferer by the surrender
+of her estates.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ANNIE E. ARMSTRONG
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Three Bright Girls.</hi> With 6 full-page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. Parkinson</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+By a sudden turn of fortune’s wheel the three heroines are brought down
+from a household of lavish comfort to meet the incessant cares and worries
+of those who have to eke out a very limited income. The charm of the
+story lies in the cheery helpfulness of spirit developed in the girls by their
+changed circumstances.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Ever bright and cheerful, they influence other lives, and at last they come out
+of their trials with honour to themselves and benefits to all about
+them.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Teachers’ Aid</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-21'/><anchor id='Pga21'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ELIZA F. POLLARD
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">For the Red Rose.</hi> With 4 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>James
+Durden</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A gipsy finds a little girl in the forest of Wimbourne, after the sacking
+of the castle by the Yorkists. He carries her to the camp and she is
+adopted by the tribe. The story tells how, when some years later Margaret
+of Anjou and her son are wrecked on the coast of England, the gipsy
+girl follows the fortunes of the exiled queen, and by what curious chain of
+events her own origin is discovered.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>This is a good story, and of special interest to lovers of historical
+romance.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Court Circular</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The Doctor’s Niece.</hi> With 6 Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Sydney Cowell</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The scene of this charming story is laid in Brittany at the end of the
+eighteenth century. The heroine is educated considerably above her
+station. When she is about sixteen she becomes companion to a little
+girl at a neighbouring château. Her charge mysteriously disappears during
+a peasant rebellion, and she goes out into the woods to find her. The
+result of the adventure is that Rosette discovers her mother, who proves
+to be the rightful owner of the château, and the tale ends happily.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Full of mystery, adventure, and a winning simplicity.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Bookman</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—The King’s Signet:</hi> The Story of a Huguenot
+Family. With 6 Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>G. Demain Hammond, R.I.</hi> 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This story relates the adventures of a noble Huguenot family, driven
+out of their château by the dragoons after the Revocation of the Edict of
+Nantes. A friend of the family, Claudine Malot, who is also a Huguenot,
+but a protégée of Madame de Maintenon, possesses a talisman, by means
+of which she saves many lives; but this brings trouble upon her, and she
+has to leave France. The adventures lead to the battle of the Boyne,
+and to the happy reunion of the scattered family in Ireland.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A stirring tale of the persecution of the Huguenots clearly and touchingly
+told.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+BESSIE MARCHANT
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Three Girls on a Ranch:</hi> A Story of New
+Mexico. Illustrated. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The Lovell family emigrate from England to New Mexico. Mr. Lovell
+is delicate and unfit for farming, but the three eldest girls take upon themselves
+the burden of working the ranch. They have adventures of a
+perilous kind, and the story of their mishaps and how they overcame them
+is throughout both exciting and stimulating.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A story with a fresh, bright theme, well handled.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Nottingham Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-22'/><anchor id='Pga22'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+E. EVERETT-GREEN
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Little Lady Clare.</hi> Illustrated. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The little Lady Clare inherits the responsibilities of an ancestry and a
+family feud, but the estates and title of her father fall to the hated branch
+of the family. The child, however, works out for herself the problem of
+the divided house, which is at last united again in a romantic manner.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Reminds us in its quaintness and tender pathos of Mrs. Ewing’s delightful tales.
+The characters are very real and lifelike. Is quite one of the best stories Miss Green
+has yet given us.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Literary World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+SARAH TYTLER
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">A Loyal Little Maid.</hi> With 4 page Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Paul Hardy</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This pretty story is founded on a romantic episode of Mar’s rebellion.
+A little girl has information which concerns the safety of her father in hiding,
+and this she firmly refuses to divulge to a king’s officer. She is lodged
+in the Tolbooth, where she finds a boy champion, whom in future years she
+rescues in Paris from the <hi rend='italic'>lettre de cachet</hi> which would bury him in the Bastille.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Has evidently been a pleasure to write, and makes very enjoyable
+reading.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Literature</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Girl Neighbours.</hi> With 6 Illustrations. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A story for girls, told in that quaint, delightful fashion which has made
+Miss Tytler’s books so popular and attractive. The introduction of the
+two young ladies from London, who represent the modern institutions of
+professional nursing and schools of cookery, is very happily effected.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>One of the most effective and quietly humorous of Miss Sarah Tytler’s stories.
+Very healthy, very agreeable, and very well written.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>The Spectator</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ALICE CORKRAN
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Margery Merton’s Girlhood.</hi> With 6 full-page
+Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Gordon Browne</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The experiences of an orphan girl who in infancy is left by her father—an
+officer in India—to the care of an elderly aunt residing near Paris. The
+accounts of the various persons who have an after influence on the story are
+singularly vivid.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q><hi rend='italic'>Margery Merton’s Girlhood</hi> is a piece of true literature, as dainty as it is delicate,
+and as sweet as it is simple.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Woman’s World</hi>.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then><p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <hi rend='italic'>From THE FOUR MISS WHITTINGTONS</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Geraldine Mockler</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See page 23)]</p>
+<p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <hi rend='italic'>From CYNTHIA’S BONNET SHOP</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Rosa Mulholland</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See page 20)]</p>
+</then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill13"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill13.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend='italic'>From THE FOUR MISS WHITTINGTONS</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Geraldine Mockler</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See <ref target="Pga23">page 23</ref>)</head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: From THE FOUR MISS WHITTINGTONS</figDesc></figure></p>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill14"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill14.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend='italic'>From CYNTHIA’S BONNET SHOP</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Rosa Mulholland</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See <ref target="Pga20">page 20</ref>)</head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: From CYNTHIA’S BONNET SHOP</figDesc></figure></p>
+</else></pgIf>
+<pb n='A-23'/><anchor id='Pga23'/>
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+GERALDINE MOCKLER
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Four Miss Whittingtons:</hi> A Story for
+Girls. With
+8 full-page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Charles M. Sheldon</hi>. 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This story tells how four sisters, left alone in the world, went to London
+to seek their fortunes. They had between them £400, and this they resolved
+to spend on training themselves for the different careers for which
+they were severally most fitted. On their limited means this was hard
+work, but their courageous experiment was on the whole very successful.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A story of endeavour, industry, and independence of spirit.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ALICE STRONACH
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">A Newnham Friendship.</hi> With 6 full-page Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Harold
+Copping</hi>. 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A sympathetic description of life at Newnham College. After the tripos
+excitements, some of the students leave their dream-world of study and
+talk of <q>cocoas</q> and debates and athletics to begin their work in the real
+world. Men students play their part in the story, and in the closing
+chapters it is suggested that marriage has its place in a girl graduate’s life.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Foremost among all the gift-books suitable for school-girls this season stands Miss
+Alice Stronach’s A Newnham Friendship.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Daily Graphic</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+BESSIE MARCHANT
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">A Heroine of the Sea.</hi> Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>A. M‘Lellan</hi>.
+3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Maudie’s home was on the wild westerly shore of Vancouver Island, and
+she earned her living by fishing in the Inlet, heartily despising all merely
+feminine occupations, and not even knowing that she was beautiful. Then
+changes come, and Maudie awakes to the charm of a domestic life. Clouds
+gather about the home, and many troubles intervene before the mystery
+is at last happily cleared away.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A genuine tale of adventure for girls, and girls will thoroughly enjoy it.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Academy</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Three Girls on a Ranch:</hi> A Story of New
+Mexico. With 4
+page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. E. Webster</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+The Lovell family emigrate from England to New Mexico, where they
+settle on a ranch. Mr. Lovell is delicate and unfit for farming, but the
+three eldest girls take upon themselves the burden of working the ranch.
+They have adventures of a perilous kind, and the story of their mishaps
+and how they overcame them is throughout both exciting and stimulating.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A story with a fresh, bright theme, well handled.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Nottingham Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A rousing book for young people.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Queen</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-24'/><anchor id='Pga24'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+MRS. HENRY CLARKE
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Fairclough Family.</hi> With 6 Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>G. D. Hammond, R.I.</hi>
+Cloth, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+It was matter for amazement when Ronald Hammersley fell in love
+with Kathy Fairclough, who was considered a blue-stocking, instead of
+with her younger sister Nell, whom Mrs. Hammersley had chosen for
+him. Why Mrs. Hammersley desired her wealthy stepson to marry one
+of Dr. Fairclough’s penniless daughters was a secret. How the secret
+became known, and nearly wrecked the happiness of Kathy and Ronald,
+is told in the story. But all ends well, and to the sound of marriage bells.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>One of those stories which all girls enjoy.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+J. M. CALLWELL
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">A Little Irish Girl.</hi> Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>H. Copping</hi>.
+2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+An orphaned family inherit a small property on the coast of Clare. The
+two youngest members of the party have some thrilling adventures in their
+western home. They encounter seals, smugglers, and a ghost, and lastly,
+by most startling means, they succeed in restoring their eldest brother to
+his rightful place as heir to the ancestral estates.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Sure to prove of thrilling interest to both boys and girls.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Literary World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+E. EVERETT-GREEN
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Miriam’s Ambition.</hi> With Illustrations. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Miriam’s ambition is to make someone happy, and her endeavour carries
+with it a train of incident, solving a mystery which had thrown a shadow
+over several lives. A charming foil to her grave elder sister is to be found
+in Miss Babs, a small coquette of five, whose humorous child-talk is so
+attractive.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Miss Everett-Green’s children are real British boys and girls, not small men
+and women. Babs is a charming little one.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Liverpool Mercury</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ELLINOR DAVENPORT ADAMS
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Those Twins!</hi> With a Frontispiece and 28 Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>S. B. Pearce</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Two little rogues are the twins, Horatio and Tommy; but loyal-hearted
+and generous to boot, and determined to resist the stern decree of their
+aunt that they shall forsake the company of their scapegrace grown-up
+cousin Algy. So they deliberately set to work to <q>reform</q> the scapegrace;
+and succeed so well that he wins back the love of his aunt.
+</p>
+
+</div><div rend="page-break-before: always">
+<pb n='A-25'/><anchor id='Pga25'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-large; center">
+Blackie &amp; Son’s
+<lb/>Illustrated Books for Children
+</p>
+
+<milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large">
+CHARLES ROBINSON—WALTER JERROLD
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Big Book of Nursery Rhymes.</hi>
+Selected and edited by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Walter Jerrold</hi>. With nearly 400 Illustrations
+in Colour or Black-and-White by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Charles Robinson</hi>.
+Large 4to, cloth elegant, gilt edges, 7<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> net.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This beautiful volume, in which Mr. Charles Robinson has interpreted
+with delightful humour and rare artistic skill the old familiar rhymes of the
+nursery, will be an unfailing source of pleasure to children of all ages.
+The pictures are bold, clear, and direct, as befits a book intended in the
+first place for little folk, but they exhibit at the same time a power of
+draughtsmanship that will give the volume a permanent artistic value.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>This is a really magnificent gift-book for quite little
+children.</q>—<hi>Saturday Review</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+JOHN HASSALL—CLIFTON BINGHAM
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Six and Twenty Boys and Girls.</hi> Pictures by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>John Hassall</hi>;
+Verses by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Clifton Bingham</hi>. 25 pages in full colour,
+and 24 pages of letterpress. Picture boards, 9 inches by 11¼
+inches, cloth back, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>; also cloth elegant, 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Most of us know some at least of the little girls and boys portrayed by
+Mr. Hassall in this amusing picture-book. As depicted with Mr. Hassall’s
+inimitable skill, and described in humorous verse by Mr. Bingham, they
+may challenge comparison with the classic Struwwelpeter. Each picture
+is not only attractive and amusing in itself, but furnishes a hint of virtues
+to be imitated or faults to be avoided.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A most original picture-book.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+MRS. PERCY DEARMER
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Roundabout Rhymes.</hi> With 20 full-page Illustrations
+in colour by Mrs.
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Percy Dearmer</hi>. Imperial 8vo, cloth extra, 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A charming volume of verses and colour pictures for little folk-rhymes
+and pictures about most of the everyday events of nursery life.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The best verses written for children since Stevenson’s <hi rend='italic'>Child’s Garden</hi>.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>The Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-26'/><anchor id='Pga26'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+STEWART ORR—JOHN BRYMER
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Gammon and Spinach.</hi> Pictures by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Stewart
+Orr</hi>. Verses by <hi rend='smallcaps'>John
+Brymer</hi>. Cover design and 24 pages in Full Colour. Picture
+boards, cloth back, 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+In <hi rend='italic'>Gammon and Spinach</hi> Mr. Stewart Orr has produced a picture-book
+unique of its kind. Nothing could be more droll than the situations in
+which he represents the frog, the pig, the mouse, the elephant, and the
+other well-known characters who appear in his pages. Little folk will
+find in these pictures a source of endless delight, and the artistic skill
+which they display will have a special appeal to children of an older
+growth.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Merry and handsome enough to make thousands of friends among little folk,
+what with its original verses and its amusing pictures.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Literary World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The book should attain a wide popularity in the nursery.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Morning Post</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">—Two Merry Mariners.</hi> Pictures by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Stewart
+Orr</hi>. Verses by <hi rend='smallcaps'>John
+Brymer</hi>. Cover design and 24 pages in full colour. Picture
+boards, cloth back, 6<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This delightful volume tells in picture and verse how Dick and his friend the
+Hare sailed to the Downy Isle, the adventures they met with in that strange
+country, their encounter with the Dragon, and their remarkable voyage home.
+Mr. Orr exhibits in these designs a rare combination of humorous invention
+with brilliant draughtsmanship and command of colour, and the author supports
+him with a series of racy verses.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The illustrations are masterpieces of drollery.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Manchester Courier</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The verses are very funny and original.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+FRED SMITH
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Animal Book.</hi> A Natural History for Little
+Folk with a Coloured Frontispiece
+and 34 full-page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>F. Specht</hi>. Crown quarto,
+11¼ inches by 9½ inches, picture boards, cloth back, 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+This book consists of a series of bright and instructive sketches of the
+better-known wild beasts, describing their appearance, character and habits,
+and the position they hold in the animal kingdom. The text is printed in
+a large, clear type, and is admirably illustrated with powerful, realistic
+pictures of the various creatures in their native state by that eminent animal
+artist F. Specht.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A work of the greatest value to the young.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Eastern Morning News</hi>.
+</p>
+<pgIf output='txt'><then>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <hi rend='italic'>From THE BIG BOOK OF NURSERY RHYMES</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Charles Robinson—Walter Jerrold</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See page 25)]</p>
+ <p rend="margin-left: 2; margin-right: 2">[Illustration: <hi rend='italic'>From MY BOOK OF TRUE STORIES</hi>
+<lb/>
+(See page 31)
+<lb/>
+SIR PHILIP SIDNEY AND THE DYING SOLDIER
+<lb/>
+(<hi rend='italic'>Reduced from a Colour Illustration</hi>)]</p>
+</then><else>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill15"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill15.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend='italic'>From THE BIG BOOK OF NURSERY RHYMES</hi>
+<lb/>
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>By Charles Robinson—Walter Jerrold</hi>&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;&nbsp;(See <ref target="Pga25">page 25</ref>)</head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: From THE BIG BOOK OF NURSERY RHYMES</figDesc></figure></p>
+ <p>
+ <anchor id="ill16"/>
+ <figure url="images/ill16.png" rend="width: 100%"><head><hi rend='italic'>From MY BOOK OF TRUE STORIES</hi>
+<lb/>
+(See <ref target="Pga31">page 31</ref>)
+<lb/>
+<hi rend="font-size: small">SIR PHILIP SIDNEY AND THE DYING SOLDIER</hi>
+<lb/>
+(<hi rend='italic'>Reduced from a Colour Illustration</hi>)</head>
+ <figDesc>Illustration: From MY BOOK OF TRUE STORIES</figDesc></figure></p>
+</else></pgIf>
+<pb n='A-27'/><anchor id='Pga27'/>
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+H. B. NEILSON—CLIFTON BINGHAM
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Animals’ Academy.</hi> With 24 full-page
+Colour Illustrations
+and many Black-and-White Vignettes. Picture-boards, cloth back,
+3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>; cloth, 5<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+In <hi rend='italic'>The Animals’ Academy</hi> Mr. Neilson and Mr. Bingham have again
+combined their forces, and have turned out a picture-book which for fun
+and variety will be difficult to equal. In bright, musical, <q>catchy</q> verse
+Mr. Bingham tells of the many amusing events that take place at a school
+in which the elephant is master and other well-known animals are the
+scholars, and Mr. Neilson illustrates the story as only he can illustrate
+animal frolics.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A humorous, clever, and delightful book. The pictures of the dressed-up animals
+will captivate little children.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>British Weekly</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+H. B. NEILSON—JOHN BRYMER
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Games and Gambols.</hi> Illustrated by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Harry B.
+Neilson</hi>; with Verses by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>John Brymer</hi>. 26 pages in colour, and 24 pages of letterpress.
+Picture boards, 9 inches by 11¼ inches, cloth back, 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>; also
+cloth elegant, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Mr. Neilson surpasses himself in these irresistible colour pictures representing
+the animal world at play. The great test match between the Lions
+and the Kangaroos, Mrs. Mouse’s Ping-Pong Party, Mr. Bruin playing
+Golf, Towser’s Bicycle Tour, and the Kittens <hi rend='italic'>v.</hi> Bunnies Football Match,
+are a few among the many droll subjects illustrated in this amusing and
+original series.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Mr. Neilson has a positive genius for making animals comic.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Academy</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Children will revel in his work.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Daily Graphic</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+S. R. PRAEGER
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">How They Went to School.</hi> With 24 full-page
+pictures in
+full colour. Picture-boards, cloth back, 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>; cloth extra, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A pretty picture-book for the little ones, full of quiet humour and shrewd
+observation of child life. The book tells in picture and story how Hal
+and Kitty, two tiny scholars, set out on their way to school, and the
+various adventures that happen to them on the road.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Quite the most charming book we have yet seen.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Daily News</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-28'/><anchor id='Pga28'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+OUR DARLING’S FIRST BOOK
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Bright Pictures and Easy Lessons for
+Little Folk.</hi> Quarto, 10⅛ inches by 7¾ inches, picture
+boards, 1<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>; cloth, gilt edges, 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+An interesting and instructive picture lesson-book for very little folk.
+Beginning with an illustrated alphabet of large letters, the little reader goes
+forward by easy stages to word-making, reading, counting, writing, and
+finally to the most popular nursery rhymes and tales.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>The very perfection of a child’s alphabet and spelling-book.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>St. James’s Budget</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+ELLINOR DAVENPORT ADAMS
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Those Twins!</hi> With a Frontispiece and 28 Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>S. B. Pearse</hi>. Cloth elegant, 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Two little rogues are the twins, Horatio and Tommy; but loyal-hearted
+and generous to boot, and determined to resist the stern decree of their
+aunt that they shall forsake the company of their scapegrace grown-up
+cousin Algy. So they deliberately set to work to <q>reform</q> the scapegrace;
+and succeed so well that he wins back the love of his aunt, and
+delights the twins by earning a V.C. in South Africa.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A merry story for young and old.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+A. B. ROMNEY
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Little Village Folk.</hi> With 37 Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Robert
+Hope</hi>. 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A series of delightful stories of Irish village children. Miss Romney
+opens up a new field in these beautiful little tales, which have the twofold
+charm of humour and poetic feeling.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A story-book that will be welcomed wherever it makes its way.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Literary World</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; margin-top: 2">
+MY NEW STORY-BOOK
+</p>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Stories, Verses, and Pictures for the
+Little Ones.</hi> 290 pages, of which 48 are in colour.
+Cloth; 2<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A treasury of entertainment for the nursery. The contents are extremely
+varied both as regards the text and the illustrations, and carefully designed
+to meet the tastes of the little ones. The many bright colour pictures will
+be in themselves a never-failing source of delight.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>A fascinating little volume, well filled with stories and quaint and pretty illustrations.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>Guardian</hi>.
+</p>
+
+</div><div rend="page-break-before: always">
+<pb n='A-29'/><anchor id='Pga29'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-large; center">
+STORIES BY GEORGE MAC DONALD
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+(NEW AND UNIFORM EDITION)
+</p>
+
+<milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p>
+<hi rend="font-size: large">A Rough Shaking.</hi> With 12 page Illustrations by <hi rend='smallcaps'>W.
+Parkinson</hi>. Crown 8vo, cloth
+elegant, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+Clare, the hero of the story, is a boy whose mother is killed at his side by
+the fall of a church during an earthquake. The kindly clergyman and his
+wife, who adopt him, die while he is still very young, and he is thrown upon
+the world a second time. The narrative of his wanderings is full of interest
+and novelty, the boy’s unswerving honesty and his passion for children and
+animals leading him into all sorts of adventures. He works on a farm, supports
+a baby in an old deserted house, finds employment in a menagerie,
+becomes a bank clerk, is kidnapped, and ultimately discovers his father on
+board the ship to which he has been conveyed.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">At the Back of the North Wind.</hi> With 75
+Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Arthur Hughes</hi>, and a Frontispiece by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Laurence Housman</hi>.
+Crown 8vo, cloth elegant, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>In <hi rend='italic'>At the Back of the North Wind</hi> we stand with one foot in fairyland and one on
+common earth. The story is thoroughly original, full of fancy and pathos.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>The Times</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">Ranald Bannerman’s Boyhood.</hi> With 36 Illustrations
+by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Arthur Hughes</hi>. Crown 8vo, cloth elegant, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-small; margin-left: 2">
+<q>Dr. Mac Donald has a real understanding of boy nature, and he has in consequence
+written a capital story, judged from their stand-point, with a true ring all through which
+ensures its success.</q>—<hi rend='italic'>The Spectator</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Princess and the Goblin.</hi> With 30 Illustrations
+by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Arthur
+Hughes</hi>, and a Frontispiece by <hi rend='smallcaps'>Laurence Housman</hi>. Crown 8vo,
+cloth elegant, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+In the sphere of fantasy George Mac Donald has very few equals, and his
+rare touch of many aspects of life invariably gives to his stories a deeper meaning
+of the highest value. His <hi rend='italic'>Princess and Goblin</hi> exemplifies both gifts. A
+fine thread of allegory runs through the narrative of the adventures of the
+young miner, who, amongst other marvellous experiences, finds his way into
+the caverns of the gnomes, and achieves a final victory over them.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="margin-top: 2">
+<hi rend="font-size: large">The Princess and Curdie.</hi> With Frontispiece and
+30 Illustrations by
+<hi rend='smallcaps'>Helen Stratton</hi>. Crown 8vo, cloth elegant, 3<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="font-size: small">
+A sequel to <hi rend='italic'>The Princess and the Goblin</hi>, tracing the history of the young
+miner and the princess after the return of the latter to her father’s court, where
+more terrible foes have to be encountered than the grotesque earth-dwellers.
+</p>
+
+</div><div rend="page-break-before: always">
+<pb n='A-30'/><anchor id='Pga30'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; center">
+NEW <q>GRADUATED</q> SERIES
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='italic'>With coloured frontispiece and black-and-white illustrations</hi>
+</p>
+
+<milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p>
+No child of six or seven should have any difficulty in reading and
+understanding <hi rend='italic'>unaided</hi> the pretty stories in the 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> series. In the
+9<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> series the language used is slightly more advanced, but is well within
+the capacity of children of seven and upwards, while the 1<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> series is designed
+for little folk of somewhat greater attainments. If the stories are
+read <hi rend='italic'>to</hi> and not <hi rend='italic'>by</hi> children, it will be found that the 6<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> 9<hi rend='italic'>d.</hi> and 1<hi rend='italic'>s.</hi> series
+are equally suitable for little folk of all ages.
+</p>
+
+<p rend='bold'>“GRADUATED” STORIES AT A SHILLING</p>
+
+<list>
+
+<item>
+Holidays at Sunnycroft. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Annie S. Swan</hi>. <hi rend='italic'>New Edition.</hi>
+</item>
+
+<item>
+At Lathom’s Siege. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Sarah Tytler</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Fleckie. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Bessie Marchant</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Elsie Wins. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Ellinor Davenport Adams</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Bears and Dacoits. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>G. A. Henty</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Crusoes of the Frozen North. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Dr. Gordon Stables</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+A Saxon Maid. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Eliza F. Pollard</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Uncle Bob. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Meredith Fletcher</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Jack of Both Sides. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Florence Coombe</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Do Your Duty! By <hi rend='smallcaps'>G. A. Henty</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Terry. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Rosa Mulholland</hi> (Lady Gilbert).
+</item>
+</list>
+
+<p rend="bold">“GRADUATED” STORIES AT NINEPENCE</p>
+
+<list>
+
+<item>
+Gipsy Dick. By Mrs. <hi rend='smallcaps'>Henry Clarke</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Two to One. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Florence Coombe</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Cherrythorpe Fair. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Mabel Mackness</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Little Greycoat. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Ellinor Davenport Adams</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Tommy’s Trek. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Bessie Marchant</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+That Boy Jim. By Mrs. <hi rend='smallcaps'>Henry Clarke</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+The Adventures of Carlo. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Katharine Tynan</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+The Shoeblack’s Cat. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>W. L. Rooper</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Three Troublesome Monkeys. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>A. B. Romney</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+The Little Red Purse. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Jennie Chappell</hi>.
+</item>
+
+</list>
+
+<p rend="bold">“GRADUATED” STORIES AT SIXPENCE</p>
+<list>
+<item>
+Hi-Tum, Ti-Tum, and Scrub. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Jennie Chappell</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Edie’s Adventures. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Geraldine Mockler</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Two Little Crusoes. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>A. B. Romney</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+The Lost Doll. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Jennie Chappell</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Bunny and Furry. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Geraldine Mockler</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Bravest of All. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Mabel Mackness</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Winnie’s White Frock. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Jennie Chappell</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Lost Toby. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>M. S. Haycraft</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+A Boy Cousin. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Geraldine Mockler</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Travels of Fuzz and Buzz. By <hi rend='smallcaps'>Geraldine Mockler</hi>.
+</item>
+
+<item>
+Teddy’s Adventures. By Mrs. <hi rend='smallcaps'>Henry Clarke</hi>.
+</item>
+</list>
+</div><div rend="page-break-before: always">
+<pb n='A-31'/><anchor id='Pga31'/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: x-large; center">
+NEW CHILDREN’S PICTURE-BOOKS
+</p>
+
+<milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p rend="font-size: large; center">
+Grimm’s Fairy Tales
+</p>
+
+<p>
+In this beautiful series of picture-books the best of these fairy tales
+are given. The text is printed on good paper in a large and clear
+type, and the many illustrations in colour and in black-and-white are
+by Miss <hi rend='smallcaps'>Helen Stratton</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+HALF-CROWN SERIES
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='italic'>Picture-boards, 13½ inches by 10 inches</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='bold'>Grimm’s Fairy Tales</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This handsome volume contains a large selection of the most popular
+stories by the brothers Grimm. The cover and no fewer than thirty
+pages are in full colour. Also in cloth, 3s. 6d.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+ONE SHILLING SERIES
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='italic'>Picture-boards, 13½ inches by 10 inches</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend="bold">Hansel and Grettel</hi> | <hi rend="bold">Cherryblossom</hi><lb/>
+<hi rend="bold">Roland and Maybird</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Besides the title story each volume contains several of the most
+popular of <hi rend='italic'>Grimm’s Fairy Tales</hi>.
+</p>
+
+<milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p rend="center; font-size: large">
+Historical Picture-Books
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This novel series comprises those stories in English History that
+will interest and amuse little children. The tales are told in such a
+manner as to attract children, dates and anything that might even in
+the slightest way suggest the lesson-book being carefully avoided.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+ONE SHILLING SERIES
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='italic'>Picture-boards. Quarto, 10⅛ inches by 7¾ inches</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend="bold">My Book of True Stories</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This book contains over thirty full-page drawings and a large
+number of smaller illustrations by Mr. T. H. Robinson. The cover
+and about twenty pages are in colour. Also in cloth, gilt edges, 2<hi rend="italic">s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+SIXPENNY SERIES
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='italic'>Picture-boards. Quarto, 10⅛ inches by 7¾ inches</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend="bold">True Stories of Olden Days</hi><lb/>
+ <hi rend="bold">True Stories of Great Deeds</hi><lb/>
+ <hi rend="bold">My Book of Noble Deeds</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each book contains seven or eight pages in colour and many black-and-white
+illustrations. The text is printed in bold type.
+</p>
+
+<pb n='A-32'/><anchor id='Pga32'/>
+
+<milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p rend="center; font-size: large">
+Scripture Picture-Books
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This excellent series includes several books of New Testament
+stories simply told. The illustrations are by eminent artists, and the
+text, which, besides incidents in the life of Christ, includes most of
+the Parables, has been specially written by Mrs. L. Haskell, one of
+the most popular authors of stories for little folk.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+ONE SHILLING SERIES
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='italic'>Picture boards. Quarto, 10⅛ inches by 7¾ inches.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend="bold">Stories from the Life of Christ</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This interesting volume contains over thirty full-page drawings, and
+a large number of smaller illustrations. The cover and no fewer than
+twenty pages are in colour. Also in cloth, gilt edges, 2<hi rend="italic">s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+SIXPENNY SERIES
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='italic'>Picture boards. Quarto, 10⅛ inches by 7¾ inches</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend="bold">Glad Tidings</hi> | <hi rend="bold">Gentle Jesus</hi><lb/>
+ <hi rend="bold">The Good Shepherd</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each book contains an average of six full-page illustrations, many
+vignettes, and eight pages in colour. The text is printed in bold type.
+</p>
+
+<milestone unit="tb" rend="rule: 20%"/>
+
+<p rend="center; font-size: large">
+Animal Picture-Books
+</p>
+
+<p>
+This is certainly the best series of Animal Picture-books published
+at the price. The pictures, which are all drawn by eminent artists,
+will form an endless source of pleasure to little folks. The text is
+written in very simple language.
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+ONE SHILLING SERIES
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='italic'>Picture-boards. Quarto, 10⅛ inches by 7¾ inches</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend="bold">A Picture-Book of Animals</hi> | <hi rend="bold">Faithful Friends</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+These bright and attractive volumes contain over thirty full-page
+drawings, and a number of smaller illustrations. The cover and
+about twenty pages are in colour. Also in cloth, gilt edges, 2<hi rend="italic">s.</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+SIXPENNY SERIES
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend='italic'>Picture-boards. Quarto, 10⅛ inches by 7¾ inches</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p rend="center">
+<hi rend="bold">Talks about Animals</hi> | <hi rend="bold">Bow-wow Picture-Book</hi><lb/>
+ <hi rend="bold">Animals of All Lands</hi> | <hi rend="bold">Cats and Kits</hi><lb/>
+ <hi rend="bold">My Book of Animals</hi> | <hi rend="bold">Friends at the Farm</hi>
+</p>
+
+<p>
+Each contains seven or eight pages in colour and many black-and-white
+illustrations. The covers, also in colour, are very attractive.
+</p>
+</div>
+ <div rend="page-break-before:right; x-class: boxed">
+ <index index="pdf"/><index index="toc"/>
+ <head>Transcriber’s Note</head>
+ <p>The following typographical errors were corrected:</p>
+ <list><item><ref target="corr054">page 54</ref>, <q>been</q> changed to <q>been on</q></item>
+ <item><ref target="corr054a">page 54</ref>, <q>mast.</q> changed to <q>mast?</q></item>
+ <item><ref target="corr060">page 60</ref>, <q>clergyman</q> changed to <q>clergyman.</q></item>
+ <item><ref target="corr096">page 96</ref>, <q>operation.</q> changed to <q>operation?</q></item>
+ <item><ref target="corr097">page 97</ref>, <q>may</q> changed to <q>many</q></item>
+ <item><ref target="corr251">page 251</ref>, <q>coxwain</q> changed to <q>coxswain</q></item>
+ <item><ref target="corr252">page 252</ref>, <q>as well</q> changed to <q>a swell</q></item>
+ <item><ref target="corr319">page 319</ref>, <q>kine</q> changed to <q>kind</q></item>
+ <item><ref target="corr341">page 341</ref>, <q>Colpoy’s</q> changed to <q>Colpoys’</q></item>
+ <item><ref target="corra12">advertisements, page 12</ref>, <q>success</q> changed to <q>success.</q></item>
+ </list>
+ <p>In addition, many missing or wrong quote marks have been standardized.<!-- (for details see the
+ TEI source of the electronic edition)--></p>
+ <p>Inconsistent use of hyphens and capitalization of military ranks has been retained as in the original.</p>
+ <p><ref target="ill02">One illustration</ref>, which was between pages 32 and 33 in the original edition, has been moved to page 65,
+ as indicated in the list of illustrations.</p>
+ </div>
+ <div rend="page-break-before: right">
+ <divGen type="pgfooter" />
+ </div>
+ </back>
+ </text>
+</TEI.2>
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