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+This eBook, including all associated images, markup, improvements,
+metadata, and any other content or labor, has been confirmed to be
+in the PUBLIC DOMAIN IN THE UNITED STATES.
+
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+Project Gutenberg (https://www.gutenberg.org) public repository for
+eBook #63405 (https://www.gutenberg.org/ebooks/63405)
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-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Personal Narrative of Events, From 1799 to
-1815, by William Stanhope Lovell
-
-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 included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Personal Narrative of Events, From 1799 to 1815
-
-Author: William Stanhope Lovell
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2020 [EBook #63405]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PERSONAL NARRATIVE OF ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Paul Clark and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Note:
-
- Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
- possible, including inconsistent hyphenation and discrepancies in
- numbers of guns. Some errors in the table of contents and chapter
- summaries have been corrected. Some other changes have been made.
- They are listed at the end of the text.
-
- Italic text has been marked with _underscores_.
-
-
-
-
- PERSONAL NARRATIVE
- OF EVENTS,
-
- FROM 1799 TO 1815,
-
- _WITH ANECDOTES_.
-
-
- BY THE LATE
-
- VICE-ADM^{L.} W^{M.} STANHOPE LOVELL, R.N., K.H.
-
- SECOND EDITION.
-
-
- London:
- WM. ALLEN & CO., 13, WATERLOO PLACE, W.
-
- 1879.
-
-
-
-
- WITHERBY AND CO., PRINTERS,
- 74, CORNHILL; NEWMAN’S COURT, CORNHILL; AND 325A, HIGH HOLBORN, W.C.
-
-
-
-
-_To_ Rear-Admiral Sir ROBERT BARRIE, C.B., K.C.H.
-
-
-MY DEAR SIR ROBERT,
-
-In dedicating the following pages to you, under whose command I had the
-honour of serving in the Chesapeake, &c., I do it with the greatest
-respect, esteem, and admiration of your conduct.
-
-I must ever consider you as one of those officers upon whom the country
-may safely rely in the hour of peril, and in whose hands it may entrust
-its honour in the day of battle. Like the celebrated Bayard of old,
-your career has obtained for you a character, “_sans peur et sans
-reproche_.”
-
- Your faithful friend,
-
- THE AUTHOR.
-
-
-
-
-_CONTENTS._
-
-
- CHAPTER I. PAGE
-
- First Trip to Sea--Shipmates--Admiral Sir John Borlase Warren,
- Bart, K.B. 1
-
-
- CHAPTER II.
-
- Channel Cruising--Boat Expeditions--Anecdote of a Gallant
- Mid--Ditto of Two Dandy Guardsmen--Expedition to Ferrol--Sir
- James Pulteney, Sir Edward Pellew and the Donkey--The Unlucky
- Cruise 7
-
-
- CHAPTER III.
-
- Cruise off Cadiz--Proceed up the Mediterranean to Egypt after a
- French Squadron under Rear-Admiral Ganteaume, 1801 16
-
-
- CHAPTER IV.
-
- From the Peace of Amiens (1802) until the Commencement of the
- Second Gallic War--Gambling 26
-
-
- CHAPTER V.
-
- From the Commencement of Second Gallic War until the Battle of
- Trafalgar, 1805; with Anecdotes 30
-
-
- CHAPTER VI.
-
- The Battle of Trafalgar, and Extracts from the Log of His
- Majesty’s Ship _Neptune_, on the 21st, 22nd, and 23rd
- October, 1805 43
-
-
- CHAPTER VII.
-
- Joined the _Melpomene_--Sent up the Mediterranean--Tremendous
- Weather, with Thunder, Lightning, and Water-spouts--Ship
- loses her Rudder and Main-topmast--Proceed to Malta 57
-
-
- CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Siege of Gaeta by the French--Boat Affairs--My Capture--Leghorn 62
-
-
- CHAPTER IX.
-
- Malta--Dreadful Accident by the Explosion of a Magazine in the
- Town, on the Bermola side--Nearly get into a Scrape about
- Breaking Quarantine--Kind Answer of the gallant Admiral Sir
- Sidney Smith to the Complaint--Rejoin the _Melpomene_--Mutiny
- in Fribourg’s Regiment--Cruise in the Adriatic 73
-
-
- CHAPTER X.
-
- North American Station, from 1808 to
- 1811--Bermuda--Anecdote--Death of Captain Conn 87
-
-
- CHAPTER XI.
-
- Lisbon--Trip to the Army of Lord Wellington--Montemor Novo,
- O’Rodondo, Villa Vicosa, Elvas, Fort le Lippe 101
-
-
- CHAPTER XII.
-
- Lisbon, Cintra, Mafra, etc., 1811, 1812--Second Trip to the
- Army--Taking of Badajoz 113
-
-
- CHAPTER XIII.
-
- Cadiz, Minorca, Majorca, Alicant, Carthagena, Algiers, Oran,
- Altea Bay--Drive a French Privateer on Shore near Denia 124
-
-
- CHAPTER XIV.
-
- Siege of the Col de Balaguer--A Reconnoitering Party--Raising
- of the Siege of Tarragona--Lieutenant-General Sir John and
- Lady Murray--Rear-Admiral Benjamin Hallowell--Viscount
- and Viscountess Mahon--Palermo, Veniros; Upset in a
- Boat--Valencia--Holland 136
-
-
- CHAPTER XV.
-
- 1814--Sent to Bermuda--Operations in the Chesapeake--The
- River Patuxent--Expedition to Washington--Town of
- Rappahannock--River Rappahannock--Commodore Robert Barrie,
- etc. 150
-
-
- CHAPTER XVI.
-
- Operations in South Carolina--Capture of Cumberland Island
- and the Fort of Point-à-Petre--An Affair with the American
- Riflemen in the Woods--An Abattis--Anecdotes of the 2nd West
- India Regiment--A Rattlesnake--Capture of the Town of St.
- Mary’s--Destruction of the Forts and Barracks--Nassau, New
- Providence--Compliment to the Royal Marines--Return Home 173
-
-
-
-
-A PERSONAL NARRATIVE OF EVENTS.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER I.
-
- First trip to sea--Shipmates--Admiral Sir John Borlase Warren,
- Bart, K.B.
-
-
-My father[A] and uncle both served their king and country in the
-American war of independence; the former was with Lord Cornwallis’s
-army when it surrendered at York to the American forces under the
-command of General Washington (he was at that time an officer in the
-6th Regiment of Foot); and the latter in the 4th Dragoons. Both were
-magistrates for the county of Buckinghamshire, and served the office of
-high sheriff for the same.
-
-When scarcely ten years old, I joined H.M. ship _Renown_ (74) in
-Torbay, bearing the flag (blue at the mizen) of one of the most
-amiable men in the service, Sir John Borlase Warren, Bt, K.B., who had
-commanded a squadron of dashing frigates during all the early part of
-the war, and had taken and destroyed several French ships, and finished
-his glorious flying squad career by capturing most of those, which,
-under the command of Monsieur Bompart, had been sent with troops to
-assist the Irish during the rebellion of 1798, thereby saving the blood
-of thousands in Ireland, if not Ireland itself. A better or braver
-officer than the late Admiral Sir J. B. Warren never lived; he was that
-perfect model of a gentleman that every one might take as a pattern. I
-had the melancholy honour of following him to his grave, and wept over
-it tears of unfeigned sorrow.
-
-But to commence my peregrinations. I still recollect the delight that
-a letter from my father gave me when at school, informing me I was
-to leave Latin and Greek, which classical knowledge was all blown
-overboard and forgotten the first gale of wind at sea; and after
-spending a short time at Little Missenden Abbey (which then belonged
-to my father) with my mother and two sisters,[B] I proceeded to
-Portsmouth, thence to find a passage to join the before-mentioned ship
-in Torbay.
-
-I bore the parting with my kind, dear, excellent mother and sisters
-pretty well, because my father accompanied me to Portsmouth to see me
-safely launched into a new world; but when he took leave, I thought
-my heart would burst with grief. Time, however, reconciles us to
-everything, and the gaiety and thoughtlessness of youth, added to the
-cocked hat, dirk, spy-glass, etc., of a nautical fit out, assisted
-wonderfully to dry my tears, and, in a manner, reconciled me to a new
-scene of life.
-
-Captain Pickmore, who at that period commanded the _Royal William_, at
-Spithead, very kindly sent me on board the _Montague_ (74) with all my
-baggage, in the admiral’s tender, to join my ship to the westward. The
-first night on board was not the most pleasant; the noises unusual to a
-novice--sleeping in a hammock for the first time--its tarry smell--the
-wet cables for a bed carpet, and a somersault or two from my lubberly
-manner of getting into it, made me draw comparisons between sleeping on
-beds of down ashore, and my new abode, by no means very favourable to
-the latter.
-
-The second day after quitting Portsmouth brought us to Torbay, where
-the channel fleet of thirty-six sail of the line, under Lord Bridport,
-was lying at anchor. I was soon transferred to my own ship, and
-introduced to my new messmates.
-
-We lived in the gun-room on the lower deck, and in fine weather
-had daylight, which was better in many respects than the old
-midshipmen’s berths in the cockpit. Amongst the youngsters were some
-within a year or two as young as myself; nice boys, full of fun
-and mischief, who soon initiated me in the sea pranks of “sawing
-your bed-posts,”--cutting you down head and foot; “reefing your
-bed-clothes,”--making them up into hard balls which, if properly done,
-will take one unpractised in the art a good half-hour or more to
-undo. It used to be a great annoyance to come off deck after a first
-or middle watch (from eight at night to twelve, or from twelve to
-four in the morning), perhaps quite wet through, thinking, on being
-relieved, what a nice sleep you would have, to find, on going to your
-hammock, all your sheets and blankets made up into hard balls, and a
-good half-hour’s work in the dark to undo them, particularly when tired
-and sleepy. During your labour to effect this, you had the pleasure of
-hearing the mischievous fellows that had a hand in doing it, laughing
-in their hammocks, and offering their condolences by saying what a
-shame it was to play such tricks when you were absent on deck, keeping
-your watch, and recommending you to lick them all round, if you were
-able, or at all events to retaliate the first opportunity.
-
-Blowing the grampus (sluicing you with water), and many other tricks
-used to be resorted to occasionally. Taking it all in good part, from
-the persuasion that it was the customary initiation to a sea life, my
-torments were few, for when the art of tormenting ceases to irritate,
-it loses the effect intended, and it generally ends by your shipmates
-saying, “Well, you are a good-natured fellow, and shall not be annoyed
-any more.”
-
-I must do my brother mids the justice to say that a more kind-hearted
-set was not to be met with. We had few or no real quarrels the four
-years we sailed together, and, whenever spare time permitted, our
-evenings were spent in the amusements afforded by the old games of
-cribbage, loo, draughts and able wackets, which is a kind of forfeit
-played with cards, where each player is subject, for every mistake,
-to one or more blows with a knotted handkerchief on the palm of the
-hand. Many of them have paid the debt of nature, but some have risen
-to high rank and honours, most deservedly, in the service. We were
-all kept tight at work, and had at least four hours of sky-parlour
-(being sent to the main-topmast-head), when our watch was over, for
-every delinquency. I recollect one of my messmates was a lazy fellow,
-and shocking bad relief (the Hon. Henry Dawson); he always kept the
-unfortunate mid he had to relieve at least half-an-hour beyond his time
-on deck, until his patience was exhausted, forcing him to the unwelcome
-alternative of making a complaint to the lieutenant of the watch, who
-sent down to bring his relief on deck. It frequently happened that an
-old quarter-master, named Ned Cowen, was employed on this errand; he
-was a complete character, and as he had sailed round the world with the
-celebrated Captain Cook, and was a great favourite with us mids, we
-used to get him into our berth, give the old fellow a glass or two of
-grog, and make him relate his adventures.
-
-Whenever old Ned presented himself at the Honble. H. Dawson’s hammock,
-he signified the purport of his visit with this summons--“Come,
-Mr. Dawson, past one bell (the half-hour after the watch has been
-called), turn out, show a leg, or I am ordered to bring you up on the
-quarter-deck, hammock and all; take my advice, bring a good, thick
-greatcoat with you; it is a wet night, and the masthead waiting for
-you--the old story, you know.” The delinquent’s tale of “overslept
-myself, sir,” was quite worn out--it occurred too often; therefore
-nothing was left but to mount up to the masthead, and there enjoy the
-refreshing breezes, fine showers, and exhilarating air of sky-parlour,
-to awaken him from his balmy slumbers.
-
-The ship was in fine order and a perfect man-of-war, well manned and
-officered. The lieutenants were good seamen, knew and did their duty
-promptly, and managed the ship well.
-
-Of the first lieutenants, two, after being promoted, found a watery
-grave--poor Hawes, in the _Moucheron_, brig of 16 guns, which foundered
-in a heavy gale with all his crew; and the gallant Burke shared a
-similar fate in the _Seagull_, of 18 guns.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER II.
-
- Channel cruising--Boat expeditions--Anecdote of a gallant
- mid--Ditto of two dandy Guardsmen--Expedition to Ferrol--Sir James
- Pulteney, Sir Edward Pellew and the donkey--The unlucky cruise.
-
-
-Our first cruise was with the channel fleet off Brest, and to me, a
-boy of ten years old, it appeared a great feat, blocking up a superior
-French one in their own harbour, and offering them battle daily,
-without their daring to come out of port.
-
-The winter’s cruise of 1799 and spring of 1800 was very stormy; nothing
-but heavy gales from S.W. to N.W. to N.E. and E., which blew us nearly
-at one time within sight of Ireland.
-
-We had various commanders-in-chief, to each of whom the sailors had
-given a peculiar nick-name. The Honble. Admiral William Cornwallis was
-styled “Billy Blue,” from his flag (blue at the main), and hoisting,
-the moment we dropped anchor from the S.W. gales in Torbay, a blue
-Peter--a hint for every person to remain on board, ready to sail again
-the moment the wind came round sufficiently to the northward to enable
-the fleet to proceed down channel to resume the blockade of Brest; Lord
-Bridport--“Lord Bread-bags” (Jack’s pun upon his lordship’s name);
-Admiral Sir Allan Gardner--“Old Junk,” because he was a tough old
-fellow, and kept the ships so long at sea upon salt junk; and Lord St.
-Vincent--“Sour Crout,” from his stern deportment. The latter had no
-sooner joined than he detached us with the _Defence_ (74), _Fisgard_,
-and _Beaulieu_ frigates, under our orders, into the Bay of Biscay, to
-annoy the coast of France.
-
-Our first attempt was at the Penmarks, where we succeeded in cutting
-out several French _chasse-marées_, and other craft, laden with brandy,
-wine, and provisions for the fleet in Brest harbour. The boats were
-commanded by the gallant Lieutenants Burke and John Thompson, of the
-_Renown_. This service was performed with little loss. Our next attempt
-was on some armed vessels in the river Quimper, coast of Brittany, but
-the boats did not succeed in finding the vessels: they, suspecting a
-visit, had moved higher up the river, whither it was not prudent to
-follow them. The crews were, therefore, landed, and having succeeded in
-destroying a fort at the entrance of the river, they returned on board
-without loss.
-
-The third attempt was at Noirmoutier, near the mouth of the river
-Loire, in La Vendée--a tide harbour. Success at first crowned our
-exertions; the boats of the squadron, again under Lieutenants Burke,
-had already burnt three vessels, mounting from 12, 18, to 24 guns, with
-some small craft, and were thinking of returning, when the ebbing of
-the tide, which the gallant assailants, carried away by their ardour,
-had failed to perceive, left all the boats high and dry, exposed to
-the fire of the French batteries. However, Lieutenants Burke and
-Thompson, with a part of the men, dragged a large fishing boat and
-our barge through the mud, and got safe back to the ships, leaving
-the remainder of the boats, with 76 of our best men and some officers
-prisoners, besides a few killed and wounded. A poor messmate of mine, a
-midshipman, named Jago, who was afterwards killed in the Mediterranean
-on another cutting-out affair, in remembrance of this transaction,
-called out on that occasion to some of his men who seemed disposed to
-hang back, “Come, my lads, stick by me now, as you stuck by me in the
-mud at Noirmoutier.”
-
-In consequence of this untoward affair, we sailed for Portsmouth to
-refit. Previous to sailing, the ship was paid. I was stationed on the
-starboard gangway to keep off the boats, but leaning too far over
-the side, fell overboard, and got a good ducking, but fortunately
-escaped breaking my head against a boat that was alongside by falling
-between her and the ship. Luckily the people in the boat picked me up
-immediately, for at that time I could not swim.
-
-After the ship had refitted, and obtained a draft of seamen and
-marines, and new boats in lieu of those we had lost on the coast of
-France, we joined the fleet again off Brest, under the command of Earl
-St. Vincent.
-
-In August our admiral was detached with a strong squadron to take the
-naval command of the expedition, under General Sir James Pulteney,
-against Ferrol.
-
-I recollect, on this expedition, two dandy young guardsmen came on
-board for a passage, and, being too late for dinner in the ward-room, a
-nice beefsteak and bottle of port wine was given them at a side table.
-After contemplating it a little while, with a supercilious turn of the
-mouth and nose, one of them made the sage remark, that “he thought
-they might be able to rough it pretty well with such fare every day in
-a campaign; but, really, common port wine, beefsteaks, and potatoes,
-was not fit food for guardsmen.” I’ll answer for it long before their
-regiment returned from Egypt they were very glad to get much worse
-fare, and if either of them lived to serve with the noble Wellington in
-the Peninsula, their pride of stomach must have had many a fall.
-
-The results of the unfortunate expedition to Ferrol are too well known
-to need further record; the gallant army, to a man, regretted that
-their evil genius placed them under the command of such a general, and
-we, of the navy, lamented our ill-luck that prevented us from taking
-the beautiful Spanish fleet that lay at anchor in the harbour.
-
-It was reported--and, I believe, with truth--that at the very time our
-troops were being re-embarked, the Spanish governor had even sent out
-an officer with the keys of the fortress in his hands, and an offer of
-terms to surrender; but he, seeing how matters stood, returned back
-to his general, rejoicing, and informed him that the British army was
-in full retreat, and part were already on board. The Spaniards had
-laid a strong boom across the harbour, flanked by two very powerful
-batteries--one on each side of the entrance.
-
-Sir James Pulteney promised to take the one on the left, or larboard
-hand, while the boats, filled with sailors and marines, were to storm
-the other at the same time.
-
-Seven sail of the line were prepared for action, with springs on
-their cables, and a spare one out of the gun-room stern port, bent
-to the sheet anchor, ready for bringing up head and stern; in short,
-everything was in a forward state for the attack, and the _London_ (98
-guns) was to break the boom, and the rest of the ships to follow in
-line of battle.
-
-All hearts beat with joyful expectation, when, to our utmost
-surprise and indignation, a signal was made from the shore that the
-commander-in-chief of the land forces had given up the idea of attack,
-and boats were to be sent immediately to embark the troops.
-
-The gallant Sir Edward Pellew, who commanded the _Impétueux_ (74), was
-ready to burst with rage when he found the object of the expedition
-given up, at a time when it was almost within our grasp, and without
-making one serious effort to obtain it. It was reported in the squadron
-that he embarked an ass, and used to go up to it, and take off his hat,
-and say, “How do you do, Sir James? I hope nothing troubled you in your
-sleep last night in the way of unpleasant dreams, or that the nightmare
-did not disturb your rest.”
-
-After this sad affair we sailed for Vigo Bay, where our appearance
-with so large a force put the inhabitants in bodily fear. When we were
-standing into the bay a large French ship (privateer) was observed to
-haul under the citadel. At night the boats of the squadron, commanded
-by the daring Lieutenant Burke, were sent to bring her out, which they
-most gallantly accomplished, after a severe and desperate struggle. She
-was called _La Guêpe_, of 18 long nine-pounders, with 244 men, sails
-bent, and perfectly ready for sea, and was going to look after our
-homeward-bound West Indiamen, and intended to have sailed the evening
-of the day of our arrival.
-
-She had her boarding nettings up, and everything ready for a stout
-resistance. On the approach of the boats the privateer and the forts
-opened a heavy fire of round and grape, but they, nothing daunted, gave
-three hearty cheers, dashed on, and, after a most gallant defence, she
-was boarded and brought out. Lieutenant Burke was severely wounded by a
-pike through both thighs, and the French captain, who most heroically
-fought his ship to the last moment, died of his wounds an hour after
-she was taken. He asked (poor fellow!) if he had done all he could
-to defend his ship; being answered in the affirmative, and justly
-complimented on his gallant conduct, he gave a faint smile, and expired.
-
-During the time we lay at anchor here we were in the habit of sending
-a boat to haul the seine on the Bayonne islands, and we were generally
-pretty successful. Amongst other fish, we frequently caught the
-torpedo[C], which gave me a practical lesson of its electric powers.
-
-On the 6th of September a tremendous heavy gale came on from the
-southward and westward, in which several vessels belonging to our
-convoy drifted from their anchors, and went on shore. The _Stag_,
-frigate, of 32 guns, Captain Winthrop, was wrecked upon Point Subudo.
-However, we fortunately saved the crew; but the men of some transports
-and merchant vessels that went on shore in other parts of the bay fell
-into the hands of the Spaniards. Not being able to get the _Stag_
-off, she was burnt the same evening. The moment the wind and weather
-permitted we sailed with the expedition from Vigo Bay, and, having seen
-them safe off the coast, the admiral, according to orders, gave up his
-charge to Captain Sir Alexander Cochrane, and proceeded off the Western
-Islands in search of some Spanish galleons, said to be coming home in a
-Portuguese convoy.
-
-We had with us four sail-of-the-line, and three frigates.
-
-During our cruise we fell in thrice with a large French ship
-(privateer), but her legs were too nimble for us. One day, when we had
-all sail set, and were carrying every stitch of canvass we could crowd
-in chase, with a fine breeze, and nearing her fast, our unlucky genius,
-which had attended us all this cruise, from the sprite that said “Bo!”
-to old Pulteney at Ferrol, still haunted us up to the present time. We
-carried away our foretop-mast, and she again escaped.
-
-The _Renown_ being by far the best sailing ship of the squadron, the
-others stood no chance with the privateer, who very quietly hauled up
-her courses, and no doubt enjoyed the fun of looking at us _hors de
-combat_.
-
-Two days after we fell in with two Portuguese convoys from the Brazils,
-bound to Lisbon. One we spoke; the others were boarded by the frigates
-to windward. The Portuguese captains of the men-of-war pledged their
-word of honour that no Spanish ships were under their protection. We,
-like geese, trusted to it, or rather, the frigates did. Will it be
-believed that in the above convoy were the five Spanish treasure-ships
-we were looking for, which arrived a few days after safe at Lisbon! And
-when they passed under the stern of the _Cynthia_, British sloop-of-war
-that was lying there, they hauled down their Portuguese colours,
-hoisted the Spanish, and fired a royal--and, no doubt, joyful--salute;
-and well they might. They had in the five vessels ten millions of
-specie, besides valuable cargoes.
-
-We afterwards heard that this business caused a very angry communication
-from our Government to that of Portugal; but they, like true
-diplomatists, threw the whole blame from themselves on the weakest
-party, by denying any knowledge of the transaction, dismissed and
-imprisoned the captains of their men-of-war for a short time, who on
-being released went to Spain, and were there promoted to rank and
-honours.
-
-After this _finale_ of our unlucky cruise, we returned to Plymouth
-to refit, and get provisions and water. While there orders came
-to complete our stores of all kinds for foreign service. Captain
-Thomas Eyles left the ship, and Captain John Chambers White took
-the command--a strict, good, and excellent officer, who has filled
-a high situation at Woolwich Dockyard since the peace, and is now a
-Rear-Admiral of the White. We were all delighted with the idea of
-getting away from the heavy winter gales and monotonous cruising of the
-channel fleet.
-
-A word upon channel cruising. I defy any person at the present day,
-except the old officers, to know the constant anxiety of the captains
-and officers of the channel fleet, sailing in two or three lines in
-heavy gales and thick weather. It required great attention in the
-lieutenants of the watch, a most strict and careful look-out to prevent
-accidents, and to have their wits always about them, ready to act at
-a minute’s warning. By the good discipline kept up, the look-out was
-perfect, and, to the _very great credit_ of the officers of the watch,
-_scarce an accident_ occurred during the long, tiresome, and harassing
-blockade of Brest, comprising a period of more than twenty years.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER III.
-
- Cruise off Cadiz--Proceed up the Mediterranean to Egypt after a
- French squadron under Rear-Admiral Ganteaume, 1801.
-
-
-In November, 1800, we sailed for Gibraltar. I was much pleased to see
-the celebrated rock, so well defended by the gallant Elliot in 1782,
-and to read, on the spot, Colonel Drinkwater’s most amusing history of
-that famous siege.
-
-As late as the year 1801, the greater part of the garrison was still
-covered with shot and broken shells, thrown by the Spaniards at that
-period. They have since been collected, and sold to be melted down for
-various purposes, some probably to be again converted into missiles of
-destruction.
-
-We cruised off Cadiz in company with the _Dragon_, _Hector_, and
-_Gibraltar_, of 74 guns each, until the spring of 1801, detaining the
-Danish and Swedish vessels, when a French squadron of eight sail of
-the line (some frigates, and a store ship), having made their escape
-from Brest, at a time the channel fleet was blown off, passed us in the
-night, and pushed up the Mediterranean for Toulon, to embark troops for
-Egypt, to strengthen their force there.
-
-The _Mercury_ (28), Captain Rogers, and the _Incendiary_ (fire-ship),
-joined us in the morning, and informed us they had been chased by
-them. Although we had only four sail of the line, no time was lost in
-proceeding after them; first touching at Gibraltar for provisions,
-then running over to Marjarine Bay, on the coast of Barbary, for
-water, and from thence to Port Mahon, to see if chance would send us
-a reinforcement. There we found the _Alexander_ (74), Captain Sir
-Alexander Ball, the _Généreux_ (80), not half-manned, and the _Harlaem_
-(64), _en flute_; however, they made a show of strength, and to sea we
-went in search of the French squadron, under Rear-Admiral Ganteaume,
-and steered for Toulon. Ill fortune attended us; for in a heavy gale,
-the _Généreux_ rolled away all her top-masts, and sprung a leak, which
-caused us to put back to Minorca, with our crippled ships, from which
-place the above-named ship was never again in a state to accompany us.
-
-The moment the rest of the squadron was ready for sea, our persevering
-admiral again sailed, and although with one ship less, he ventured
-to reconnoitre Toulon, where we found the French had also put back
-damaged, and were apparently employed in refitting. We, therefore,
-shaped our course for Minorca. On our way thither, to complete our
-water and provisions, we chased a Spanish convoy into Cadeque, a small
-port near the entrance of the Bay of Rosas; but the admiral did not
-think, under existing circumstances, it was worth while risking the
-loss of lives to attack them, having the prospect of an action with a
-superior French force in view; we, therefore, returned to Port Mahon
-to get ready to proceed after the enemy’s fleet in Toulon.
-
-During our stay, we heard that we were to be joined at Malta by His
-Majesty’s ship _Athénienne_ (64), which was not even coppered, and
-had only half her complement of men. Having put the ships into as
-good a state as circumstances would admit, we proceeded to Malta, and
-there picked up the 64 gun-ship, which completed our ill-conditioned
-squadron, viz., five good ships of the line, one 64, _en flute_, and
-another 64, half-manned, and with no copper on her bottom.
-
-With these ships we went to look for Admiral Ganteaume; and off the
-island of Maretimo, we fell in with the _Salamine_ brig, of 16 guns,
-which gave us information that the day before she had been chased by
-the French squadron, and that by shaping our course to south-east,
-we should probably see them next morning. What joy ran through the
-different ships! but, alas! owing to the ill-sailing of our squadron,
-all our hopes were frustrated. We did, indeed, get sight of them
-the following day at dawn, far to windward, and by a shift of wind,
-shortly after brought them right a-head, so that although there were
-no light airs, by sun-set we could see more than halfway down their
-courses; yet most of our ships, with the exception of the _Hector_ and
-_Dragon_, were very far astern, some hull down. Still, however, we
-hoped with three good ships of the line to bring their rear to action
-in the night, and so retard them, that the next day our bad sailing
-ships might pick up any birds we had winged, while we stood on after
-the others; but bad fortune attended us, our only frigate, the old
-_Mercury_, of 28 guns, sailed so heavily as to be unable to keep them
-in view. At ten at night, foggy, hazy weather came on, we lost sight
-of our game, and the next morning the horizon was so obscured that the
-enemy was no longer to be seen.
-
-What was to be done? We knew Alexandria, or some part of the coast
-of Egypt, was their destination, and thither we steered. Ganteaume
-guessed we should follow him thither, and, like a cunning old fox,
-taking advantage of the hazy night, soon after dark hauled his wind
-on the starboard tack, and doubled round us; therefore, at daylight,
-in consequence of the very thick state of the atmosphere preventing
-our seeing him, we preceded him to the coast of Egypt, while he shaped
-his course for Cape Derne Head, and tried to land his troops a little
-to the westward of Alexandria; but the few that attempted it were
-soon murdered by the Arabs, and he, not feeling himself quite at his
-ease for fear of our again meeting him, returned back to Toulon to
-refit. After taking in water and provisions, he once more proceeded to
-the coast of Egypt, and although he did not land his men, picked up
-His Majesty’s ship _Swiftsure_ (74), Captain Ben. Hallowell, who was
-obliged to surrender, after a gallant defence, and took his prize safe
-into the harbour of Toulon.
-
-In the meantime we kept on our course for Alexandria, and at the end
-of March arrived off there, and joined the fleet of Lord Keith. Here
-a sad and heavy affliction awaited our amiable admiral. The first
-news was, that our gallant army had landed on the 8th, and that his
-brave, handsome, and only son, who belonged to the Coldstream Guards,
-had been killed on landing. He bore his loss with the resignation of a
-Christian, but with the feelings of a father.
-
-Having remained off Alexandria for a few weeks, Lord Keith detached
-us in search of our old friend Ganteaume, but first of all taking
-away one of our best ships, the _Hector_ (74), and giving us in lieu
-the _Stately_ (64), _en flute_, a Turkish 64, and a corvette. During
-our stay the captain pacha, and other Turkish admirals, came on
-board on a visit of condolence to our admiral. I recollect he was a
-very fine-looking man, with a long black beard, and brought his pipe
-and coffee-cup bearers with him. The mouth of the pipe was set with
-diamonds, and so were his coffee-cups. Old Tombrook, the captain of the
-Turkish 64, that sailed with us, was introduced to the admiral, and the
-captain pacha said that if he did not behave well, Sir John had only
-to write a note to him, and his head should be taken off immediately
-on his return to the Turkish fleet; or if the admiral preferred it, he
-would send an executioner on purpose to decapitate Captain Tombrook,
-and lay his head at Sir John B. Warren’s feet.
-
-We left Alexandria the beginning of May, and sailed for Coron, in the
-Morea, to procure wood, water, and fresh provisions, of which we stood
-very much in need, the scurvy having begun to make its appearance from
-our long continuance at sea upon bad salt and other food of the worst
-quality. The bread was full of maggots and weevils, the flour musty,
-and swarming with insects, the water so putrid, thick and stinking,
-that often have I held my nose with my hand while I drank it strained
-through my pocket handkerchief; and we were so short of this necessary
-article, that our consumption was limited to two pints a day for all
-purposes. Provisions, at the time I am speaking of, were not like those
-supplied now-a-days from Her Majesty’s stores; everything then was done
-by an infamous job contract; government paid through thick and thin
-for everything, and we poor devils had to suffer in consequence of the
-neglect of those persons under government winking at the nefarious jobs
-of contractors, and no doubt they had weighty reasons for so doing.
-
-I recollect, in a mid’s berth, we used to ask what such-and-such a
-county was famous for. Suffolk, in our black book, was put down as
-famous for supplying the navy with rotten and bad cheese. Burgoo was
-served out with treacle for breakfast, instead of nice wholesome cocoa
-and sugar; and will it be believed, that until the peace of 1802,
-French merchants had a contract for supplying the British Navy with
-French brandy, while our West Indian merchants knew not what to do with
-their rum and cocoa! At last John Bull awoke from his dream, and it
-struck him that soldiers and sailors liked rum just as well as brandy,
-and that by giving them cocoa for breakfast it would not only assist
-the West Indian merchants, but give general satisfaction throughout the
-fleet.
-
-I take this opportunity of mentioning the night-blindness which seized
-several of our ship’s company after dark. It came on immediately it
-began to grow dusk. First we thought it was sham, in order to skulk
-from their watches, but we soon found it was not the case. The men were
-first attacked off Egypt, and it was supposed it was occasioned by the
-heavy dews. I have since been informed that it frequently occurs in
-tropical climates.
-
-We remained at Coron ten days, getting supplies; but gained no
-intelligence of the French squadron, though the Turkish corvette had
-been despatched for that purpose, to make enquiries at the different
-out-ports. On her return, we sailed for Malta, where the Christian
-slaves, on board the two Turkish men-of-war, were liberated on our
-arrival, to the great joy of the Maltese. Having refitted, we proceeded
-to Port Mahon, and from thence to cruise off Toulon. On our passage,
-we had most severe thunder and lightning, which struck the _Dragon_
-and ourselves, indeed, all the squadron more or less; the former’s
-main-mast was injured, and our mizen-top-gallant-mast was dashed to
-atoms, the top-mast shaken into laths, the mizen-mast set on fire,
-and the few tin and iron pots and pans, we mids had in the gun-room,
-were every one perforated in the same manner, as if a musket-ball had
-been fired through them. The lightning then providentially took a
-direction out of one of the gun-room ports, and escaped; several men
-on board both ships were much scorched, and one man in the _Dragon_
-killed. If the _Renown_ had been one of the old 74’s, whose mizen-mast
-stepped in the after magazine, she must have been blown up; but,
-fortunately, her’s stepped in the gun-room. We stood on for the Gulf
-of Lyons, and looked into Toulon, and there saw the French ships lying
-with their prize, the _Swiftsure_, some of the ships stripped, one
-with her main-mast out, and no chance of their putting to sea again
-for some time. We, therefore, proceeded to the Island of Elba, and
-on our way fell in with two French frigates, and chased them into
-Leghorn; the _Stately_ (64), _en flute_, got pretty near them, but
-they slipped through her fingers. One named the _Success_, of 32 guns,
-formerly British, captured by the French squadron, under Rear-Admiral
-Ganteaume, on his passage from Brest to Toulon, a few months before,
-was afterwards taken by the _Minerve_ (36), Captain Cockburn, and
-_Phœnix_ (32), Captain Halstead, and they drove the _Bravoure_ (44) on
-shore near Leghorn, and destroyed her. We then went to endeavour to
-relieve the garrison of Porto Ferajo, which was closely besieged by the
-French, and a sortie was agreed upon by the garrison. The intention was
-to turn the enemy’s works, and destroy his batteries, and a party of
-sailors and marines were landed to assist at the attack; but the troops
-from Porto Ferajo, being all foreigners, in our pay, composed of Swiss
-and Germans, did not know us nor we them. All parties met in the dark,
-and hearing these people talk French, our men fired upon them, and they
-upon us. The sortie never reached its destination--Johnny Crapaud was
-not to be caught napping--our expedition partly failed in its object;
-Captain Long, of His Majesty’s brig _Vincego_, was killed. “_Sauve
-qui peut_” was the order of the day, and a pell-mell retreat to the
-boats became necessary. Followed by the French, several were killed,
-wounded, and taken prisoners, and some shot in the water, trying to
-swim off to the boats. A few days after, the following ludicrous song
-appeared on board, to the tune of “Vinegar Hill”:--
-
- “Pray were you at Elba races?
- Were you there in the morning?
- Some were picking of grapes,[D]
- Some were drinking of wine,
- And some were running away,
- And singing out, ‘Oh! rare Elba races.’”
-
-We then returned to Minorca to get more troops; but shortly after our
-arrival, a French man-of-war brig, from Toulon, came into the roads,
-with despatches, to inform us the preliminary treaty of peace had been
-signed at Amiens.
-
-While we remained at Minorca, we lost our captain of marines (Burns),
-a very worthy man. His death was singular. A vessel, a few weeks after
-the arrival of the French brig, came from England, confirming the
-news from France, with an order to cease hostilities; also bringing
-letters and papers. It was one in the morning when the news came. Poor
-Burns got up quite well, and sat laughing and talking, and hearing the
-news from old England, and saying what he should do when he got upon
-half-pay; called for a glass of cold water, which he drank off, and
-laid down in his cot again; the cramp seized him in his stomach, and in
-five minutes he was a corpse. He was much beloved in the ship, full of
-humour, and a kind-hearted pleasant man. He was buried with military
-honours at Port Mahon, all the officers of the ship, and many of the
-squadron, attending his funeral.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IV.
-
- From the Peace of Amiens (1802) until the commencement of the
- second Gallic War--Gambling.
-
-
-I fortunately remained in the Mediterranean during the whole of the
-short peace, which helped on my mid’s time, in the _Renown_ (74), with
-Captain John C. White[E], a smart officer. Our worthy and amiable
-admiral struck his flag at Minorca, and returned to England, from
-whence he was shortly sent, at the request of the Emperor of Russia,
-to St. Petersburgh, as ambassador, and gave universal satisfaction.
-Indeed, he was fully capable of wielding the sword, using the pen, or
-managing the weighty matters of a court.
-
-From Minorca we sailed for Malta--at which place we remained nine
-months, without ever going out of it.
-
-The harbour was crowded with men-of-war, and the garrison with troops,
-returned from Egypt. I heard of a great deal of gambling taking
-place--some duels in consequence, and suicides. Of all vices, gambling
-is the worst, for you not only risk your own ruin, but that of your
-family also; and a man of honour and principle stands no chance with
-black-legs. A person possessed of affluence ought not to gamble,
-because he cannot want another’s money, and a poor man that does so,
-and plays for a large amount, must be a swindler, knowing that if he
-loses he has not the means to pay; he generally, therefore, gives leg
-bail for the amount.
-
-Our time passed rather heavily during this long sojourn in one place.
-We used, however, to go occasionally in a boat to St. Paul’s Bay, and
-have a ride to Florean to see the catacombs, and to Cività Vecchia to
-view the handsome church of St. Paul.
-
-A malignant fever broke out in several of the ships, owing, probably,
-to the great heat of the weather, when many died: it was something like
-the yellow fever, and came on in August and September.
-
-Shortly after this we embarked two companies of artillery, under a
-Captain McDonald, and Lieutenants Dougal, Campbell, and Carmichael,
-with orders to proceed to Gibraltar, and thence home. Owing to heavy
-westerly winds, we had a six weeks’ passage, and found on our arrival
-that a most serious disturbance had taken place amongst the troops
-in the garrison, which ended in one of the regiments being packed
-off to the West Indies. Various causes were assigned for the mutiny,
-and amongst others, a too sudden change from a very relaxed state of
-discipline to the opposite extreme.
-
-After remaining here a few days, though we had expected to sail the
-moment the wind came to the eastward for England, the arrival of
-despatches from thence stopped our proceeding.
-
-Napoleon’s plans, by the wisdom and foresight of the Ministry, were
-seen through, and orders arrived for the detention of all the ships
-of the line (at all serviceable) then in the Mediterranean, instead
-of sending them to England. This created a partial murmur amongst the
-different crews; but the firmness and strict discipline of our captain
-and officers kept our ship’s company perfectly quiet. The crew of the
-_Gibraltar_, however, broke out, and two of the unfortunate men were
-hanged afterwards in Orestana Bay, Sardinia.
-
-We sailed from the Rock in September, 1802, for Orestana Bay, in
-company with the _Dragon_ (74) and _Gibraltar_ (80), and there joined
-Rear-Admiral Sir R. Bickerton’s squadron. On our way an accident
-occurred, which very nearly sent us back to the Rock a cripple. In the
-act of wearing, we ran on board of the old _Gibraltar_. Fortunately, it
-was fine weather, as we took her nearly amidships, carried away part
-of our cutwater and jib-boom, but did her no damage. It was our fault.
-The signal was made to wear together. We were to windward. The _Renown_
-answered her helm in a moment. Not so the old _Gibraltar_, she took
-longer time, and before she could get out of our way we were on board
-of her.
-
-Our time (nearly nine weeks) passed dull enough at this anchorage.
-Occasionally we went shooting and fishing. Fish, however, were
-scarce--although, had we taken the right method, more perhaps might
-have been caught. Plenty of those beautiful large mussels, whose shells
-are nearly two feet long, were to be found quite at the head of the
-bay in the shallows; also mullet and rock fish; and on the different
-shores various kinds of plover, and other wild fowl. But small shot was
-so scarce in the squadron, that the feathered tribe were not so much
-diminished as they might have been. I recollect one of the lieutenants,
-named Jane (now a captain), used to employ me to roll slugs between
-pieces of wood to convert them into a kind of round-shot, for which
-service he generally took me with him on his shooting excursions.
-The inhabitants of these parts are a wild race of beings, and mostly
-clothed in black sheep skins, the wool outside.
-
-We left Sardinia in November, and proceeded to Malta for the winter,
-and on the 18th of May, 1803, put to sea with the squadron, under Sir
-R. Bickerton, Bart., to cruise off Naples, matters having assumed an
-hostile appearance at home.
-
-After sailing through the Faro of Messina, when passing near the
-island of Stromboli, its volcano broke out in a most beautiful
-eruption, which lasted for several months. We had the good fortune
-to be becalmed pretty near it for a whole night, which gave us a
-magnificent illumination, and at intervals a cloud of fireworks, thrown
-from its crater into the air, sent forth a brilliant light. Having
-been off deck in my watch, and my quarter and station bills not being
-correct and kept in good order, I had four hours of sky-parlour on the
-main-royal-cross-trees, which enabled me to have a fine view of the
-burning mountain, and of its river of fire, which appeared to run from
-its crater into the sea.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER V.
-
- From the commencement of second Gallic War until the Battle of
- Trafalgar, 1805; with Anecdotes.
-
-
-Whilst off Naples official notice reached us of the declaration of war
-against France, and we proceeded immediately off Toulon, where, in the
-course of a short time, Lord Nelson arrived in a frigate, and took the
-command of the fleet in the Mediterranean. His lordship’s flagship (the
-_Victory_) joined us in a few weeks, having on her passage out captured
-a French frigate, and some merchant vessels. We continued to cruise
-in the Gulf of Lyons from June, 1803, until the 24th of July, 1804,
-without ever going into any port to refit. It is true that occasionally
-the whole fleet ran from the heavy gales of the Gulf of Lyons, and
-took shelter in various outlandish places in Sardinia, where we could
-get wood and water, such as at Agincourt Sound--amongst the Magdalen
-islands--in the Straits of Bonifacio (a most beautiful anchorage,
-sheltered from all winds); but the shores and country around are the
-picture of desolation--no town--no trees of any size--rocks upon rocks,
-and the stunted bushes of the wild myrtle and arbutus merely sufficient
-for the purposes of fuel. There was a small village seven or eight
-miles off, at one of the Magdalen islands, where some few got their
-linen washed, but most of us in the fleet were put to our shifts to get
-that necessary comfort (clean linen) accomplished.
-
-These long cruises used to put our wits sadly to the test for
-an appearance of a bit of white linen above our black cravats,
-particularly when we had to answer the signal for a midshipman on board
-the flagship.
-
-Soap was almost--indeed, I might say, quite--as scarce an article as
-clean shirts and stockings. It was a common thing in those days of real
-hard service to turn shirts and stockings inside out, and make them do
-a little more duty. Sometimes we used to search the clothes-bag to see
-“if one good turn deserved another.” These expedients, added to reefed
-stockings, made us appear sufficiently dandified to go and answer the
-signal. Borrowing those articles that had been washed on shore--if such
-a thing was left amongst one of us--was quite out of the question, for
-we knew the day of repayment was very far off.
-
-The island of Sardinia affords several good anchorages for fleets and
-squadrons in particular winds: Orestana Bay, St. Peter, St. Antonio,
-Cagliari, from the south-west to the south side, and Terra Nova Bay
-on the north-east; besides many others for single or few ships. Porto
-Conti, for instance, on the north-west part of the island, is a very
-safe one. Our noble and gallant chief used to manage to get us fresh
-beef twice a week--that is to say, so many live bullocks were embarked
-on board each ship, and we killed them as we wanted them--by which
-means, with the assistance of oranges that were procured occasionally,
-few cases of scurvy occurred in the fleet, notwithstanding our long
-stay at sea. But as for articles of luxury--tea, potatoes, soap, and
-other sea stores for our messes--we had none.
-
-The inhabitants of Sardinia were as wild as their country; the
-mountaineers and lowlanders generally were engaged in a kind of petty
-war with each other. Both parties always went armed, and murders
-frequently took place. At one of the anchorages in the straits, another
-mid and myself were attending a watering party--one of these fellows
-rode down with a bag of cheese, made of goat’s or sheep’s milk, for
-sale; he was armed with a long gun and pistols, and we had no firearms
-with us. Some dispute in the bargaining, for the want of understanding
-each other’s language, arose; the Sard, very coolly mounted his horse,
-and taking up his cheeses, rode off a short distance, and fired at
-us; the ball passed through the sleeve of the mate’s coat, and near
-my head; he then galloped off, reloaded his gun, rode up, and gave us
-another shot, but luckily without injury.
-
-A midshipman of the _Victory_ was killed by these fellows a short time
-afterwards in consequence of some dispute about the hiring of a horse
-that had been brought down by these wild folks to the beach. The poor
-mid, anxious for a ride, gave the rascal a dollar, mounted the horse,
-and rode backwards and forwards for an hour on or near the beach.
-The Sardinian wanted his horse, the other thought he had not had his
-dollar’s worth of riding, and a warm dispute ensuing, the Sard most
-deliberately shot at him with his gun, and broke his arm, so close
-up that it was necessary to take it out of the socket. He bore the
-operation well, poor fellow, but a fever afterwards came on, which
-carried him off. Lord Nelson tried to get satisfaction, but in a wild
-country like this, without law or justice, it was found impossible.
-The offender made his escape to the mountains, and nothing further was
-heard of him.
-
-Shooting parties occasionally took place, but, not having dogs, the
-sportsmen were seldom rewarded. Although some kinds of game were
-numerous, and flocks of blue pigeons, to the amount of thousands
-together, were seen, few were brought on board, for no person dared
-follow them far for fear of the wind changing, when we knew the fleet
-would sail immediately to regain our station. Previous to the Spanish
-war we were sent by his lordship, in the _Renown_, to the Bay of Rosas,
-in Catalonia, to procure bullocks and oranges for the fleet, where we
-remained long enough to have our clothes washed--a luxury we stood much
-in need of.
-
-Our long cruise of near fourteen months off Toulon, amidst nothing but
-gales of wind, and heavy storms of most terrific thunder and lightning,
-met with no reward in the shape of prize-money.
-
-One man-of-war schooner, of 12 guns, called the _Renard_, and
-half-a-dozen small French vessels, were the only captures made by
-the fleet during the above period; these, with the exception of
-the schooner, not being worth sending into port, were destroyed. A
-lieutenant of the _Renown_, and myself, went to Malta in the _Renard_,
-and shortly after rejoined our ship off Toulon, in the _Narcissus_
-frigate.
-
-One of the marine officers had a monkey on board, who used to amuse us
-with his gambols; but was rather fond of biting, for which he received
-occasionally a beating from us youngsters. This brought on a coolness
-between his master and us, and led at last to open war.
-
-A cabal was formed to get Jacko a licking from his own master, by
-letting him loose from his chain in the marine officer’s cabin, that he
-might do some mischief; and the time chosen was when his best clothes
-were put out ready for him to dine with the captain.
-
-We knew F. was invited that day, because we had seen the captain’s
-steward ask him, and his own servant go into the marine officer’s berth
-(he had one in the gun-room, on the lower-deck, where we messed), and
-lay out his best coat, epaulet, white trousers, etc.; and after making
-all other preparations necessary for the toilet, leave the cabin, lock
-the door, put the key in his pocket, and go away.
-
-Now was the time for action. A mid of the name of O., the leader of
-all mischief, undertook to get into the cabin through the lower-deck
-port, by going on deck, then into the mizen chains, and from thence by
-a rope’s end made fast under his arms. We let him down through the port
-on the lower-deck into the cabin, and he untied the monkey. This being
-done, we returned into the gun-room, and peeped through the key-hole
-and cracks to see Jacko’s manœuvres.
-
-After jumping about and chattering to himself for some little time, he
-commenced operations. Unfortunately for his owner, he found a bottle
-of ink, which he let fall, and it broke in pieces, splashing the ink
-on the deck. The monkey was now in his glory; he seized upon the new
-red coat and epaulet, and began mopping up the wet, then chattering
-to himself, jumping about and appearing to feel quite delighted with
-his performance, particularly when he saw the marks of his hands and
-feet, stained with black, upon the red uniform. Not contented with his
-exploits on the coat, he lugged down the pair of smart inexpressibles,
-that looked so temptingly white, hanging over the chair, and finished
-the housemaid’s work by wiping up the remainder of the ink with them.
-This feat having been done, we thought we had seen enough, and went
-most innocently to give information to the lieutenant of Marines, and
-his servant, that Jacko was loose in the cabin, and, we were afraid,
-was after some mischief, for we heard something break, and by peeping
-through the key-hole, saw he had his master’s coat on the deck, and
-dragging it about.
-
-Down ran the poor marine officer, calling his servant to bring the
-key. The moment the door was opened, the first glance showed the
-havoc committed on the dinner dress. Jacko, perceiving his frolic was
-over, retreated into his cage, from whence he was dragged to get a
-good beating. The poor servant was scolded because the monkey had got
-loose, who very truly said it was tied up safe when he left the cabin.
-The officer swore, stamped, and raved like a madman. His dress was so
-completely messed for the day, he could not dine with the captain;
-and we innocent young rascals stood looking very demure, and condoling
-with him on his misfortune, all the time laughing in our sleeves at the
-trick we had played. We had paid off the master and monkey, who between
-the two had got us sent to the mast-head occasionally for being saucy
-to the marine officer, because we did not like being bitten, without
-licking Jacko for it.
-
-A reward was offered to find out who let it loose, that F. might make
-the person or persons pay the damage; but it was never found out, and
-on the earliest opportunity the monkey was sent out of the ship, on
-board a merchant vessel we fell in with, bound to Malta, his master
-having had quite enough of monkey tricks.
-
-A ship of the line, the _Kent_ (74), Captain Pulteney Malcolm, having
-been kept in the Bay of Naples to attend the royal family there, in
-case of their being obliged to go to Palermo, to avoid falling into the
-hands of the French, the _Renown_ was sent to relieve her. The _Kent_
-was ordered home in consequence of being leaky, and very much out of
-repair. Captain J. C. White wishing to return home, exchanged into the
-_Kent_ with Captain Pulteney Malcolm; he took several of the midshipmen
-with him, and myself amongst the number. We remained ten days at
-Naples, which were employed by the captain in seeing everything worth
-observation, and he was so kind as to take another youngster and myself
-with him.
-
-After the above period, we left Naples for the Bay of Salerno, at which
-place we embarked a large supply of cattle and vegetables for our
-fleet off Toulon. On joining them, we found our ship very weak, and
-her timbers, from the looseness of several bolts, working very much,
-and causing her to make a good deal of water,--in fine weather from
-six to eight inches per hour, and in bad weather two feet, which kept
-increasing to nearly four,--until our arrival in England.
-
-After having given the bullocks to the ships, we proceeded to
-Gibraltar, and from thence to Cadiz, where we took on board a million
-and sixty thousand dollars. We anchored near a handsome French
-seventy-four and frigate; the former, called _L’Aigle_, the name of the
-other I forget. Whenever we passed near them, some of their crew would
-abuse us; we told them to come outside, and see how soon we would take
-the change out of them; but they stood too much in awe of a British
-seventy-four, although we had such a tempting cargo to urge them to the
-risk.
-
-At this period, four of our frigates, under Sir Graham Moore, were
-cruising off Cape St. Vincent to intercept the four Spanish frigates,
-loaded with treasure, expected home. We spoke our ships off there, and
-a few days afterwards they fell in with the Spaniards, took three, and
-the unfortunate fourth blew up in the action with all her crew.
-
-I always did think, and my opinion has never changed, that it was a
-cruel thing to send only four frigates to detain four others, when
-by increasing the force by two or three line-of-battle ships, this
-might have been effected without loss of blood, or honour to the
-Spaniards. If it was necessary to detain these vessels and treasure
-from political motives, in order to make the king of Spain declare his
-equivocal conduct, it would have been humane to have sent such a force
-as would have put resistance out of the question; for what man, who was
-not a traitor, could yield without fighting (and with such a valuable
-cargo on board), to a force, in all appearance, not greater than his
-own. It was an untoward event. After a long passage, we at length
-arrived at Spithead, the ship in a very leaky, weak state. Having
-landed the money, we left Portsmouth the end of October for Chatham, at
-which place the ship was paid off.
-
-Our old parson was a “rum” subject; after trying all other mess places,
-he got old Pipes, the boatswain, to take him into his. They agreed
-very well for a little time; but one unfortunate day, the evil genius
-of poor old Fritz prevailed, for Pipes coming down rather unexpectedly
-to his cabin in the fore cock-pit to get a glass of grog, having got
-wet when the hands were turned up reefing topsails, he found the
-parson helping himself rather too freely out of his liquor-case. This
-was a crime Mr. Boatswain could not put up with. A breach immediately
-ensued, and an instant dismissal from his berth took place, with the
-exclamation of, “The parson is such a black; I cannot allow him to mess
-with me any longer.” After this occurrence, the captain interfered, and
-he again messed in his proper place with the officers in the wardroom.
-And I recollect one Sunday morning before church-time, the old fellow
-came into our berth, and with his hand to his stomach, began: “Oh!
-my dear fellow, I feel so poorly, I do not know what to do, or how
-I shall get through the service.” “What is the matter, Mr. F.?” I
-enquired. “Oh! I feel such a pain.” I knew what he wanted, so I went to
-the locker, took out the rum bottle, and gave a good boatswain’s glass
-of grog (three parts spirits, and one water). He told me I had saved
-his life, and that now he could preach very well. “Come, sir,” said I,
-“take a north-wester to wash the other down,” which he did. The service
-commenced soon after, and he performed it admirably.
-
-He was a clever, facetious, and kind-hearted person; and I believe it
-was money matters that drove him, poor man! to the bottle; he died
-sometime after on shore. He used to tell us boys: “My dear fellows, do
-as I say, and not as I do.”
-
-Not having been in England for four years, and my brother being
-encamped on Coxheath, I got permission, previous to the ship being paid
-off, to go and see him. Nothing would serve me but a ride on horseback.
-I was dressed out very smart in white visibles--not invisibles, as
-the ladies call them--although it appears the fashion of the day to
-show they wear trousers, _whose scientific, Oriental name, by-the-bye,
-is fatimas_. To the young ladies I have a pretty little anecdote to
-relate. I knew a very gallant officer who fell deeply in love with a
-lady merely from handing her into a carriage. The moment she put her
-pretty feet upon the carriage steps he was pierced by Cupid’s arrows.
-He dreamed of them all night; thought of them when he awoke in the
-morning; he could not drive them from his imagination during the day.
-The pretty feet again appeared before his fancy when asleep the next
-night, and the third day found him prostrate before them, acknowledging
-their beauty, and supplicating that he might call them his own. He was
-accepted. Were this not an “olla”--which means in Spanish something of
-all sorts--I should not have ventured to have written the above.
-
-To return to my ride. As I said before, I was in full dress, with
-cocked hat, long coat, and side-arms, that I might appear in camp in a
-becoming manner. The landlord at the inn told me he knew sailors liked
-to ride fast, and promised to give me a quiet blood mare he had in
-his stables, who would show me the way. She was shortly equipped, and
-brought out. Upon her back I mounted; but scarcely were we out of the
-town of Chatham when off she started at full speed, and ran away with
-me along the turnpike road, to the amusement of some of his Majesty’s
-liege subjects, and to the terror and dismay of others--up hill, down
-dale, splashing myself, and every person I met, with mud, for the roads
-were wet, and it began to pour with rain. The ladies and gentlemen in
-their carriages as I passed them stared at me with astonishment. Having
-got to a place, called Kit’s Cot Hill, I ran on board of a man riding
-upon a donkey, with two sacks of flour, knocking him, donkey and cargo,
-head over heels; but my steed being pretty nearly blown, I at length
-stopped her.
-
-The miller was, fortunately, not hurt, but came up in a great passion
-to attack me. Luckily just at the moment some soldiers, who belonged to
-the same regiment as my brother, were passing by: they took my part,
-and, a parley ensuing, I explained how the untoward event had happened,
-and it ended in a laugh. Not far from this was a small inn, where I put
-up my flyaway, having had enough riding for one day, hired a gig, and
-at last got safe to the regiment without any broken bones.
-
-Shortly after this the ship was paid off, and I joined the _Barfleur_
-(98), having had six weeks’ leave to see my friends and relate the
-wonders of my four years’ voyage in foreign parts.
-
-Throughout the four months I passed in the _Barfleur_ we were attached
-to the channel fleet.
-
-In May, 1805, I removed to the _Neptune_ (98 guns), Captain T. F.
-Fremantle, a clever, brave, and smart officer, who sent me home to
-pass my examination at Somerset House, in August, which I did, before
-old Captain Sir Alexander Snap Hammond, whose character for turning
-mids back frightened me not a little. The one examined before me not
-having been sent, as from Oxford or Cambridge, to rusticate in green
-fields and sylvan groves, but condemned to study six months longer in
-a mid’s berth on the briny element in order to finish his nautical
-education, and eat peas-pudding, burgoo and molasses, salt-junk,
-lobscouse, sea-pie, and study Hamilton Moore. However, the passing
-captains, seeing I was alarmed on first entering, civilly desired me to
-be seated a few minutes and take courage. Having waited a short time,
-and got rather better of some odd qualms and palpitations which the
-unfortunate candidate turned back before me had created, I was ordered
-to find the time of high-water at Plymouth, work an azimuth amplitude,
-double altitude, bearings and distances, &c., which being performed,
-I was desired to stand up, and consider myself on the quarter-deck
-of a man-of-war at Spithead--“unmoor”--“get underway”--“stand out to
-sea”--“make and shorten sail”--“reef”--“return into port”--“unrig the
-foremast and bowsprit, and rig them again.” I got into a scrape after
-reefing for not overhauling the reef tackles when hoisting the sails.
-However, they passed me, and desired me to come again the next day
-to receive my passing certificate. I made the captains the best bow
-I could, and, without staying to look behind me, bolted out of the
-room, and was surrounded in a moment by other poor fellows, who were
-anxiously waiting their turn to be called in for examination, who asked
-what questions had been put to me, and the answers I made, &c.
-
-This important event over, I spent a few days of September with my
-friends; then repaired to Plymouth, and was ordered a passage to join
-the _Neptune_ (98), off Cadiz, in the _Belleisle_ (74), one of the very
-last ships that sailed to join the fleet of Lord Nelson.
-
-We had a very quick run out, and ten days before the ever-memorable and
-glorious 21st of October, 1805, I rejoined my ship.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VI.
-
- The Battle of Trafalgar, and extracts from the log of His Majesty’s
- Ship _Neptune_, on the 21st, 22nd, and 23rd October, 1805.
-
-
-FEELINGS OF A CREW GOING INTO ACTION. BY LIEUT. H. GASCOIGNE, R.M.
-
-_Extracted from a Poem called “Fame.”_
-
- “The man who pants not for his country’s fame
- Is lost to virtue and the sense of shame;
- For here the common parent of us all,
- Bears every claim of those whom dear we call--
- Our father, mother, brother, sister, wife,
- Religion, friendship--all that’s good in life,
- The whole united in the single name
- Of country! ever our support must claim.
- Poor is the soul who could outlive the day
- When honour called him, and he shunn’d the fray;
- Poor is the man who yet could wish to live
- When to his country death would glory give!
- Pardon, O God! thou righteous Judge of all,
- If willing we obey our country’s call,
- Though ill-prepared; for Thou didst plant these laws,
- And to Thy mercy we submit our cause!
- Full expectation gives the mind to wait,
- And moments lengthen in the hands of fate.”
-
-
-I shall never forget the 18th, 19th, 20th, and 21st of October, 1805.
-Signs of a movement in the combined fleets of France and Spain in Cadiz
-were made by signal on the 18th by the inshore squadron, and on the
-19th the enemy came out of port. The wind was light and the day rather
-hazy, so that the body of our fleet never perceived them. Sunday we
-had a fresh breeze, when some of the headmost ships saw the enemy in
-shore, but they were too close under the land to be attacked. All
-hearts towards evening beat with joyful anxiety for the next day, which
-we hoped would crown our anxious blockade labours with a successful
-battle. When night closed in, the rockets and blue lights, with signal
-guns, informed us the inshore squadron still kept sight of our foes,
-and, like good and watchful dogs, our ships continued to send forth
-occasionally a growling cannon to keep us on the alert, and to cheer us
-with the hope of a glorious day on the morrow.
-
-And the morrow came; and with it the sun rose, which, as it ascended
-from its bed of ocean, looked hazy and watery, as if it smiled in tears
-on many brave hearts which fate had decreed should never see it set. It
-was my morning watch; I was midshipman of the forecastle, and at the
-first dawn of day a forest of strange masts was seen to leeward. I ran
-aft and informed the officer of the watch. The captain was on deck in a
-moment, and ere it was well light, the signals were flying through the
-fleet to bear up and form the order of sailing in two columns.
-
-The wind had moderated considerably in the night, but still our fleet,
-which consisted of twenty-seven sail of the line, four frigates, a
-schooner, and cutter, was much scattered. Our ship had been previously
-prepared for battle, so that with the exception of stowing hammocks,
-slinging the lower yards, stoppering the topsail-sheets, and other
-minor matters, little remained to be done. All sail was set, and the
-different ships tried to form the line in two divisions, but the
-lightness of the wind, and the distance of the sternmost from the van,
-prevented anything like speed in the manœuvre; in short, the line never
-was properly formed, for the brave and gallant chiefs of each division
-were too eager to get into battle to wait for this. The old _Neptune_,
-which never was a good sailer, took it into her head to sail better
-that morning than I ever remember to have seen her do before. About
-ten o’clock we got close to the _Victory_, and Captain Fremantle had
-intended to pass her and break the enemy’s line, but poor Lord Nelson
-himself hailed us from the stern-walk of the _Victory_, and said,
-“_Neptune_, take in your studding-sails and drop astern; I shall break
-the line myself.” A signal was then made for the _Téméraire_ (98) to
-take her station between us and the _Victory_, which consequently made
-us the third ship in the van of his lordship’s column.
-
-At this period the enemy were forming their double line in the shape
-of a crescent. It was a beautiful sight when their line was completed:
-their broadsides turned towards us, showing their iron teeth, and now
-and then trying the range of a shot to ascertain the distance, that
-they might, the moment we came within point blank (about six hundred
-yards), open their fire upon our van ships--no doubt with the hope of
-dismasting some of our leading vessels before they could close and
-break their line. Some of them were painted like ourselves--with double
-yellow sides; some with a broad single red or yellow streak; others all
-black; and the noble _Santissima Trinidada_ (138), with four distinct
-lines of red, with a white ribbon between them, made her seem to be a
-superb man-of-war, which indeed she was. Her appearance was imposing;
-her head splendidly ornamented with a colossal group of figures,
-painted white, representing the Holy Trinity, from which she took her
-name. This magnificent ship was destined to be our opponent. She was
-lying-to under topsails, top-gallant sails, royals, jib, and spanker;
-her courses were hauled up; and her lofty, towering sails looked
-beautiful, peering through the smoke, as she awaited the onset. The
-flags of France and Spain, both handsome, chequered the line, waving
-defiance to that of Britain.
-
-Then, in our fleet, union-jacks and ensigns were made fast to the fore
-and fore-topmast-stays, as well as to the mizen-rigging, besides one at
-the peak, in order that we might not mistake each other in the smoke,
-and to show the enemy our determination to conquer. Towards eleven,
-our two lines were better formed, but still there existed long gaps
-in Vice-Admiral Collingwood’s division. Lord Nelson’s van was strong:
-three three-deckers (_Victory_, _Téméraire_, and _Neptune_), and four
-seventy-four’s, their jib-booms nearly over the others’ taffrails,
-the bands playing “God save the King,” “Rule Britannia,” and “Britons
-strike home;” the crews stationed on the forecastle of the different
-ships, cheering the ship ahead of them when the enemy began to fire,
-sent those feelings to our hearts that ensured us victory. About ten
-minutes before twelve, our antagonists opened their fire upon the
-_Royal Sovereign_ (110), Vice-Admiral Collingwood, who most nobly, and
-unsupported for at least ten minutes, led his division into action,
-steering for the _Santa Anna_ (112), which was painted all black,
-bearing the flag of Admiral Gravina, during which time all the enemy’s
-line that could possibly bring a gun to bear were firing at her. She
-was the admiration of the whole fleet.
-
-To show the great and master mind of Nelson, who was thinking of
-everything even in the momentous hour of battle, when most minds would
-have been totally absorbed in other matters, it was remarked by him
-that the enemy had the iron hoops round their masts painted black;
-orders were issued by signal to whitewash those of his fleet, that
-in the event of all the ensigns being shot away, his ships might be
-distinguished by their white masts and hoops.
-
-In order to convey a more accurate notion of the commencement and of
-the ensuing events of this glorious day, I shall introduce an extract
-from the log-book of His Majesty’s Ship _Neptune_ (98 guns):--
-
- “A.M., moderate and fine weather; at daylight discovered 39 strange
- ships to leeward. At 6, answered the signal from the _Victory_,
- Lord Nelson’s flag-ship, No. 76, to form the order of sailing
- in two lines; bore up and made all sail, the fleet consisting
- of twenty-seven ships of the line, four frigates, a cutter, and
- schooner, in company; cleared ship for action. At 11, answered the
- general telegraph signal, ‘England expects every man will do his
- duty’; Captain Fremantle inspected the different decks, and made
- known the above signal, which was received with cheers. At 11.30,
- the signal to break the enemy’s line, and engage to leeward.
-
- “At 12, the _Royal Sovereign_ (110), Vice-Admiral Collingwood,
- most nobly broke the enemy’s line, and engaged the Spanish Admiral
- Gravina, whose flag was flying in the _Santa Anna_ (112), cutting
- off the 19th ship from their rear; the French and Spanish fleet, of
- 33 sail of the line, 4 frigates, and 2 brigs, lying-to for us to
- leeward, with their heads to the northward.
-
- “At 12.15, the _Victory_ (100), Vice-Admiral Lord Nelson, followed
- by the _Téméraire_ (98), Captain Eliab Hervey, and _Neptune_ (98),
- Captain Fremantle, broke the line of the enemy by the French
- Commander-in-Chief’s ship, Admiral Villeneuve, in the _Bucentaure_
- (84), and _Santissima Trinidada_ (138), of four decks, bearing the
- flag of Rear-Admiral Don Cisneros Baltazar, the eleventh ship from
- the van.
-
- “At 12.25, three of the enemy’s ships of the line opened their fire
- upon us, raking us fore and aft. At 12.35, we broke their line,
- passed between, and opened our broadside and raked them on both
- sides. At 12.47, we engaged a two-deck ship, with a flag at her
- mizen. At 1.30, entirely dismasted her, she struck her colours; but
- before that, the _Leviathan_ (74), also opened her broadside upon
- her, we passed on (first giving her three hearty cheers), and bore
- down and attacked the _Santissima Trinidada_, a Spanish four-decker
- of 140 guns, with a flag at her mizen; raked her as we passed
- under her stern; and at 1.50 opened our fire on her starboard
- quarter. At 2.40, shot away her main and mizen masts; at 2.50, her
- foremast; at 3, she cried for quarter, and hailed us to say they
- had surrendered; she then stuck English colours to the stump of
- her mainmast; gave her three cheers. At this time the _Leviathan_
- and _Conqueror_ (74’s), on our starboard quarter, firing on some
- of the enemy’s ships. Our standing and running rigging much
- cut; foretop-gallant and royal-yard shot away; the foremast and
- foretop-mast very badly wounded; three shot in the main-mast; one
- cheek of the mizen mast shot away, and wounded in other places;
- foreyard nearly shot in two, and ship pulled in several places;
- sent down men to get up more shot, having nearly fired away all
- that was on deck.
-
- “When the smoke cleared away, observed the _Victory_, _Royal
- Sovereign_, and _Téméraire_ warmly engaged, and the six van ships
- of the enemy who had not been engaged had tacked, and were bearing
- down to attack us. At 3.30, opened our fire on them, assisted by
- the _Leviathan_ and _Conqueror_; observed one of them to have all
- her masts shot away by our united fire; the rest then hauled their
- wind (we learned afterwards it was Rear-Admiral Dumanoir), and
- making off to the southward, and we not in a condition to follow
- them, our sails being nearly shot from the yards, and, in addition
- to other defects, not a brace or bowline left. Turned the hands
- up to knot and splice, and bend new sails. At 5, observed 18 sail
- of the enemy making off, viz., 13 sail of the line, 3 frigates,
- and 2 brigs, leaving to us 20 ships of the line, 2 of which were
- first-rates, viz., _Santissima Trinidada_ and _Santa Anna_. At
- 5.15, a French ship of the line, _L’Achille_, blew up with nearly
- all her crew. Observed the _Victory_ with her mizen-mast and
- all her topmasts shot away; the _Royal Sovereign_ with only her
- foremast standing; unable to see the condition of the rest of the
- fleet. At 6, we hailed the _Ajax_ (74), and told her to go and
- take possession of a French ship of the line dismasted; saw the
- _Prince_ (98) take the _Santissima Trinidada_ (138) in tow, which
- had struck to us. Found we had 10 men killed, and 35 wounded, 4 of
- whom shortly after died of their wounds.
-
- “At midnight, having repaired what damages we could, made sail.
- At 4 in the morning of the 22nd, we were spoke by the _Pickle_
- schooner, who told us it was Admiral Collingwood’s orders. We took
- some ship in tow. At daylight, observed Admiral C.’s flag in the
- _Euryalus_ frigate, with the _Royal Sovereign_ in tow, who made our
- signal to take her in tow, which we did.
-
- “At daylight, it blew a fresh gale from the S.S.W.; the ships very
- much scattered; all the prizes dismasted and drifting about, most
- of them having been cast off from the ships that had them in tow;
- and the French 84-gun ship, _Rédoutable_, while in tow of the
- British _Swiftsure_, foundered with nearly all her unfortunate
- crew. At daylight of the 23rd, we picked up four of her people
- floating upon a piece of her wreck. Came on board of us, as
- prisoner from the _Mars_ (74), Admiral Villeneuve, the French
- commander-in-chief.
-
- “In this battle we lost the brave Vice-Admiral Viscount Nelson, who
- was killed on board the _Victory_ by a musket-ball from the maintop
- of the French 84-gun ship, _Rédoutable_. The news of the death of
- this lamented hero threw a damp over our victory, which we were
- not prepared for. At noon on the 23rd, the signal was made that
- the remnant of the enemy’s fleet was coming out of Cadiz to try
- and pick up some of the dismasted ships and prizes; cast off the
- _Royal Sovereign_, and bore up with the rest of the ships that were
- able, and formed the line of battle to leeward of our dismasted
- ships and prizes for their protection; on seeing which, the enemy
- returned into port without accomplishing his object, but losing
- another ship, the _El Rayo_ (100), for his pains!”
-
-Thus ended this noble fight, the consequences of which were felt from
-one end of Europe to the other, indeed, I may say, in all parts of the
-world; and, surely, for such a day’s work, the country ought to have
-voted a medal, not only to the admirals and captains, but (as was the
-case at Waterloo) to every officer, seaman, and marine, in the fleet.
-
-The loss of the _Neptune_ in this action, considering what she did, was
-comparatively small; but the ship was admirably managed by her gallant
-captain, who was ably supported by a clever scientific first lieutenant
-(the present Captain George Acklom), who justly merited every praise
-for his coolness and abilities on that memorable day.
-
-During the time we were going into action, and being raked by the
-enemy, the whole of the crew, with the exception of the officers,
-were made to lie flat on the deck, to secure them from the raking
-shots, some of which came in at the bows and went out at the stern.
-Had it not been for the above precaution, many lives must have been
-sacrificed. My quarters were the five midship-guns on each side of the
-main-deck. I was sent on board the _Santissima Trinidada_, a few days
-after the action, to assist in getting out the wounded men, previous
-to destroying her. She was a magnificent ship, and ought now to be in
-Portsmouth harbour. Her top-sides, it is true, were perfectly riddled
-by our beautiful firing, and she had, if I recollect right, 550 killed
-and wounded; but from the lower part of the sills of the lower-deck
-ports to the water’s edge, few shot of consequence had hurt her between
-wind and water, and those were all plugged up. She was built of cedar,
-and would have lasted for ages, a glorious trophy of the battle; but
-“sink, burn, and destroy,” was the order of the day, and after a
-great deal of trouble, scuttling her in many places, hauling up her
-lower-deck ports,--that when she rolled the heavy sea might fill her
-decks,--she did at last go unwillingly to the bottom.
-
-I have now by me a gilt dirk that I brought away from her, it belonged
-to the Spanish admiral’s son, Don Baltazar Cisneros; I would not part
-with it for its weight in gold. Of all our hard-earned prizes, only
-four got safe to Gibraltar; viz., _San Ildefonso_ (74), _San Juan
-Nepomuceno_ (74), _Bahama_ (74), and the old English _Swiftsure_ (74),
-the rest were either sunk or burnt. Nothing being talked of now but
-horizontal firing, it is to be hoped we shall fire as well and with the
-same precision and effect next war, as the British fleet did on this
-memorable day.
-
-The establishment of the school for naval gunnery on board the
-_Excellent_ at Portsmouth, placed as it is under the superintendence of
-Sir Thomas Hastings, and other scientific officers, will, in my humble
-opinion however some persons may affect to despise teaching seamen the
-science of naval gunnery, be of general benefit to the service. One of
-the originators of it, the gallant Captain Sir John Pechell, Bart.,
-C.B., K.C.B., deserves great credit, and the thanks of the service
-for the interest, zeal, and attention he has paid to it; as also does
-Captain George Smith, who invented the moveable target, now used on
-board our men-of-war, and several other ingenious and clever inventions
-of his have been before the public. He has lately invented paddle-box
-life boats for steam ships.
-
-
-_List of the English Fleet, under Lord Nelson, on the 21st October,
-1805-27 sail of the line, 4 frigates, 1 cutter, 1 schooner._
-
-
-LORD NELSON’S DIVISION.
-
- Guns. Killed. Wounded.
-
- _Victory_ 100 { Vice-Admiral Viscount Nelson } 51 75
- { Captain T. M. Hardy }
- _Téméraire_ 98 Eliab Harvey 47 76
- _Neptune_ 98 T. F. Fremantle 10 35
- _Conqueror_ 74 Israel Pellew 3 9
- _Leviathan_ 74 H. W. Bayntum 4 22
- _Ajax_ 74 Lieut. J. Pilfold 0 9
- _Orion_ 74 Edward Codrington 1 23
- _Agamemnon_ 64 Sir Edward Berry 2 7
- _Minotaur_ 74 C. J. M. Mansfield 3 22
- _Spartiate_ 74 Sir F. Laforey, Bart. 3 20
- _Britannia_ 100 { Rear-Admiral the Earl Northesk } 10 42
- { Captain Charles Bullen }
- _Africa_ 64 Henry Digby 18 44
- --- ---
- Total 154 383
- --- ---
-
-
-VICE-ADMIRAL COLLINGWOOD’S DIVISION.
-
- Guns. Killed. Wounded.
-
- _Royal Sovereign_ 100 { Vice-Admiral Collingwood } 47 94
- { Captain Rotherham }
- _Mars_ 74 G. Duff (killed) 29 69
- _Belleisle_ 74 W. Hargood 33 93
- _Tonnant_ 80 C. Tyler 26 50
- _Bellerophon_ 74 J. Cook (killed) 27 133
- _Colossus_ 74 J. N. Morris 40 160
- _Achille_ 74 Richard King 13 59
- _Polyphemus_ 74 R. Redmill 2 4
- _Revenge_ 74 R. Moorson 28 51
- _Defiance_ 74 P. C. Durham 17 53
- _Swiftsure_ 74 W. G. Rutherford 9 7
- _Defence_ 74 G. Hope 7 29
- _Thunderer_ 74 Lieut. Stockham 4 16
- _Prince_ 98 R. Grindall 0 0
- _Dreadnought_ 98 John Conn 7 26
- --- ---
- Total 263 794
- --- ----
- Grand Total 417 1177
- --- ----
-
-
-FRIGATES.
-
- Guns.
- _Euryalus_ 36 Hon. H. Blackwood.
- _Sirius_ 36 William Prowse.
- _Phœbe_ 36 Hon. T. B. Capel.
- _Naiad_ 36 T. Dundas.
- _Pickle_ (schooner) 12 Lieut. J. R. Lapenotiere.
- _Entreprenant_ (cutter) 12 Lieut. R. B. Young.
-
- * * * * *
-
-
-_List of the French and Spanish combined fleets in action, off Cape
-Trafalgar, near Cadiz, 21st October, 1805--33 sail of the line, 3
-frigates, 3 brigs._
-
- No. Guns.
- 1. _San Ildefonso_ 74 Taken. (Spanish.)
- 2. _San Juan Nepomuceno_ 74 Do. (Do.)
- 3. _Bahama_ 74 Do. (Do.)
- 4. _Swiftsure_ 74 Do. (French.)
- (The above four ships arrived safe at Gibraltar.)
- 5. _Monarca_ 74 Taken and wrecked. (Spanish.)
- 6. _Fougueux_ 74 Do., do., and all her crew.
- (French.)
- 7. _Indomptable_ 84 Do., do. (Do.)
- 8. _Bucentaure_ 74 Taken and wrecked, and most of
- her crew. (French.)
- 9. _San Francisco de Asis_ 74 Taken and wrecked. (Spanish.)
- 10. _El Rayo_ 100 Do. (Do.)
- 11. _Neptuno_ 84 Do. and destroyed. (Do.)
- 12. _Argonaut_ 74 Driven on shore, but got off again.
- (French.)
- 13. _Berwick_ 74 Taken and wrecked. (Do.)
- 14. _L’Aigle_ 74 Do., do. (Do.)
- 15. _L’Achille_ 74 Blew up in action, with most of
- her crew. (French.)
- 16. _Intrépide_ 74 Taken, and burnt after the action.
- (French.)
- 17. _San Augustin_ 74 Do., do. (Spanish.)
- 18. _Santissima Trinidada_ 140 Taken by the _Neptune_; sunk after
- the action by the _Prince_ and
- _Neptune_, in consequence of
- orders to destroy her. (Spanish.)
- 19. _Rédoutable_ 84 Taken, and foundered with all her
- crew except four. (French.)
- 20. _Argonauta_ 80 Taken and destroyed. (Spanish.)
- 21. _Santa Anna_ 112 Taken, but got into Cadiz
- dismasted. (Spanish.)
- 22. _Algesiras_ 74 Taken, but escaped in the gale
- into Cadiz. (French.)
- 23. _Pluton_ 74 Do., do. (Do.)
- 24. _San Juste_ 74 Do., but got into Cadiz with her
- foremast only standing.
- (Spanish.)
- 25. _San Leandro_ 64 Taken--got into Cadiz. (Do.)
- 26. _Le Neptune_ 84 Escaped. (French.)
- 27. _Le Héros_ 74 Escaped--lost topmasts. (French.)
- 28. _Principe di Asturias_ 112 Lost all her masts--escaped
- into Cadiz. (Spanish.)
- 29. _Montanez_ 74 Escaped. (Spanish.)
- 30. _Formidable_* 84 Do. (French.)
- 31. _Mont Blanc_* 74 Do. (Do.)
- 32. _Scipion_* 74 Escaped. (French.)
- 33. _Duguay Trouin_* 74 Do. (Do.)
-
-(The four ships marked thus (*) were taken a few days after the action
-by Sir Richard Strachan’s squadron.)
-
-
-_Names and Rank of French and Spanish Flag Officers in the battle._
-
- Admiral Villeneuve, Commander-in-Chief--taken. (French.)
-
- Rear-Admiral Magon--killed. (French.)
-
- Rear-Admiral Dumanoir--escaped; taken afterwards by Sir Richard
- Strachan. (French.)
-
- Admiral Gravina--escaped. (Spanish.)
-
- Vice-Admiral Alava--taken in _Santa Anna_ (112). (Spanish.)
-
- Rear-Admiral Cisneros--taken in _Santissima Trinidada_(140). (Spanish.)
-
-The loss of the combined fleet was twenty ships of the line, one
-admiral killed, and three taken; the total killed, wounded, and taken
-prisoners, was near 16,000 men and officers. In concluding the account
-of the Battle of Trafalgar, I think I shall be excused for copying into
-this _olla_ two beautiful extracts from unknown authors. The first
-lines on the particular circumstance of each of the different powers
-having a ship of the line, called the _Neptune_, in the battle:--
-
- “Three different powers to rule the main,
- Assumed old Neptune’s name;
- One from Gallia, one from Spain,
- And one from England came.
-
- “The British _Neptune_, as of yore,
- Proved master of the day;
- The Spanish _Neptune_ is no more,[F]
- The French one ran away.”
-
-
-LORD NELSON’S DEATH AND TRIUMPH.
-
-_From the Sheffield Paper, 1805._
-
- “Intelligence of a most glorious event, accompanied with tidings
- of an awful calamity (like the angels of mercy and affliction
- travelling together), has arrived on our shores, and awakened the
- public mind from the agony of despondence to a tumult of mingled
- emotions, sorrow and joy, mourning and triumph.
-
- “On the 21st of October, 1805, while the cowardly and incapable
- Austrian, General Mack, was surrendering himself and army into the
- hands of Bonaparte, the noble and lamented Lord Nelson, once more,
- and for the last time, fought and conquered the united foes of his
- country; but he fell in the meridian of victory, and in one moment
- became immortal in both worlds.
-
- “His career of services had been long; but it was only in the last
- war that he burst upon the eye of the public as a luminary of the
- first magnitude. At the battle of Aboukir, he rose like the sun in
- the east, and like the sun too, after a summer’s day of glory, he
- set in the west, at the battle of Trafalgar, leaving the ocean in a
- blaze as he went down,[G] and in darkness when he descended.
-
- “In ages to come, when the stranger who visits our island shall
- enquire for the monument of Nelson, the answer will be, ‘Behold his
- country which he has saved.’”
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VII.
-
- Join the _Melpomene_ (38)--Sent up the Mediterranean--Tremendous
- weather, with thunder, lightning, and water-spouts--Ship loses her
- rudder and main-topmast--Proceed to Malta.
-
-
-Ten days after the action, I was appointed acting lieutenant of the
-_Melpomene_ (38), Captain Peter Parker. The weather having moderated,
-we sailed in company with the _Orion_ (74), Captain Codrington:
-_Endymion_ (44), and _Weazle_ brig, (18); to look into Toulon, and
-scour the Mediterranean, in search of a squadron of French frigates. We
-parted from the fleet on the 8th of November, 1805, with every prospect
-of a most delightful cruise, and the chance of picking up some prizes;
-but a few days after leaving Gibraltar, our golden hopes were dashed to
-nought, and we were sent a wreck, without a rudder, to Malta.
-
-The weather continued moderate until the 11th, when we captured a small
-Spanish settee, laden with stores of little value, and took her in tow,
-for the purpose of conveying her to the commodore, but a heavy squall
-coming on, we destroyed her.
-
-On the 12th, we saw the island of Majorca, and finding the main-yard
-sprung, we lowered it down, and fished it. On the 13th, owing to the
-violence of the gale and heavy sea, we bore up, with the _Weazle_
-brig in company, to take shelter under Majorca; at this time the ship
-was labouring very hard, in consequence of a heavy cross swell. On the
-14th, none of the squadron were in sight; the morning of the 15th,
-about nine o’clock, a most tremendous squall came on, accompanied with
-thunder, lightning, rain, and sleet, which obliged us to clew up all
-our sails; shortly afterwards the main-mast was struck by lightning,
-the fluid exploded by the pumps, and knocked myself and a seaman down;
-the sensation I felt was that of a severe electric shock, shaking
-every bone in my body, but, thank God! it did me no further injury;
-the seaman, poor fellow! was a good deal burnt, but he afterwards
-recovered. On examining the mainmast, we found it splintered in many
-places, particularly about the hoops, and in the wake of the trusses,
-where copper had been nailed on.
-
-The next day we stood towards Barcelona, in the hopes of rejoining the
-_Orion_, but between nine and ten in the morning of the 17th, the sea
-rose all round us, angry, black, threatening clouds, accompanied with
-water-spouts, and heavy flashes of lightning, gave us warning that
-a tempest of no common kind was approaching; several land birds of
-various descriptions, blown from land not in sight, settled on the deck
-and rigging, in hopes of shelter from the pitiless storm; a woodcock
-tried to rest upon the capstern on the quarter-deck; a hoopoe, linnets,
-greenfinches, and other small birds, also endeavoured, poor things! to
-find shelter, but when the first burst of the tempest came on, they
-were blown to leeward, and probably perished. In the midst of all this
-we had to fire guns at the water-spouts to break them, furl the sails,
-and prepare for another gale. At eleven a heavy sea pooped us, stove
-in the dead lights, and filled the captain’s cabin with water; the
-wind increased to a perfect hurricane, and at one, the lightning again
-struck the ship and hurt the main-topmast and the main-mast. At two
-the storm stay-sails were blown to atoms, and the ship became entirely
-unmanageable; whole seas, at times, rolled over her, one of which,
-breaking on the quarter, struck the rudder, and the rudder-head gave
-way, it was immediately chocked, and the ship was then steered by the
-rudder pennants. Between three and four, the main-topmast was blown
-over the side, the rudder-chains gave way, and we found the main-mast
-sprung a few feet above the quarter-deck. The whole of the night, the
-rudder, having nothing to confine it, thumped about a great deal, and
-made us fear it would shake the stern-post. In the morning of the 18th,
-the ship fortunately took a heavy plunge, and the rudder unshipped
-itself from the stern and sank. The sea at this period was most heavy
-and breaking; it stove the quarter boats, and caused the ship to
-strain so much that it was necessary to keep the pumps constantly
-going. Towards noon of the 18th we veered a cable astern with hawsers,
-etc., and struck the mizen-topmast to try and wear ship, but found it
-impossible, for the moment we got the ship four or five points from the
-wind, she flew to again. On the 19th, the weather began to moderate,
-but still there was a heavy sea; yet, notwithstanding the ship laboured
-a great deal, we commenced making a Pakenham’s jury rudder out of a
-spare maintopmast-jibboom, and other spars.
-
-Towards evening we saw the Columbretes, small rocky uninhabited
-islands, near Ivica, on the lee bow, distant four or five leagues;
-finding ourselves drifting bodily down on them, we made all sail on the
-foremast, in the hopes of getting the ship on the other tack, veered
-away a cable astern, and with hawsers bowsed it over to windward; but
-the heavy swell,--the moment we got way upon the ship, and she was a
-few points from the wind, striking her abaft the beam,--made her fly to
-the wind again. We therefore furled our sails, and let go an anchor in
-60 fathoms, with a spring on the cable, which for a time brought us up;
-but soon after midnight, during my watch, there came on a heavy squall
-with thunder, lightning and rain, the ship drove, when we cut the cable
-and set new storm stay-sails and fore-sail; she evidently would not
-weather the rocks, but when pretty near them, it pleased Providence to
-send us a shift of wind in another severe squall, which enabled us to
-clear them. On the morning of the 20th the weather became moderate,
-and towards evening, having completed our jury-rudder, we succeeded in
-shipping it, and found to our great joy it answered with a little care
-very well. The 21st we had a steady breeze from the S.W., which enabled
-us to shape our course for Malta. It was necessary to keep a sharp look
-out upon our rudder guys and braces, for the constant friction against
-the ship’s sides, soon chafed the woulding. On the 22nd, at night,
-it again blew very heavy, our starboard fore channel was very badly
-started, and we found the fore-yard sprung; however the ship steered
-very well, going before the gale at the rate of ten and eleven knots
-per hour. On the 26th we arrived at Malta, and moored safely from the
-gales in La Valette harbour. The defects of the ship were as follows: a
-rudder, main-mast, two top-masts, both lower yards, maintop-sail-yard,
-the starboard fore channel had to be secured, and general caulking was
-wanted. In short, the ship was strained all to pieces.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER VIII.
-
- Siege of Gaeta by the French--Boat affairs--My capture--Leghorn.
-
-
-After the repairs were made good, which took nearly two months, we
-sailed for Messina, and found there some transports waiting for a
-convoy to take a reinforcement of troops, with General Sherbrooke, to
-Egypt.
-
-The service being most pressing, we took them under convoy, and after
-a passage of three weeks, made the low sandy coast to the westward of
-Alexandria, on which were growing a few date or palm trees, planted in
-a cluster. We got off the port on the following day, where we no sooner
-discovered the British squadron, under Capt. Benjamin Hallowell, in the
-_Tigre_ (80), all snug, than we hove to; and putting the general and
-his staff on board one of the transports, started back to Messina. The
-_Tigre_ fired guns and made the signal of recall, which the captain,
-much to our satisfaction, would not notice, for we had no particular
-relish to exchange the chance of a good cruise, for the burning sands
-of Egypt, to fire at Turks behind sand banks and stone walls.
-
-This, however, very nearly got Captain Peter Parker into a serious
-scrape; for the gallant old Ben. was most wroth, and nothing saved him
-from a court martial but his being a great friend of Lord Collingwood.
-
-On our return to Sicily we went from Messina to Palermo, and from
-thence to succour the fortress of Gaeta, near Terracina, besieged by
-Marshal Massena, with 30,000 men. We ran in and engaged a battery
-and a French man-of-war brig near Mola. The battery was thrown up in
-Cicero’s Garden. Night, and a very heavy thunder storm coming on, which
-blew dead on shore, obliged us to haul off and get an offing; the brig
-taking advantage of the darkness, cut her cable, and got safe into
-Naples.
-
-A few days afterwards, I went with some other officers on shore, to
-be introduced to the Prince of Hesse Philippsthal, who commanded the
-fortress, and to look round the works and observe the French lines. It
-appearing to our captain that we could flank the enemy’s works to the
-N.W. of the peninsula, with the ship, in the afternoon, we stood in
-and fired a few broadsides, which put them to confusion, however the
-wind failing obliged us to haul off. A day or two afterwards the wind
-changing and permitting us to do the same thing, again we stood in, but
-the French had got something prepared for us this time, in the shape
-of a good masked battery, which was so well directed that every shot
-hit us, and we were glad to get off with the loss of three men badly
-wounded; one poor fellow lost both his legs, another his right leg, and
-the third was severely wounded by a splinter. We took the hint and did
-not go there any more. Shortly after this, Rear-Admiral Sir Sidney
-Smith came and assumed the command of the squadron, he used to send the
-launches, armed with a carronade, every dark night to flank the French
-camp on the Terracina side, with orders the moment the gun was fired to
-pull either to starboard or port, in order to avoid the enemy’s shot.
-Our being low on the water prevented them seeing us, so that they could
-only fire at the flashes of our guns. Some shot occasionally passed
-over us, but the greater part went either to the right or left. One
-of the Sicilian gun-boats was sunk one night, and some of the oars
-knocked out of the men’s hands, but by attending to the orders of the
-gallant admiral we generally escaped. Our other orders from him were
-not to go within musket shot, and directly the moon began to appear,
-to disperse and return on board. One night we killed a French general
-named Vaubois, who had come down to the beach with some field pieces to
-return our fire.
-
-We went hence to Palermo and landed our wounded men, when we proceeded
-off Naples with a spy, dispatches, and proclamations, from King
-Ferdinand the VII., to his beloved subjects, calling upon them to
-rise and make a diversion to raise the siege of Gaeta; but they were
-too wise to follow his advice, having neither leaders, spirit, nor
-enterprise for such dangerous work. To get the above gentleman with his
-dispatches, proclamations, &c., on shore, being a service of danger,
-with the prospect at least of a dungeon for the remainder of the war,
-should they even escape hanging, volunteers were necessary; myself and
-a fine gig’s crew and a sergeant of marines, offered our services,
-and engaged not to return without performing the service if it were
-possible.
-
-We were all well armed and left the ship in the gig, with the spy,
-soon after dark, at the entrance of the Bay of Naples; the oars were
-well muffled and greased to prevent them from making a noise. We
-first rowed under the land towards Baia and Pansilippo; the night was
-favourable, being very dark, and rather inclined to be stormy, with
-an occasional flash of sheet lightning, which latter we could have
-dispensed with; however, on we pulled, taking care not to feather the
-oars, and to row as easy as possible, that we might make no splashing
-in the water. At last we got to what I thought a favourable place, and
-we pulled in, when just as the boat was touching the shore a whole host
-of fishermen bawled out and gave the alarm. The alarm fires were lit
-along the shore in a minute, and we were instantly challenged; off we
-shoved the boat and told the Italian to say we were fishermen looking
-for our companions. While he was talking the wind being off the land,
-soon blew us out of hearing and musket shot, when we again rowed along
-shore nearer Naples, and tried to land upon the rocks, not far from
-Castle del Ovo; here again, however, the fellows were upon the _qui
-vive_, and we again shoved off, when I determined to put a good face
-upon the matter, and after passing the castle to land right under the
-houses. They not expecting us there, we succeeded, and our friend the
-spy, with his dispatches and proclamations, went at once into the
-city, and I then shoved off and got safe back to the ship by a little
-after midnight; the captain was quite happy to see us safe returned,
-having so well accomplished our object. Having seen the alarm fires and
-signals from the ship, he was very anxious on our account.
-
-The spy being a clever fellow, managed his business well, and in a
-fortnight after returned safe to Palermo with answers. Nothing was
-done, for King Joe and his police kept too sharp a look out, to allow
-his Sicilian Majesty’s corps of lazzaroni to make, or attempt to make,
-any disturbance.
-
-On our way off Cività Vecchia, near Mount Circello, in company with
-the _Juno_ (32), we fell in with two French settees, who were steering
-along shore towards Mola; one we sunk with our two guns, and the
-other we took; both were laden with charcoal for the forges of the
-French army before Gaeta; the _Juno_ went thither with our prize,
-and we continued off the above place in the hope of falling in with
-a French squadron, but in this we were anticipated by the _Sirius_
-(36), who fell in with them, took a corvette, and dispersed the rest.
-From thence we proceeded off Leghorn, and on the 18th of May, 1806, at
-noon, I was sent, with seven men, armed with merely four cutlasses,
-two muskets, and having only eight ball cartridges, after a French
-row-boat, with orders also to attack a convoy close in shore under the
-town of Leghorn. This adventure having nearly cost me my life, I shall
-enter more fully into it. All hands were upon deck, ready to carry any
-orders given into execution; a French row-boat passed close to the
-ship, armed with musketoons and muskets, and having a crew of sixteen
-men. The ship had French colours flying at the time, trying to entice
-out the enemy’s convoy in shore, and therefore Captain Parker would
-not permit a musket to be fired to bring-to the small vessel passing
-near us. The wind was light, and the row-galley had no sooner got out
-of musket shot astern, than they out sweeps and began to pull away,
-suspecting, notwithstanding our French flag, that we were an English
-frigate. At this time our distance from Leghorn might be about seven
-or eight miles. A large polacre ship was seen to leeward, which was
-taken for an enemy; we bore up and made all sail after her, when I
-was called off the forecastle, and ordered to jump into the starboard
-cutter and go after the aforesaid galley; so much was I hurried that
-permission was not even allowed me to run below to my cabin, in the
-gun-room, to get my sword and pistols, but, obeying orders, let the
-consequences be what they might, having always been drilled into me,
-away I went, rather sulkily I confess, and when lowered down in the
-quarter-boat, I found that instead of the proper boat’s crew, any men
-that happened to be nearest, had been ordered into her; amongst others,
-an Italian, a native of Leghorn, who for some crime had been severely
-punished three days before. Just as we were shoving off I discovered
-there were neither muskets, pistols, nor swords in the boat; after
-some little delay, two muskets, and four cutlasses, with two cartouch
-boxes, were given us. With this equipment, I ordered the boat tackles
-to be unhooked, and away we pulled, but guess my astonishment, when
-upon opening the cartouch boxes, I found the gunner’s mate had given me
-the wrong ones, for one contained five, and the other only three ball
-cartridges. In about ten minutes after leaving the ship, the gig was
-sent to join me, with orders to attack the convoy, and take as many
-as possible. I therefore ordered the gig to go and attack a merchant
-vessel, which I pointed out, while I went after the row-galley. A
-short time brought us within musket shot; at this period the ship was
-four or five miles off to leeward, and we about the same distance from
-the shore. The few musket balls I had, were soon expended; observing,
-however, that whenever I took up the musket and pointed it the
-Frenchmen bobbed down, we pulled alongside and boarded her, and for a
-few minutes we had the vessel in possession, when a gun fired from the
-shore unfortunately drew my attention. The Italian whom I brought with
-me thinking it a good opportunity for revenge, joined the Frenchmen,
-and excited them to rise, and they being more than double our numbers,
-soon overpowered us--stabbed one of my men, threw two overboard, laid
-me sprawling by a blow on the head and a cut in my right hand. In
-half-an-hour I was safely landed in the lazaretto at Leghorn. I must do
-the enemy the justice to say, that the moment they had recaptured their
-vessel, they picked up the two men thrown overboard.
-
-We remained in the lazaretto three weeks, a surgeon coming occasionally
-to see the wounded man and myself, and give us some plasters. We not
-being touchable on account of our quarantine, old Sangrado brought
-a long slender white stick, with which he used to feel the seaman’s
-wound,--a stab in the left side,--and my hand; however we did not
-trouble the old fellow long, for low diet and good constitutions soon
-healed flesh wounds.
-
-At the expiration of three weeks, we were considered free from any
-possibility of our having the plague; a guard of French soldiers
-was therefore sent down to the door of the lazaretto, and we were
-committed to their charge and marched to the sound of an old brass
-drum to the fortress at Leghorn, where I had the option, either to
-sign a parole not to attempt to quit it, or be locked up in a prison.
-Of two evils always choose the least,--escape was impossible, for the
-castle or citadel was built upon a small islet joined to the town by a
-draw-bridge; a strong guard was constantly mounted there, and at sunset
-the bridge was hauled up, and the sea surrounded the place on all
-sides, while sentinels were posted at every angle. I therefore was glad
-to have permission from ten in the morning until six in the evening
-to walk round the fortress to breathe fresh air, with a young Russian
-mid who was taken with me. After that period we were locked up in the
-prison of the fortress until the next morning, when we were again let
-out to enjoy fresh air.
-
-For prisoners, we were treated very well. I was allowed tenpence a
-day to live upon, which, with occasional presents received from kind,
-friendly people in the town, we managed very well. For the first few
-nights our beds were rather too full of light and heavy cavalry; but
-by adopting the plan of lying down in them a good half-hour before
-going to sleep, and then throwing off the clothes, and setting to work
-with a good will, in the course of a week most of the bugs and fleas
-were got rid of, and we enjoyed tolerable rest.
-
-At this period Leghorn was placed in a happy state of suspense, between
-being in actual possession of the French and under the government of
-the Queen of Etruria. The former held all the fortifications, as an
-army of observation, while the latter was acknowledged for a short time
-longer, because it suited the views of the French emperor, and we were
-permitted to have a kind of acting consul there, who was a most worthy,
-excellent man--the Rev. J. Hall--whose kindness I shall never forget.
-He had a very delightful family. What became of them after the French
-took the entire possession of the country I never knew. Some American
-merchants also (particularly a Mr. Purviance) showed me every attention
-when I was let out of prison. I tried, through the Rev. J. Hall, to
-get myself and boat’s crew liberated, claiming the protection of the
-Etrurian Government, they not being actually at war with England, and
-professing neutrality, but I soon found it was useless, for they dare
-do nothing to displease the French. However, most luckily for me, a
-friend of Joseph Bonaparte’s, who was at that time King of Naples,
-had been captured in a French corvette, _La Bergère_, and he sent out
-a flag of truce to Admiral Sir Sidney Smith, offering me in exchange
-for his friend, who was at Malta, which our admiral agreed to. At the
-expiration of six weeks I was, to my great joy, liberated, and took
-up my quarters in the town, where I remained more than a fortnight,
-visited Pisa, and Monte Negro, and amused myself about the town, until
-an opportunity offered of my getting to Palermo.
-
-Luckily, a Danish merchant brig was at this time ready for sailing, and
-I took my passage on board her, for, just when I was going to embark,
-an order came from King Joseph for me to be sent to him at Naples.
-My passport was signed and given me, and my bill of health from the
-quarantine office was likewise in my possession; the wind being fair,
-the brig was getting under. Had I been differently situated with regard
-to money and clothes, I would have risked placing myself in the hands
-of King Joseph, for the delight of travelling, even as a prisoner, by
-land to Naples, for the novelty of the thing; but my thread-bare coat,
-empty pockets, and tattered garments decided me to get on board the
-Dane as fast as possible, and run the risk of being taken out “_vi et
-armis_,” rather than go in such a shabby plight to Naples. Our acting
-consul hurried me off, telling me the police were after me. I was
-immediately put into a boat, and got safe on board, with two of my
-men, and the young Russian, who, by-the-bye, afterwards turned out to
-be a Frenchman, sent into our service by Bonaparte, through Russian
-influence, with some of their own youngsters, and passed off on our
-Government as a Russian. All that I can say is, that he was a clever,
-smart lad. I met him in Paris in 1818 (Lieutenant de Vaisseau), when
-he laughed at the trick that had been played, and told me several more
-Russian midshipmen in our service were young Frenchmen. This was done
-by some of the Emperor Alexander’s official servants, when it was the
-policy of Russia after the fatal battle of Austerlitz, in December,
-1805, to endeavour to please Napoleon. Very probably the Russian agent
-received a douceur for the transaction, and as for humbugging John
-Bull, and taking advantage of his good-nature, this, added to a breach
-of faith and confidence, was of little consequence when compared with
-other matters.[H]
-
-I must confess that, until the time we were safe under sail, which was
-more than an hour after we got on board, my eye watched every boat with
-anxiety, expecting to see some French soldiers sent to take me out;
-nor was I quite satisfied of my safety until we had sailed through the
-Piombino Passage, which we did before dark, when I began to think I
-might whistle with safety, being well “out of the wood,” and in the
-probable track of some of our cruisers.
-
-After a pleasant passage of five days, we arrived safe at Palermo,
-and from thence I proceeded in a transport for Malta to look for the
-_Melpomene_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER IX.
-
- Malta--Dreadful accident by the Explosion of a Magazine in the
- town, on the Bermola side--Nearly get into a scrape about breaking
- quarantine--Kind answer of the gallant Admiral Sir Sidney Smith
- to the complaint--Rejoin the _Melpomene_--Mutiny in Fribourg’s
- regiment--Cruise in the Adriatic.
-
-
-On my arrival at Malta I learnt that the ship was on a cruise, and
-that she had lost, a short time after I was taken, our gallant first
-lieutenant, Andrew Thompson, who was killed, with most of his boat’s
-crew, in boarding,--in the middle of the day, with the barge alone,--a
-French armed settee, with six long nine-pounders, off Leghorn; but the
-few survivors--Lieutenant Gascoigne, R.M.; Mr. W. Butler, mid; and a
-noble fellow, a sergeant of marines, named Milligan, with eight seamen,
-all that remained out of twenty-five men--gallantly hooked on the boat,
-and carried the vessel, driving some of her crew overboard, and causing
-the rest to beg for quarter.
-
-At the prize agent’s I found my chest of clothes, which had been left
-behind to be forwarded to England, it not being expected I should
-rejoin the ship. This was a great and unexpected comfort. The delight
-of a nice new coat, linen, &c., after my poor ragged dress was a
-treat, which, fully to enjoy, a person should be placed in a similar
-situation.
-
-I was sent on board the _Madras_ (guard-ship) to wait for a passage to
-join the _Melpomene_, when, in August, a dreadful accident happened.
-I was awakened out of sleep about six in the morning by a tremendous
-noise, and the bursting of shells. I jumped out of bed, and ran upon
-deck, thinking we were in action, when a shell fell upon the wharf
-to which the ship was secured, burst, and killed the gunner of the
-_Madras_. An immense cloud of black smoke and dust was hovering in the
-air, and cries, shrieks, and groans were heard in every direction: a
-magazine in the centre of the town of Bermola, nearly opposite the
-dockyard, in which many live shells had been placed by the French
-during the siege in 1800, had exploded. A party of artillerymen had
-been sent to take out the fuses, and by some unfortunate accident
-one shell had gone off, for one or two explosions were heard before
-the magazine blew up. How the event happened of course not a soul
-employed was left to tell, and, in addition to a sergeant’s party of
-artillerymen, nearly 300 of the inhabitants were killed or seriously
-injured; part of two streets were thrown down, and many more houses
-were severely shaken.
-
-A short time after this shocking event, a transport was directed to
-sail for Palermo, and a passage thither was ordered for me to look for
-my ship. Outside of Malta harbour we were boarded by a boat, bringing
-a lieutenant and some men from a vessel in quarantine to join their
-ship also at Palermo. The wind, which had been fair, suddenly changed,
-and the weather appearing unsettled, the master prudently bore up,
-and returned into harbour. I thought it very hard to be placed in
-quarantine, because we had taken the above officer and men out from the
-lazaretto, therefore the moment the ship dropt anchor, without waiting
-for the pratique boat to come alongside, I got into a shore boat, and
-landed in the town of Valette.
-
-Fortunately, as soon as I had landed, the captain of the _Madras_
-met me, and instantly sent me back to the transport, saying, if the
-quarantine officer found me out, I should be sent to prison. The next
-morning the wind came fair, and we put to sea. Just when we had got
-clear of the harbour--the pratique office having gained intelligence of
-my visit to the shore--a boat was sent after the ship to take me out,
-and place me in the lazaretto; but the wind freshening, we left her
-astern, and proceeded on our voyage to Palermo, where I expected that
-nothing more would have been thought of the matter.
-
-From thence I went on board the _Thunderer_ (74), for a passage to
-Naples, where I was taken very ill with a kind of cholera morbus, which
-in a few hours reduced me very much, but a good constitution enabled me
-soon to recover from its attack, although it left me very weak for some
-time.
-
-On our arrival off Naples we found cruising at the entrance of the bay
-the gallant Admiral Sir Sidney Smith, who sent for me on board the
-_Pompée_ (80), and said, “What is this you have been doing? You are
-a very pretty fellow! This morning a brig came from Malta, bringing a
-formal complaint against you from the governor for breaking quarantine,
-and requesting me to send you back there to be tried; but,” added he,
-in the kindest manner, “never mind, I have answered them, and told them
-they, not you, were to blame, for had they done their duty you could
-never have got on shore, and it was entirely owing to their neglect
-that you transgressed the quarantine laws.” That answer settled the
-matter, and I never heard anything more of the affair, although, after
-joining the _Melpomene_, which I did in the course of a few days, the
-ship was sent to Malta to refit.
-
-I was quite delighted to get back to my old ship, and be under the
-command of her dashing gallant young captain, who, had he not been
-killed afterwards in America, would have now been one of the best
-officers in the service. Shortly after our arrival at Malta, in
-September, a most serious mutiny broke out in a foreign regiment in
-our service, quartered at Fort Recazzoli, called “Fribourg’s,” or
-the Greek Light Infantry. It was composed of Germans, Swiss, French,
-Greeks, Istrians, Dalmations, and Albanians. Most of the officers were
-Germans, and the discipline of the regiment did not suit the ideas of
-these mercenaries; added to which, some of the Albanians and Dalmatians
-had been most shamefully cajoled by emissaries, under false promises,
-into our service. In those countries a kind of clanship prevails, and
-some of the heads of those clans were told, that if they would enter,
-with their followers, into this regiment, they would receive the rank
-of captain. These wild chiefs, thinking it a great thing to be made
-captain at once in the British service, embarked with their followers,
-and came to Malta, where, instead of being placed in the situation they
-expected, they were put into the ranks, and one or two of them made
-a sergeant or corporal. This, with other causes, created a general
-disgust, and a secret plan was formed by these wild tribes to rush
-into the officers’ mess-room, while at dinner, and murder every one of
-them indiscriminately. Suspecting, however, that their plan had been
-discovered, they did not wait for dinner time, but about two or three
-o’clock in the afternoon, rose upon the few officers that were in the
-fort at the time, killed a captain, the adjutant, and quarter-master,
-wounded the colonel and major, whose lives were saved by the Germans,
-and hauling up the drawbridge, demanded terms, which were that the
-regiment should be disbanded, and themselves sent back to their own
-country.
-
-In the fort at this time was a gallant young officer of artillery,
-Lieutenant Fead, with a few of his men, one or two of whom refusing,
-like good soldiers, to quit their post without orders from their own
-officer, the mutineers killed them, making Lieutenant Fead prisoner,
-obliging him to point the guns and mortars towards the town of La
-Valette.
-
-Fort Recazzoli is a strong isolated fortress on the left hand side of
-Malta harbour as you come in from the sea, and in which was a large
-magazine of gunpowder. The mutineers held out several days, and
-threatened to fire upon the town of La Valette if their terms were not
-immediately agreed to. One day indeed they did fire a few shells, but
-Lieutenant Fead purposely gave the mortars so much elevation, that the
-shells dropped quite clear of the town. Things had remained in this
-state for two or three days, with all the garrison at Malta and the
-seamen and marines of the few ships in harbour on the alert, boats
-rowing guard, the batteries manned, and a cordon of troops drawn round
-the fort; when, on the afternoon of the second day a grand tiraillade
-was heard within it, the Germans and Swiss, with the few artillerymen
-who had taken no part in the mutiny, and had been disarmed by the
-others, watching an opportunity, made a rush, destroyed the guard at
-the drawbridge, let it down, and sallied forth out of the fortress,
-bringing with them one or two wounded officers and forty-five of the
-principal malcontents; the remainder hauled up the drawbridge and held
-out for several days, again demanding terms, and threatening to blow up
-the magazine if they were not complied with.
-
-The mutineers being now reduced to a few, early in the morning, we
-stormed the place with scaling ladders, when part of the 44th Regiment
-and some sailors got possession of most of the fort; but the mutineers
-had not been idle, they had built up a kind of high breast-work of
-large loose stones before the magazine, within which they retreated,
-and kept up a brisk fire of musketry--a ball from which grazed my hat
-and stuck in the wall near me. They used occasionally, from behind
-this breast-work, to demand a parley and terms, always ending with
-the threat of blowing up the magazine, with themselves, in which
-were several hundred barrels of gunpowder. General Valette, who
-commanded the garrison, very properly refused to listen to any but an
-unconditional surrender--things having gone too far.
-
-We stationed our men under the bomb proofs, it being the general
-opinion of the engineer officers that when the magazine did blow up
-the greatest explosion would be towards the sea, where the wall of the
-magazine was weakest, and that under the bomb proof the men would be
-comparatively safe; and as these desperate fellows had declared, that
-if when St. John’s clock should strike the hour of nine in the evening,
-their terms, free pardon and safe conduct back to their own country,
-were not complied with, they would set fire to the train and blow
-themselves and the fortress up, we awaited the event with much anxiety.
-A strong suspicion existing that they had undermined the garrison, and
-had made a passage out for themselves at the back of it, I was sent to
-row guard to intercept any attempt they might make to escape by water.
-At about nine, off went the train, and a most awful explosion took
-place; the whole sea wall was blown to atoms, and the shock like that
-of an earthquake was felt far and near, some fish in the harbour made
-a spring out of the water, which showed they also were sensible of the
-vibration. Three of the 44th Regiment who were posted sentinels were
-killed by the falling stones, and a few more were hurt. I immediately
-pulled on shore and had communication with the fort, and then went
-and made my report to the senior naval officer. These desperate
-wretches, at first, were considered to have perished, but, about a week
-afterwards they were brought in, nearly starved to death, having been
-unable to make their escape from the island. They were immediately
-tried by a court martial and hanged.
-
-To return to those forty-five mutineers dragged out of the fortress by
-the sortie. They were also brought before a military tribunal; fifteen
-of them were condemned to be hanged, and most of the remainder to be
-shot. The execution was most terribly mismanaged: it presented, indeed,
-a shocking spectacle. But I will say no more upon the subject, further
-than to the last moment these poor wretches continued to vent their
-abuse on the English, and the men sentenced to be hanged endeavoured to
-keep up the spirits of those that were about to be shot--even when the
-ropes were round their necks they called to them, saying, “What are you
-crying for? It is we that ought to bewail our fate of being hanged like
-dogs instead of being shot like men.”
-
-I recollect seeing a Catholic priest very busy on the scaffold, wishing
-to persuade the criminals to kiss the crucifix before they were
-launched into eternity, but they kicked him off, and spat in his face,
-telling him he was no better than themselves.
-
-In November we sailed on a cruise off Corfu, and from thence up the
-Adriatic, where we spent a very stormy winter, blockading Venice,
-anchoring occasionally at Trieste, and under Cape Salvatore, the
-islands of Lissa, Sansego, and various other places. The N.E. winds in
-winter blow most furiously from the Istrian and Dalmatian mountains,
-and, if caught by these winds on the Italian coast, a ship is placed in
-a most critical situation; a heavy, short sea rises with the wind, and
-you are obliged to carry a press of canvas to prevent being driven on a
-lee shore.
-
-A Russian squadron of seven sail of the line, besides frigates and
-transports, with troops on board, arrived from Naples early in the
-spring of 1807, and anchored off Trieste, the Emperor of Russia having
-withdrawn his alliance from us, professing neutrality, in consequence
-of the great success of the French army under Napoleon in Austria,
-&c. The Russian admiral, Greig, very politely sent to Captain Pat.
-Campbell, of the _Unité_, the senior officer in the Adriatic, to say
-that he intended to send a ship of the line with the transports to
-land the troops they had on board at Venice, we being off the port
-blockading it, in company with the _Unité_. Captain P. Campbell replied
-that two British frigates would never suffer one Russian seventy-four,
-with her convoy, to break the blockade, and therefore requested, if
-that was the admiral’s intention, he would take his whole force, which
-would prevent any collision between us.
-
-Admiral Greig very properly did so, and saw his convoy enter safely the
-port of Venice.
-
-During the nine months we cruised in this sea we took and destroyed
-a great many of the enemy’s small vessels; but our prize concerns
-were unfortunately entrusted to agents, who became insolvent, and
-our hard-earned money was in consequence lost. I shall in the sequel
-suggest a plan for the management of prize-money, in the event of our
-again being engaged in war, it having fallen to my lot to lose every
-penny by the breaking of four agents in different parts of the world,
-into whose hands we entrusted the management of our prize affairs.
-
-These honest people have an easy way of getting rid of money committed
-to their charge. A ship brings captured vessels into harbour; on board
-comes Mr. A., B., C, or D., with a smirking face and soft tongue,
-making low bows, hoping he may have the honour,--being an accredited
-agent under a bond for £20,000,--to transact the affairs of H.M.
-ship! Officers generally being strangers in the port, and having
-orders frequently to proceed to sea again in forty-eight hours, after
-completing water and provisions, have no time to look after or make
-inquiries about _stability_ of prize agents, and therefore trust the
-concerns to the first that comes. The moment a ship is fitted out she
-goes to sea on another cruise--probably for three or four months;
-the prizes in the meanwhile are sold by the agent. Now, what does
-he generally do with the money? Why! speculates with it on his own
-account. If the scheme answers, he puts the amount of his speculation
-into his own pocket--we, whose the money ought to be, never getting any
-part of it. If it fails, the prize agent breaks, and off he starts,
-paying perhaps not a shilling in the pound. Oh! but then you have got
-his bond for £20,000! What matters this amongst a whole fleet, when he
-runs away with perhaps more than £100,000 of their money!
-
-I am not putting an extreme case--this did happen more than once--and
-it would astonish the public if the whole system of prize-plundering
-agents that was carried on last war could be laid open. They would,
-indeed, wonder men could be so easily led to trust persons with large
-sums of money without knowing more about them. My reply is, necessity
-obliges them.
-
-Now, the remedy I propose is this. Let the Government, in the event of
-another war, take the prize agency into their own hands, and deduct an
-eighth or a quarter to cover all expenses, and, whenever ships leave a
-station, let the money be sent to England. Government would have the
-use of it; the officers and ships’ companies would be sure to receive
-the remainder; and it would be much better to give up an eighth or a
-quarter to Government to make sure of the rest than to lose, as has
-happened in many cases, every sixpence of our hard-earned reward.
-
-But to return to our cruise. One morning watch, during the time we were
-washing decks, and when the after-skylight gratings were off, a strange
-sail was seen from the topmast-head. Without thinking of such things as
-hatchways, back I ran from the fore part of the quarter-deck to hail
-the maintop-masthead, and to ask the man looking out what she looked
-like, when, just as I had placed my speaking-trumpet to my mouth, head
-over heels down the after-hatchway I fell, bang into the gun-room.
-Fortunately, I came off with only a severe bruise, and the spraining of
-my right ankle, which laid me up for three weeks.
-
-The vessel proved to be an enemy’s small coaster, called a “trabaculo,”
-the rig of which is merely two large lug-sails, with a boom at the foot
-of them, with a jib, and sometimes a stay-sail and top-sail, to be set
-flying when going before the wind. She was in ballast, from Chiozza,
-bound to Ancona for a cargo. On searching the prisoners for letters and
-papers, we found concealed in their waistbands and linings of their
-clothes seven hundred and sixty-eight gold Venetian zechins, besides
-some dollars, which we took the liberty of extracting. They belonged
-to a rich Venetian merchant, and he had sent the money on board, under
-the charge of the master of the vessel, to purchase her cargo. On
-our chasing him, seeing no means of escape, he distributed the money
-amongst the men to sew in their dresses.
-
-When we first captured him, finding the vessel without anything in her,
-Captain Parker was on the eve of letting her go, when the prying eyes
-of a young mid made the discovery of the concealed money, which we took
-from them, and then allowed the vessel, with her crew, to return to her
-own port, she not being worth the trouble of sending to Malta.
-
-Some prizes in a gale of wind having been driven on shore near Pesaro,
-on the coast of Italy, a flag of truce came off to offer an exchange
-of prisoners, to which we gladly acceded. I was sent thither, with
-two boats, to bring back our seamen and petty officers. The French,
-seeing us coming, got the men down on the pier, to have them ready.
-Several officers of that nation, who were standing there, came bowing
-and scraping to the stairs of the landing-place, making a great number
-of fine speeches, and offering me refreshments of all kinds, if I would
-do them the honour to walk up into the town, which I gladly accepted,
-hoping to rest my boats’ crews and stretch my legs for half-an-hour on
-shore, after blockading their ports for six months.
-
-Just when I was stepping out of the boat I observed they held a
-consultation. Afterwards one of the officers came up to me, and said
-that he was very sorry, but orders had just arrived for them on no
-account to suffer me to come out of my boat. Now this was utterly
-false, no one having come near them, for I kept my eye upon them the
-whole time. “It was very unfortunate--they were quite in despair
-about it,” holding up their hands, shrugging up their shoulders,
-and making wry faces all the time; “they wished so much to show me
-civility--refreshments were already laid out at their lodgings--but
-what could they do?--they were so sorry--but orders must be obeyed.”
-So, taking off their cocked hats, they wished me adieu. I returned the
-salute, thanked them for the trouble they had taken in getting a repast
-ready for me, which the authorities would not permit me to enjoy; then
-off we shoved the boats, and, after a long pull, got back to the ship
-with our exchanged shipmates, much amused with the French offer of
-refreshments, which it was never intended I should partake of.
-
-We continued in the Adriatic until the end of September, 1807, when
-we proceeded to Trieste to embark Lord Pembroke and suite, and carry
-them to England. They had come from Vienna. Amongst his lordship’s
-suite were Sir William A’Court, the present Lord Heytesbury, and a Mr.
-Hammond. They were all pleasant, gentlemanly men, and although bred in
-Courts, where little else than cold-heartedness and deceit are learned,
-they in a short time won the esteem of us unsophisticated sailors.
-
-After a stormy passage of nearly six weeks, we anchored at Spithead,
-when I found myself appointed lieutenant of H.M. Ship _Swiftsure_
-(74), bearing the flag of my much-esteemed friend and admiral, Sir
-John Borlase Warren, who had been appointed commander-in-chief on the
-Halifax station.
-
-After an absence from England of three years, the ship being on the
-point of sailing, I could only get one day’s sight of home, when I set
-off to join my new ship at Plymouth, and the end of November sailed
-for the North American station to relieve Admiral Berkeley, where we
-remained three years and a half.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER X.
-
- North American station, from 1808 to 1811--Bermuda--Anecdote--Death
- of Captain Conn.
-
-
-We had a long passage out, running far to the southward, and crossing
-the tropic of Cancer before we hauled to the westward for the islands
-of Bermuda. In a squall we carried away the fore-yard, which, being a
-bad stick, went in three pieces. However, we soon made another, which
-answered our purposes remarkably well, and at the end of six weeks we
-arrived in Murray’s anchorage.
-
-These islands consist of a group of three hundred and sixty-five, which
-the Bermudians tell you is the reason there are three hundred and
-sixty-five days in the year. They are very picturesque, and covered
-chiefly with sweet-smelling cedar trees, of whose timber several fine
-18-gun sloops-of-war and small schooners have been built.
-
-Had the Bermudians been permitted to follow their own plan, no doubt
-these would have been very safe vessels: but our Navy Board took out a
-_patent for making coffins_, and sent them out plans and dimensions,
-from which they were by no means to deviate. The consequence was,
-such a tribe of little tubs, in the shape of two and three-masted
-schooners, were built, that it was absolutely throwing money away
-to construct them. Several of them, indeed, did founder, with all
-their crews. The ship-sloops were certainly better--I may say, with
-truth, they were favourites--very good sea boats, and in every respect
-excellent vessels.
-
-Besides cedar trees, these islands produce arrow-root of the best
-quality, tobacco, Indian corn, &c., but not in sufficient quantities
-for their own consumption: they, therefore, import flour and other
-articles of food from the United States, and other places. Abundance of
-fish is taken, such as grouper--which is a fine, firm fish of the rock
-species, frequently weighing several pounds--chub, porgay, and various
-other kinds; and in the spring of the year a spermaceti whale fishery
-is carried on, this species frequenting those seas at that period.
-
-The scenery of these islands is very pretty. Everything here is in
-miniature--little hills, valleys, and lakes; whilst blue and red birds,
-flitting about under a brilliant sun, give the whole the appearance
-of fairy land. The heat in summer is very oppressive, and the heavy
-tempests of wind, or, to use the native expression, “the blow,”
-accompanied with frightful storms of thunder and lightning, are most
-terrific. In winter the gales generally commence from the S.S.W. to
-S.W., and then fly round to the N.W. at once in a most severe squall.
-
-The approach to the Bermudas, amongst coral rocks and breakers,
-is attended with great danger, unless you are quite sure of your
-reckoning. Before the great improvements in navigation, many an
-unfortunate vessel was wrecked on them.
-
-The whole chain of these islands is formed like the coral banks in the
-south seas; there are no real springs of fresh water, and most of the
-inhabitants get this necessary article from tanks attached to their
-houses to catch the rain, and when these are dry they go to wells dug
-in different parts of the sea coast, through which the salt water
-filters, and becomes tolerably sweet. From these the men-of-war, too,
-generally get their supply, which has the effect of Cheltenham water,
-and saves the trouble of applying to the doctor.
-
-With regard to society, much depends upon the military and naval
-commanders-in-chief, the regiments, and king’s ships. Some of the
-Bermudian families are highly respectable.
-
-Much merriment was afforded one evening at a party, to which a naval
-captain, who is now dead, was invited. He had come in from a long
-cruise, and had been paying his addresses to a certain young lady
-living on one of the islands; but the tongue of slander had been busy
-against him during his absence, and on his making a proposal she
-refused him. This came to the ears of the lady of the house, who,
-wishing to quiz the poor man, and to be very facetious, forgetting that
-her husband had but one eye, and was not very handsome otherwise, began
-her attack thus: “So, Captain ----, I hear Miss ---- has refused you,”
-and went on very cruelly to torment the poor man, in his distress,
-as ladies _can_ do sometimes when they wish to be _mischievous_. He
-bore it all for a long time with great patience and forbearance; being
-goaded at length beyond endurance, he rose from his chair and said,
-“Mrs. ----, when such an old, ugly fellow as your husband, with but one
-eye, can get a pretty young woman like yourself for a wife, I ought
-never to despair.” And out he walked, the tables fairly turned on
-the facetious dame. Having mentioned the word “slander” in the above
-anecdote, I am induced to add another story by way of advice to young
-ladies.
-
-Whenever your friend--and many young ladies have a confidential
-one--abuses or throws out hints to the prejudice of your absent lover,
-listen to her with caution. The following little tale will point out
-the necessity of not relying entirely upon the recommendation of bosom
-friends in love affairs, for it is an old saying that all advantages
-in love, war, law, and elections are considered fair. Two young ladies
-from twenty-three to twenty-five years of age, who lived in a large
-town in the north, were first cousins, and dear confidential friends;
-the one, a widow, had soft, pretty, languishing, blue eyes, that said,
-“pray do love me;” the other, a spinster, had black, sparkling eyes,
-that said, “you shall love me.” The former had an offer of marriage
-from a widower, who had a son about fifteen years of age, whom he
-wished to put into a profession previous to his marriage, but wanted
-some ready money to do so. He, therefore, proposed that the fair
-widow should advance him the money necessary to enable him to do it.
-She, very properly, consulted her friends; some gave one opinion,
-some another. She hesitated between love and money--she called in her
-cousin, Miss Black-eyes, who strongly advised her by no means to part
-with her cash. She still hesitated, asked other advice--sent for her
-cousin again--went so far as to purchase her wedding dress and make
-preparations for furnishing a house. In the meanwhile Miss Black-eyes
-had had frequent communications with the gentleman, and also with
-her cousin. At last, she got some friends to back her opinion, and,
-finally, the match was broken off. But the same day the spinster gave
-the money to the gentleman, who had a license ready--off they went to
-the next parish and were married. Therefore, I say, be very cautious in
-adopting any opinion where the least chance of a clash of interest is
-likely to exist, particularly in _love_ affairs.
-
-Our cruises in winter, during the time we were on this station, were
-generally to the southward. Sometimes we ran down to the island of
-Porto Rico, the Mona passage, and off Anegada, with the hope of
-picking up some of the French vessels from Martinique or Guadaloupe;
-but the whole time we remained here, nearly four years, only one ship
-letter-of-marque, a schooner, and brig, fell into our hands.
-
-In our summer cruises, we, on one occasion, went to Madeira; another
-time to Fayal, one of the western isles, and when there, paid our
-respects to the nuns in the convents, and bought some of their pretty
-wreaths for ladies’ hair, beautifully made of parrots’ feathers, in
-imitation of myrtle. When first we went to the bars of the convent,
-the abbess sent some of the elder sisters to offer flowers for
-sale, but these finding no market, she changed her set, and the next
-time some pretty, interesting young nuns offered their goods, which
-we immediately bought from such fair hands. If the old harpy of an
-abbess went away for a minute they used to smile, talk, and give us
-their hands to kiss through the grates; and their handsome dark eyes
-seemed to say, “Oh! that these bars were removed, that I might get out
-of this horrid prison, to which I am consigned by sordid parents to
-make way for some male branch of the family.” Several of these young
-ladies, we were informed, had been expatriated from Portugal, from that
-motive. A short time after we left Fayal, one young nun did make her
-escape with a captain in the navy, who very honourably married her;
-but her poor friend, who tried to accompany her, met with a serious
-accident, falling down and breaking her leg, when getting out of the
-convent window. She was taken back to her cell, where, it was said, she
-underwent purgatory upon earth.
-
-When on the North American station I met with a severe hurt, while
-making sail in chase, which laid me up for a considerable period. A
-rope having got loose, struck me on the face, broke my jaw, and knocked
-out five of my teeth.
-
-In winter, the ships used to rendezvous at Bermuda; during summer at
-Halifax, Nova Scotia. At the latter place we used to enjoy pleasant
-society, amongst very kind-hearted and friendly people, whose pretty
-daughters made sad havoc with the hearts of both the army and navy.
-
-After one of our long summer cruises I got leave of absence for ten
-days, and travelled with a friend, an officer of the Royal Engineers,
-in his gig, across the country to Annapolis Royal; the scenery did not
-strike me as being particularly interesting. I saw a great deal of
-barren, dreary, uncultivated land, that wanted the hand of man to clear
-it, and make it “bring forth its fruit in due season.”
-
-Driving along the road we frequently started coveys of spruce
-partridges. I used occasionally, when time permitted, to get a shot
-at them. These birds do not, like our partridges, take to the fields,
-but on rising from the ground always fly into fir trees; they are very
-stupid, and once in a tree will allow you to shoot them all, provided
-you begin with the lowest and proceed upwards.
-
-I recollect at one place where we breakfasted after leaving Windsor, a
-large brown bear and two cubs had been caught during the night in a pit
-fall; the old one was shot in the pit, and the young ones kept alive,
-probably to be sent to England.
-
-The native Mic Mac Indians are a poor race, those, at least, that I saw
-in Halifax and its neighbourhood. They are confined to a few families.
-They used to come to the town in their slight bark canoes, bringing
-game, and skins of the silver and black fox, and boxes made of the bark
-of the birch tree, ornamented with the small quills of the porcupine,
-dyed of various colours. I have often been in their wigwams, and always
-found the people civil. Some of the young squaws were passable, but
-the old women frightful. These wigwams are easily built: half a dozen
-poles placed triangularly and covered with the bark of the birch tree,
-is the general plan; the fire is in the middle of the hut, the smoke
-finding its way out at the top, and by the door-way. These habitations
-appear warm, and the inmates healthy. When travelling, the women
-carry their babies in a kind of basket, strapped to their back, which
-resembles the lower part of a fiddle-case, peeping out of which their
-little smoked faces have a curious appearance. After disposing of their
-wares, these people generally get drunk and fight, the men beating
-the squaws, who, in their turn, belabour the men. It not unfrequently
-happens that those who return by water contrive to upset their canoes,
-when they lose all the articles they have bought; it is, however, very
-rare that any of the crew are drowned. Fish of various sorts are most
-abundant, and the market very good. The harbour of Halifax is safe, but
-sometimes difficult to make, on account of the thick fogs, which in
-particular winds,--those from south-east to south-west,--hang about the
-coast.
-
-A very provoking circumstance occurred to one of the lieutenants,
-who was a Welchman, and a married man, during a cruise, caused by a
-nanny-goat eating his letters that he had just received from England,
-previous to his having read them.
-
-A schooner joined us at sea from Bermuda, bringing the mail and letters
-from there and Halifax, Nova Scotia. We all felt very anxious about
-news, for it was nearly ten months since we had heard from “sweet
-home;” in consequence of our being out cruising, and going from place
-to place, they had missed us.
-
-The weather was squally when the above vessel joined us with the
-letters, and by the time her boat had reached us, and they were
-delivered to their owners, it was necessary to turn the hands up to
-reef the topsails. Poor M----, for fear his letters should get wet in
-his pocket, for it began to rain as well as blow, left them for safety
-on the rudder-head in the wardroom, and went on deck to his station. No
-sooner was the evolution performed than down he ran below, thinking,
-poor fellow! to have a nice, quiet reading of his two letters from his
-wife, giving an account of a new bit of mischief that had been added to
-his establishment during his absence, for he had left his wife near her
-confinement, previous to his leaving England. Now, only imagine M----’s
-rage, vexation, and consternation, on beholding Mrs. Taffy, the Welch
-goat, mounted on the rudder-head, very quietly eating up the letters.
-One was quite gone, and a very small corner of the other sticking out
-of the goat’s mouth, which she was endeavouring to masticate with all
-possible dispatch. “Nanny” was seized by the throat in a moment, and
-measures adopted to make her disgorge the precious writing, but all in
-vain, for she had taken such good care to bite them in small pieces,
-in order that they might the more easily be swallowed, and readily
-digested, that not a fragment larger than a crown piece was recovered,
-and he had to wait eight long months more, before he got others to tell
-him the contents of those, and give him information about his family.
-
-This was a trial of temper. We commiserated, sympathised, and found
-fault with him for not putting them in his pocket, writing-desk, or
-any safer place than where he had left them; in short, he had all
-Job’s comforters, but was obliged to have recourse to Dame Patience,
-hoping that some other vessel might soon come from home and bring him
-others. Eight long months elapsed ere he received information from
-England--making in the whole nearly eighteen months--a vexatious period
-at any time, but still more so in his case. The goat had been used to
-run in and out of the ward-room, for she was a great pet, and generally
-after dinner had some biscuit and a little wine or grog given to her,
-which she was very fond of. After the unfortunate affair of the letters
-she was banished for a month. After that period it was forgotten, and
-she came in for her biscuit and grog as usual.
-
-On one of our spring cruises, in May, 1810, we lost our captain (John
-Conn), who, in a fit of derangement, jumped overboard out of his stern
-cabin, and was drowned. He was a thorough seaman, and very much beloved
-by us all. He served in Lord Rodney’s fleet in the action of the 12th
-of April, 1782, and commanded the _Dreadnought_ (98), at the battle
-of Trafalgar. He was mate of the _Ramilies_ (74), Rear-Admiral Thomas
-Graves, when she was lost in that dreadful gale, which proved fatal
-to the _Ville de Paris_ (110), _Glorieux_ (74), _Centaur_ (74), and
-various other men-of-war, transports, and merchant ships, in the gulf
-stream, not far from the latitude of Bermuda, when returning to England
-in August of that year with the prizes taken by Lord Rodney.
-
-He gave me a piece of advice respecting the coast of America which I
-shall never forget, and as it is of that sort which all seamen liable
-to be sent on the North American station ought to be acquainted with,
-I shall mention it here. “Never lay your ship to at night in a gale
-of wind to the S.S.W. on the coast of America on the larboard tack,
-for the wind generally flies round at once to the N.W. with a heavy
-squall, and takes the ship flat back.” It was this, and lying-to under
-a main-sail, which caused the loss of the _Ramilies_ at that period. He
-often gave me an account of that misfortune. It was as follows:--“We
-were on the larboard tack, with a reefed main-sail set. The gale
-commenced from S.E., and gradually came round to the S.S.W., blowing
-extremely hard. When in the middle watch of the night of the 16th of
-October, 1782, the wind flew round in a most tremendous squall to the
-N.W., taking the ship aback, and throwing her nearly on her beam ends.
-We tried to brace the main-yard round, but, finding it impossible, we
-cut the foot rope of the main-sail, which was quite a new one, with
-the hope of splitting it, but it was bound so tight against the mast
-and rigging that we could not effect this. The ship at this time had
-great stern-way upon her; the sea, breaking over her poop, stove in
-the dead-lights and windows, and filled the ward-room and admiral’s
-cabin with water, and before anything could be done the main-mast,
-mizen-mast, and foretop-mast went over the side; the stern-post was
-much shaken, and the ship, nearly a new one, sprung a dangerous leak.
-At daylight the whole convoy was scattered; many of the vessels
-dismasted--some had foundered--and the sea was covered with wreck;
-the wind blowing a hurricane. By dint of perseverance, having thrown
-overboard most of her guns and heavy stores, we succeeded in keeping
-the ship afloat until the 22nd, when, finding she would not float much
-longer, we took advantage of a lull of wind, and saved the crew on
-board a few of the merchant ships that had continued by her.”
-
-Captain J. Conn also mentioned that had the orders of Rear-Admiral
-Graves been attended to the ship would probably not have been lost. The
-admiral came out of his cabin in the middle watch, and, after looking
-about him and making his remarks to the officer on deck, said, “It
-looks black under the lee bow, and I see some flashes of lightning.
-Should the clouds appear to near you, immediately haul up the main-sail
-and wear ship.” Unfortunately the admiral went into his cabin without
-sending for the captain, who slept in the ward-room. The moment the
-admiral had gone in, the officer of the watch ran down to Captain S.
-M., and mentioned the directions he had received. The captain replied,
-“It is my positive order you do no such thing without first coming to
-acquaint me.” The lieutenant of the watch had scarcely got on deck when
-he saw that a most violent squall, with shift of wind, was about to
-take place. Down he ran to acquaint his captain, according to orders,
-but before he could get again upon the deck to give the necessary
-directions the mischief had been done: she was taken aback, lost her
-masts, and was finally abandoned and burnt--all owing to adhering too
-closely to etiquette. The captain very properly was never employed
-afterwards.
-
-From Bermuda we sailed to Halifax, where, one afternoon, a man fell
-from the main-top, and striking first against the main-rigging, then
-against the spare topsail-yard in the chains, dropped into the sea.
-Being on deck, I ran to the gangway, and, seeing no time was to be
-lost, jumped overboard, and, fortunately, getting hold of the man
-just as he was sinking, I kept him up until a boat was sent to our
-assistance. His fall having been broken by the main-rigging, previous
-to his striking the topsail-yard, was probably the cause of his life
-being saved.
-
-After remaining in port some time, orders arrived from England for the
-7th Fusiliers, commanded by Lieutenant-Colonel Blakeney, to proceed to
-join the army of Lord Wellington. We embarked the headquarters and four
-hundred men of this fine regiment. The remainder were sent out in other
-men-of-war, and, after a passage of three weeks, were landed at Lisbon.
-The officers were a most pleasant, gentlemanly set of men; but out of
-the whole of those whom we took thither only the gallant Sir Edward
-Blakeney (now a Major-General) and another are alive.
-
-After returning to Halifax nothing of interest occurred on the station
-for the remainder of our time, except that Captain Charles Austen, a
-very amiable man and excellent officer, who had been placed in command
-of the _Swiftsure_ in lieu of Captain Conn, who was drowned, was
-appointed to the _Cleopatra_, Captain Lloyd joining the former ship in
-his stead.
-
-We returned to England in the spring of the year 1811, and the ship was
-paid off at Chatham.
-
-After a month at home, I took a passage in the _Port Mahon_, brig, of
-18 guns, to Lisbon, and on the 11th of June arrived in the Tagus, and
-was placed on the Admiralty list for promotion.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XI.
-
- Lisbon--Trip to the Army of Lord Wellington--Montemor Novo,
- O’Rodondo, Villa Vicosa, Elvas, Fort le Lippe.
-
-
-I was appointed to a ship in the Tagus by the commander-in-chief,
-Admiral Sir G. Berkeley, whose amiable family treated me with great
-kindness and attention.
-
-Having but little to do, I passed much time in examining the
-beautifully situated, but dirty town of Lisbon. If it were not for the
-scavenger dogs which prowl about and take “pot luck,” the streets would
-be impassable from filth. Having a brother[I] in the 14th Dragoons,
-with the army of Lord Wellington, whom I had not seen for more than
-seven years, and a remount of horses arriving from England for the
-regiment, amongst which was one for my brother, I thought it a very
-good opportunity of going to see him.
-
-The admiral having been so obliging as to grant me a month’s leave of
-absence, on the 19th of July, I accordingly left Lisbon, placing on the
-horse a pair of saddle bags, blanket, great coat, sword and pistols,
-together with some hams and brandy, which I was told would be very
-acceptable in camp.
-
-After a short ride, I embarked in a Portuguese passage boat, with a
-motley group of persons. A sail of three hours brought me safe to Aldea
-Galega, a small town on the southern bank of the Tagus.
-
-I was now about to travel in a strange country. Unable to speak the
-language, and having no servant to take care of my horse, the troops
-having gone forward the previous day, I began to fear I should be
-placed in some difficulty. Before me was a march of five or six
-days,--during which my steed would require that care a groom only
-could bestow,--I determined, however, to push on and trust to fortune,
-and my Portuguese vocabulary. Looking about the miserable town of
-Aldea Galega for mules, I was lucky enough to meet with a dismounted
-dragoon, belonging to the 14th, going to Lisbon, who informed me that
-the detachment of his regiment, which I ought to have accompanied, had
-marched from Galega only the day before, and that by my making all
-haste, I most likely should overtake them in less than forty-eight
-hours. I pressed this man into my service, went to a commissary, got
-two mules, on one of which I put my baggage, mounting the soldier, with
-three days’ rations for myself and cattle, on the other. In the evening
-we left this town for a place called Pegoeus, twenty miles distant,
-and after a most disagreeable ride through a long stunted wood, with a
-heavy sandy soil, in which the horse and mules sank half-way up their
-knees at every step, a little before midnight reached Pegoeus, a most
-wretched place, consisting of three miserable dirty hovels, very much
-resembling cow-houses, into one of which we entered, in order to rest
-the horse and mules. Sitting down upon my baggage, I loaded my pistols,
-as the house was full of ill-looking Portuguese and Spanish muleteers
-and peasantry, nearly all armed, and half drunk, and making a great
-noise. Some people I was informed had been robbed a few hours before of
-everything, near this very place. Although very much tired, sleeping
-was out of the question; I was therefore glad when daylight arrived.
-While my cattle were being saddled, I was fain to undress by the
-road-side, and shake off some score of fleas that were scampering over
-me in all directions: then mounting my horse, a cool ride of five hours
-brought me to a small village called Vendas Novas, where I remained a
-short time to get something to eat, and rest the animals. Here we were
-fortunate enough to get tea and eggs for breakfast, and I heard to my
-great joy, that the detachment was only three hours’ march ahead of me.
-At half-past nine we left this place, and after riding sixteen miles
-in the heat of the day, almost broiled, reached a tolerably good town
-called Montemor Novo, built on a hill. At this place are the remains of
-a Moorish castle.
-
-I joined the troops going to the army under the Hon. Major Butler, with
-whom I took up my quarters, and the next day sent the dragoon back
-with the mules. On the following morning at five we marched for a town
-called Arryoles, where we arrived at ten.
-
-Most of the Portuguese villages and towns in the Alemtejo are dull
-and uninteresting, at least they appeared so to me. The next morning
-early, we moved to a small clean town called Vemeiro, only eight miles
-distant, which, losing our way, we did not reach until noon. I found it
-very pleasant marching with the troops, not but that it was distressing
-to put the inhabitants to so much trouble and inconvenience turning
-them out of their rooms to quarter officers and soldiers in them. It is
-but justice however to say that the British officers and men generally
-conducted themselves with so much propriety, forbearance, and good
-feeling towards the natives of the different towns where they were
-billeted, that mutual regrets frequently took place at parting. God
-forbid, old England ever should be the scene of warfare. Contending
-armies are one of the greatest scourges with which Divine providence
-can afflict a nation. Even your allies cannot avoid bringing with
-them desolation for a time, by destroying crops of all kinds, to
-prevent their falling into the hands of the enemy. In short, ruin and
-devastation follow in the train of an army, whether friend or foe.
-
-Being near the town of Usagree, in Estramadura, with a brigade of
-dragoons, I remember seeing whole fields of wheat, &c., cut down
-and given as green food to the horses of our army. The French being
-expected almost immediately to occupy the position we were then in,
-the commanding officer very properly thought it better to secure the
-grain for ourselves than leave it to fall into the hands of the enemy.
-A poor old Spaniard came up to the gallant colonel, the late Sir Felton
-Harvey, and, shaking his grey locks, implored him to spare his only
-field, which was to preserve himself and family from starving, and
-which he beheld our troops cutting to feed their horses. The reply was
-that we were his friends; that we were obliged to take the corn, since
-our horses must not starve; that, if they did not eat it, those of the
-French, his mortal enemies, would. The colonel concluded by giving the
-poor man an order on the commissary to pay him in dollars equal to
-what had been taken away. I give this anecdote for the edification of
-such of my countrymen as are apt, through ignorance, let us hope, to
-malign the conduct of our soldiers in the Peninsula, and who grudge
-the officers and men of both army and navy their hard-earned half-pay
-or pension, a return surely not more than sufficient for averting the
-horrors of war from the hearths of their fellow subjects.
-
-The constant state of alarm and anxiety that the whole of Spain and
-Portugal suffered while the contending armies were hovering about
-was extreme. As long as the British troops occupied their towns and
-villages, the poor inhabitants knew they had nothing to fear; but the
-moment the French came, plunder and destruction were the order of the
-day, and in very many cases, outrages were committed through mere
-wantonness: houses unroofed, the sides of others stove in, and the
-furniture destroyed. Our soldiers were the “lion and the lamb”; those
-of the French, to use Voltaire’s expression, the “tiger and the monkey.”
-
-I was informed at Villa Vicosa, by a genteel Portuguese family, of the
-continual fear they lived in, and they related to me the following
-circumstance:--One night the alarm was given that the French were
-advancing into the town, nearly every person having gone to bed.
-Immediately all the church bells began tolling to give warning;
-everyone, even the sick, arose, these latter were put into cars, each
-person taking what things he could carry with him--one a bed, another
-articles of clothing, chairs, tables, or whatever else might be useful
-in their hiding places. After they had gone a short distance, it was
-found to be only a false alarm. An enemy’s foraging party had been
-seen during the evening in the neighbourhood, but had, fortunately for
-them, taken another direction. At this period our troops were in the
-north of Portugal, and the French having a strong garrison in Badajoz,
-used to send out occasionally a marauding party, which caused the above
-consternation!
-
-We left Vemiero on the 23rd July, and arrived at Estramoy the same day.
-It is rather a large inland town, and once had been a garrison, the
-works of the fortifications remained, but the guns had been removed,
-the city being commanded by an eminence at the back of it still
-higher than the hill on which it is built. Unlike most other towns in
-Portugal, it is tolerably clean. On the following morning we marched
-from hence to a pretty neat little village called O’Rodondo, where we
-arrived at ten, and I had the pleasure of once more meeting my brother,
-who had just recovered from a sabre cut in his face, received at the
-battles of Fuentes d’Onor, which knocked out two of his teeth and split
-his tongue.
-
-Since we had parted in the year 1804 on the peaceful shores of England,
-what trials and scenes had we both gone through and witnessed. He had
-been on the expedition under Sir Samuel Achmuty, at the taking of Monte
-Video, in South America; in four general actions; the two bloody days
-of Talavera in 1809; the battle of the Coa, Busaco, Fuentes d’Onor,
-where he was wounded, besides several warm affairs and skirmishes; and
-since then he was in the battles of Llerena, Salamanca, Vittoria,
-Pyrenees, Orthes, Toulouse, and numerous outpost affairs.
-
-He has lately been sent with Lord William Russell as one of the
-Lieut.-Colonels employed by our Government as military reporters
-when Don Pedro returned to Portugal, the events of which period he
-has published in his “rough leaves.” He at present commands the
-15th Hussars, and is with his regiment at Madras, having sailed
-from Gravesend, with the headquarters of his regiment, on board the
-_Herefordshire_, East Indiaman, on the 4th of June, 1839.
-
-I, too, had been tried in fire at Trafalgar, and on various boat
-expeditions, etc., and had been wounded, and taken prisoner.
-
-We remained at O’Rodondo three days, during which time I rode with my
-brother to various places in the neighbourhood. On the 28th of July,
-the regiment moved to Villa Vicosa, where we found some fine infantry
-regiments preparing for a march to the northward to invest Ciudad
-Rodrigo.
-
-I liked Villa Vicosa much better than any other town I had yet seen
-in Portugal, the inhabitants were very civil, and I was introduced to
-several families, and did hope we should remain here for some days; the
-country round about it was pleasant, and a park full of deer, belonging
-to the Prince Regent, used to furnish us occasionally with venison.
-Those officers who had a regency certificate had permission to shoot in
-it.
-
-Operations against Ciudad Rodrigo having been determined upon, we only
-remained here three days, during which time I visited Elvas, Borba,
-Alandroal, and other places. From Elvas, I had a very good view of
-Badajoz, with the river Guadiana, and the surrounding flat country.
-The town and fortifications of Elvas are well worth seeing, they are
-on a large scale, and built on a high hill. This being one of the
-principal frontier towns of Portugal, great pains had been taken by
-Count Le Lippe[J] to render the works as strong as possible. After he
-had completed the fortifications, he found it necessary to erect a
-strong fortress or castle, on a high hill, which commanded the best
-part of them, and which is considered so strong, that it is supposed to
-be impregnable; it is named after himself. Report says that a garrison
-of 15,000 men in Elvas, and 1200 in Fort Le Lippe, with plenty of
-provisions, would keep those places in defiance of any numbers that
-might be brought against them.
-
-There is at Elvas a very large, fine, and curious aqueduct, differing
-from any I had yet seen: it has three tiers of arches, raised one above
-the other, and of great height.
-
-The French army having made a movement to the northward, orders arrived
-in the evening for the 14th Dragoons to march at daylight the next
-morning for Estramoy, where they halted for the night. Next day they
-moved forward to Frontiera, and from thence to O’Crato, where are the
-remains of an old Moorish castle. We left this town on the morning of
-the 5th of August, and on our arrival at the miserable village of
-Gafete, my leave of absence having expired, I was obliged, to my great
-sorrow, to return to Lisbon. So, bidding my brother and friends of the
-regiment adieu, I struck off for Abrantes, thirty miles distant.
-
-Colonel Hervey very kindly sent a dragoon to escort me thither, the
-road being rendered dangerous by marauding parties of the natives. I
-was now mounted upon a nice little French horse. He had belonged to the
-French 1st Hussars, and had been taken from the enemy in a charge by my
-brother’s troop. I reached Abrantes by five in the evening, and, having
-got a tolerable billet and something to eat, was glad to go to rest.
-
-At ten the next morning I quitted Abrantes alone, the soldier having
-gone back to his regiment, which was ordered to cover the siege of
-Ciudad Rodrigo.
-
-I had still eighty-four miles to ride to Lisbon, which was not very
-pleasant to do alone at that period, considering the excited state and
-wretched poverty of the country.
-
-At sunset I arrived at Santarem, thirty-six miles from Abrantes. This
-latter is a large, dirty town, standing upon a hill that commands the
-country around it. The river Tagus runs at its foot, over which is a
-bridge of boats that can be removed at pleasure. The French marshal,
-Junot, derived his title from this city.
-
-At Santarem I picked up an English soldier, who undertook the care of
-my horse. This is a large town. Part of it is built on a high hill: the
-remainder standing in a valley.
-
-When here last year the French committed great devastation, unroofing
-some of the houses, and staving in the sides of others, besides
-plundering and destroying whatever they could lay their hands on.
-
-My billet had been unroofed, and part of its sides were torn down.
-I found a mattrass spread on the floor, but without the necessary
-accompaniment of clothes. The fleas, as is usual in such places,
-were exceedingly troublesome; but, having ridden all day under a hot
-sun, sleep soon overcame this annoyance, and I remained unconscious
-of their attacks till seven the next morning, when I arose, and,
-after taking a refreshing swim in the Tagus in order to get rid of my
-lively bed-fellows, ate my breakfast, and then rode to Villa Franca,
-twenty-four miles. The heat of the weather being very great, and my
-horse loaded with my saddle bags, it was impossible for me to go faster
-than a walk, so that it was evening before I reached that place.
-
-In the course of the day I passed through several small villages that
-the French had nearly destroyed. The inhabitants were beginning to
-return and put the remains of their houses in order.
-
-At Villa Franca I got a tolerably good dinner, but was almost talked
-to death by the landlady, an Irishwoman, at whose house I had put up,
-and who inquired the news of the army--what they were about--whither
-going--where such a regiment was, &c., &c., forgetting that I was tired
-and wanted rest.
-
-Early next morning I left for Lisbon, and, after a ride of six hours,
-passing by part of the lines of Torres Vedras, at which men were still
-working, I reached that city.
-
-I had ridden, for the first time in my life, more than five hundred
-miles, and nearly the whole of it in the sun during the hottest part
-of the day, in the months of July and August, without its doing me the
-least harm, and never feeling over fatigued.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XII.
-
- Lisbon, Cintra, Mafra, etc., 1811, 1812--Second trip to the
- Army--Taking of Badajoz.
-
-
-I spent the remainder of the year in the Tagus, making, when duty
-permitted, excursions up that river to some of the small islands, near
-Alhandra, where we used to find snipe, quail, and other wild fowl.
-Sometimes we landed on the south side of the Tagus, to shoot red-legged
-partridges and woodcocks, which we occasionally met with near the
-Prince’s Quinta. But the most delightful place for snipe and wild fowl
-was Loares, on the road towards Torres Vedras: the swamps being there
-alive with various kinds of them, and amongst others, bittern, kites,
-hawks, and I have seen, now and then, an osprey.
-
-In March, 1812, I made a very pleasant excursion to Cintra, Mafra, and
-Colares, with the present Lord By----, and some other officers of the
-_Barfleur_. On our road, we went to see the palace of Calous, where, in
-some of the rooms are, very well painted, the whole of the adventures
-of Don Quixote.
-
-Cintra, fifteen miles distant from Lisbon, is situated on the
-north-east side of the rock. It is certainly one of the most romantic
-places I have seen, and commands an extensive and beautiful view of
-the country and of the sea. The buildings most worthy of observation
-are: first, the Penia convent, rising from the rock of Lisbon; it is
-about three hundred and twenty years’ old, and is tenanted by three
-monks. From hence is a fine prospect, comprising Cape Espichel,
-Peniche, and the Burling islands. Another convent, called the Cork,
-from its being lined with that wood, built also on the rock, and having
-fifteen monks for its inmates, next attracts attention. This was
-founded about three hundred years ago. Beyond, on an extreme point of
-the rock, are the ruins of a Moorish castle, mosque, prison, and baths:
-the latter supposed by some to be of Roman origin. The Marquess of
-Marialva’s palace, where the convention was signed, is very fine, and
-pleasantly situated.
-
-Rising amongst rocks, and embosomed in orange, lemon, and pomegranate
-trees, Penia Verde must not pass unnoticed. Its original possessor, Don
-Juan de Castro, who died A. D. 1723, and whose remains, at his request,
-were interred in a particular spot in the garden, discovered much of
-the interior of Brazil: besides being of great use to the Government
-in several important matters. On his return to Lisbon he petitioned
-for a pension, which being most ungratefully refused, he so willed his
-property and possessions as to prevent them in any way benefiting his
-country, which had turned a deaf ear to his claims for compensation
-for the services he had rendered her. This fact our guide adduced
-as a reason for the grounds being found in their wild and neglected
-condition.
-
-The king’s palace, an old gloomy edifice, did not much take my fancy.
-What most struck me there was a shower-bath, lined with white marble,
-or, perhaps, pantiles, and which, on turning a pipe, throws the water
-in all directions. It not unfrequently happened that visitors were
-taught a practical lesson of its powers. It used to be a joke to get
-them to step into the bath room, the machinery was put in motion, and
-they underwent a good drenching as the reward of their curiosity.
-
-The prince’s palace of Romalyan I thought pretty, and its situation,
-looking towards Lisbon and the sea, quite delightful. The Marquis of
-Marialva has other gardens than those adjoining his palace, which we
-went to see, on account of the figures they contain; amongst them
-are shoemakers, and an old woman spinning, all as large as life; by
-touching some wires they are set in motion and immediately begin their
-work.
-
-We one day rode to the village of Colares, prettily situated near the
-sea, and famous for its wine, which is so excellent that I am surprised
-it is not more frequently met with in England; it is something in
-flavour between claret and burgundy.
-
-In the garden of a Signor Tomazine, at the above place, is a mineral
-spring, but I am ignorant of its qualities. Would not this afford
-a capital speculation to an M.D. Let me advise one to analyse the
-spring, rent it--write a pamphlet upon its good qualities--recommend
-it strongly for the cure of all kinds of complaints, particularly
-consumptions and pulmonary affections. The fine beautiful air of
-Cintra, and its romantic scenery he could always call in to his aid as
-a good and faithful ally in all extreme cases; and when he occasionally
-failed, he might say the case was desperate, and the patient’s time
-was come. With the assistance above mentioned, he would be sure to
-effect some cures, and make his fortune; steam vessels would bring him
-patients and friends to attend them, some of the latter would probably
-in time fall sick, and, therefore, he might justly calculate upon
-getting a few of them also on his books as patients. I hope, should any
-medical gentleman take this hint, he will remember me gratefully in his
-will, for depend upon it, the speculation will answer much better than
-many of the railroads.
-
-Before leaving Cintra, on our return to Lisbon, we made an excursion
-to Mafra to see an eminent building, containing, besides a convent and
-church, a palace for the king, and another for the queen. I believe
-that, with the exception of the Escurial in Spain, this is the largest
-pile of building in Europe. I was told that in one quadrangle alone,
-the French, previous to the convention, had quartered 15,000 men. From
-the roof is a fine view of the country for many miles. There is also a
-topada, or park, of some extent, belonging to it. From the church rises
-a dome, something like that of St. Paul’s in London. There are likewise
-two steeples. The interior, which contains some good paintings, and
-several pieces of sculpture in alto-relief, on scriptural subjects, is
-well worth inspection. These were executed at Rome, and showed the
-hand of a great master. There are also statues of all the saints, in
-white marble. Its six organs are considered very fine, and according
-to the padres, the Mafra ring of bells is the best in the world. This
-palace, at the time we saw it, was the depôt for the formation of the
-Portuguese army.
-
-I have not dwelt much on Lisbon, a city so generally known, that to
-notice its public buildings, aqueduct, etc., would be superfluous in a
-narrative like the present. We had a few slight shocks of an earthquake
-during the time I was there, which created a little alarm, and caused
-all the church bells to be set ringing for the people to come to mass.
-
-On the 16th of March I had permission to accompany my brother to his
-regiment, which was then at Olivença, in Spain, covering the siege
-of Badajoz. Our route to the army was the same as before, through
-the Alemtejo to Elvas; we crossed the river Guadiana by the ford of
-Xerumaha to Olivença, in Estramadura, where the regiment remained until
-the 4th of April.
-
-Marshal Soult having advanced towards Badajoz to try and raise the
-siege, the cavalry, both heavy and light, were sent forward as far as
-Villaloa, Almandralajo, and Villa Franca, to oppose him; some brigades
-of infantry occupying Albuera on nearly the same spot where Lord
-Beresford fought the battle.
-
-I remained behind to see the siege, and pay a visit to my old friends
-of the 7th Fusiliers, with a Captain Daniel Capel, of the 14th. On the
-5th of April I went with them to look at the breaching batteries, and
-to visit an old acquaintance, who had been wounded the day before by
-a musket-ball through the side, while doing duty as an engineer in the
-trenches. Poor fellow! he was afterwards killed on the Pyrenees by
-lightning; he belonged to the 37th Regiment. I spent a very pleasant
-day with the Fusiliers, but it was doomed alas! to be the last with
-several of my gallant friends, and amongst others, poor Saint Pol, who
-the next night was mortally wounded at the storming of the large breach.
-
-On my return, late in the evening, to my quarters at Olivença, what
-with the haze in my head, occasioned by wine, the foggy state of the
-evening, the smoke from the fire of the different batteries, the
-captain of dragoons and myself lost each other, and our way. By mistake
-my horse, who had been taken from the enemy, took the wrong road, and
-instead of going to the left, towards a ford that we had to cross at
-some distance in rear of the camp, he chose to take me to the foot of
-the bridge leading to Badajoz, where the enemy had a cavalry picket;
-fortunately for me, we had a strong covering party of the 43rd Regiment
-lying down on the ground. Being unable to give the countersign, these
-were going to shoot me for a French officer. They seized my steed, and
-knocked me off his back with the butt end of a musket. I was dragged on
-the ground back to the camp, where I had to encounter the jokes of my
-friends, softened it is true by sincere congratulations on my escape.
-My horse, whose head had been turned from Badajoz, got loose, and
-managed to find his way back to Olivença, where I was _lucky_ enough
-to find him the next day; for sometimes lost horses were borrowed
-to carry baggage, commissary stores, or other articles, and they
-undergoing various metamorphoses, such as cropping the ears and tails,
-with other little changes in their appearances, the lawful owners could
-with great difficulty recognise their own steeds.
-
-These slight-of-hand tricks used occasionally to be played; and with
-an army consisting of so many thousand troops, composed of various
-nations, and covering a vast extent of country, it was not a very easy
-matter to trace a lost animal, whether horse, mule, or donkey.
-
-On the evening of the 6th, Badajoz was stormed and taken. _No other
-troops in the world_ could have carried a citadel so strong, and so
-manfully defended; they behaved most _nobly_, in spite of death and
-destruction, which were dealt around with _no sparing hand_.
-
-Our army was indeed a gallant band of warriors, such as we shall never
-see again; such as the world probably will never again produce.
-
-Having rejoined the 14th Dragoons at Valverde, I proceeded with them
-to the several towns of Almendrab, Santa Martha, Villalva, Villa
-Franca, Fuente de Meastro, Rebeiro, and nearly to Usagre. Marshal Soult
-pushed forward his cavalry, and some outpost skirmishing took place.
-Near Villa Franca, the 12th, 14th, and 16th Light Dragoons, with six
-regiments of heavy horse, having joined and drawn up, we expected a
-general cavalry action. It passed over, however, with some skirmishing
-in front with a numerous body of the enemy’s dragoons, who manœuvred
-to cover the retreat of their army.
-
-I recollect one of Soult’s scouts, a Spaniard, being taken by a patrol
-of the 14th Dragoons. This fellow was observed stealing, under cover of
-night, in the direction of our pickets, when he was seized and brought
-in. Being threatened with instant death unless he gave up his despatch,
-he fell on his knees and implored for mercy, directing the officer
-to cut the third leather button from his coat, when he would find
-what he demanded. On taking off the button, a tiny slip of paper was
-discovered, on which was written these words, “Hold out: I am coming.”
-I saw this _morceau_; it was short and to the purpose. It had been sent
-by the marshal to the governor of Badajoz.
-
-My leave of absence having expired, I was obliged to return towards
-Lisbon. I had been all day with my brother on the advanced picket,
-looking at our videttes and those of the French, near Usagre, when,
-having laid down in my clothes to get a little rest, orders arrived to
-again advance. No engagement, however, being expected, I was advised to
-remain where I was for the night, and to set out in the morning on my
-route for the Tagus.
-
-Next day, whilst quietly retracing my steps thither, a brilliant
-cavalry affair took place near the above-named town and Llerena, when
-the French were completely routed, and many prisoners made. I was sorry
-I had not remained to witness the rencontre, but consoled myself with
-the reflection that I had probably been saved a broken head, where I
-should have gained neither credit nor thanks.
-
-The second day after leaving the army I reached Badajoz, and went over
-the defences of that city, which bore strongly the marks of recent
-strife. Not the least affecting evidence of mortal affray were the
-bodies of several of my gallant countrymen floating in the ditch,
-and which people were employed in removing in order to their being
-buried. The more I examined the works, the greater my astonishment
-at the bravery and perseverance of our troops. By one unacquainted
-with military tactics, time alone would have been pronounced capable
-of effecting the ruin before him. He could never have conceived it
-possible that walls so apparently impregnable would have yielded to the
-force of a besieging army. But for the escalade, indeed, failure had
-been inevitable where success was now complete, insured as it had been
-by immense sacrifice of life.
-
-My road from Badajoz lay through Olivença, where I crossed the river
-Guadiana to Xerumaha, and proceeded thence to Villa Vicosa and San
-Miguel de Mechada, where I fell in with some French prisoners marching,
-under a strong escort, to Lisbon. They had formed part of a division,
-under General Girard, when he was surprised and routed by the gallant
-Sir Rowland Hill near Miranda.
-
-The fifth day brought me to Evora, where, announcing to the inhabitants
-glad tidings of victory, I got an excellent billet at the house of a
-padre, who gave me the best dinner and bed I had had for some time.
-
-Evora, the capital of the Alemtejo, is a fine old town, and has still
-visible the remains of a Roman wall. Here, too, is the aqueduct, built
-by the General Sertorius, which is in tolerable repair after the lapse
-of so many ages. This place is fortified, and contains an episcopal
-palace.
-
-Time pressing, I set forward the next morning, my friend, the priest,
-having obtained an order from the Juis de Fori for a muleteer to attend
-me, and convey my baggage on a mule. The fellow turned rather sulky,
-so much so that I was obliged to drive him on with my pistol to Vendas
-Novas, where, after a hot ride of thirty-six miles, I had to sit up all
-night to guard my baggage and prevent the rascal running away, such I
-had been informed being his intention the moment I had gone to bed. The
-window of my room looking into the street, I told my friend that if he
-attempted to escape I would shoot him on the spot. This had the desired
-effect, and next morning I proceeded, still driving the Spaniard on
-before me, to that dirty place, Pegoeus, where, falling in with a party
-of English soldiers, I gave him in charge to them.
-
-The following day I arrived, after a ride of five hours, at Aldea
-Galega, where, dismissing my muleteer, who made many humble apologies
-for his behaviour, I embarked in the ferry-boat, and crossed over to
-Lisbon. The fellow, it appeared, was fearful of being again pressed at
-Aldea Galega into the service of the commissaries to carry stores or
-provisions to the army.
-
-Captain Hood Linze, of H.M.S. _Ocean_ (98), being obliged to invalid on
-account of a severe wound from the stab of a madman, I was, on the 11th
-June, 1812, appointed acting commander of H.M.S. _Brune_.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIII.
-
- Cadiz, Minorca, Majorca, Alicant, Carthagena, Algiers, Oran, Altea
- Bay--Drive a French Privateer on shore near Denia.
-
-
-On the 13th of June I sailed in H.M. Ship _Brune_ for Cadiz, at that
-time besieged by Marshal Soult. I waited on Admiral Legg, and our
-ambassador (Sir Henry Willesley), and delivered my despatches, and,
-after remaining there two days, proceeded to Gibraltar and Minorca,
-where I was placed under the orders of Rear-Admiral Benjamin Hallowell,
-who, on the 4th July, sent me to Palma Bay, Majorca, to collect
-Spanish troops, and embark them on board transports and the _Brune_.
-After making two or three trips between the two above-named islands,
-I embarked Major-General Whittingham’s brigade of Spanish troops, who
-were not a bad-looking body of men.
-
-I dined occasionally with his Excellency the Governor-General of the
-Balearic islands, the Marquis de Coupigny, who was a very pleasant,
-gentlemanly person, and at whose table I met several of the Spanish
-_noblesse_, who had taken refuge at Palma during the troubles on the
-continent.
-
-I observed that smoking was not uncommon with the Spanish ladies.
-Whence this custom originated it is perhaps difficult to determine,
-unless, indeed, the habit of using tobacco--to which the other sex
-are immoderately addicted--has gradually, from social motives, been
-adopted by the fair; for we can hardly suppose that a practice so
-generally reprobated by them should at once be resorted to by ladies
-as a recreation, or even solace. The compliment, if such it be, ought
-to be duly appreciated by their husbands. But what will not woman do
-or suffer to conduce to the comfort or to mitigate the care of him she
-loves!
-
-In Spain are to be seen beautiful women in every rank of life, with
-very fine eyes, pretty feet and hands. They generally carry a fan--a
-most useful auxiliary whilst conversing; indeed, they would be hardly
-able to talk without one. Their dress is calculated to set off a good
-figure and fine features to great advantage.
-
-After embarking the brigade of General Whittingham, we proceeded
-to Alicant. The castle and fortress of this place make a figure
-in history, particularly during the war of succession, and bring
-to remembrance the brave and chivalric conduct of the Earl of
-Peterborough. The anchorage in the bay is good, and, with a long scope
-of cable, ships may ride out a heavy gale with the wind in, for the
-under-tow is so great that you ride with little strain on the cables.
-
-After the battle of Salamanca, Soult, thinking his situation before
-Cadiz insecure, raised the siege, and retired into the interior; but
-it being doubtful whether he might not make a dash at Carthagena,
-Rear-Admiral Sir Sidney Smith proceeded thither from Gibraltar in
-the _Tremendous_ (74), to communicate with the general commanding our
-army at Alicant and Rear-Admiral Hallowell on the subject. I was,
-therefore, sent thither with two Spanish regiments, embarked on board
-transports, to be ready to act in case of necessity, but with orders on
-no account to land the troops, unless the place was threatened, as a
-bad periodical yellow fever was raging in the town with great violence.
-The gallant admiral (Sir Sidney Smith), however, would take me on
-shore to show me the best places to plant cannon and take up position
-in case of attack. After this, we must go to the hospital to inquire
-into the nature of the fever, &c. Every now and then he gave me a pinch
-of snuff, telling me not to swallow my saliva, and there would be no
-danger of catching the disease. In the course of a week I was attacked
-by fever, but, being in the outer roadstead, the fresh air probably
-prevented its attaining that malignancy it had reached in the town, but
-it was some weeks before I perfectly recovered.
-
-The _Tremendous_ (74), with the admiral, sailed the day after our visit
-to the city to join the fleet off Toulon. Several other men-of-war
-arrived in the course of a few days with more troops from headquarters.
-Whether Soult was deterred by the sickness prevailing in the place, or
-had heard of the reinforcements, he passed on his route, and we all
-returned to Alicant.
-
-Shortly after, I was sent to Altea Bay, to lie there and protect any
-transports that might arrive to procure water.
-
-During my stay there the French sent a detachment of three hundred
-infantry and a squadron of cavalry from Denia to forage and levy
-contributions. Having only my own ship’s company--which altogether, men
-and boys, amounted to only one hundred and forty--it was impossible
-for me to land and fight them, but by making a show with our boats,
-and firing a few shots, we dislodged them from the town, and prevented
-their plundering it or getting any contributions from the inhabitants.
-They succeeded, however, in our neighbourhood, and in the course of a
-couple of days collected a quantity of forage, &c., and retired upon
-Denia.
-
-Within one day’s march of Altea was a Spanish division of troops,
-to whom I immediately sent the moment intelligence of the enemy’s
-intention of paying us a visit reached me.
-
-The officer I dispatched got to them the same evening, and returned
-back the following morning, three hours before the arrival of
-the enemy. The Spaniards, with their usual alertness, sent two
-regiments--about twelve hundred men--_exactly five days_ after the
-French had retired.
-
-On the 8th of December, 1812, a convoy of transports were placed under
-my orders to proceed to Oran, on the coast of Barbary, to procure corn
-and bullocks for the army and navy, but heavy gales from the S.W.
-obliged us to run into the bay of Algiers, where we remained about a
-fortnight.
-
-Our consul, Mr. MacDonald, was extremely civil, and occasionally I
-slept at his country house, a few miles out of the town; but being
-unaccustomed to the noise of the jackals that came nightly to the very
-walls of his yard in search of food, I was frequently disturbed by them.
-
-The Dey of Algiers ordered us a daily supply of fresh provisions and
-vegetables. On my departure I proffered my services to take whatever
-his Highness might have to send to his servant, the Bey of Oran. He
-thanked me, through our consul, and requested me to take a stone
-coffin for the Bey’s son, which I delivered safe. The Dey was so much
-indisposed during my stay that I was unable to obtain an audience. We
-had a great deal of saluting--twenty-one guns on anchoring--twenty-one
-guns on landing; three guns whenever he sent off his present of fresh
-meat and vegetables, which latter was considered in the light of three
-salaams.
-
-After a passage of two days from Algiers, we reached the fine, safe bay
-of Marsalquiver, three miles from the town of Oran, where all ships
-anchor in winter, it being nearly land-locked.
-
-No time was lost in having an interview with the Bey, who was civil;
-but I had a long discussion previously with his guards, who refused me
-admittance to his presence unless I took off my boots, and employed
-menaces to enforce their demands. However, finding me obstinate, and
-our vice-consul, who was a Spaniard, telling them I had come from
-Algiers with a present from his Highness the Dey, they permitted me to
-pass, and I never was troubled afterwards.
-
-The Bey was a venerable-looking man, of about sixty-five years of age,
-thin, and of middle stature, with a fine, long, white beard, hard
-features, but a scowl upon his countenance that showed he could, when
-he thought proper, play the tiger.
-
-He promised the supplies I requested in ten days, said he wished to be
-on the best terms with the English, and thanked me for bringing the
-stone coffin for his son’s tomb; gave me coffee without sugar, and
-a pipe to smoke, and appeared much amused with my awkward manner of
-sitting cross-legged like a Turk.
-
-He was surrounded by his principal officers, in full dress, with
-silver-gilt swords and pistols in their girdles.
-
-The admiral or captain of the port was a handsome, mild, gentlemanly
-person. The old Bey, the morning of my arrival, had been administering
-summary justice, for on my going into the market-place I saw three
-ill-looking Moors hanging by the neck. It is not the fashion in Barbary
-to place caps over the criminals’ faces before they are executed. Upon
-inquiring what those three wretches had been doing, the vice-consul
-gave me the following account:--“A Moorish merchant, with a special
-passport from the Bey, had permission to travel into the interior to
-traffic, when he and his party were waylaid on the mountains, robbed,
-and all, except one, murdered. The person who escaped immediately
-informed the proper authorities, who reported it to the Bey. A body
-of troops was instantly sent to the mountains, who arrested all the
-chiefs of the tribes, and brought them before his Highness. He, looking
-at them sternly, said, ‘On such a day a merchant from my city, with my
-passport, was murdered and robbed on the mountains. If in three days
-from this time you do not bring before me the whole of the offenders,
-your own heads shall answer for it. Begone!’ In less than forty-eight
-hours eleven fellows were brought in, and led directly to the palace.
-The Bey demanded who committed the murder. Three men were pointed out.
-They did not deny it. ‘Very well,’ said the Bey, ‘take these men, and
-instantly hang them up in the market-place.’ Three others, who had
-been most active in plundering, had their right hands cut off, and the
-remaining five received each from three to five hundred bastinadoes on
-the soles of their feet.” The third evening, at sunset, the murderers
-were cut down and buried.
-
-They have a very expeditious way of staunching the blood after
-amputation. The stumps of the arms are plunged into a kind of boiling
-pitch, which has the effect of searing the arteries. Over this is
-placed a dressing and bladder, when the sufferers are turned out.
-
-I used to go occasionally, with our vice-consul and some of my
-own officers, out shooting. We always found the people tolerably
-civil--except the boys, who used to abuse and spit at us, calling us,
-amongst other names, Christian dogs. Now and then we got a shove and a
-sly stone.
-
-Coming home one evening from an excursion to a small lake, about
-sixteen miles distant, where we had been for the purpose of shooting
-flamingos, &c., we got into a serious scrape, owing to a young
-commissary having taken his servant, a Portuguese boy, with him, who
-did not understand managing a horse.
-
-We had ridden fast across the country from the lake to get back before
-the gates of Oran were shut, which they always were at sunset, when,
-just as we were entering the town and trotting on, we met a party of
-Turkish and Moorish boys, who tried to frighten our horses by throwing
-up their loose garments in the animals’ faces, and making a great
-noise. All our horses stood this, except the one on which the servant
-boy was mounted, which reared up, and, dashing forward, knocked down
-with his fore feet one of the young Turks who had been most forward
-in the mischief. His head was a good deal cut, and bled profusely.
-We should have said he was very justly served. Not so the Moors and
-Kabiles. A hue and cry was instantly raised, and we were followed by a
-mob, demanding the life of the poor Portuguese for having, he being a
-Christian, drawn the blood of a true follower of the prophet. Pushing
-on to the vice-consul’s, we jumped off our horses, shoved in the young
-Portuguese, and locked and barricaded the doors. The Moors and Kabiles
-surrounded the house, making a great clamour, insisting that the
-servant should be immediately given up and put to death. Nothing but
-their fear of the English prevented them breaking into the place. We
-hoisted our colours on the flagstaff at the consul’s house, when it was
-considered a fortress, and respected accordingly.
-
-In a city like Oran, where each man is a spy on his neighbour, the news
-was fortunately not long in reaching the ears of the Bey, who, on the
-first intimation of the danger that threatened the consul’s residence,
-sent down a party of troops, with the captain of the port, to restore
-order, and act as circumstances might require. Some management was
-necessary to get the captain of the port into the house, as also to
-keep out the Moors, who, had they laid hold of the boy, would certainly
-have murdered him.
-
-We at length succeeded, and then explained that, returning from
-shooting, we had ridden full trot into the town in order to get home
-before the gates were closed at sunset, clearly showing that but for
-the boys frightening our horses no harm could possibly have happened.
-He said that he did not in the least doubt the truth of our story, but
-should the boy die,--accidents not being provided against in their
-code of laws,--nothing short of the death of the Portuguese lad would
-appease the populace, since blood, and Turkish blood, too, had been
-spilt.
-
-I proposed putting on my uniform and attending the vice-consul and
-captain of the port to the palace, which was done. Passing through the
-crowd was not very agreeable, but, under the protection of a guard, we
-reached our destination in safety.
-
-The old Bey laid down the Moorish law with great clearness, arguing the
-point calmly, and evidently with a friendly feeling towards us.
-
-He had been making enquiries, he said, and had found our account of
-the transaction to be quite correct; that he knew the Turkish boy was
-a great rascal, and though he had been rightly served, it would be
-difficult to pacify the Moors, especially since the offender was not an
-Englishman. “True,” I replied; “but he is a subject of our ally, and
-under my protection, and nothing but extreme necessity shall compel me
-to give him up.” “Keep him out of sight,” replied his Highness, “and
-never again let eyes be cast on him in this place, or I will not be
-answerable for his life. Come here to-morrow.”
-
-We returned to the consul’s, and the captain of the port dispersed
-the mob, assuring them the Bey would take care that justice was done.
-With the morning’s dawn again came our clamorous foes; but having in
-the meantime had communication, through our friend the captain of the
-port, with the boy’s parents, we had learned there was no fear of the
-young Turk dying, who, though he had received a severe cut and some
-bruises, was doing well. A hint, too, was given us that a few dollars
-would assist to heal the wound and soften the rigour of justice. We
-went early next morning to the palace, when the Bey informed us of what
-we already knew, that the boy would not die from the injuries he had
-sustained. Then entering into conversation, “Consider,” said he, “if a
-like event had happened to you in a town in England? You knew it was
-wrong to ride fast near a populous town.” We pleaded our apprehensions
-of being locked out all night. “You ought to have come home sooner
-then; but to return to my first question. If in your own country such
-an accident had happened, what would be the consequence?” I replied
-that we should have had to pay the doctor’s bill, and in the case of
-a poor person to give something extra to the parents for the loss of
-time in nursing him. “Very well, then, you shall do the same here; but,
-take my advice, never ride fast through a large town again, and smuggle
-your Portuguese off to the ships for fear of accident;” which I did
-the earliest opportunity. The Bey then said, “Who furnished you with
-horses?” The vice-consul informed him. “What! my slave? they were mine,
-and the fellow had let them to you without my leave; he has been the
-cause of the whole. Here,”--clapping his hands, that an officer might
-come,--“go directly and give my groom five hundred bastinadoes for
-letting out my horses without asking my permission.” Making our bows
-we retired, when just outside the door we met Achmet the groom in the
-hands of two fierce looking Moorish officers of justice, taking him to
-the market-place to undergo his punishment. He fell on his knees, and
-implored us to ask his master to pardon him. We stopped the officers
-of vengeance, and after a little solicitation, the Bey listened to our
-request, and the man was pardoned, who, when he met us, wanted to kiss
-our feet for saving him from being bastinadoed. I believe the fellow
-was a rogue, who intended to pocket the money, thinking his master
-would not find him out. Thus ended the affair, the commissary paying
-sixty Spanish dollars to the mother of the young vagabond.
-
-Having embarked our supplies for the army, we returned to Alicant with
-the convoy, and the 21st of January, 1813, proceeded to Gibraltar to
-refit, where we remained three weeks, and then rejoined Rear-Admiral
-Hallowell, who sent us to our old station in Altea Bay,[K] and from
-thence to cruize off Denia, near which place we drove a French felucca
-privateer on shore, mounting two brass nine-pounders and swivels, with
-small arms, and bilged her. Our next destination was another trip to
-Oran, on the coast of Barbary, with four transports, for cattle and
-corn. We had a capital run there and back with our live cargo.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XIV.
-
- Siege of the Col de Balaguer--A Reconnoitering Party--Raising
- of the Siege of Tarragona--Lieutenant-General Sir John and Lady
- Murray--Rear-Admiral Benjamin Hallowell--Viscount and Viscountess
- Mahon--Palermo, Veniros; upset in a boat--Valencia--Holland.
-
-
-Towards the end of May, 1813, embarking 300 men of the 67th Regiment,
-under Colonel Prevost, an officer who had distinguished himself at the
-battle of Barrosa, we sailed with the expedition from Alicant to lay
-siege to the castle of the Col de Balaguer and the city of Tarragona.
-The land forces, under the command of Lieut.-General Sir John Murray,
-consisted of about 20,000 men, but, unfortunately, not more than 5000
-were British and Germans, the rest being Spaniards and Sicilians. The
-naval part was under the orders of that intelligent and indefatigable
-officer, Rear-Admiral Benjamin Hallowell.
-
-On the 3rd of June, when off the castle of the Col de Balaguer, the
-whole of the 67th Regiment, with Rolle’s and Dillon’s, and a company of
-artillery, making together about 900 men, were ordered to invest it.
-The navy was placed under the command of the gallant Captain Charles
-Adams, of the _Invincible_ (74), by whose great exertions the troops,
-guns, and stores were soon landed, and who personally superintended
-every difficult and dangerous undertaking during the siege. Captain
-Carroll, of the _Volcano_, was landed to assist troops, and a more
-intrepid and excellent officer could not have been selected.
-
-The fortress was situated on a high hill, in a most difficult pass,
-through which winds the main road from Tortosa to Tarragona. It was
-armed with twelve heavy pieces, two ten-inch mortars, two howitzers,
-and had a garrison of more than a hundred men. Its elevated position,
-and surrounding heights, difficult of access, required the greatest
-labour to drag up the guns and mortars necessary to establish our
-batteries. No time, however, was to be lost; Marshal Suchet, with
-10,000 men, being in full march from the neighbourhood of Valencia to
-relieve it, and succour Tarragona.
-
-After a siege of five days the place surrendered. I had the pleasure of
-assisting, with a party of seamen, to form the mortar battery, which
-was no sooner opened than the shells were thrown with such precision
-by the artillery that an expense magazine was blown up in the castle,
-which, just as our breaching battery was about to open, capitulated.
-An artilleryman and myself had a most providential escape. Being very
-busy placing sand bags on the battery, on the morning of the 8th, just
-before day-break, down came three of the enemy’s shells. I ordered the
-working party to get behind the sand bags, and lie flat on their faces
-to avoid the splinters. One shell from an howitzer exploded behind us;
-two ten-inch followed, one fell about a couple of yards in front of me
-and the artilleryman, which made us both jump to get out of its way,
-when down came the second on the other side of us. The man called out
-very coolly--“I’ll be d---- if we are not done now!” After falling on
-the ground both fuses went out, and, much to our satisfaction, the
-shells, of course, did not explode.
-
-Captain Stodart, of the _Strombolo_, a brave officer, was employed to
-form the breaching battery, and Lieutenants Corbyn and P----, of H.M.S.
-_Invincible_, worked like slaves with their party to drag the heavy
-guns up hills, or what in England would be called mountains, by tackles
-and purchases.
-
-The commander of the French fort was perfectly astonished to see the
-places the guns had been dragged up in so short a time; and Suchet, who
-calculated upon its holding out ten days, was in a great rage when he
-heard it had been taken in five. I have his address to his corps upon
-the subject by me now, in which he informs his army “that a military
-commission will sit upon the conduct of the commander of the fortress
-of Balaguer.”
-
-We had done our part, and were looking for intelligence from our army
-before Tarragona with anxiety, as we could at night see the shells in
-the air, and hear the firing on both sides.
-
-Colonel Prevost, and Captain Charles Adam, of the _Invincible_,
-thinking it advisable to make a reconnaissance towards Tortosa to
-gain intelligence of the advance of the French marshal (for the
-information we got from the Spaniards was so vague that we could place
-no dependence upon it), on the morning of the 9th of June they,
-in company with Lieutenant-Colonel Hamilton, Captain Arabin (Royal
-Artillery), Captain Du Cane, of the 20th Light Dragoons, with four of
-his men and myself, started from the castle we had taken, at three in
-the morning, all well mounted, to try and get a peep into Tortosa,
-about twenty miles from Balaguer, and where it was reported Suchet was
-to arrive in the course of the day.
-
-After a pleasant ride of about sixteen miles, and as we had just got
-a glimpse of Tortosa, on reaching the summit of a hill we all at once
-entered a serpentine road, surrounded by high banks and ravines, which
-completely prevented our seeing beyond a short distance. Jogging on
-quietly, we met an old Spanish woman thumping two mules past us as hard
-as she could, calling out, “Los Franceses, los Franceses,” but not a
-word more could we get out of the _signora_. We, therefore, rode on
-to the next turn of the road, when, just at the corner, plump we came
-upon the advance guard of the French army, a regiment of cuirassiers.
-They for a moment stopped their horses, being as much surprised to see
-us as we were to meet them. With one glance they saw who we were--out
-came their carbines and swords--pop, pop, and a charge, which knocked
-over one of our dragoons, and “_sauve qui peut_,” or the devil take the
-hindmost, became the order of the day. Away we scampered--they after
-us, with a regular view halloa, and a flourish of French fashionable
-words, but not of the most select phraseology. Reader, if you wish
-to know them, I refer you to the scene of Madame Rambouillet and
-the Novice in Sterne’s “Sentimental Journey.” After a capital gallop
-of four miles, we regularly beat them, with the loss of only one of
-our party, who in the charge was knocked head over heels and taken
-prisoner. Luckily for us we had left a corporal’s guard of the 20th
-Light Dragoons about four miles in our rear upon a steep eminence,
-which commanded a good view of part of the road. The corporal, seeing
-how matters stood, and that we were coming back a deuced deal faster
-than we went, with a French regiment of cavalry after us, very cleverly
-came trotting up, and showed himself at the top of the hill with his
-men. The enemy, thinking we had a strong body of cavalry there, pulled
-up their horses and gave over the chase.
-
-Our ride had not been for nothing--we had had a good gallop, and found
-out where our neighbours were, who towards evening drove in our picket
-of dragoons, and established themselves not far from us.
-
-News was immediately sent to Lieutenant-General Sir John Murray,
-who was before Tarragona, of the arrival of the French army in our
-neighbourhood.
-
-Our situation was strong, and having the castle, which commanded the
-road, neither cannon nor cavalry could pass from Tortosa. Marshal
-Suchet came the next day and had a peep at the fortress, sent some
-light troops across the mountains to feel us, and halted his army a few
-miles off.
-
-Lieutenant-General Sir John Murray, as I said before, had nearly
-20,000 men, but, unfortunately for him, only 5000 were British and
-Germans--the rest Spaniards and Sicilians, on whom he could place no
-dependence in the hour of need--otherwise no general ever had a better
-opportunity of beating a divided army.
-
-We had stopped Suchet, with his 10,000 men, from advancing on the
-Valencia side by the capture of the castle of Col de Balaguer:
-therefore he would only have had to cope with the Barcelona corps of
-8000, and the Lerida of 2000 men, so that, after leaving a sufficient
-number of men to carry on the siege for a day or two, which the
-rear-admiral even offered to do with the sailors and marines alone, he
-might have beaten the enemy in detail. I am speaking, supposing he had
-had 16,000 or 20,000 British or German soldiers; but really with such a
-set, strong in point of numbers, but wanting the vigour and bottom of
-English troops, it certainly would have been running a great risk, and
-he had not the nerve to attempt it.
-
-Great blame was attached to the general for embarking in such a hurry,
-and leaving his guns and stores behind. The gallant, clever naval chief
-felt it most severely, fearing lest any blame should be attached to
-him for not taking on board the stores and artillery: he, therefore,
-remonstrated very warmly upon the subject, but it was in vain.
-
-The whole may be summed up in a few words. Marshal Suchet retired to
-Tortosa--the Lerida corps back to their old quarters--the Barcelona
-retrograded also--the Anglo-Spanish and Sicilian army embarked in a
-hurry--we blew up the castle of Balaguer that had been taken--the
-French garrison of Tarragona sallied forth, took all our battering
-train and stores, which we had been collecting, at a great expense, for
-months before, into the town, and played checkmate with the guns that
-had taken Badajos, for it was the same train. In short, all the troops
-ran away from each other the same day.
-
-No sooner was the army embarked than the commander of the forces,
-learning that the French corps had retired, requested they might be
-re-landed the next day, which was complied with, but it was then too
-late--we had lost our battering guns and stores, and nothing could be
-done.
-
-Lieutenant-General Lord William Bentinck arrived shortly afterwards,
-the troops were again embarked, and I was ordered to proceed to Alicant
-and take on board Sir John and Lady Murray, and convey them to Palermo,
-he being appointed to the command of the forces there.
-
-I found the Honourable Lady John Murray a most agreeable, clever,
-sensible, pleasant woman, and Lieutenant-General Sir John Murray a
-very amiable man in private life, and although much condemned at the
-time for not fighting Marshal Suchet and taking Tarragona, yet neither
-those who had the command of the army previous to him, nor General Lord
-William Bentinck, who took the command of the troops from Sir John
-Murray, gained more laurels or succeeded much better than he did.
-
-To move and manage a Spanish army in those days was next to an
-impossibility. They were too proud to be taught, and too ignorant and
-obstinate to do anything of themselves.
-
-Having landed my passengers at Palermo, I embarked three hundred of the
-44th Regiment to join the army of Lord William Bentinck on the coast
-of Catalonia. I met at the above city Viscount and Viscountess Mahon,
-with their two children, fine boys of ten and eleven years’ old. His
-lordship wished to go to Minorca, and, as we had orders to touch there,
-I had much pleasure in giving them a passage.
-
-On our arrival at Port Mahon we were placed under quarantine, which
-prevented my landing Lord and Lady Mahon and family. The accommodation
-being not suited to ladies at the lazaretto, I was delighted when my
-amiable passengers made up their minds to remain on board.
-
-Having received orders to proceed to the coast of Catalonia with the
-troops, we sailed at the end of August for the mouth of the river
-Ebro, but, not finding the expedition there, we shaped our course for
-Tarragona, and on the 4th of September joined the admiral, who directed
-me to land the 44th Regiment at Villa Nova. The town of Villa Nova and
-the village of Veneros nearly join. There is an open roadstead for
-ships, and the winds from the S.E. to S.W. throw in a heavy swell upon
-the bar and beach. The holding ground is good, and numerous vessels
-during many parts of the year arrive for the purpose of shipping wine,
-which is either rafted off or taken on board in the country boats.
-The wine is most excellent, and of different kinds, both white and
-red. The latter is so good, and so much resembles port, that when I
-was there ten ships and brigs were lying in the roads taking it in,
-to be landed at Oporto, and converted into port wine for the English
-market. I was informed that there were annually sent from this place
-to Portugal ten thousand pipes. Another very pleasant wine there was,
-“Alba Flora,” besides sweet wines of various kinds, one of which had
-the sparkling qualities of champagne.
-
-It had been blowing strong from the southward previous to our arrival,
-and the swell had not gone down.
-
-Between the ships and the landing-place was a bar, on which the sea
-broke with great violence, and which boats had to pass. Those belonging
-to the country being well calculated for going through the breakers,
-and whose crews were acquainted with the place, dashed through the surf
-extremely well.
-
-I thought that by following them in my shell of a gig, and waiting for
-a smooth, after three successive waves had broken upon the bar, I might
-get safe also; but I was soon taught a different lesson--the sea was
-more nimble than the gig, and although the men pulled to the utmost
-to go faster than the breakers, yet they beat us hollow, and taking
-the boat up on one of their white tops, spun us over in a moment.
-Fortunately we had not far to swim, and as soon as the waves had beaten
-us over the bar we got into quite smooth water, when, sticking to the
-boat and oars, we soon reached the shore, though not without a precious
-good ducking. We had, unfortunately, the viscountess’s poor abigail in
-the boat, who never before had had such a swim in salt water, so it was
-something new to her, and gave her an opportunity of adding a paragraph
-to her letter when she wrote home, describing her foreign travels by
-sea, land, and _under the water_. She was nearly drowned, poor thing!
-but keeping her on her back we swam with her ashore. She was carried to
-a Spanish house, wrapped up in blankets, where a few drops of comfort
-in the shape of brandy, and some hours’ repose, made her as lively as a
-lark again.
-
-By the way of drying myself, and getting the salt water out of me, I
-mounted a mule, and rode to Villa Franca, the head-quarters of our
-army, distant about thirteen miles, to see some old military friends.
-
-The country around was very pretty, and we had a fine view of the
-celebrated Mount Serrat, rising from a plain in numerous mountains and
-spires,[L] with convents upon them; but the whole of that part of the
-country was forbidden ground, being occupied by the French army. On my
-return in the evening I visited my water-nymph, and was happy to find
-her quite recovered from the severe morning’s ducking. I offered to
-take her off again with me in the gig, which she, like a wise woman,
-declined; being a novice in the art of swimming, and not liking the
-first lesson I gave her, she preferred returning to the ship next day
-in a country boat. The day having turned out fine, the swell towards
-evening had somewhat gone down, though it was still so great that I was
-nearly swamped going back to the ship.
-
-On taking leave of the gallant Rear-Admiral Benjamin Hallowell next
-day, he gave me a letter of thanks, and did me the honour to say he was
-sorry to part with me; the regrets were mutual, for it was a pleasure
-to be under the command of an officer of his abilities and experience.
-He has not many months ago paid the debt of nature, full of years and
-honours, beloved and respected by all who knew him, and generally
-regretted by the service. He was one of those
-
- “Who take them for all in all,
- We ne’er (I fear), shall see their like again.”
-
-Such men as Lords Howe, Duncan, St. Vincent, Nelson, Saumarez, Keats,
-Hallowell, &c., are not mushrooms of a day’s growth, but the experience
-of a long and hazardous service in all parts of the world had braced
-their nerves and trained their minds to the task, which they performed
-with such _credit_ to themselves and _honour and glory to their
-country_.
-
-On the 8th September we sailed from this anchorage for Tarragona, which
-place the French had evacuated, having first destroyed most of the guns
-and blown up part of the fortifications. Everything looked miserable
-and wretched in the extreme. Many of the houses were knocked to pieces,
-and the poor inhabitants, returning back to view the birthplaces of
-themselves and ancestors, found them reduced to a heap of ruins. I rode
-with my agreeable passengers to Reus, the second largest town in the
-province of Catalonia, where we dined after the Spanish fashion upon
-olla podrida, and other messes, stuffed full of garlic and bad oil.
-After walking about the town, and looking at a handsome church, the
-windows of which were of stained glass, we returned on board and sailed
-for Valencia. The peasantry of this province and of Catalonia are as
-fine a race of men as I ever saw in any country--tall, strong, and well
-made.
-
-On the 15th September we anchored off the Grao de Valencia, and the
-next morning communicated with our consul according to orders, and
-landed Viscount and Viscountess Mahon and family, who took up their
-abode with Mr. Tupper, our representative, who was very civil and
-polite, and showed us the lions of the city. The cathedral was very
-fine, from the top of which we had a most magnificent view of a very
-fertile valley, producing rice, maize, flax, and other grain, besides
-almond and vine trees, the latter covered with beautiful purple and
-white grapes.
-
-A small river runs past Valencia, over which are two tolerably fine
-stone bridges. We had a view also of the lake of Albufera, from which
-the French marshal, Suchet, derives his dukedom.
-
-Valencia is one of the best towns I have seen in Spain, and the road
-from the grao, or beach, is extremely pretty, having trees planted
-on each side, to afford shelter from the sun. Neat little thatched
-cottages, scattered here and there, put me for a short time in mind of
-England.
-
-After dinner at the consul’s, which was served up in the Spanish
-style, we went to the opera, and sat in a box with some pretty Spanish
-ladies, friends of Mr. Tupper. The opera was in honour of the Marquis
-of Wellington. It represented the Spaniards driving the Moors out of
-Spain; afterwards we had a fandango, and the whole concluded with a
-farce, the subject taken from Gil Blas, where he entertains at supper
-the sycophant.
-
-Having re-embarked Viscount and Viscountess Mahon, I sailed for Altea
-Bay to complete our water. Altea has an export trade of almonds and
-raisins; several vessels during the summer and autumn months call there
-for a cargo. The anchorage is good, and sheltered from most winds,
-except those from south-east by east to south-south-west, which seldom
-blow direct on shore. I rode out several heavy gales there in the
-frigate I commanded, by giving her nearly two cables.
-
-From this place we proceeded to Alicant, where we landed some stores
-for the garrison; and after showing the Viscount and his amiable lady
-the celebrated castle, we went to Gibraltar, where we unfortunately
-found the yellow fever raging to that degree amongst the inhabitants,
-that all intercourse was forbidden. The garrison was encamped on Europe
-Point, for the benefit of more air.
-
-On the 5th October we sailed for England, touching at Lisbon on our
-way, and after a stormy passage of three weeks anchored in Plymouth
-Sound, from which place we were sent to the Motherbank to perform three
-weeks’ quarantine. On the 20th of November we moved to Spithead, where
-I landed my most agreeable and pleasant passengers with very great
-regret. I had had them on board for more than three months, so that my
-cabin felt quite a desert without their society.
-
-After being detained at Portsmouth a few days, we proceeded to the
-Downs, and on the 14th December between six and seven hundred of His
-Majesty’s 37th and 56th Regiments were sent on board, with orders
-from Admiral Foley for me to land them at Goree, or the Brill, or
-Helveot Sluys; but owing to the winds and tide we were unable to fetch
-either. I therefore anchored off Schevelling, and communicated with our
-ambassador, Lord Clancarty, at the Hague, who desired the troops to be
-landed at the village of Schevelling. His excellency wishing to see me
-at the Hague, I went there to wait upon his lordship.
-
-The little I was enabled to see of Dutchland, gave me a favourable
-opinion of the cleanliness of its people; and the neat pretty cottages
-from the beach to the city struck me as being particularly picturesque.
-Schevelling itself is nothing but a fishing place amongst sand hills;
-but the town of the Hague was neat, and in summer must be a pleasant
-place. But as the severe winter of 1813 was just commencing, I was
-obliged to hurry off from the coast as fast as possible, for fear of
-being caught upon a lee shore.
-
-On our passage back to the Downs, the two branch pilots very nearly ran
-the ship upon the Galloper Sands in a fog, which obliged us to anchor
-off the light for a tide. The next day, however, we arrived safely in
-the Downs, and from thence we were sent to Sheerness to be docked and
-refitted.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XV.
-
- 1814--Sent to Bermuda--Operations in the Chesapeake--The River
- Patuxent--Expedition to Washington--Town of Rappahannock--River
- Rappahannock--Wedding Party--Commodore Robert Barrie, &c., &c.
-
-
-The ship having undergone the necessary repairs, which was very heavy
-work during the severe winter of 1813, towards the end of March we
-sailed for Spithead, where we embarked three hundred and fifty marines,
-and proceeded, in company with the _Tonnant_ (80), _Regulus_ (44), and
-_Melpomene_ (38), _en flute_ to Bermuda, at which place we arrived
-after a passage of eight weeks.
-
-Nothing particular occurred on our voyage out, except my having the
-measles very badly, which, not knowing what ailed me, I had driven
-inwardly by cold bathing.
-
-We remained at Bermuda until the 3rd of July, when, in company with
-the _Asia_ (74), _Regulus_, and _Melpomene_, we proceeded to the
-Chesapeake, and made Cape Henry on the 11th, and anchored in Synhaven
-Bay. The following morning we proceeded up the Chesapeake, and on the
-15th joined Rear-Admiral Cockburn in the _Albion_ (74), who was lying
-at anchor, with two frigates, at the entrance of the river Patuxent.
-
-I was placed under the orders of Captain J. Nourse, of the _Severn_
-(44), and sent up the river Patuxent for the purpose of assisting to
-blockade the American flotilla, under Commodore Barney, whose broad
-pennant was flying in a sloop of eight guns, and who had under his
-command seventeen gun-boats, each carrying a long 32, 24, or 18-pounder
-in the bow, and a 32-pound carronade in the stern, and manned with a
-crew of from sixty to seventy men.
-
-We ran thirty miles up the river, to the village of Benedict, in
-company with the _Severn_, _Ætna_, and _Manly_ (brig).
-
-Rear-Admiral Cockburn proceeded with the others into the river Potomac
-to annoy the enemy in that quarter. As we advanced, the gun-boats
-retreated up the river to a town called Nottingham, twenty-five miles
-above Benedict, where, from the shoalness of the water, we could
-not follow them with the ships. During the time we continued in the
-Chesapeake we had guard-boats rowing every night to prevent the Yankees
-from trying the effect of their torpedoes or fire ships.
-
-From the 17th of July until the 17th of August our time was taken up
-in making incursions into different parts of the country, with 300
-marines, attacking and, to use an American expression, “scaring the
-militia,” getting fresh provisions, destroying their store-houses
-and other public buildings, with the arms found there. Some of the
-Americans used to say, “What did King George send you here from the
-old country to come and scare us for? We don’t go to yours to frighten
-you, I guess. Your confounded sarpents come and anchor in our waters;
-then send their barges, full of armed men, who are pulling about day
-and night, landing here and there, scaring us and our families very
-considerably--tarnation seize them.” Our reply used to be, “You must
-ask your President, Jim Madison: he invited us.”
-
-A great many black slaves, with their families, used to take advantage
-of our visits to come away with us. Some of their first exclamations
-were, “Me free man; me go cut massa’s throat; give me musket,” which
-many of them did not know how to use when they had it.
-
-Another favourite expression, when we wanted them to work, was, “No, me
-no work--me free man.” It was, therefore, necessary to explain to these
-new freemen--which explanation, I fear, will frequently have to be
-repeated in our West India colonies, with other arguments--that we must
-all work and gain our livelihood by the “sweat of our brow,” whether
-bond or free; but they considered work and slavery synonymous terms.[M]
-
-Republicans are certainly the most cruel masters, and the greatest
-tyrants in the world towards their fellow men. They are urged by the
-most selfish motives to reduce every one to a level with, or even
-below themselves, and to grind and degrade those under them to the
-lowest stage of human wretchedness. But American liberty consists in
-oppressing the blacks beyond what other nations do, enacting laws
-to prevent their receiving instruction, and working them worse than
-donkeys. “But you call this a free country, when I can’t shoot my
-nigger when I like--eh?”
-
-While on the coast of America we embarked from fifteen hundred to two
-thousand slaves--the young men we formed into a black corps, and,
-taking possession of the small islands of Tangiers, we drilled and
-endeavoured to make our recruits of some use. The aged men, with the
-women and children, were sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, and from thence
-a free colony was formed at the island of Trinadada, in the West Indies.
-
-Towards the middle of July and the month of August some parts of this
-coast are subject to tornadoes. We had one of them on the 25th of
-July, which obliged us, although lying at anchor in a river, to let go
-a second. The previous day and that morning had been extremely close
-and sultry. The storm came on from the north-west, with the greatest
-violence, accompanied by a few claps of thunder and vivid flashes of
-lightning: such was its force that, although in smooth water, the ship
-heeled so much over that our main-deck guns nearly touched the water;
-and a fine schooner of seventy tons burthen, tender to the _Severn_,
-with a long 18-pounder on board, at anchor near us, without topmasts,
-her sails furled and gaffs on deck, was turned bottom upwards in a
-moment, and one poor fellow drowned. Its fury was spent in about ten
-minutes, but during its continuance we saw immense trees torn up by
-the roots, barns blown down like card houses of children, and where
-the strength of the current of wind passed scarcely anything could
-withstand its violence. Trees and other things continued to be swept by
-us for sometime, and when the tornado was over we observed, at a turn
-of the river, so much large timber, lumber, and other articles floating
-down the tide that my gallant senior officer, Captain Nourse, who is
-since dead, poor fellow! thought at first it was the American flotilla
-coming to attack us, and he was just on the point of returning to his
-ship to prepare for a fight, he having come on board to dine with me,
-when I discovered, by means of a spy-glass, the approaching flotilla
-was perfectly harmless.
-
-This circumstance was mentioned a short time afterwards to that _most
-gallant_ officer, Captain Napier, who commanded the _Euryalus_,
-but Charley would not believe that the force of wind could upset a
-schooner of seventy tons, lying at anchor with all her sails furled,
-with her gaffs on deck, and without even top-masts; however, on the
-dashing, brilliant expedition, under Sir James Gordon, up the Potomac
-to Alexandria, above Washington, he had an opportunity of judging
-for himself when (part of a tornado passing across the bows of the
-frigate) he saw in a moment both his bowsprit and fore-topmast broken
-in two, like twigs.
-
-Having heard that the enemy’s gun boats had moved down from Nottingham
-towards Benedict, on the 10th August I was ordered to proceed twenty
-miles up the river with five boats to reconnoitre. On landing I was
-informed they had been there two days before, but that they had
-returned to Upper Marlborough. On rowing up the river we fell in with
-a canoe, containing one white man, who was pulling from Leonard creek
-to the opposite shore; on seeing us he endeavoured to get to land, but
-not being able to do so, jumped overboard and was drowned. We had every
-reason to believe he was one of our deserters.
-
-On the 13th I again went up the river to ascertain the movements of
-Commodore Barney, but gained little information further than that he
-was with the flotilla at Nottingham.
-
-The next day we received an account of a party of American militia
-having arrived in the woods, at the back of our watering-place, with
-the intention of surprising some of our men; we therefore landed before
-daylight between three and four hundred marines and seamen, headed by
-Captain Nourse and myself, accompanied by Captain Coles, R.M., and
-separated into four parties, with the hope of being able to cut some of
-them off; but from the thickness of the woods and their knowledge of
-the country, the enemy succeeded in getting away from us.
-
-On one of our foraging excursions we were beset by a being so well
-described by old Cobbet, in his “Cottage Economy,” ycleped “Methodist
-parson,” who put on his canonicals, and began to whine and cant, and
-wished to preach a sermon on peace. Captain Nourse very properly told
-him to be off--that we must attend to our “calling” as well as he
-to “his,” that Jim Madison had “called us,” and, therefore, we must
-perform our duty.
-
-About this time a private of the marines belonging to my ship did a
-very gallant thing: to use an Irishism he surrounded three American
-dragoons, and took them, horses and all, prisoners. His name was Pat
-Gallaghen, or Gahagen. He effected this extraordinary feat in the
-following manner:--whenever boats were sent for water a sergeant’s
-party of marines accompanied them, it being necessary to post videttes
-to watch for the approach of an enemy. The casks in the launch had been
-filled, and all the party, except this man, who was placed near a stack
-of hay, had withdrawn. While the picket, who had to descend a cliff
-towards their boats, were out of sight, Pat observed five dragoons
-ride down to the corner of a wood, near a gate; keeping his eye on
-the party, he concealed himself behind the hay-rick, two of the men
-remained inside the gate, a long musket-shot off, whilst the others,
-after ascertaining, as they thought, that no _Britishers_ were near,
-came galloping up to see the boats go off, and without observing the
-sentry in his hiding place, halted. The marine, very bravely putting
-his musket to his shoulder, called out--“You three d---- rascals, if
-you do not immediately jump off your horses and deliver yourselves up
-prisoners I’ll shoot the whole of you at once, for I have you all in a
-line.” Off they got, and the sergeant at that moment shewing his head
-above the cliff to recall the vidette, they were very quietly taken to
-the beach, and themselves and horses brought safely on board.
-
-This brave man, from his immoderate fondness of liquor, was unfit to
-be promoted; therefore, all that could be done for him was to give him
-the money arising from the sale of the horses. Now, here was a proper
-subject for a medal or order of merit, which might have had the effect
-of rousing his pride, and curing him of the baneful evil of drinking to
-excess. But alas! it was the fashion to confer such distinctions on a
-very few.
-
-Look at the brave fellows who gained the battles of the Peninsula! With
-the exception of Waterloo, no field was honoured with a medal.[N] Of
-the navy, not a man below the rank of captain obtained any badge of
-distinction, notwithstanding the many general engagements that took
-place, and the numerous most daring boat expeditions met with the same
-neglect. Since it was impossible to grant promotion in every instance,
-this would have been an easy and gratifying mode of awarding the meed
-of praise to many deserving individuals.
-
-I am not particularly fond of France or of any foreign country, but I
-must do the continental powers the justice to say they understand human
-nature, and know when to reward their officers and men better than we
-do. The practice of making their sentries carry arms to the veteran
-with his medal or order of merit works wonders on the _morale_ of their
-soldiers; and I do _most sincerely and conscientiously believe_ that,
-had this plan been adopted in our army and navy during the late war,
-not one half of the _desertions or punishments_ would have taken place
-in either service.
-
-It is revolting to honourable feeling to meet in society at home or
-abroad, foreigners from nearly all nations covered with insignias or
-medals; while we,--who have had the pleasure of beating them in every
-part of the world, and which, with God’s blessing, should our king and
-country need our services, we shall be too happy to do again,--have
-neither.
-
-On the 17th of August, the _Tonnant_ (80), Vice-Admiral Sir A.
-Cochrane; _Royal Oak_ (74), Rear-Admiral P. Malcolm; several frigates
-and smaller men-of-war, with twenty sail of transports, having on
-board the 4th, 21st, 44th, and 85th Regiments of foot, and the marine
-battalion, under Lieut.-Colonel Malcolm, joined the squadron under the
-command of Rear-Admiral Cockburn, at the mouth of the river Patuxent.
-The land forces were commanded by the gallant Major-General Ross.
-We weighed on the morning of the 20th, and sailed up the river to
-Benedict, where we landed the troops, which, including artillery,
-sailors, and marines, did not muster more than 4500 men.
-
-On the evening of the above day all the boats of the fleet, manned and
-armed, divided into divisions and sub-divisions, of which I commanded
-one, left the ships, advanced up the river towards Lower Marlborough
-to attack the American gun-boats, under Commodore Barney, and likewise
-to act on the right flank of our army. As we advanced, the enemy’s
-flotilla retired sixty miles further up the river to a place called Pig
-Point, where, in a most favourable position for defence, surrounded by
-banks and narrow creeks, with a wooded country on one side, and hills
-on the other, which were to have been lined with riflemen and other
-troops, it was their intention to have awaited the attack.
-
-Late in the evening of the 21st the boats reached Nottingham, when we
-fired on a few American dragoons, and drove them out of the town. Our
-army arrived a short time afterwards. The next day, at noon, we came up
-with the vessels of the enemy, who on our approach set them on fire,
-and blew them all up, except one, which, together with five merchant
-schooners, we brought away. This service was performed with little loss
-on our side, for the advance of our infantry had driven the Americans
-from the woods, who had fallen back upon the main road to Washington.
-One division of boats proceeded to Upper Marlborough to keep up a
-communication with our army; the remainder occupied a position at Pig
-Point to cover a retreat.
-
-No sooner was the flotilla destroyed than the brave and dashing
-Rear-Admiral Cockburn joined the troops, and marched with them to
-attack the city of Washington.
-
-This most gallant and daring affair was accomplished by 4500 British
-infantry, after first beating an American army of more than four times
-their own number, with their President, “Jim Madison,” at their head,
-who appeared on the field of battle mounted upon a white horse, and
-wearing a huge cocked hat. He addressed the American army previous to
-the battle of Bladensburgh, and recommended them to do their duty and
-fight well for the honour of their country, kill and make prisoners of
-all the Britishers, and then, wishing them success, and saying fighting
-was not in his province--he left that to the gallant generals who
-understood the art of war--he put spurs to his horse, and rode off to
-Washington to order refreshments and a grand _fête_ to be got ready at
-the capital for the victorious army of the United States.
-
-General Ross, Rear-Admiral Cockburn, and all the field officers of the
-to-be-captured army, were to have been invited; but they forgot the
-advice of Mrs. Grundy in her cookery book, “Catch your hare first.”
-This is an absolute fact, for when our troops entered Washington the
-evening of the battle, tables were very elegantly laid out in the rooms
-of the President’s house, and wine placed in coolers ready iced, which
-the _great politeness_ of the Americans left free for us to drink, for
-fear their presence might prevent our people feeling quite at home and
-at their ease.
-
-But to return to the advance of our troops. No sooner did the enemy
-see the steady and undaunted forward movement of part of the 4th, with
-the whole of the gallant 85th Regiment,--commanded by two fine, brave,
-dashing fellows, Colonel Thornton and Major Brown,--attempt to pass
-the bridge over the river Potomac, “which they had left to allow the
-Britishers to cross, that they might take them all prisoners” (the
-Americans having destroyed all the others), than they opened a most
-destructive fire from their heavy batteries of 24-pounders, which they
-had thrown up to enfilade it, and which were commanded by a brave old
-fellow of the United States’ Navy, Commodore Barney, who was wounded
-and taken prisoner, and whose flotilla of gun-boats we had previously
-destroyed at Pig Point, in the river Patuxent. He, however, made his
-escape with seven or eight hundred seamen, joined the American army,
-and was of great service in working and firing the guns in their field
-batteries, which were supported by a very heavy fusilade of musketry.
-
-The round and grape shot from the heavy guns in battery made fearful
-gaps in the ranks of the advancing column, but, nothing daunted, they
-gave three cheers, and rushed on in the most daring manner, which the
-enemy observing, it created a panic amongst them, and they gave way,
-declaring, I was informed, “that it was of no use their staying there
-to be shot, for the Britishers did not mind being killed at all.” So
-off they went, and never stopped until they got on the other side of
-Washington.
-
-The whole of the narrative of the attack on Washington and Baltimore
-has been so ably and faithfully described by the gallant author of the
-“Subaltern,” that I shall confine myself to our naval affairs, but I
-thought the above anecdotes, which are not mentioned in his work, were
-worth preserving to show the character of the natives.
-
-After having been twelve days and nights in an open boat, I was not
-sorry to return to my ship, but the moment the troops were re-embarked,
-a difficult navigation down the river precluded all idea of rest.
-
-The fag to officers and men of every description, during the whole of
-the operations in the Patuxent, was very harassing, and the labour of
-getting up to Baltimore without pilots, feeling our way with the lead,
-whilst boats on each bow and one a-head were sounding also, gave little
-time for respite. The heat of the weather too was very great, the
-thermometer varying only from 79° to 82° in the shade, during most of
-our severest services, which added much to the exhaustion.
-
-On the 8th of September we again landed the troops, now reduced to four
-thousand men, at a place called North Point, on the right hand side of
-the Patapsco river, leading to Baltimore. It was unfortunate that we
-ever attempted it, for most of the enemy’s army beaten at Washington
-had been sent to strengthen the works, and the whole population were in
-arms against us. The Americans seeing us approach, very wisely brought
-out several large ships and sunk them in the channel, under the guns of
-Fort Mac-Henry, which prevented the naval part of the expedition from
-acting near enough to be of any use with their guns.
-
-The only chance perhaps that might have given any hope of success was
-the offer of the gallant Rear-Admiral Cockburn to make a dash with all
-the boats of the fleet, and try and storm Fort Mac-Henry, keeping the
-troops on board until the issue of this measure was decided. Could we
-have once got possession of it, the little army might have been landed
-with ease, and the place been our own in a few hours. But the higher
-powers decided against his plan. Poor General Ross was killed, having
-been shot by a rifleman from a tree. He was brought down, wrapped up
-in a union jack, attended by his aide-de-camp; I placed the body in my
-boat, and sent it on board. He was beloved and universally respected
-by both the army and navy. By his untimely fall the little hope we
-had of succeeding vanished, and although the gallant Brook did all
-that a man could do, yet the strength of the enemy’s field-works
-that they had thrown up was so great,--and there being ten to one
-against us, intrenched as they were behind breast-works bristling with
-cannon,--caused the admiral to request the army to fall back, and we
-re-embarked them.
-
-Just before Sir Alexander Cochrane left the Chesapeake some Americans
-came on board of Sir Pultney Malcolm’s ship to treat for the exchange
-of prisoners. Colonel Brook, and Captain Dix, who commanded the
-_Menalaus_, frigate, were on board at the time. Boasting of their good
-marksmen, Jonathan thought to be very witty by telling Captain Dix, who
-was fat and broad made, “I guess, captain, you cover a deal of ground.
-You had better not come on shore, for our riflemen can shoot a duck
-through the head with a single ball at two hundred yards: therefore you
-will stand no chance.” “Very probably they are good shots,” replied
-Colonel Brook, “but you forget one thing--the poor duck was not a
-soldier with a red jacket on his back, and a musket, with a bayonet at
-the end of it, in his hand, ready to return the fire and use the steel.
-That makes a deal of difference with regard to steady shooting.”
-
-I was placed under the orders of Captain Robert Barrie, of the _Dragon_
-(74), and left with him in the Chesapeake, having on board part of
-Colonel Malcolm’s battalion of marines, commanded by Captain Coles of
-that corps, a good and clever officer; the remainder were embarked
-in other ships, while the fleet and transports, under Sir Alexander
-Cochrane, proceeded out of the Chesapeake to the southward.
-
-No sooner did our senior officer, Captain Robert Barrie, find himself
-free to act according to his own able judgment, than, with a mind
-capable of planning, and a heart as bold as a lion to execute, he
-undertook all kinds of expeditions, or, as our commodore used to call
-them, “shooting parties.” “Come,” he used to say, “we have not had a
-shooting party this some time: I have just had information that a body
-of Yankee militia, with a field-piece or two, are in such a place--we
-must go and take it from them.” Boats were manned and armed--the marine
-battalion, under Lieutenant-Colonel Malcolm, about 400 strong, the
-commodore always at their head, were put into them, and away we used to
-go. Bang, bang from the field-pieces--a tiraillade from the American
-musketry--three cheers and a dash from us, and the guns were ours: the
-militia taking themselves off to the woods, and we dragging the guns
-to our boats, frequently five, six, and seven miles, with an enemy’s
-force, double and treble our numbers, looking at us. In short, during
-the time we continued in the Chesapeake the American militia had no
-sinecure, for they never knew where we intended to land, and we had too
-much sense to go twice to the same place without an object in view.
-
-At this period provisions of all kinds began to run short; it was
-therefore necessary to put all hands on half allowance, and make
-frequent excursions to try and procure flour and cattle.
-
-On one of these foraging parties, the late Captain Tom Alexander, at
-the head of 200 seamen and marines, did a very gallant thing: he was
-attacked by 1,100 American troops,--with two squadrons of cavalry and
-five field pieces,--while he was busy getting cattle; the enemy’s
-horse made a charge, but not knowing that a swamp was between them
-and Alexander’s party, the horses sank up to their chests in mud, and
-began floundering about; he immediately commenced his fire upon them,
-which put them to the right-about, leaving half-a-dozen dragoons, who
-had been thrown from their horses, sticking with their heads in the
-mud; some of the sailors mounted these fellows in a moment, and shoving
-their heads deeper into the mire, there left them. After this, he
-embarked his men with the exception of three, who were made prisoners,
-and returned on board, leaving the cattle for a more convenient
-opportunity.
-
-The commodore, on the 1st of November, gave the following order to his
-squadron in the Chesapeake:--
-
- “H.M. Ship _Dragon_, Nov. 1st, 1814.
- “Chesapeake Bay.
-
- “The provisions of the squadron under my command getting extremely
- low, and it being very uncertain at this advanced season of the
- year when a supply can arrive, I find myself under the painful
- necessity of placing the ship’s company and marine battalion on
- short allowance.
-
- “You are therefore to place the crew and marines on board your ship
- upon half allowance, so as to make your provisions last for two
- months from this date.
-
- “You will signify to your crew that I trust it will not be
- necessary to continue this restriction long, and that I shall
- try by every means in my power to procure temporary supplies
- from the enemy. In the meantime, I am satisfied their zeal for
- their country’s cause will point out the absolute necessity
- of persevering in the blockade of the Chesapeake to the last
- extremity, and that the temporary privations they are reduced to
- will be borne with the utmost cheerfulness.”
-
- “(Signed) ROBERT BARRIE,
- “Captain and Senior Officer.”
-
-In November we proceeded up the river Rappahannock for the purpose of
-attacking the American militia, 600 strong, who had some fieldpieces
-posted at Farnham Church.
-
-We first took the town of Rappahannock, driving the enemy out of it,
-who ran away so fast that they dropped their colours, which we took.
-On one side of them, under the American eagle, was this motto, “Death
-or victory”; on the other, “Down with the tyrants.” However, they
-were “scared” from death, and ran away from victory. We then attacked
-the militia at Farnham Church, and captured two of their fieldpieces;
-afterwards returning to Rappahannock we embarked some flour and
-tobacco, and then retired down the river to our ships, without in the
-least injuring the town.
-
-We had with us on this expedition Major Brown, of the 85th Regiment,
-who had been severely wounded at the battle of Bladensburgh, and on
-the falling back of our army from Washington, he, with several other
-officers and men, who were too ill to be removed, were left behind. He
-was a fine gallant fellow, and now commands the 2nd Battalion of Rifles.
-
-I must take this opportunity of confirming two statements of my gallant
-friend Captain J. Scott, which he mentions in his memoirs. First,
-with regard to the unjust accusation of plundering: all I can say is,
-that I saw nothing of the kind, unless taking provisions when we were
-starving upon half allowance may be called so; but on every principle
-of war we were entitled to forage, and for which in many cases we paid.
-The orders of both Admiral Cockburn and Captain Barrie were positive
-against plundering.
-
-With respect to the second, I can vouch for his account of the
-poisoning the spirits at Benedict being perfectly true. In consequence
-of what had taken place, if we wished to eat or drink anything that
-was found in their houses placed out ready for us upon their tables,
-we used to force the natives to eat a part first, that, in the event of
-its being poisoned, they might die with the Britishers.
-
-We used occasionally to purchase cattle from the Americans. The plan
-agreed on was this: they were to drive them down to a certain point,
-where we were to land and take possession; for the inhabitants being
-all militiamen, and having too much patriotism to sell food to “King
-George’s men,” they used to say, “put the money under such a stone or
-tree, pointing to it, and then we can pick it up, and say we found it.”
-More ways than one to cheat the old gentleman.
-
-Having seen in some publications several comments upon our mode of
-warfare in America, and no person yet ever having taken the trouble
-to place the facts before the public in its different bearings, it is
-high time that our side of the question should appear. According to the
-old proverb, “there are always two sides to a story.” The truth of the
-matter was this:--
-
-At the commencement of hostilities, America invaded Upper Canada,
-took York Town, and at the very beginning of a severe winter, having
-first sacked the place, and turned the inhabitants out into the
-snow to perish, burnt it to the ground. Had it been taken by storm,
-after a severe resistance, the laws of war would have sanctioned the
-proceedings; but the case was far different, little or no resistance
-being made.
-
-General Sir George Prevost wrote a letter of remonstrance, not only
-to the American officer commanding the division, but also to the
-Government, reprobating the mode of warfare they had just adopted, and
-calling upon both to disapprove of it by a public manifesto, and punish
-the parties concerned. An evasive answer was returned, and we got no
-redress. Sir George Prevost sent copies of the correspondence to the
-naval commander-in-chief, and retaliation was in consequence determined
-upon; and that their Government might feel we had the power to repay
-the favour they had conferred upon poor York Town, and other places,
-we had orders to destroy all public buildings, and such private houses
-also as had been fortified or fired from, inasmuch as they had been
-placed in the light of a fortress; _and the blaze that burnt York, in
-Upper Canada, reached Washington_.
-
-This, and the endeavouring to destroy our men-of-war by torpedoes,--the
-blowing up of Lieut. Geddes, and the barge’s crew of H.M. Ship
-_Ramilies_ (74), by means of gun locks fixed in barrels of powder,
-with lines made fast to casks of flour, biscuits, or other “notions,”
-as Jonathan used to call them,--were among the causes which led to our
-system of warfare.
-
-Small vessels, called coasters, were laden in this manner:--the upper
-part of the hold consisted of an assortment of all kinds, and the under
-filled with casks of gunpowder; they were then placed directly in the
-way of our ships at anchor off their harbours, their crews taking to
-a boat and making their escape on shore when they observed our’s near
-them in chase. A vessel of this kind was taken by the boat of the
-_Ramilies_ (74), off New London, commanded by that most intelligent and
-excellent officer, Sir Thomas Hardy, who, suspecting from the manner
-she was thrown in his way that all was not right, had her anchored two
-good cables’ length from his ship, and kept her there two or three
-hours before he would allow any person to go on board, thinking that
-by that time any mechanism invented for so diabolical a purpose would
-explode. After the above period poor Lieut. Geddes, whom I knew well,
-volunteered to go with the barge’s crew to examine the cargo very
-carefully; Sir Thomas Hardy still felt doubtful, but was at length
-induced by the repeated solicitations of Geddes to allow him to go,
-but with particular injunctions to be careful. It is supposed that in
-hoisting up a cask of flour or biscuits they pulled the line that was
-made fast from it to the barrel of powder, the explosion immediately
-took place, when a lieutenant, midshipman, and barge’s crew, sixteen in
-number, some of the best men in the ship, were blown to atoms.
-
-This fatal and melancholy catastrophe probably saved many of our
-gallant countrymen, as well as some of our men-of-war, by acting as
-a warning, and putting us on our guard against this _most dastardly_
-method of carrying on the war.
-
-The Americans had observed that several of our ships, the moment they
-captured a coasting vessel, hauled her alongside to take out her
-cargo, which frequently consisted of flour, biscuits, or other useful
-articles. They, therefore, fitted out several explosion vessels on the
-above plan, hoping thereby to blow up some of our seventy-four gun
-ships or frigates, and very probably they would have succeeded with
-any other except the _Ramilies_, but her wary captain, fortunately
-suspecting some trick would be attempted, never suffered them to come
-sufficiently near.
-
-These circumstances combined brought about our visit to Washington. The
-above is the real state of the case: it requires no comments, and every
-just man must say they were rightly served.[O]
-
-On the 10th November, I was ordered up to Sharp’s Islands, near
-Baltimore, to cover the _Dragon’s_ tender and boats, that were sent
-to capture the steam packet that went occasionally from thence to
-French Town, but they arrived too late, she having crossed before they
-arrived. However, they took several schooners and sloops, and the
-packet from Baltimore to Elk Town.
-
-On the 15th of December, Rear-Admiral Cockburn rejoined the squadron
-from Bermuda, and gave us orders to proceed in company with the
-_Dragon_ (74), and _Regulus_ (44), and a schooner, to the coast of
-South Carolina. Having completed our provisions from a transport
-brought by the admiral, we left the Chesapeake on the 18th of December,
-which none of the squadron very much regretted, for the heavy north
-gales and cold weather made our boat operations in the Chesapeake
-anything but agreeable.
-
-
-
-
-CHAPTER XVI.
-
- Operations in South Carolina--Capture of Cumberland Island and the
- Fort of Point-à-Petre--An Affair with the American Riflemen in the
- Woods--An Abattis--Anecdotes of the 2nd West India Regiment--A
- Rattlesnake--Capture of the Town of St. Mary’s--Destruction of the
- Forts and Barracks--Nassau, New Providence--Compliment to the Royal
- Marines--Return Home--Concluding Remarks.
-
-
-On the 11th of January, 1815, we took possession of Cumberland Island
-without meeting any resistance. The marine battalions, commanded
-by Colonel Richard Williams and Colonel Malcolm, and the two flank
-companies of the 2nd West India Regiment, under Major Bradley, were
-disembarked, encamped, and works thrown up for protection--rumours
-being afloat that the enemy intended to attack us.
-
-Having waited some days for the arrival of the rear-admiral, and the
-ships being greatly in want of water, Commodore Barrie determined
-on making an attack upon the fort of Point-à-Petre and the town of
-St. Mary’s, South Carolina. The boats of the squadron were ordered
-to attack the fort by water, under the command of two most excellent
-officers--Captain C. B. H. Ross[P] and Captain Samuel Jackson, of the
-_Albion_ and _Lacedemonian_--while the Royal Marine battalion, with
-the commodore, part of the 2nd West Indian Regiment, and a few seamen,
-with myself, landed, to march through the woods and assail it in the
-rear. After advancing about a couple of miles we saw a few riflemen,
-who immediately retired into the woods. We kept on a kind of footpath
-and soon came to an abattis, behind which the enemy was posted, who
-immediately opened a brisk fire, but by bugling, cheering, and blazing
-away right and left, we drove them out and arrived at the fort which
-they had abandoned, just as the boats landed. The battery mounted
-six 24-pounders, and two brass 6-pounder field pieces. During this
-bush-fight a tragic economical occurrence, worthy of Joey Hume, took
-place. While scrambling over the fallen timber of the abattis, after
-the American sharpshooters, two blacks of the 2nd West Indian Regiment
-stumbled upon one of them; the rifleman fired and missed, one of the
-blacks put his musket to his shoulder and was going to shoot him when
-the other called out “Ta’am, why for you poil king cartridge? tick him,
-Ta’am, tick him!” which between the two was immediately accomplished.
-Each party lost some killed and wounded, but the woods being very thick
-we made few prisoners.
-
-During the time we were here, and at Cumberland Island, we had some
-sharp white frosts and a little ice, two things the West Indian blacks
-had never seen; they were puzzled not a little, particularly when they
-beheld their own breath. The keen morning air having rendered their
-faces of a sickly purple colour, their major enquired what was the
-matter; their reply was: “Major, me no know--me no like it at all--me
-no see ’um, but he bity me toe a my finger.” When we laughed at their
-droll description, they said, breathing hard, “Eh! you no see smoke
-come out of my mouth, ah! massa major, he bity me toe a my finger!”
-shaking and rubbing their hands, and stamping with their feet, “Bad
-country this, no like em at all.” Several of these poor fellows were
-frost bitten, and lost their limbs.
-
-After the capture of the fort and barracks we embarked, and proceeded
-up the river to the town of St. Mary’s, which surrendered without
-further opposition. We made the inhabitants pull down their own fort
-and stockade in the town, took possession of the shipping and stores,
-and destroyed the public buildings.
-
-A curious thing occurred on board one of the ships: a rattlesnake
-_versus_ grog or, finding a Tartar. During the time I was pulling
-about, taking possession of some of the vessels, and sending boats
-to others, I was startled by a tremendous noise on board one of the
-prizes, and saw the men running up the rigging in all directions,
-while others took to the boats. I went directly alongside to see what
-was the matter, thinking that some torpedo or clock-work, such as had
-blown up poor Lieut. Geddes, of the _Ramilies_, off New London, had
-been discovered. Upon inquiry I found that a rattlesnake had been the
-cause of all the row. Some of the boats’ crews on going on board very
-naturally went down below into the cabin, and other parts of the ship
-to see what she contained. Jack spied in the master’s cabin a large
-case, the wire-work of which was placed against the ship’s side, and
-which in their hurry they had not observed. The vessel, I must remark,
-was bound to France. Seeing this case the thought instantly struck them
-that it must contain wine or spirits; they were determined, after all
-their toil, to have a good drink before any of the officers came below;
-an iron crowbar and cutlasses soon ripped open the top, when, instead
-of rum, wine, or brandy, out jumped a large rattlesnake, at least two
-yards’ long--away flew the sailors up the hatchways, some got into the
-boats, others in the rigging, the snake made one spring up the ladder,
-and was on deck after them in a moment--he soon jumped overboard, and,
-the vessel being pretty close to the shore, made his escape into the
-rushes and we saw no more of him.
-
-After remaining here a few days, I accompanied Captain Ross and Captain
-Jackson forty miles up the river, to bring down the _Countess of
-Harcourt_ Indiaman, that had been captured by a privateer some months
-before. In going up and down the river St. Mary’s we saw several large
-alligators sleeping on the banks, which at a little distance were taken
-for logs of timber, until they began to plunge into the water; we
-fired at several, and observed the balls strike the scales, but they
-bounded off, apparently without doing them any injury. I saw some of
-the Americans with the upper part of their shoes made of the skin, it
-had been tanned, and wore well, the knobs looked curious. I regretted
-afterwards I did not procure some of the shoes and tanned skins, and
-bring them home with me to England.
-
-After returning with the Indiaman, which we loaded with cotton, etc., I
-was ordered to proceed to Nassau, New Providence, to bring 300 more of
-the 2nd West India Regiment, it being the intention of the rear-admiral
-to make some attack further to the northward.
-
-We reached the Bahamas in ten days, first making the hole in the rock
-at the island of Abacco, which is a most excellent land-mark: it lies
-in lat. 25°, 56 N., long. 77°, 20 W. from London. Then, steering S. by
-E., 18 leagues, we arrived off the bar of New Providence, where we took
-a pilot to conduct us to the anchorage. An immense shark followed us
-over the bar, and remained by the ship during our stay, and proceeded
-with us again when we sailed. The water was so very clear that we saw
-him daily at the bottom. He was too cunning to take bait, though now
-and then he would come up to the top, eat the bones and bits of biscuit
-thrown overboard, and try and get the piece of beef off the hook, but
-never would swallow it.
-
-On my return from New Providence with troops, we again took on
-board part of the marine battalion from the fort and barracks of
-Fort Washington at Point-à-Petre, the guns of which we embarked;
-then, blowing up the works and burning the barracks, we returned to
-Cumberland Island to plan further annoyances to the enemy.
-
-While we were absent at the Bahamas, Captain Phillot, of the
-_Primrose_, brig, had been sent ninety miles up the river to attack
-some troops and destroy their stores of provisions, but the river
-becoming narrow, and the Americans lining the banks with sharpshooters,
-besides felling trees to stop the boats, he failed in the object,
-having lost several men killed and wounded, amongst the latter Captain
-Phillot himself severely. Had the enemy not prematurely shown their
-intention, they would have blocked up the boats, and probably captured
-them all. As it was, nothing but the coolness and bravery of the
-commander, and officers and men under his orders, prevented it.
-
-Just at this period we received the news of the total failure of
-our southern expedition to New Orleans, which event gave us deep
-and sincere regret, but we hoped by a gallant dash to wipe out our
-distressing feelings at such an unfortunate event; but while in the
-midst of preparations we received intelligence that the olive branch
-of peace was received, and the demon of war between parent and child
-had ceased. Had it arrived immediately after the taking of Washington,
-how great would have been our delight! As it was, although we could not
-help feeling a secret pleasure at the prospect of returning home to our
-families and friends, yet the throwing away so many valuable lives in
-the swamps of New Orleans cast a damp on our spirits, and a secret wish
-to try and blot it from our memories by some gallant achievement.
-
-Previous to returning to Nassau, I had the honour to receive a public
-letter of thanks from my brave and worthy commodore, Barrie. To have
-his approbation was, indeed, a flattering testimonial, and I look back
-at this hour with pleasure when we served together on the other side of
-the Atlantic, and I hope, if ever England should be again plunged in
-war, that fortune may place me under his command.
-
-On the 6th of March the ship I commanded was ordered to proceed to
-Nassau with the 2nd West India Regiment, and from thence to Bermuda,
-where we arrived the beginning of April with a re-captured English
-brig. After remaining there a fortnight, and receiving letters of
-thanks from Sir Alexander Cochrane and Rear-Admiral Cockburn, addressed
-to my officers and ship’s company, as well as two others to myself,
-we proceeded to Halifax, Nova Scotia, at which place we embarked the
-98th Regiment, Lieutenant-Colonel Douglass, and sailed, in a heavy
-snow-storm, on the 20th of May with a convoy of transports for England,
-and arrived at Spithead in June, after a passage of twenty-two days.
-
-From the period of our sailing from Britain (April, 1814) until the
-same month, 1815, we had been constantly employed upon a variety of
-harassing services and desultory warfare, with the gallant Royal Marine
-battalions, under the present colonels, Sir R. Williams[Q] and Sir John
-Malcolm, and it would be the height of injustice not to bear witness
-to their most brave, able, and steady conduct on every occasion. But
-where did they ever do otherwise? From the sun’s rising in the east
-to its setting in the west, in both hemispheres, it has witnessed the
-devoted bravery and loyalty of the whole corps of Royal Marines.
-
-After remaining sometime at Spithead, orders came for us to embark part
-of the suite of the Duchess D’Angoulême. After making the necessary
-preparations, and expending some of my own money in the outfit, we
-received counter orders.
-
-In August the ship was ordered to Sheerness to be paid off; on the 23rd
-I was promoted to the rank of captain, and on the 9th September the
-pennant was hauled down, and I parted from my old officers and ship’s
-company with very great regret. Thus ended my naval services for the
-present, after nearly seventeen of the best years of my life in active
-warfare; and I have now to thank God for His protection and providence
-on many trying occasions.
-
-I shall conclude by making a few remarks before closing this narrative
-upon the unfortunate mistake this country committed with regard to
-our quarrel with the United States, and also upon the actions which
-took place between our frigates and theirs, and upon the subject of
-searching for English sailors on board their vessels.
-
-The great error that England committed was her not having declared war
-against America two or three years earlier than she did. She ought to
-have done it on account of their having aided and assisted our mortal
-enemy, by carrying on the trade for France in vessels belonging to the
-United States, and not have allowed them to become the aggressors,
-to choose their own time, and make the first attack. Had she done so
-in 1808-1809, or even in 1810, America would have been completely in
-our power, for the whole of her merchant vessels covered the seas,
-and her few men-of-war were not particularly well manned. The embargo
-had been on two years, by which time most of her trading vessels were
-safely returned from every part of the world; and her seamen being
-thrown out of employ, were glad to enter on board their men-of-war and
-privateers for the chance of prize money. But she being now ready,
-and having secured nearly all her merchant vessels safe in their own
-ports, first insulted the British flag by sending a 58-gun frigate,
-the _Constitution_, to attack the _Little Belt_ corvette of 18 guns
-then cruizing on the American coast to intercept French vessels. This
-large frigate of 58 guns, and 487 men, _very gallantly_ fired into the
-little sloop of war of 18 guns and 120 men, killed and wounded several
-of them; but she in a very spirited manner returned the fire of this
-greatly superior force, and killed some of her men. Commodore Rogers,
-of the American 58-gun ship, pretended to make an apology to Captain
-Bingham, of His Majesty’s ship _Little Belt_, by saying he took her for
-a frigate, or he should not have fired into her.
-
-This was done with the hope of making England declare war, and thereby
-putting the onus upon her, and making the war in America more popular;
-but that failing, and they having an army ready to invade Canada,
-urged on by Bonaparte in 1812, threw down the gauntlet, and commenced
-hostilities, uniting with France against the liberties of Europe.
-
-Their few frigates being beautifully manned, and immensely superior
-to ours in size, guns, and number of men, took three of our 48-gun
-frigates after a severe action. But I do maintain the British navy
-lost no honour. The enemy’s ships mounted 58 guns, 24 and 42-pounders,
-with a complement of 487 picked seamen and marines; whereas our ships
-carried only 48 guns, 18 and 32-pounders, all badly manned, and one,
-the _Guerrière_, with only 187 men at quarters, the other two, the
-_Java_ and _Macedonian_, had nearly their complement of 300 men such as
-they were. The strength, size, and number of guns of the American ships
-were too great for ours.
-
-Persons not conversant with nautical affairs, imagine that one frigate
-is as good as another; but that is not the case, for it is very clear
-that a man of five feet four inches, weak in proportion, cannot stand
-against a man of six feet, with nearly double his strength, although
-both are called men.
-
-Another circumstance must be mentioned, which is this. A ship capable
-of carrying 58 or 60 heavy guns, 30 of which are long 24-pounders on
-her main deck, must be a much stronger and larger ship, both in hull,
-masts, and yards, and her masts several inches in diameter bigger
-than the smaller ship, carrying only 28 18-pounders on the main deck;
-therefore three, indeed two, if in a fresh breeze of wind, 24-lb. shot
-striking the main-mast in the same place or nearly so, of the smaller
-vessel, would knock it away, whereas it would require double the
-number of the 18-pound shot to cut away that of the larger ship, giving
-so many more advantages to the bigger ship against the smaller, by the
-latter being so much sooner crippled.
-
-The ridiculous, silly, and mischievous hue and cry that was raised
-in this country, in consequence of the above action, by a malicious,
-envious party, to pluck from the navy some of her laurels, needs no
-comment. It gave a lustre to the above frigate actions of our enemy
-all over the world which they did not deserve, and made them think
-themselves much more superior than they were, until the fight between
-the English frigate, _Shannon_ (48), Captain Philip Broke, and the
-_Chesapeake_ (49), Captain Laurence, off Boston. The latter had fifty
-more men than the former, but was taken in fifteen minutes by the
-gallant Captain Broke, and the ship’s company of the _Shannon_. This
-brilliant affair, followed a short time afterwards by the action of the
-_Endymion_ (50), Captain Henry Hope, that mounted 24-pounders on her
-main deck, and 32-pounders on the quarter-deck, against the _President_
-(60), 24-pounders and 42-pounders, which she also captured, proved to
-them that, when we were more evenly matched, the navy of England was
-still mistress of the seas.
-
-It was long seen by those who chose to make use of their senses that
-the disputes between the two countries must end in a rupture; and that
-the American Government were determined to side with France, and pick
-a quarrel with us, and that a war was inevitable. They knew that the
-whole attention of the British Government was taken up by the great
-struggle in Europe, and therefore few, if any, troops could be spared
-from the great theatre of war on the Peninsula; they considered this
-the time therefore to demand new maritime law.
-
-The right of search (which for ages had been the acknowledged or
-assumed law of all European belligerent nations), for enemies’
-merchandize carried in neutral vessels, America was determined to
-oppose. Instigated by intrigues, and offers of all kinds, made by
-French emissaries sent for that purpose, Bonaparte found his Milan
-decrees, declaring the whole coasts of Great Britain and her extensive
-colonies in the four quarters of the world in a state of blockade, to
-be of no use without a navy to support it, and not having one that
-dared show its face upon the ocean, had no means to carry his decrees
-into execution. His eagle eye at once saw that by making a tool of
-the United States, and embroiling them with England, he might make a
-great diversion in his favour. He, therefore, induced their cabinets to
-enter into his plans, backed, it was said, “_by good, weighty, golden
-reasons_, and insisted upon a new maritime law,” which would strike a
-death blow at our dominion of the sea, and at once evade all blockade.
-The law I allude to was, that the neutral flag or vessel should permit
-the ship wearing it to carry the cargo of an enemy free of capture from
-the other belligerent, who met it on the sea or elsewhere.
-
-It was very extraordinary that America found little fault with France,
-who first commenced the general blockade by the issue of her Milan
-decrees, and who confiscated all the United States’ vessels that were
-captured by her men-of-war or privateers with British colonial or
-other produce on board, coming directly or indirectly from any port of
-the United Kingdom of Great Britain and her colonies. Had they merely
-touched or been driven by stress of weather into an English port, or
-even boarded by a British cruiser, it was sufficient to condemn them
-as lawful prizes in a French Court of Admiralty, when met at sea by
-French armed vessels, and detained. England waited with great patience,
-thinking that all the neutral powers, but above all America, would
-protest against the measure, and join her who was fighting for the
-liberties of all the world against the iron grasp of Bonaparte, and his
-intended universal dominion. The United States, on the contrary, put up
-with the seizure of their vessels by France, and when Great Britain was
-obliged, after the greatest forbearance, to declare the whole coast of
-France and her allies in a state of blockade--which she had the means
-of doing, having more than one thousand men-of-war of different sizes
-at sea or in commission, ready effectually to carry this measure into
-operation--they grew outrageous because she would not permit them to be
-our secret enemy, and carry the trade of France in their ships, under
-the new maritime law they proposed, viz., that a neutral ship and flag
-were to make an enemy’s cargo neutral also. The above was one of the
-causes that led to the war.
-
-Impressment of seamen or sailors out of their vessels is another source
-of complaint against this country. To this latter act England was
-driven by the conduct of citizens of the United States, decoying men
-to desert whenever any of our ships, whether men-of-war or merchant
-vessels, put into their harbours. The enticing our seamen away to man
-their vessels naturally made us search for British subjects whenever
-British men-of-war boarded any of our ships, whether at sea or in
-foreign parts, particularly when we knew the easy method by which
-English subjects were naturalised and gained American protections.
-
-I recollect a very fine young seaman whom we took out of an American
-ship at Messina in Sicily, when I was a lieutenant of the _Melpomene_
-frigate. On being brought on board he produced his United States’
-protection, and requested to be sent back to his ship. He wrote to the
-American consul to claim him, and the master of his ship came on board
-to demand him as an American citizen. Having strong suspicion that he
-was an English subject,--notwithstanding the clamour raised by the
-Yankee master and consul, and the production of his protection; yet,
-from his not having any nasal twang when he spoke, and not using the
-general slang words of that country, such as “I guess,” “I calculate,”
-etc.,--we kept him on board that night. The next morning he came on the
-quarter-deck of the frigate, and gave up his American protection and
-said, “I will not deny my country--I am a native of Swansea, in Wales,
-and I got that protection when I sailed last voyage in a merchant ship
-from Liverpool to New York, in the following manner. On my arrival at
-New York I was told that by paying two dollars I could get a protection
-of citizenship, which would prevent my being pressed on board an
-English man-of-war. The way it was managed was this:--I was put into
-a large cradle made on purpose to hold men; I was then rocked by them
-for a minute or two, and afterwards taken before the proper authorities
-by the old couple, who made oath they had known me ever since I was
-in my cradle--no further questions were asked, the matter being quite
-understood between the parties,--I paid the fees, the protection was
-granted, and, having given the old folks two dollars for their trouble,
-I became a ‘registered American citizen,’ and that, sir,” he said, “is
-the way British seamen are kidnapped in the States--in short, it is a
-regular trade, and hundreds of seamen that have protections got them in
-the same manner.”
-
-A knowledge of the various tricks played on the other side of the
-Atlantic to entice away our seamen, made the officers of the British
-navy more anxious to recover their sailors, which of course at times
-caused some irritating disputes with the masters and skippers of the
-American vessels. These magnified every trifle, and reported all the
-circumstances to people who were paid by that part of the press in the
-French interest to make the worst of everything, in order to inflame
-the public mind against this country, particularly after the affair of
-the _Leopard_ (50), taking our deserters out of the American frigate
-_Chesapeake_ (48), and the unfortunate event of H.M.S. _Leander_, when
-a man was killed by accident by her firing to bring-to a vessel under
-the United States’ flag off New York for the purpose of examining her.
-
-The Americans acted with great wisdom and foresight previous to
-their declaration of war, by putting on the embargo and passing the
-“Non-intercourse Bill” with England two years before. By that wise
-act they were enabled to get home their trade from all parts of the
-world, and having done this, they insulted our flag by sending a 58-gun
-ship, commanded by Commodore Rogers, to fire into the _Little Belt_
-corvette of 18-guns, commanded by Captain Bingham, cruising near their
-coast, and killing several of her men and wounding others. This affair
-had two meanings. First to revenge the death of their citizens slain
-in the _Chesapeake_ frigate, and on board the merchant ship off New
-York; and secondly to induce us to declare war against them, to make
-it more popular with the generality of the people of the States, that
-the Government might be able to throw the blame upon England. Britain
-having her hands full in other places, fighting for the liberties of
-the world, making at the same time a desperate struggle for her own
-existence, and most nobly striving to liberate other powers from the
-grasp of Bonaparte, was not willing at this most critical period to
-have another foe; she therefore tried something in protocol fashion of
-the present day, but it failed as all half-measures generally do.
-
-America laughed at it, and commenced biting our heels, while John
-Bull was tossing the dogs in front. They had the wisdom to perceive
-the great error England had committed in not seeing that war was
-inevitable, and that she ought to have declared it two or three years
-before, and not have allowed her to get the whole of her vessels safe
-into port. Our politeness and good breeding enabled them to secure
-all or most of their shipping, in order to enable them to man their
-ships of war and privateers with picked sailors. Their seamen being
-thrown out of employ, were glad to enter on board their men-of-war
-and privateers for the almost certain chance of a rich harvest, by
-capturing our East and West Indiamen.
-
-This was the great mistake England committed; for had we gone to war
-at an earlier period when the seas were covered with American merchant
-ships, they would have been swept into our harbours, and she would have
-been completely at our mercy, and twelve months at that time would have
-settled our disputes far more amicably than the unsatisfactory method
-adopted in the year 1815.
-
-Natural affection, intimate connections with this country, a common
-language, and a wish to incline to a reasonable adjustment of claims,
-would probably have settled our quarrel, and not have left the boundary
-line as a further bone of contention. But we were unfortunately so
-delighted with the success of our allies and our own gallant army,
-by the capture of Paris, and other deeds in Europe, added to the
-abdication of Napoleon, that American matters were left nearly in the
-same state as before the war, although we had the means at that period
-to have settled everything in a most satisfactory manner. The country
-was like,--or might be compared to,--soldiers and sailors who had
-received so much pay and prize-money that they got drunk. Great Britain
-was intoxicated with the honour and renown which their countrymen in
-the army and navy had gained for them, and never thought of the morrow.
-Indeed, up to the present time, 1839, they have been living upon the
-_principal_ of _credit_, for we have put, I fear, very little by or out
-to interest which was _then gained_, and which has been most woefully
-frittered away ever since, until the country has at last almost run
-bankrupt: for we are spit upon in Spain, treated with contempt in
-Portugal, despised in France, laughed at in Russia, kicked in Canada,
-and in a fine olla podrida in India and China.
-
-
- FINIS.
-
-
- NOTE.--Vice-Admiral William Stanhope Lovell, R.N., K.H., was born
- September 15th, 1788. Married, 2nd January, 1822, Selina, youngest
- daughter of Sir Henry Crewe, Bart., of Calke Abbey, Derby, and by
- her, who died on the 30th March, 1838, had issue one son and three
- daughters, who survive him. Vice-Admiral Lovell died in 1859,
- “_sans peur et sans reproche_.” Was buried at Bexley, Kent.
-
-
-
-
-_APPENDIX._
-
-
-Having, in the foregoing narrative, stated, in justification of our
-mode of warfare in America, some of the causes which led to our
-adoption of the system of retaliation, I beg to subjoin two extracts
-from the Annual Register of the year 1814, as well as copies of public
-documents, which a friend has most kindly favoured me with, which fully
-bear me out in saying that we were in a manner compelled to adopt the
-system we pursued, _i.e._, to teach the Americans that we had the power
-to return with interest the inhuman mode of warfare with which they
-began the campaign.
-
- “From several causes it was not to be expected that the war between
- Britain and America would be carried on in the most humane and
- honourable mode, especially by the Americans; they had not yet
- forgotten the war of the revolution, and by our employment of the
- Indians, _though they set us the example_, the consequences were
- such as might be dreaded. In their different invasions of Canada,
- the greatest inhumanities were exercised; especially at Sandwich,
- at the settlements on the Thames, at York, and at Fort George.
- Finding that remonstrances against this mode of conducting the war
- produced no effect, General Sir George Prevost at length issued
- a proclamation announcing a severe retaliation on the Americans,
- while at the same time he earnestly deprecated this mode of
- warfare.”--_Annual Register_, p. 318, _Principal Occurrences_, 1814.
-
-
- “A proclamation issued by General Sir George Prevost, Bart.,
- announces, after long forbearance, a severe retaliation on the
- Americans for their inhuman mode of warfare in their different
- invasions of Canada, especially for their having, in the midst of
- a severe Canadian winter, wantonly burnt the beautiful village of
- Newark, and turned out _four hundred helpless women and children_
- to perish in the snow, and through the severity of the season,
- _without shelter, and without a remnant of property_. This case is
- made out with the utmost distinctness against the Americans, not
- only in this, but in a number of other instances, at Sandwich, at
- the settlements on the Thames, at York, and at Fort George. General
- Sir George Prevost earnestly deprecates this mode of warfare; but
- he justly observes that ‘since it has been so long persevered in by
- the enemy, retaliation becomes an imperious duty.’ But he at the
- same time says, ‘that he will no longer pursue a system of warfare
- so revolting to his own feelings, and so uncongenial to the British
- character, unless forced to it by the future measures of the
- enemy.’”--_Annual Register_, p. 27; _Principal Occurrences_, 1814.
-
-I trust that I have fully vindicated our mode of warfare in America,
-by showing that we were driven to it by the great inhumanities
-so frequently committed by the enemy, and when forbearance and
-remonstrance failed, nothing was left but to teach them that when
-goaded beyond endurance--_four hundred helpless women and children
-turned out to perish in the frost and snow of a severe Canadian winter_
-from the village of Newark, besides wanton barbarities committed in
-various other places--the British lion was at length aroused from
-his slumber, and that the fires which the Americans had lit in other
-places, reached the public works of their capital--Washington.
-
-
-Copies of Correspondence.
-
- “Head-quarters, British Troops,
- “Bank of the St. Lawrence,
- “14th Nov., 1813.
-
- “Sir,--
-
- “The object of the present communication, which is made by
- desire of the officers in command of the British forces in this
- neighbourhood, is, in the first instance, to claim as prisoners
- two American officers who were taken on the morning of the 11th,
- previous to the action, and deserted to their own shore while on
- the way to Prescott.
-
- “I enclose a copy of their paroles.
-
- “William Gilkinson, Esq., of Prescott, is the bearer of this flag,
- and I am instructed to request that you will facilitate his passage
- to the Commanding General of the United States’ Army, to whom he is
- desirous of making a representation on the subject of the plunder
- and destruction of his property by the American troops in this
- neighbourhood. And on this subject I am instructed to protest in
- the most solemn manner against that system of rapine and plunder
- of the property of the peaceful and unoffending inhabitants which
- has marked the progress of the American army during its short
- continuance in this province; and I am further to entreat that his
- Excellency the Commander-in-Chief of the United States’ Army will
- allow no consideration arising out of the circumstances of the
- disparity of rank of the British officer by whom he is so called
- upon, to restrain his Excellency from immediately disavowing this
- system so disgraceful to a civilized army, and affording every fair
- indemnity to the individual sufferers; or that he will, by an open
- avowal that the system complained of is an authorized one, leave
- it in the option of the general officer (hourly expected to assume
- the command of the powerful and rapidly increasing British force in
- this neighbourhood), to employ it in such acts of just retaliation
- upon the persons and property of the inhabitants of the right bank
- of the St. Lawrence as he may think fit, as commensurate with the
- treatment of the inhabitants on this side.
-
- “I have the honour to be, Sir, very respectfully,
-
- “Your most obedient humble servant,
-
- “(Signed) T. HARVEY, Lieut.-Col.,
- “D.C.G. to the British Forces
- “in the Canadas.”
-
-
- “Head Quarters, Montreal,
- “2nd June, 1814.
-
- “Sir,--
-
- “I have the honour to transmit to you a copy of a letter which I
- have written to Lieut.-General Drummond, in consequence of the
- late disgraceful conduct of the American troops in the wanton
- destruction of private property on the north shores of Lake Erie,
- in order that if the war with the United States continues, you may,
- should you judge it advisable, assist in inflicting that measure
- of retaliation which shall deter the enemy from a repetition of
- similar outrages.
-
- “I have, &c.,
-
- “(Signed) GEORGE PREVOST,
- “Commander of the Forces.
-
- “To Vice-Admiral the Honourable
- “Sir A. COCHRANE, K.B., &c., &c.”
-
-
- “Head Quarters, Montreal,
- “1st June, 1814.
-
- “Sir,--
-
- “It is with sincere regret and disappointment that I perused the
- detail of illiberal and wanton devastation and unjustifiable
- outrage reported in your letter of the 27th ult., and Major-General
- Riall’s of the 19th, to have been committed in the vicinity of
- the village of Dover, and on its unoffending inhabitants, by the
- conflagration of their dwelling-houses and their mills.
-
- “I cherished the hope that the severe, although just, retaliation
- inflicted for the destruction of the village of Newark would have
- deterred the enemy from similar acts of barbarity; under that
- impression, I issued a proclamation of the 4th January last, which
- has since been most scrupulously adhered to by the troops under
- my command, and it is with painful reluctance I now feel myself
- compelled to return to a system so abhorrent to those principles of
- humanity which have always animated and characterized Britons.
-
- “But such horrors cannot be suffered to remain without notice or
- unrevenged; you must, therefore, transmit by a flag of truce to the
- officer commanding the American force nearest to you a statement of
- those atrocities, with information that you have my instructions
- to inflict a severe retribution for them; you may assure him that
- the same will be repeated for every act of such outrage committed
- on the defenceless and peaceable settlers of our frontier, and that
- the British fleet on the coast of America will be called upon to
- assist in the measure of just retaliation.
-
- “I have, &c.,
-
- “(Signed) GEORGE PREVOST,
- “Commander of the Forces.
-
- “To Lieut.-Gen. DRUMMOND, &c., &c.,
- “Com. Upper Canada.”
-
-
- “Tonnant, Halifax,
- “5th Oct., 1814.
-
- “Sir,--
-
- “I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of your Excellency’s
- letter of the 3rd August, acquainting me of the repetition on the
- part of the enemy of the disgraceful outrages committed by him on
- the north shores of Lake Erie.
-
- “I have therefore reiterated my order of retaliation of the 18th
- July, of which a copy was sent to your Excellency, and given
- further directions for the distressing him south of the Delaware,
- to the utmost of our power; from that river northward I have
- restrained the squadron from acting in full execution of its
- purport until I see what change the late events may produce in that
- quarter.
-
- “I have the honour to be,
-
- “Your Excellency’s most obedient humble servant,
- “ALEXANDER COCHRANE,
- “Vice-Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.
-
- “To his Excellency
- “Lieut.-General Sir GEO. PREVOST, Bt.,
- “Commander of the Forces, &c., &c.”
-
-
- “Head Quarters, Montreal,
- “August 6, 1814.
-
- “My Lord,--
-
- “I have the honour to transmit to your Lordship a copy of a
- letter I have addressed to Vice-Admiral the Hon. Sir A. Cochrane,
- respecting the late wanton and disgraceful conduct of the enemy in
- the burning of the villages of Queen Town and St. David’s, on the
- Erie frontier.
-
- “J. W.
-
- “To EARL BATHURST.”
-
-
- “Head Quarters, Montreal,
- “30th Sept., 1814.
-
- “Sir,--
-
- “I have the honour to acknowledge your three letters of the 19th
- inst., which have been laid before the Commander of the Forces,
- with regard to the miseries which the enemy have again made on
- Port Talbot; his Excellency is of opinion that it is the act of
- Westbrook, who is gratifying private animosities with a heartless
- band; he scarcely conceives it to have been authorized by the
- Government of the U.S., and requests to be informed who commanded
- the enemy’s force employed on this occasion. The Commander of
- the Forces hopes that precautionary measures have been taken
- to frustrate the design of the enemy upon Long Point, should
- the execution of it be attempted. If you consider it necessary
- to retaliate for the unjustifiable act of carrying off Colonel
- Burnell, you have his Excellency’s authority to do so, or else, if
- you prefer it, two respectable American citizens may be taken as
- hostages for him from Hamilton.
-
- “To Lieut.-General DRUMMOND.”
-
-
- WITHERBY & CO., Printers, 325a, High Holborn, W.C.
-
-
-FOOTNOTES:
-
-[A] Colonel Thomas Stanhope Badcock, of Little Missenden Abbey,
-Bucks, and of Maplethorpe Hall, Lincolnshire, married Anne, daughter
-of William Buckle, Esq., of the Mythe House and Chasely, in
-Gloucestershire, by Anne, daughter of George Turberville, Esq. The
-family is descended from Sir Salathiel Lovell, of Harleston, co.
-Northampton, one of the Barons of the Exchequer, whose youngest
-daughter _Jane_ married Richard Badcock, Esq. Of the two elder
-daughters, _Maria_ married Joseph Townshend, Esq., and died without
-issue; _Penelope_ married the Rev. Michael Stanhope, D.D., canon
-of Windsor, and died 1738, leaving with other issue Arthur Charles
-Stanhope, Esq., father of Philip Stanhope, who, succeeding to the
-honours of his family in 1773, became fifth Earl of Chesterfield. Sir
-Salathiel Lovell had two sons, _Samuel_, his heir, a Welsh judge, who
-married in 1692 Miss Sergeant, and left one son, _Samuel_, and one
-daughter, _Rachel Jane_, married in 1732 Richard Edgeworth, Esq., of
-Edgeworthstown, co. Longford, who died in 1764, leaving issue.
-
-[B] The eldest, _Anne_ Bethia, married 21st September, 1809,
-Lieut.-General Sir Jasper Nicholls, K.C.B. (Commander-in-Chief at
-Madras and afterwards Commander-in-Chief in India), and had eight
-daughters and one son. Lady Nicholls died at Rome in 1844. _Sophia_
-Lovell married 9th June, 1814, the Rev. James Duke Coleridge, D.C.L.,
-eldest son of Colonel Coleridge, of Heath’s Court, Ottery St. Mary’s,
-Devon, and had two daughters. Mrs. Coleridge died at Torquay in 1874.
-
-[C] _Torpedo vulgaris._
-
-[D] It was near a vintage.
-
-[E] Afterwards Sir John Chambers White.
-
-[F] Taken and destroyed.
-
-[G] The French ship of the line, _L’Achille_, on fire and blowing up.
-
-[H] Being a man of plain common-sense, I never could to this day
-understand the policy of our training up foreign officers of all
-nations in our service to sting ourselves. Surely our rulers forget the
-sensible fable of Æsop, “The countryman and the viper.” We took the
-Russians from frost and snow, thawed them in our bosoms, and the time
-may yet come when they may sting us. “_Tempus omnia monstrat._”
-
-[I] Sir Lovell Benjamin Lovell, K.C.B., K.H., commenced in the Royal
-Bucks Militia in 1804, and entered as cornet (by purchase) the 14th
-Light Dragoons, November, 1805; served at the taking of Monte Video,
-under Sir Samuel Auchmuty, in 1807, and subsequently in the Peninsula,
-including the battles of Talavera, the Coa, Busaco, Fuentes d’Onor
-(wounded), Salamanca, Vittoria, the Pyrenees, Nive, Ortherg, and
-Toulouse; actions or skirmishes near Talavera, Sexmiro, Val de la
-Mula, La Meares, Freixeda, Guarda, Coimbra, Valle, Venda de Sierra,
-Pombal, Redinha, Miranda de Corvo, Coa, Galligos, Nave d’Aver, Espiga,
-near Fuentes d’Onor, Llerena, near Salamanca, St. Christova, Bueda,
-Castrillos, Foncastin, Matylla; at Burgos, Osma, Huarte, Pampeluna,
-Vale de Bastan, Pass of Maya, Lines of Ainho, Cambo, Hasparren, Helite,
-Garris, Sauveterre, St. Gladie, Buelho, Garlier, San Roman--total, 10
-general actions, 40 minor actions or skirmishes, besides attending 7
-sieges; was at the siege of Oporto, being one of the military reporters
-under Lord William Russell. Appointed to the Lieutenant-Colonelcy of
-the 15th Hussars, March 21st, 1834; appointed Brigadier-General of the
-cantonment of Bangalore, 1841, and Major-General in India, September,
-1841; gazetted to the command of the Hyderabad subsidiary force,
-February 15th, 1847, and took command March 3rd, at Secunderabad;
-appointed Major-General in 1854, and Colonel of the 12th Lancers, 29th
-November, 1856. Sir Lovell Benjamin Lovell received the war medal,
-with eleven clasps, for Busaco, Fuentes d’Onor, Badajoz, Salamanca,
-Vittoria, the Pyrenees, Nive, Orthes, and Toulouse. He died at Brighton
-in 1861. Sir Lovell and his brother assumed by sign manual the surname
-and arms of Lovell in 1840.
-
-[J] Prince Lippe Bückeburg.
-
-[K] During our stay in Altea Bay, in 1812, I was invited by the
-Spanish authorities in the town to assist at the proclaiming of the
-new constitution, and accordingly landed my officers and marines to
-be present at the ceremony of reading them. A few of the Spaniards
-cheered, as well as ourselves, and called out, “Viva Fernando Septimo;”
-but it appeared to me they were not very enthusiastic about it at that
-period; indeed they did not seem to care two straws whether they had
-the old or new constitution--to get rid of the French was the first
-object.
-
-[L] (!) Peaks.
-
-[M] Amongst so many new black freemen in the West Indies, of course
-many cases of delinquency must occur. Why not transport all troublesome
-and bad characters to Africa? They originally came from thence, and it
-would be only returning them back to their own country. Just land them
-on the beach at Bonny, and leave them to find their own way amongst
-their countrymen, or send them to Fernando Po to clear the forests and
-make roads, which would ventilate the island and make it more healthy.
-
-[N] Medals were given in 1848(?) for the Peninsula wars, and to the
-survivors of the Battle of Trafalgar also in 1848. An English merchant,
-whose name I cannot remember, gave to some of those who were present at
-the Battle of Trafalgar (among the fortunate recipients was my father)
-medals, having on one side the profile of Lord Nelson, and on the
-reverse side the representation of the ships going into action, with
-the date, October 1st, 1804, and round it the memorable words signalled
-to the fleet: “England expects every man will do his duty.” This medal
-is much prized by the family, as is also the dirk previously mentioned.
-(M.S.L.)
-
-[O] The revilers of our American mode of warfare should bear in mind
-other circumstances, viz.: that America seized the opportunity of
-declaring war against us at a most critical period, when we were not
-only making a desperate struggle for our existence as a nation, but
-also to liberate other powers from the iron grasp of Bonaparte, and
-fighting in the cause of liberty itself. That must not be forgotten on
-our side of the question.
-
-[P] The rear-admiral, in the _Albion_, arrived on the previous evening,
-when Captain Ross joined with the boats of that ship in the attack on
-the fort by water.
-
-[Q] Lieutenant-Colonel Williams, of the Marines, was not at the capture
-of Washington. He was then in Canada, and joined us at Cumberland
-Island previous to the attack on Fort Washington, at Point-à-Petre.
-
-
-
-
- Transcriber's Note:
-
- The following is a list of changes made to the original. The first
- line is the original line, the second the corrected one.
-
- Page 108
-
- We remained at O’Rodonto three days, during
- We remained at O’Rodondo three days, during
-
- northward to invest Cuidad Rodrigo.
- northward to invest Ciudad Rodrigo.
-
- Operations against Cuidad Rodrigo having been
- Operations against Ciudad Rodrigo having been
-
- Page 110
-
- was ordered to cover the siege of Cuidad Rodrigo.
- was ordered to cover the siege of Ciudad Rodrigo.
-
- Page 114
-
- nexts attracts attention. This was founded about
- next attracts attention. This was founded about
-
- Page 124
-
- 4th July, sent me to Palma Bay, Minorca, to collect
- 4th July, sent me to Palma Bay, Majorca, to collect
-
- Page 138
-
- _Invincible_, thinking it advisable to make a reconnoissance
- _Invincible_, thinking it advisable to make a reconnaissance
-
- Page 183
-
- of the _Eudymion_ (50), Captain Henry Hope, that
- of the _Endymion_ (50), Captain Henry Hope, that
-
-
-
-
-
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-<pre>
-
-The Project Gutenberg EBook of Personal Narrative of Events, From 1799 to
-1815, by William Stanhope Lovell
-
-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 included
-with this eBook or online at www.gutenberg.org/license
-
-
-Title: Personal Narrative of Events, From 1799 to 1815
-
-Author: William Stanhope Lovell
-
-Release Date: October 8, 2020 [EBook #63405]
-
-Language: English
-
-Character set encoding: UTF-8
-
-*** START OF THIS PROJECT GUTENBERG EBOOK PERSONAL NARRATIVE OF ***
-
-
-
-
-Produced by Paul Clark and the Online Distributed
-Proofreading Team at https://www.pgdp.net (This file was
-produced from images generously made available by The
-Internet Archive)
-
-
-
-
-
-
-</pre>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p>Transcriber's Note:</p>
-
-<p>Every effort has been made to replicate this text as faithfully as
-possible, including inconsistent hyphenation and discrepancies in
-numbers of guns. Some errors in the table of contents and chapter
-summaries have been corrected. Some other changes have been made.
-They are listed at the end of the text.</p>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="coverfront">
- <img src="images/coverfront.jpg" width="800" height="492" alt="" />
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_i"></a>[Pg i]</span></p>
-
-<h1>PERSONAL NARRATIVE<br />
-OF EVENTS,</h1>
-
-<p class="p2 center xlarge smcap">From 1799 to 1815,</p>
-
-<p class="p2 center large"><i>WITH ANECDOTES</i>.</p>
-
-
-<p class="p4 center">BY THE LATE</p>
-
-<p class="center large">VICE-ADM<sup>L.</sup> W<sup>M.</sup> STANHOPE LOVELL, R.N., K.H.</p>
-
-<hr class="p4 r5" />
-<p class="center">SECOND EDITION.</p>
-<hr class="r5" />
-
-<p class="p4 center"><b>London:</b><br />
-WM. ALLEN &amp; CO., 13, WATERLOO PLACE, W.</p>
-<hr class="p2 r5" />
-
-<p class="center">1879.
-</p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_ii"></a>[Pg ii]</span></p>
-
-<p class="center">WITHERBY AND CO., PRINTERS,<br />
-74, CORNHILL; NEWMAN’S COURT, CORNHILL; AND 325A, HIGH HOLBORN, W.C.
-</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iii"></a>[Pg iii]</span></p>
-
-<p><i>To</i> Rear-Admiral Sir <span class="smcap">Robert Barrie</span>, C.B., K.C.H.</p>
-
-<p class="p2"><span class="smcap">My dear Sir Robert,</span></p>
-
-<p>In dedicating the following pages to you, under
-whose command I had the honour of serving in the
-Chesapeake, &amp;c., I do it with the greatest respect, esteem,
-and admiration of your conduct.</p>
-
-<p>I must ever consider you as one of those officers upon
-whom the country may safely rely in the hour of peril, and
-in whose hands it may entrust its honour in the day of
-battle. Like the celebrated Bayard of old, your career has
-obtained for you a character, “<i>sans peur et sans reproche</i>.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">Your faithful friend,</p>
-
-<p class="right">THE AUTHOR.
-</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_iv"></a>[Pg iv]<br /><a id="Page_v"></a>[Pg v]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CONTENTS"><i>CONTENTS.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<table summary="Contents">
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I</a>.</h3></td>
-<td class="tdr small">PAGE</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">First Trip to Sea&mdash;Shipmates&mdash;Admiral Sir John Borlase Warren,
-Bart, K.B.</td>
-<td class="tdpn">1</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Channel Cruising&mdash;Boat Expeditions&mdash;Anecdote of a Gallant Mid&mdash;Ditto
-of Two Dandy Guardsmen&mdash;Expedition to Ferrol&mdash;Sir
-James Pulteney, Sir Edward Pellew and the Donkey&mdash;The
-Unlucky Cruise</td>
-<td class="tdpn">7</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Cruise off Cadiz&mdash;Proceed up the Mediterranean to Egypt after a
-French Squadron under Rear-Admiral Ganteaume, 1801</td>
-<td class="tdpn">16</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">From the Peace of Amiens (1802) until the Commencement of the
-Second Gallic War&mdash;Gambling</td>
-<td class="tdpn">26</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">From the Commencement of Second Gallic War until the Battle of
-Trafalgar, 1805; with Anecdotes</td>
-<td class="tdpn">30<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vi"></a>[Pg vi]</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">The Battle of Trafalgar, and Extracts from the Log of His Majesty’s
-Ship <i>Neptune</i>, on the 21st, 22nd, and 23rd October, 1805</td>
-<td class="tdpn">43</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Joined the <i>Melpomene</i>&mdash;Sent up the Mediterranean&mdash;Tremendous
-Weather, with Thunder, Lightning, and Water-spouts&mdash;Ship
-loses her Rudder and Main-topmast&mdash;Proceed to Malta</td>
-<td class="tdpn">57</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Siege of Gaeta by the French&mdash;Boat Affairs&mdash;My Capture&mdash;Leghorn</td>
-<td class="tdpn">62</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Malta&mdash;Dreadful Accident by the Explosion of a Magazine in the
-Town, on the Bermola side&mdash;Nearly get into a Scrape about
-Breaking Quarantine&mdash;Kind Answer of the gallant Admiral Sir
-Sidney Smith to the Complaint&mdash;Rejoin the <i>Melpomene</i>&mdash;Mutiny
-in Fribourg’s Regiment&mdash;Cruise in the Adriatic</td>
-<td class="tdpn">73</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">North American Station, from 1808 to 1811&mdash;Bermuda&mdash;Anecdote&mdash;Death
-of Captain Conn</td>
-<td class="tdpn">87</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Lisbon&mdash;Trip to the Army of Lord Wellington&mdash;Montemor Novo,
-O’Rodondo, Villa Vicosa, Elvas, Fort le Lippe</td>
-<td class="tdpn">101</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Lisbon, Cintra, Mafra, etc., 1811, 1812&mdash;Second Trip to the Army&mdash;Taking
-of Badajoz</td>
-<td class="tdpn">113<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_vii"></a>[Pg vii]</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Cadiz, Minorca, Majorca, Alicant, Carthagena, Algiers, Oran, Altea
-Bay&mdash;Drive a French Privateer on Shore near Denia</td>
-<td class="tdpn">124</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Siege of the Col de Balaguer&mdash;A Reconnoitering Party&mdash;Raising of
-the Siege of Tarragona&mdash;Lieutenant-General Sir John and Lady
-Murray&mdash;Rear-Admiral Benjamin Hallowell&mdash;Viscount and
-Viscountess Mahon&mdash;Palermo, Veniros; Upset in a Boat&mdash;Valencia&mdash;Holland</td>
-<td class="tdpn">136</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">1814&mdash;Sent to Bermuda&mdash;Operations in the Chesapeake&mdash;The
-River Patuxent&mdash;Expedition to Washington&mdash;Town of Rappahannock&mdash;River
-Rappahannock&mdash;Commodore Robert Barrie,
-etc.</td>
-<td class="tdpn">150</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td><h3><a href="#CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI</a>.</h3></td>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td class="tdh">Operations in South Carolina&mdash;Capture of Cumberland Island and
-the Fort of Point-à-Petre&mdash;An Affair with the American Riflemen
-in the Woods&mdash;An Abattis&mdash;Anecdotes of the 2nd West
-India Regiment&mdash;A Rattlesnake&mdash;Capture of the Town of St.
-Mary’s&mdash;Destruction of the Forts and Barracks&mdash;Nassau, New
-Providence&mdash;Compliment to the Royal Marines&mdash;Return
-Home</td>
-<td class="tdpn">173</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_viii"></a>[Pg viii]<br /><a id="Page_1"></a>[Pg 1]</span></p>
-
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="A_Personal_Narrative_of_Events"><span class="smcap">A Personal Narrative of Events.</span></h2>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_I">CHAPTER I.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">First trip to sea&mdash;Shipmates&mdash;Admiral Sir John Borlase Warren,
-Bart, K.B.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">My father<a id="FNanchor_1" href="#Footnote_1" class="fnanchor">[A]</a> and uncle both served their king and
-country in the American war of independence; the
-former was with Lord Cornwallis’s army when it
-surrendered at York to the American forces under
-the command of General Washington (he was at
-that time an officer in the 6th Regiment of Foot);
-and the latter in the 4th Dragoons. Both were
-magistrates for the county of Buckinghamshire, and
-served the office of high sheriff for the same.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_2"></a>[Pg 2]</span></p>
-
-<p>When scarcely ten years old, I joined H.M. ship
-<i>Renown</i> (74) in Torbay, bearing the flag (blue at the
-mizen) of one of the most amiable men in the service,
-Sir John Borlase Warren, Bt, K.B., who had
-commanded a squadron of dashing frigates during
-all the early part of the war, and had taken and
-destroyed several French ships, and finished his
-glorious flying squad career by capturing most of
-those, which, under the command of Monsieur Bompart,
-had been sent with troops to assist the Irish
-during the rebellion of 1798, thereby saving the
-blood of thousands in Ireland, if not Ireland itself.
-A better or braver officer than the late Admiral Sir
-J. B. Warren never lived; he was that perfect model
-of a gentleman that every one might take as a pattern.
-I had the melancholy honour of following him
-to his grave, and wept over it tears of unfeigned
-sorrow.</p>
-
-<p>But to commence my peregrinations. I still recollect
-the delight that a letter from my father gave
-me when at school, informing me I was to leave
-Latin and Greek, which classical knowledge was all
-blown overboard and forgotten the first gale of wind
-at sea; and after spending a short time at Little<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_3"></a>[Pg 3]</span>
-Missenden Abbey (which then belonged to my father)
-with my mother and two sisters,<a id="FNanchor_2" href="#Footnote_2" class="fnanchor">[B]</a> I proceeded to
-Portsmouth, thence to find a passage to join the
-before-mentioned ship in Torbay.</p>
-
-<p>I bore the parting with my kind, dear, excellent
-mother and sisters pretty well, because my father
-accompanied me to Portsmouth to see me safely
-launched into a new world; but when he took leave,
-I thought my heart would burst with grief. Time,
-however, reconciles us to everything, and the gaiety
-and thoughtlessness of youth, added to the cocked
-hat, dirk, spy-glass, etc., of a nautical fit out, assisted
-wonderfully to dry my tears, and, in a manner, reconciled
-me to a new scene of life.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Pickmore, who at that period commanded
-the <i>Royal William</i>, at Spithead, very kindly sent me
-on board the <i>Montague</i> (74) with all my baggage, in
-the admiral’s tender, to join my ship to the westward.
-The first night on board was not the most pleasant;
-the noises unusual to a novice&mdash;sleeping in a hammock
-for the first time&mdash;its tarry smell&mdash;the wet cables for
-a bed carpet, and a somersault or two from my
-lubberly manner of getting into it, made me draw
-comparisons between sleeping on beds of down ashore,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_4"></a>[Pg 4]</span>
-and my new abode, by no means very favourable to
-the latter.</p>
-
-<p>The second day after quitting Portsmouth brought
-us to Torbay, where the channel fleet of thirty-six
-sail of the line, under Lord Bridport, was lying at
-anchor. I was soon transferred to my own ship, and
-introduced to my new messmates.</p>
-
-<p>We lived in the gun-room on the lower deck, and
-in fine weather had daylight, which was better in
-many respects than the old midshipmen’s berths in
-the cockpit. Amongst the youngsters were some
-within a year or two as young as myself; nice boys,
-full of fun and mischief, who soon initiated me in the
-sea pranks of “sawing your bed-posts,”&mdash;cutting you
-down head and foot; “reefing your bed-clothes,”&mdash;making
-them up into hard balls which, if properly
-done, will take one unpractised in the art a good half-hour
-or more to undo. It used to be a great annoyance
-to come off deck after a first or middle watch
-(from eight at night to twelve, or from twelve to four
-in the morning), perhaps quite wet through, thinking,
-on being relieved, what a nice sleep you would have,
-to find, on going to your hammock, all your sheets
-and blankets made up into hard balls, and a good half-hour’s
-work in the dark to undo them, particularly
-when tired and sleepy. During your labour to effect
-this, you had the pleasure of hearing the mischievous
-fellows that had a hand in doing it, laughing in their
-hammocks, and offering their condolences by saying
-what a shame it was to play such tricks when you
-were absent on deck, keeping your watch, and recom<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_5"></a>[Pg 5]</span>mending
-you to lick them all round, if you were able,
-or at all events to retaliate the first opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>Blowing the grampus (sluicing you with water), and
-many other tricks used to be resorted to occasionally.
-Taking it all in good part, from the persuasion that it
-was the customary initiation to a sea life, my torments
-were few, for when the art of tormenting ceases to
-irritate, it loses the effect intended, and it generally
-ends by your shipmates saying, “Well, you are a good-natured
-fellow, and shall not be annoyed any more.”</p>
-
-<p>I must do my brother mids the justice to say that
-a more kind-hearted set was not to be met with. We
-had few or no real quarrels the four years we sailed
-together, and, whenever spare time permitted, our
-evenings were spent in the amusements afforded by the
-old games of cribbage, loo, draughts and able wackets,
-which is a kind of forfeit played with cards, where
-each player is subject, for every mistake, to one or more
-blows with a knotted handkerchief on the palm of the
-hand. Many of them have paid the debt of nature,
-but some have risen to high rank and honours, most
-deservedly, in the service. We were all kept tight at
-work, and had at least four hours of sky-parlour
-(being sent to the main-topmast-head), when our
-watch was over, for every delinquency. I recollect
-one of my messmates was a lazy fellow, and shocking
-bad relief (the Hon. Henry Dawson); he always kept
-the unfortunate mid he had to relieve at least half-an-hour
-beyond his time on deck, until his patience
-was exhausted, forcing him to the unwelcome alternative
-of making a complaint to the lieutenant of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_6"></a>[Pg 6]</span>
-watch, who sent down to bring his relief on deck.
-It frequently happened that an old quarter-master,
-named Ned Cowen, was employed on this errand;
-he was a complete character, and as he had sailed
-round the world with the celebrated Captain Cook,
-and was a great favourite with us mids, we used to
-get him into our berth, give the old fellow a glass or
-two of grog, and make him relate his adventures.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever old Ned presented himself at the Honble.
-H. Dawson’s hammock, he signified the purport of
-his visit with this summons&mdash;“Come, Mr. Dawson,
-past one bell (the half-hour after the watch has been
-called), turn out, show a leg, or I am ordered to bring
-you up on the quarter-deck, hammock and all; take
-my advice, bring a good, thick greatcoat with you; it
-is a wet night, and the masthead waiting for you&mdash;the
-old story, you know.” The delinquent’s tale of “overslept
-myself, sir,” was quite worn out&mdash;it occurred too
-often; therefore nothing was left but to mount up to
-the masthead, and there enjoy the refreshing breezes,
-fine showers, and exhilarating air of sky-parlour, to
-awaken him from his balmy slumbers.</p>
-
-<p>The ship was in fine order and a perfect man-of-war,
-well manned and officered. The lieutenants were
-good seamen, knew and did their duty promptly, and
-managed the ship well.</p>
-
-<p>Of the first lieutenants, two, after being promoted,
-found a watery grave&mdash;poor Hawes, in the <i>Moucheron</i>,
-brig of 16 guns, which foundered in a heavy gale with
-all his crew; and the gallant Burke shared a similar
-fate in the <i>Seagull</i>, of 18 guns.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_7"></a>[Pg 7]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_II">CHAPTER II.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Channel cruising&mdash;Boat expeditions&mdash;Anecdote of a gallant mid&mdash;Ditto
-of two dandy Guardsmen&mdash;Expedition to Ferrol&mdash;Sir James
-Pulteney, Sir Edward Pellew and the donkey&mdash;The unlucky cruise.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">Our first cruise was with the channel fleet off Brest,
-and to me, a boy of ten years old, it appeared a great
-feat, blocking up a superior French one in their own
-harbour, and offering them battle daily, without their
-daring to come out of port.</p>
-
-<p>The winter’s cruise of 1799 and spring of 1800 was
-very stormy; nothing but heavy gales from S.W. to
-N.W. to N.E. and E., which blew us nearly at one
-time within sight of Ireland.</p>
-
-<p>We had various commanders-in-chief, to each of
-whom the sailors had given a peculiar nick-name.
-The Honble. Admiral William Cornwallis was styled
-“Billy Blue,” from his flag (blue at the main), and
-hoisting, the moment we dropped anchor from the
-S.W. gales in Torbay, a blue Peter&mdash;a hint for every
-person to remain on board, ready to sail again the
-moment the wind came round sufficiently to the
-northward to enable the fleet to proceed down channel
-to resume the blockade of Brest; Lord Bridport&mdash;“Lord
-Bread-bags” (Jack’s pun upon his lordship’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_8"></a>[Pg 8]</span>
-name); Admiral Sir Allan Gardner&mdash;“Old Junk,”
-because he was a tough old fellow, and kept the ships
-so long at sea upon salt junk; and Lord St. Vincent&mdash;“Sour
-Crout,” from his stern deportment. The
-latter had no sooner joined than he detached us with
-the <i>Defence</i> (74), <i>Fisgard</i>, and <i>Beaulieu</i> frigates, under
-our orders, into the Bay of Biscay, to annoy the coast
-of France.</p>
-
-<p>Our first attempt was at the Penmarks, where we
-succeeded in cutting out several French <i>chasse-marées</i>,
-and other craft, laden with brandy, wine, and provisions
-for the fleet in Brest harbour. The boats were
-commanded by the gallant Lieutenants Burke and
-John Thompson, of the <i>Renown</i>. This service was
-performed with little loss. Our next attempt was on
-some armed vessels in the river Quimper, coast of
-Brittany, but the boats did not succeed in finding the
-vessels: they, suspecting a visit, had moved higher up
-the river, whither it was not prudent to follow them.
-The crews were, therefore, landed, and having succeeded
-in destroying a fort at the entrance of the
-river, they returned on board without loss.</p>
-
-<p>The third attempt was at Noirmoutier, near the
-mouth of the river Loire, in La Vendée&mdash;a tide harbour.
-Success at first crowned our exertions; the boats
-of the squadron, again under Lieutenants Burke, had
-already burnt three vessels, mounting from 12, 18, to
-24 guns, with some small craft, and were thinking of
-returning, when the ebbing of the tide, which the gallant
-assailants, carried away by their ardour, had failed
-to perceive, left all the boats high and dry, exposed to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_9"></a>[Pg 9]</span>
-the fire of the French batteries. However, Lieutenants
-Burke and Thompson, with a part of the men, dragged
-a large fishing boat and our barge through the mud,
-and got safe back to the ships, leaving the remainder
-of the boats, with 76 of our best men and some
-officers prisoners, besides a few killed and wounded.
-A poor messmate of mine, a midshipman, named
-Jago, who was afterwards killed in the Mediterranean
-on another cutting-out affair, in remembrance of this
-transaction, called out on that occasion to some of his
-men who seemed disposed to hang back, “Come, my
-lads, stick by me now, as you stuck by me in the mud
-at Noirmoutier.”</p>
-
-<p>In consequence of this untoward affair, we sailed
-for Portsmouth to refit. Previous to sailing, the ship
-was paid. I was stationed on the starboard gangway
-to keep off the boats, but leaning too far over the
-side, fell overboard, and got a good ducking, but fortunately
-escaped breaking my head against a boat
-that was alongside by falling between her and the
-ship. Luckily the people in the boat picked me up
-immediately, for at that time I could not swim.</p>
-
-<p>After the ship had refitted, and obtained a draft of
-seamen and marines, and new boats in lieu of those
-we had lost on the coast of France, we joined the
-fleet again off Brest, under the command of Earl
-St. Vincent.</p>
-
-<p>In August our admiral was detached with a strong
-squadron to take the naval command of the expedition,
-under General Sir James Pulteney, against Ferrol.</p>
-
-<p>I recollect, on this expedition, two dandy young<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_10"></a>[Pg 10]</span>
-guardsmen came on board for a passage, and, being
-too late for dinner in the ward-room, a nice beefsteak
-and bottle of port wine was given them at a side table.
-After contemplating it a little while, with a supercilious
-turn of the mouth and nose, one of them made
-the sage remark, that “he thought they might be able
-to rough it pretty well with such fare every day in a
-campaign; but, really, common port wine, beefsteaks,
-and potatoes, was not fit food for guardsmen.” I’ll
-answer for it long before their regiment returned from
-Egypt they were very glad to get much worse fare,
-and if either of them lived to serve with the noble
-Wellington in the Peninsula, their pride of stomach
-must have had many a fall.</p>
-
-<p>The results of the unfortunate expedition to Ferrol
-are too well known to need further record; the gallant
-army, to a man, regretted that their evil genius placed
-them under the command of such a general, and we,
-of the navy, lamented our ill-luck that prevented us
-from taking the beautiful Spanish fleet that lay at
-anchor in the harbour.</p>
-
-<p>It was reported&mdash;and, I believe, with truth&mdash;that
-at the very time our troops were being re-embarked,
-the Spanish governor had even sent out an officer
-with the keys of the fortress in his hands, and an offer
-of terms to surrender; but he, seeing how matters
-stood, returned back to his general, rejoicing, and informed
-him that the British army was in full retreat, and
-part were already on board. The Spaniards had laid a
-strong boom across the harbour, flanked by two very
-powerful batteries&mdash;one on each side of the entrance.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_11"></a>[Pg 11]</span></p>
-
-<p>Sir James Pulteney promised to take the one on
-the left, or larboard hand, while the boats, filled with
-sailors and marines, were to storm the other at the
-same time.</p>
-
-<p>Seven sail of the line were prepared for action, with
-springs on their cables, and a spare one out of the
-gun-room stern port, bent to the sheet anchor, ready
-for bringing up head and stern; in short, everything
-was in a forward state for the attack, and the <i>London</i>
-(98 guns) was to break the boom, and the rest of the
-ships to follow in line of battle.</p>
-
-<p>All hearts beat with joyful expectation, when, to
-our utmost surprise and indignation, a signal was
-made from the shore that the commander-in-chief of
-the land forces had given up the idea of attack, and
-boats were to be sent immediately to embark the
-troops.</p>
-
-<p>The gallant Sir Edward Pellew, who commanded
-the <i>Impétueux</i> (74), was ready to burst with rage when
-he found the object of the expedition given up, at a
-time when it was almost within our grasp, and without
-making one serious effort to obtain it. It was reported
-in the squadron that he embarked an ass, and used to
-go up to it, and take off his hat, and say, “How do
-you do, Sir James? I hope nothing troubled you in
-your sleep last night in the way of unpleasant dreams,
-or that the nightmare did not disturb your rest.”</p>
-
-<p>After this sad affair we sailed for Vigo Bay, where
-our appearance with so large a force put the inhabitants
-in bodily fear. When we were standing into the
-bay a large French ship (privateer) was observed to haul<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_12"></a>[Pg 12]</span>
-under the citadel. At night the boats of the squadron,
-commanded by the daring Lieutenant Burke, were sent
-to bring her out, which they most gallantly accomplished,
-after a severe and desperate struggle. She was
-called <i>La Guêpe</i>, of 18 long nine-pounders, with 244
-men, sails bent, and perfectly ready for sea, and was
-going to look after our homeward-bound West Indiamen,
-and intended to have sailed the evening of the
-day of our arrival.</p>
-
-<p>She had her boarding nettings up, and everything
-ready for a stout resistance. On the approach of the
-boats the privateer and the forts opened a heavy fire of
-round and grape, but they, nothing daunted, gave three
-hearty cheers, dashed on, and, after a most gallant defence,
-she was boarded and brought out. Lieutenant
-Burke was severely wounded by a pike through both
-thighs, and the French captain, who most heroically
-fought his ship to the last moment, died of his wounds
-an hour after she was taken. He asked (poor fellow!) if
-he had done all he could to defend his ship; being
-answered in the affirmative, and justly complimented
-on his gallant conduct, he gave a faint smile, and
-expired.</p>
-
-<p>During the time we lay at anchor here we were in
-the habit of sending a boat to haul the seine on the
-Bayonne islands, and we were generally pretty successful.
-Amongst other fish, we frequently caught
-the torpedo<a id="FNanchor_3" href="#Footnote_3" class="fnanchor">[C]</a>, which gave me a practical lesson of its
-electric powers.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_13"></a>[Pg 13]</span></p>
-
-<p>On the 6th of September a tremendous heavy gale
-came on from the southward and westward, in which
-several vessels belonging to our convoy drifted from
-their anchors, and went on shore. The <i>Stag</i>, frigate,
-of 32 guns, Captain Winthrop, was wrecked upon Point
-Subudo. However, we fortunately saved the crew;
-but the men of some transports and merchant vessels
-that went on shore in other parts of the bay fell into
-the hands of the Spaniards. Not being able to get
-the <i>Stag</i> off, she was burnt the same evening. The
-moment the wind and weather permitted we sailed
-with the expedition from Vigo Bay, and, having seen
-them safe off the coast, the admiral, according to
-orders, gave up his charge to Captain Sir Alexander
-Cochrane, and proceeded off the Western Islands in
-search of some Spanish galleons, said to be coming
-home in a Portuguese convoy.</p>
-
-<p>We had with us four sail-of-the-line, and three
-frigates.</p>
-
-<p>During our cruise we fell in thrice with a large
-French ship (privateer), but her legs were too nimble
-for us. One day, when we had all sail set, and were
-carrying every stitch of canvass we could crowd in
-chase, with a fine breeze, and nearing her fast, our
-unlucky genius, which had attended us all this cruise,
-from the sprite that said “Bo!” to old Pulteney at
-Ferrol, still haunted us up to the present time. We
-carried away our foretop-mast, and she again escaped.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Renown</i> being by far the best sailing ship of
-the squadron, the others stood no chance with the
-privateer, who very quietly hauled up her courses, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_14"></a>[Pg 14]</span>
-no doubt enjoyed the fun of looking at us <i>hors de
-combat</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Two days after we fell in with two Portuguese
-convoys from the Brazils, bound to Lisbon. One we
-spoke; the others were boarded by the frigates to
-windward. The Portuguese captains of the men-of-war
-pledged their word of honour that no Spanish
-ships were under their protection. We, like geese,
-trusted to it, or rather, the frigates did. Will it be
-believed that in the above convoy were the five Spanish
-treasure-ships we were looking for, which arrived a
-few days after safe at Lisbon! And when they passed
-under the stern of the <i>Cynthia</i>, British sloop-of-war
-that was lying there, they hauled down their Portuguese
-colours, hoisted the Spanish, and fired a royal&mdash;and,
-no doubt, joyful&mdash;salute; and well they might. They
-had in the five vessels ten millions of specie, besides
-valuable cargoes.</p>
-
-<p>We afterwards heard that this business caused a
-very angry communication from our Government to
-that of Portugal; but they, like true diplomatists, threw
-the whole blame from themselves on the weakest party,
-by denying any knowledge of the transaction, dismissed
-and imprisoned the captains of their men-of-war
-for a short time, who on being released went to
-Spain, and were there promoted to rank and honours.</p>
-
-<p>After this <i>finale</i> of our unlucky cruise, we returned
-to Plymouth to refit, and get provisions and water.
-While there orders came to complete our stores of all
-kinds for foreign service. Captain Thomas Eyles left
-the ship, and Captain John Chambers White took the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_15"></a>[Pg 15]</span>
-command&mdash;a strict, good, and excellent officer, who
-has filled a high situation at Woolwich Dockyard since
-the peace, and is now a Rear-Admiral of the White.
-We were all delighted with the idea of getting away
-from the heavy winter gales and monotonous cruising
-of the channel fleet.</p>
-
-<p>A word upon channel cruising. I defy any person
-at the present day, except the old officers, to know the
-constant anxiety of the captains and officers of the
-channel fleet, sailing in two or three lines in heavy
-gales and thick weather. It required great attention in
-the lieutenants of the watch, a most strict and careful
-look-out to prevent accidents, and to have their wits
-always about them, ready to act at a minute’s warning.
-By the good discipline kept up, the look-out was perfect,
-and, to the <i>very great credit</i> of the officers of the
-watch, <i>scarce an accident</i> occurred during the long,
-tiresome, and harassing blockade of Brest, comprising
-a period of more than twenty years.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_16"></a>[Pg 16]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_III">CHAPTER III.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Cruise off Cadiz&mdash;Proceed up the Mediterranean to Egypt after a
-French squadron under Rear-Admiral Ganteaume, 1801.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">In November, 1800, we sailed for Gibraltar. I was
-much pleased to see the celebrated rock, so well defended
-by the gallant Elliot in 1782, and to read, on
-the spot, Colonel Drinkwater’s most amusing history
-of that famous siege.</p>
-
-<p>As late as the year 1801, the greater part of the
-garrison was still covered with shot and broken shells,
-thrown by the Spaniards at that period. They have
-since been collected, and sold to be melted down for
-various purposes, some probably to be again converted
-into missiles of destruction.</p>
-
-<p>We cruised off Cadiz in company with the <i>Dragon</i>,
-<i>Hector</i>, and <i>Gibraltar</i>, of 74 guns each, until the spring
-of 1801, detaining the Danish and Swedish vessels,
-when a French squadron of eight sail of the line (some
-frigates, and a store ship), having made their escape
-from Brest, at a time the channel fleet was blown off,
-passed us in the night, and pushed up the Mediterranean
-for Toulon, to embark troops for Egypt, to
-strengthen their force there.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Mercury</i> (28), Captain Rogers, and the <i>Incen<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_17"></a>[Pg 17]</span>diary</i>
-(fire-ship), joined us in the morning, and informed
-us they had been chased by them. Although we had
-only four sail of the line, no time was lost in proceeding
-after them; first touching at Gibraltar for provisions,
-then running over to Marjarine Bay, on the
-coast of Barbary, for water, and from thence to Port
-Mahon, to see if chance would send us a reinforcement.
-There we found the <i>Alexander</i> (74), Captain Sir Alexander
-Ball, the <i>Généreux</i> (80), not half-manned, and
-the <i>Harlaem</i> (64), <i>en flute</i>; however, they made a show
-of strength, and to sea we went in search of the French
-squadron, under Rear-Admiral Ganteaume, and steered
-for Toulon. Ill fortune attended us; for in a heavy
-gale, the <i>Généreux</i> rolled away all her top-masts,
-and sprung a leak, which caused us to put back to
-Minorca, with our crippled ships, from which place the
-above-named ship was never again in a state to
-accompany us.</p>
-
-<p>The moment the rest of the squadron was ready for
-sea, our persevering admiral again sailed, and although
-with one ship less, he ventured to reconnoitre Toulon,
-where we found the French had also put back damaged,
-and were apparently employed in refitting. We, therefore,
-shaped our course for Minorca. On our way
-thither, to complete our water and provisions, we chased
-a Spanish convoy into Cadeque, a small port near the
-entrance of the Bay of Rosas; but the admiral did
-not think, under existing circumstances, it was worth
-while risking the loss of lives to attack them, having
-the prospect of an action with a superior French
-force in view; we, therefore, returned to Port Mahon<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_18"></a>[Pg 18]</span>
-to get ready to proceed after the enemy’s fleet in
-Toulon.</p>
-
-<p>During our stay, we heard that we were to be joined
-at Malta by His Majesty’s ship <i>Athénienne</i> (64), which
-was not even coppered, and had only half her complement
-of men. Having put the ships into as good a
-state as circumstances would admit, we proceeded to
-Malta, and there picked up the 64 gun-ship, which
-completed our ill-conditioned squadron, viz., five good
-ships of the line, one 64, <i>en flute</i>, and another 64, half-manned,
-and with no copper on her bottom.</p>
-
-<p>With these ships we went to look for Admiral Ganteaume;
-and off the island of Maretimo, we fell in with
-the <i>Salamine</i> brig, of 16 guns, which gave us information
-that the day before she had been chased by the
-French squadron, and that by shaping our course to
-south-east, we should probably see them next morning.
-What joy ran through the different ships! but, alas!
-owing to the ill-sailing of our squadron, all our hopes
-were frustrated. We did, indeed, get sight of them the
-following day at dawn, far to windward, and by a shift
-of wind, shortly after brought them right a-head, so
-that although there were no light airs, by sun-set we
-could see more than halfway down their courses; yet
-most of our ships, with the exception of the <i>Hector</i>
-and <i>Dragon</i>, were very far astern, some hull down.
-Still, however, we hoped with three good ships of the
-line to bring their rear to action in the night, and so
-retard them, that the next day our bad sailing ships
-might pick up any birds we had winged, while we
-stood on after the others; but bad fortune attended us,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_19"></a>[Pg 19]</span>
-our only frigate, the old <i>Mercury</i>, of 28 guns, sailed so
-heavily as to be unable to keep them in view. At ten
-at night, foggy, hazy weather came on, we lost sight of
-our game, and the next morning the horizon was so
-obscured that the enemy was no longer to be seen.</p>
-
-<p>What was to be done? We knew Alexandria, or
-some part of the coast of Egypt, was their destination,
-and thither we steered. Ganteaume guessed we
-should follow him thither, and, like a cunning old fox,
-taking advantage of the hazy night, soon after dark
-hauled his wind on the starboard tack, and doubled
-round us; therefore, at daylight, in consequence of
-the very thick state of the atmosphere preventing our
-seeing him, we preceded him to the coast of Egypt,
-while he shaped his course for Cape Derne Head, and
-tried to land his troops a little to the westward of
-Alexandria; but the few that attempted it were soon
-murdered by the Arabs, and he, not feeling himself
-quite at his ease for fear of our again meeting him,
-returned back to Toulon to refit. After taking in
-water and provisions, he once more proceeded to the
-coast of Egypt, and although he did not land his men,
-picked up His Majesty’s ship <i>Swiftsure</i> (74), Captain
-Ben. Hallowell, who was obliged to surrender, after a
-gallant defence, and took his prize safe into the harbour
-of Toulon.</p>
-
-<p>In the meantime we kept on our course for Alexandria,
-and at the end of March arrived off there, and
-joined the fleet of Lord Keith. Here a sad and heavy
-affliction awaited our amiable admiral. The first news
-was, that our gallant army had landed on the 8th, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_20"></a>[Pg 20]</span>
-that his brave, handsome, and only son, who belonged
-to the Coldstream Guards, had been killed on landing.
-He bore his loss with the resignation of a Christian,
-but with the feelings of a father.</p>
-
-<p>Having remained off Alexandria for a few weeks,
-Lord Keith detached us in search of our old friend
-Ganteaume, but first of all taking away one of our
-best ships, the <i>Hector</i> (74), and giving us in lieu the
-<i>Stately</i> (64), <i>en flute</i>, a Turkish 64, and a corvette.
-During our stay the captain pacha, and other Turkish
-admirals, came on board on a visit of condolence to
-our admiral. I recollect he was a very fine-looking
-man, with a long black beard, and brought his pipe
-and coffee-cup bearers with him. The mouth of the
-pipe was set with diamonds, and so were his coffee-cups.
-Old Tombrook, the captain of the Turkish 64,
-that sailed with us, was introduced to the admiral, and
-the captain pacha said that if he did not behave well,
-Sir John had only to write a note to him, and his head
-should be taken off immediately on his return to the
-Turkish fleet; or if the admiral preferred it, he would
-send an executioner on purpose to decapitate Captain
-Tombrook, and lay his head at Sir John B. Warren’s
-feet.</p>
-
-<p>We left Alexandria the beginning of May, and sailed
-for Coron, in the Morea, to procure wood, water, and
-fresh provisions, of which we stood very much in need,
-the scurvy having begun to make its appearance from
-our long continuance at sea upon bad salt and other
-food of the worst quality. The bread was full of maggots
-and weevils, the flour musty, and swarming with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_21"></a>[Pg 21]</span>
-insects, the water so putrid, thick and stinking, that
-often have I held my nose with my hand while I drank
-it strained through my pocket handkerchief; and we
-were so short of this necessary article, that our consumption
-was limited to two pints a day for all purposes.
-Provisions, at the time I am speaking of, were
-not like those supplied now-a-days from Her Majesty’s
-stores; everything then was done by an infamous
-job contract; government paid through thick and thin
-for everything, and we poor devils had to suffer in
-consequence of the neglect of those persons under
-government winking at the nefarious jobs of contractors,
-and no doubt they had weighty reasons for so
-doing.</p>
-
-<p>I recollect, in a mid’s berth, we used to ask what
-such-and-such a county was famous for. Suffolk, in
-our black book, was put down as famous for supplying
-the navy with rotten and bad cheese. Burgoo was
-served out with treacle for breakfast, instead of nice
-wholesome cocoa and sugar; and will it be believed,
-that until the peace of 1802, French merchants had a
-contract for supplying the British Navy with French
-brandy, while our West Indian merchants knew not
-what to do with their rum and cocoa! At last John
-Bull awoke from his dream, and it struck him that
-soldiers and sailors liked rum just as well as brandy,
-and that by giving them cocoa for breakfast it would
-not only assist the West Indian merchants, but give
-general satisfaction throughout the fleet.</p>
-
-<p>I take this opportunity of mentioning the night-blindness
-which seized several of our ship’s company<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_22"></a>[Pg 22]</span>
-after dark. It came on immediately it began to grow
-dusk. First we thought it was sham, in order to skulk
-from their watches, but we soon found it was not the
-case. The men were first attacked off Egypt, and it
-was supposed it was occasioned by the heavy dews.
-I have since been informed that it frequently occurs
-in tropical climates.</p>
-
-<p>We remained at Coron ten days, getting supplies;
-but gained no intelligence of the French squadron,
-though the Turkish corvette had been despatched for
-that purpose, to make enquiries at the different out-ports.
-On her return, we sailed for Malta, where the
-Christian slaves, on board the two Turkish men-of-war,
-were liberated on our arrival, to the great joy of the
-Maltese. Having refitted, we proceeded to Port Mahon,
-and from thence to cruise off Toulon. On our passage,
-we had most severe thunder and lightning, which struck
-the <i>Dragon</i> and ourselves, indeed, all the squadron
-more or less; the former’s main-mast was injured, and
-our mizen-top-gallant-mast was dashed to atoms, the
-top-mast shaken into laths, the mizen-mast set on fire,
-and the few tin and iron pots and pans, we mids had
-in the gun-room, were every one perforated in the same
-manner, as if a musket-ball had been fired through
-them. The lightning then providentially took a direction
-out of one of the gun-room ports, and escaped;
-several men on board both ships were much scorched,
-and one man in the <i>Dragon</i> killed. If the <i>Renown</i> had
-been one of the old 74’s, whose mizen-mast stepped in
-the after magazine, she must have been blown up;
-but, fortunately, her’s stepped in the gun-room. We<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_23"></a>[Pg 23]</span>
-stood on for the Gulf of Lyons, and looked into Toulon,
-and there saw the French ships lying with their
-prize, the <i>Swiftsure</i>, some of the ships stripped, one
-with her main-mast out, and no chance of their putting
-to sea again for some time. We, therefore, proceeded
-to the Island of Elba, and on our way fell in with two
-French frigates, and chased them into Leghorn; the
-<i>Stately</i> (64), <i>en flute</i>, got pretty near them, but they
-slipped through her fingers. One named the <i>Success</i>,
-of 32 guns, formerly British, captured by the French
-squadron, under Rear-Admiral Ganteaume, on his passage
-from Brest to Toulon, a few months before, was
-afterwards taken by the <i>Minerve</i> (36), Captain Cockburn,
-and <i>Phœnix</i> (32), Captain Halstead, and they
-drove the <i>Bravoure</i> (44) on shore near Leghorn, and
-destroyed her. We then went to endeavour to relieve
-the garrison of Porto Ferajo, which was closely besieged
-by the French, and a sortie was agreed upon by
-the garrison. The intention was to turn the enemy’s
-works, and destroy his batteries, and a party of sailors
-and marines were landed to assist at the attack; but
-the troops from Porto Ferajo, being all foreigners, in
-our pay, composed of Swiss and Germans, did not know
-us nor we them. All parties met in the dark, and
-hearing these people talk French, our men fired upon
-them, and they upon us. The sortie never reached its
-destination&mdash;Johnny Crapaud was not to be caught
-napping&mdash;our expedition partly failed in its object;
-Captain Long, of His Majesty’s brig <i>Vincego</i>, was killed.
-“<i>Sauve qui peut</i>” was the order of the day, and a pell-mell
-retreat to the boats became necessary. Followed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_24"></a>[Pg 24]</span>
-by the French, several were killed, wounded, and taken
-prisoners, and some shot in the water, trying to swim
-off to the boats. A few days after, the following
-ludicrous song appeared on board, to the tune of
-“Vinegar Hill”:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Pray were you at Elba races?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Were you there in the morning?</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Some were picking of grapes,<a id="FNanchor_4" href="#Footnote_4" class="fnanchor">[D]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Some were drinking of wine,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And some were running away,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And singing out, ‘Oh! rare Elba races.’”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>We then returned to Minorca to get more troops;
-but shortly after our arrival, a French man-of-war brig,
-from Toulon, came into the roads, with despatches, to
-inform us the preliminary treaty of peace had been
-signed at Amiens.</p>
-
-<p>While we remained at Minorca, we lost our captain
-of marines (Burns), a very worthy man. His death was
-singular. A vessel, a few weeks after the arrival of the
-French brig, came from England, confirming the news
-from France, with an order to cease hostilities; also
-bringing letters and papers. It was one in the morning
-when the news came. Poor Burns got up quite well,
-and sat laughing and talking, and hearing the news
-from old England, and saying what he should do when
-he got upon half-pay; called for a glass of cold water,
-which he drank off, and laid down in his cot again;
-the cramp seized him in his stomach, and in five
-minutes he was a corpse. He was much beloved in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_25"></a>[Pg 25]</span>
-the ship, full of humour, and a kind-hearted pleasant
-man. He was buried with military honours at Port
-Mahon, all the officers of the ship, and many of the
-squadron, attending his funeral.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_26"></a>[Pg 26]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IV">CHAPTER IV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">From the Peace of Amiens (1802) until the commencement of the
-second Gallic War&mdash;Gambling.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">I fortunately remained in the Mediterranean during
-the whole of the short peace, which helped on my
-mid’s time, in the <i>Renown</i> (74), with Captain John
-C. White<a id="FNanchor_5" href="#Footnote_5" class="fnanchor">[E]</a>, a smart officer. Our worthy and amiable
-admiral struck his flag at Minorca, and returned to
-England, from whence he was shortly sent, at the
-request of the Emperor of Russia, to St. Petersburgh, as
-ambassador, and gave universal satisfaction. Indeed,
-he was fully capable of wielding the sword, using the
-pen, or managing the weighty matters of a court.</p>
-
-<p>From Minorca we sailed for Malta&mdash;at which place
-we remained nine months, without ever going out
-of it.</p>
-
-<p>The harbour was crowded with men-of-war, and the
-garrison with troops, returned from Egypt. I heard
-of a great deal of gambling taking place&mdash;some duels
-in consequence, and suicides. Of all vices, gambling
-is the worst, for you not only risk your own ruin, but
-that of your family also; and a man of honour and
-principle stands no chance with black-legs. A person<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_27"></a>[Pg 27]</span>
-possessed of affluence ought not to gamble, because
-he cannot want another’s money, and a poor man that
-does so, and plays for a large amount, must be a
-swindler, knowing that if he loses he has not the
-means to pay; he generally, therefore, gives leg bail
-for the amount.</p>
-
-<p>Our time passed rather heavily during this long
-sojourn in one place. We used, however, to go occasionally
-in a boat to St. Paul’s Bay, and have a ride to
-Florean to see the catacombs, and to Cività Vecchia
-to view the handsome church of St. Paul.</p>
-
-<p>A malignant fever broke out in several of the ships,
-owing, probably, to the great heat of the weather,
-when many died: it was something like the yellow
-fever, and came on in August and September.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after this we embarked two companies of
-artillery, under a Captain McDonald, and Lieutenants
-Dougal, Campbell, and Carmichael, with orders to proceed
-to Gibraltar, and thence home. Owing to heavy
-westerly winds, we had a six weeks’ passage, and found
-on our arrival that a most serious disturbance had
-taken place amongst the troops in the garrison, which
-ended in one of the regiments being packed off to the
-West Indies. Various causes were assigned for the
-mutiny, and amongst others, a too sudden change
-from a very relaxed state of discipline to the opposite
-extreme.</p>
-
-<p>After remaining here a few days, though we had
-expected to sail the moment the wind came to the
-eastward for England, the arrival of despatches from
-thence stopped our proceeding.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_28"></a>[Pg 28]</span></p>
-
-<p>Napoleon’s plans, by the wisdom and foresight of
-the Ministry, were seen through, and orders arrived
-for the detention of all the ships of the line (at all serviceable)
-then in the Mediterranean, instead of sending
-them to England. This created a partial murmur
-amongst the different crews; but the firmness and strict
-discipline of our captain and officers kept our ship’s
-company perfectly quiet. The crew of the <i>Gibraltar</i>,
-however, broke out, and two of the unfortunate men
-were hanged afterwards in Orestana Bay, Sardinia.</p>
-
-<p>We sailed from the Rock in September, 1802, for
-Orestana Bay, in company with the <i>Dragon</i> (74) and
-<i>Gibraltar</i> (80), and there joined Rear-Admiral Sir
-R. Bickerton’s squadron. On our way an accident
-occurred, which very nearly sent us back to the Rock
-a cripple. In the act of wearing, we ran on board of
-the old <i>Gibraltar</i>. Fortunately, it was fine weather,
-as we took her nearly amidships, carried away part
-of our cutwater and jib-boom, but did her no damage.
-It was our fault. The signal was made to wear together.
-We were to windward. The <i>Renown</i> answered her
-helm in a moment. Not so the old <i>Gibraltar</i>, she took
-longer time, and before she could get out of our way
-we were on board of her.</p>
-
-<p>Our time (nearly nine weeks) passed dull enough at
-this anchorage. Occasionally we went shooting and
-fishing. Fish, however, were scarce&mdash;although, had we
-taken the right method, more perhaps might have been
-caught. Plenty of those beautiful large mussels, whose
-shells are nearly two feet long, were to be found quite
-at the head of the bay in the shallows; also mullet and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_29"></a>[Pg 29]</span>
-rock fish; and on the different shores various kinds of
-plover, and other wild fowl. But small shot was so
-scarce in the squadron, that the feathered tribe were
-not so much diminished as they might have been. I
-recollect one of the lieutenants, named Jane (now a
-captain), used to employ me to roll slugs between
-pieces of wood to convert them into a kind of round-shot,
-for which service he generally took me with him
-on his shooting excursions. The inhabitants of these
-parts are a wild race of beings, and mostly clothed in
-black sheep skins, the wool outside.</p>
-
-<p>We left Sardinia in November, and proceeded to
-Malta for the winter, and on the 18th of May, 1803,
-put to sea with the squadron, under Sir R. Bickerton,
-Bart., to cruise off Naples, matters having assumed an
-hostile appearance at home.</p>
-
-<p>After sailing through the Faro of Messina, when
-passing near the island of Stromboli, its volcano
-broke out in a most beautiful eruption, which lasted
-for several months. We had the good fortune to be
-becalmed pretty near it for a whole night, which gave
-us a magnificent illumination, and at intervals a cloud
-of fireworks, thrown from its crater into the air, sent
-forth a brilliant light. Having been off deck in my
-watch, and my quarter and station bills not being
-correct and kept in good order, I had four hours of sky-parlour
-on the main-royal-cross-trees, which enabled
-me to have a fine view of the burning mountain, and of
-its river of fire, which appeared to run from its crater
-into the sea.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_30"></a>[Pg 30]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_V">CHAPTER V.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">From the commencement of second Gallic War until the Battle of
-Trafalgar, 1805; with Anecdotes.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">Whilst off Naples official notice reached us of the
-declaration of war against France, and we proceeded
-immediately off Toulon, where, in the course of a short
-time, Lord Nelson arrived in a frigate, and took the
-command of the fleet in the Mediterranean. His lordship’s
-flagship (the <i>Victory</i>) joined us in a few weeks,
-having on her passage out captured a French frigate,
-and some merchant vessels. We continued to cruise
-in the Gulf of Lyons from June, 1803, until the 24th of
-July, 1804, without ever going into any port to refit.
-It is true that occasionally the whole fleet ran from
-the heavy gales of the Gulf of Lyons, and took shelter
-in various outlandish places in Sardinia, where we could
-get wood and water, such as at Agincourt Sound&mdash;amongst
-the Magdalen islands&mdash;in the Straits of Bonifacio
-(a most beautiful anchorage, sheltered from all
-winds); but the shores and country around are the
-picture of desolation&mdash;no town&mdash;no trees of any size&mdash;rocks
-upon rocks, and the stunted bushes of the wild
-myrtle and arbutus merely sufficient for the purposes
-of fuel. There was a small village seven or eight miles<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_31"></a>[Pg 31]</span>
-off, at one of the Magdalen islands, where some few got
-their linen washed, but most of us in the fleet were put
-to our shifts to get that necessary comfort (clean linen)
-accomplished.</p>
-
-<p>These long cruises used to put our wits sadly to the
-test for an appearance of a bit of white linen above our
-black cravats, particularly when we had to answer the
-signal for a midshipman on board the flagship.</p>
-
-<p>Soap was almost&mdash;indeed, I might say, quite&mdash;as
-scarce an article as clean shirts and stockings. It was
-a common thing in those days of real hard service to
-turn shirts and stockings inside out, and make them do
-a little more duty. Sometimes we used to search the
-clothes-bag to see “if one good turn deserved another.”
-These expedients, added to reefed stockings, made us
-appear sufficiently dandified to go and answer the
-signal. Borrowing those articles that had been washed
-on shore&mdash;if such a thing was left amongst one of us&mdash;was
-quite out of the question, for we knew the day of
-repayment was very far off.</p>
-
-<p>The island of Sardinia affords several good anchorages
-for fleets and squadrons in particular winds:
-Orestana Bay, St. Peter, St. Antonio, Cagliari, from the
-south-west to the south side, and Terra Nova Bay on
-the north-east; besides many others for single or few
-ships. Porto Conti, for instance, on the north-west part
-of the island, is a very safe one. Our noble and gallant
-chief used to manage to get us fresh beef twice a week&mdash;that
-is to say, so many live bullocks were embarked
-on board each ship, and we killed them as we wanted
-them&mdash;by which means, with the assistance of oranges<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_32"></a>[Pg 32]</span>
-that were procured occasionally, few cases of scurvy
-occurred in the fleet, notwithstanding our long stay at
-sea. But as for articles of luxury&mdash;tea, potatoes, soap,
-and other sea stores for our messes&mdash;we had none.</p>
-
-<p>The inhabitants of Sardinia were as wild as their
-country; the mountaineers and lowlanders generally
-were engaged in a kind of petty war with each other.
-Both parties always went armed, and murders frequently
-took place. At one of the anchorages in the
-straits, another mid and myself were attending a watering
-party&mdash;one of these fellows rode down with a bag
-of cheese, made of goat’s or sheep’s milk, for sale; he
-was armed with a long gun and pistols, and we had no
-firearms with us. Some dispute in the bargaining, for
-the want of understanding each other’s language, arose;
-the Sard, very coolly mounted his horse, and taking
-up his cheeses, rode off a short distance, and fired at
-us; the ball passed through the sleeve of the mate’s
-coat, and near my head; he then galloped off, reloaded
-his gun, rode up, and gave us another shot, but
-luckily without injury.</p>
-
-<p>A midshipman of the <i>Victory</i> was killed by these
-fellows a short time afterwards in consequence of some
-dispute about the hiring of a horse that had been
-brought down by these wild folks to the beach. The
-poor mid, anxious for a ride, gave the rascal a dollar,
-mounted the horse, and rode backwards and forwards
-for an hour on or near the beach. The Sardinian
-wanted his horse, the other thought he had not had
-his dollar’s worth of riding, and a warm dispute ensuing,
-the Sard most deliberately shot at him with his gun,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_33"></a>[Pg 33]</span>
-and broke his arm, so close up that it was necessary to
-take it out of the socket. He bore the operation well,
-poor fellow, but a fever afterwards came on, which
-carried him off. Lord Nelson tried to get satisfaction,
-but in a wild country like this, without law or justice,
-it was found impossible. The offender made his escape
-to the mountains, and nothing further was heard of
-him.</p>
-
-<p>Shooting parties occasionally took place, but, not
-having dogs, the sportsmen were seldom rewarded.
-Although some kinds of game were numerous, and
-flocks of blue pigeons, to the amount of thousands
-together, were seen, few were brought on board, for no
-person dared follow them far for fear of the wind
-changing, when we knew the fleet would sail immediately
-to regain our station. Previous to the Spanish
-war we were sent by his lordship, in the <i>Renown</i>, to the
-Bay of Rosas, in Catalonia, to procure bullocks and
-oranges for the fleet, where we remained long enough
-to have our clothes washed&mdash;a luxury we stood much
-in need of.</p>
-
-<p>Our long cruise of near fourteen months off Toulon,
-amidst nothing but gales of wind, and heavy storms of
-most terrific thunder and lightning, met with no reward
-in the shape of prize-money.</p>
-
-<p>One man-of-war schooner, of 12 guns, called the
-<i>Renard</i>, and half-a-dozen small French vessels, were
-the only captures made by the fleet during the above
-period; these, with the exception of the schooner, not
-being worth sending into port, were destroyed. A
-lieutenant of the <i>Renown</i>, and myself, went to Malta<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_34"></a>[Pg 34]</span>
-in the <i>Renard</i>, and shortly after rejoined our ship off
-Toulon, in the <i>Narcissus</i> frigate.</p>
-
-<p>One of the marine officers had a monkey on board,
-who used to amuse us with his gambols; but was rather
-fond of biting, for which he received occasionally a
-beating from us youngsters. This brought on a coolness
-between his master and us, and led at last to
-open war.</p>
-
-<p>A cabal was formed to get Jacko a licking from his
-own master, by letting him loose from his chain in the
-marine officer’s cabin, that he might do some mischief;
-and the time chosen was when his best clothes were
-put out ready for him to dine with the captain.</p>
-
-<p>We knew F. was invited that day, because we had
-seen the captain’s steward ask him, and his own servant
-go into the marine officer’s berth (he had one in the
-gun-room, on the lower-deck, where we messed), and
-lay out his best coat, epaulet, white trousers, etc.;
-and after making all other preparations necessary for
-the toilet, leave the cabin, lock the door, put the key
-in his pocket, and go away.</p>
-
-<p>Now was the time for action. A mid of the name
-of O., the leader of all mischief, undertook to get into
-the cabin through the lower-deck port, by going on
-deck, then into the mizen chains, and from thence by
-a rope’s end made fast under his arms. We let him
-down through the port on the lower-deck into the cabin,
-and he untied the monkey. This being done, we returned
-into the gun-room, and peeped through the
-key-hole and cracks to see Jacko’s manœuvres.</p>
-
-<p>After jumping about and chattering to himself for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_35"></a>[Pg 35]</span>
-some little time, he commenced operations. Unfortunately
-for his owner, he found a bottle of ink, which
-he let fall, and it broke in pieces, splashing the ink on
-the deck. The monkey was now in his glory; he
-seized upon the new red coat and epaulet, and began
-mopping up the wet, then chattering to himself, jumping
-about and appearing to feel quite delighted with
-his performance, particularly when he saw the marks
-of his hands and feet, stained with black, upon the red
-uniform. Not contented with his exploits on the coat,
-he lugged down the pair of smart inexpressibles, that
-looked so temptingly white, hanging over the chair,
-and finished the housemaid’s work by wiping up the
-remainder of the ink with them. This feat having been
-done, we thought we had seen enough, and went most
-innocently to give information to the lieutenant of
-Marines, and his servant, that Jacko was loose in the
-cabin, and, we were afraid, was after some mischief, for
-we heard something break, and by peeping through the
-key-hole, saw he had his master’s coat on the deck,
-and dragging it about.</p>
-
-<p>Down ran the poor marine officer, calling his servant
-to bring the key. The moment the door was opened,
-the first glance showed the havoc committed on the
-dinner dress. Jacko, perceiving his frolic was over, retreated
-into his cage, from whence he was dragged to
-get a good beating. The poor servant was scolded because
-the monkey had got loose, who very truly said
-it was tied up safe when he left the cabin. The officer
-swore, stamped, and raved like a madman. His dress
-was so completely messed for the day, he could not<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_36"></a>[Pg 36]</span>
-dine with the captain; and we innocent young rascals
-stood looking very demure, and condoling with him on
-his misfortune, all the time laughing in our sleeves at
-the trick we had played. We had paid off the master
-and monkey, who between the two had got us sent to
-the mast-head occasionally for being saucy to the
-marine officer, because we did not like being bitten,
-without licking Jacko for it.</p>
-
-<p>A reward was offered to find out who let it loose,
-that F. might make the person or persons pay the
-damage; but it was never found out, and on the earliest
-opportunity the monkey was sent out of the ship, on
-board a merchant vessel we fell in with, bound to
-Malta, his master having had quite enough of monkey
-tricks.</p>
-
-<p>A ship of the line, the <i>Kent</i> (74), Captain Pulteney
-Malcolm, having been kept in the Bay of Naples to
-attend the royal family there, in case of their being
-obliged to go to Palermo, to avoid falling into the
-hands of the French, the <i>Renown</i> was sent to relieve
-her. The <i>Kent</i> was ordered home in consequence of
-being leaky, and very much out of repair. Captain
-J. C. White wishing to return home, exchanged into
-the <i>Kent</i> with Captain Pulteney Malcolm; he took
-several of the midshipmen with him, and myself amongst
-the number. We remained ten days at Naples, which
-were employed by the captain in seeing everything
-worth observation, and he was so kind as to take
-another youngster and myself with him.</p>
-
-<p>After the above period, we left Naples for the Bay
-of Salerno, at which place we embarked a large supply<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_37"></a>[Pg 37]</span>
-of cattle and vegetables for our fleet off Toulon. On
-joining them, we found our ship very weak, and her
-timbers, from the looseness of several bolts, working
-very much, and causing her to make a good deal of
-water,&mdash;in fine weather from six to eight inches per
-hour, and in bad weather two feet, which kept
-increasing to nearly four,&mdash;until our arrival in England.</p>
-
-<p>After having given the bullocks to the ships, we
-proceeded to Gibraltar, and from thence to Cadiz,
-where we took on board a million and sixty thousand
-dollars. We anchored near a handsome French seventy-four
-and frigate; the former, called <i>L’Aigle</i>, the name
-of the other I forget. Whenever we passed near them,
-some of their crew would abuse us; we told them to
-come outside, and see how soon we would take the
-change out of them; but they stood too much in awe
-of a British seventy-four, although we had such a
-tempting cargo to urge them to the risk.</p>
-
-<p>At this period, four of our frigates, under Sir Graham
-Moore, were cruising off Cape St. Vincent to intercept
-the four Spanish frigates, loaded with treasure, expected
-home. We spoke our ships off there, and a few
-days afterwards they fell in with the Spaniards, took
-three, and the unfortunate fourth blew up in the action
-with all her crew.</p>
-
-<p>I always did think, and my opinion has never
-changed, that it was a cruel thing to send only four
-frigates to detain four others, when by increasing the
-force by two or three line-of-battle ships, this might
-have been effected without loss of blood, or honour to
-the Spaniards. If it was necessary to detain these<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_38"></a>[Pg 38]</span>
-vessels and treasure from political motives, in order to
-make the king of Spain declare his equivocal conduct,
-it would have been humane to have sent such a force
-as would have put resistance out of the question; for
-what man, who was not a traitor, could yield without
-fighting (and with such a valuable cargo on board), to
-a force, in all appearance, not greater than his own.
-It was an untoward event. After a long passage, we
-at length arrived at Spithead, the ship in a very leaky,
-weak state. Having landed the money, we left Portsmouth
-the end of October for Chatham, at which place
-the ship was paid off.</p>
-
-<p>Our old parson was a “rum” subject; after trying
-all other mess places, he got old Pipes, the boatswain,
-to take him into his. They agreed very well for a
-little time; but one unfortunate day, the evil genius
-of poor old Fritz prevailed, for Pipes coming down
-rather unexpectedly to his cabin in the fore cock-pit
-to get a glass of grog, having got wet when the hands
-were turned up reefing topsails, he found the parson
-helping himself rather too freely out of his liquor-case.
-This was a crime Mr. Boatswain could not put up with.
-A breach immediately ensued, and an instant dismissal
-from his berth took place, with the exclamation of,
-“The parson is such a black; I cannot allow him to
-mess with me any longer.” After this occurrence, the
-captain interfered, and he again messed in his proper
-place with the officers in the wardroom. And I recollect
-one Sunday morning before church-time, the old
-fellow came into our berth, and with his hand to his
-stomach, began: “Oh! my dear fellow, I feel so poorly,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_39"></a>[Pg 39]</span>
-I do not know what to do, or how I shall get through
-the service.” “What is the matter, Mr. F.?” I enquired.
-“Oh! I feel such a pain.” I knew what he wanted, so
-I went to the locker, took out the rum bottle, and gave
-a good boatswain’s glass of grog (three parts spirits,
-and one water). He told me I had saved his life, and
-that now he could preach very well. “Come, sir,” said
-I, “take a north-wester to wash the other down,” which
-he did. The service commenced soon after, and he
-performed it admirably.</p>
-
-<p>He was a clever, facetious, and kind-hearted person;
-and I believe it was money matters that drove him,
-poor man! to the bottle; he died sometime after on
-shore. He used to tell us boys: “My dear fellows,
-do as I say, and not as I do.”</p>
-
-<p>Not having been in England for four years, and my
-brother being encamped on Coxheath, I got permission,
-previous to the ship being paid off, to go and see him.
-Nothing would serve me but a ride on horseback.
-I was dressed out very smart in white visibles&mdash;not
-invisibles, as the ladies call them&mdash;although it appears
-the fashion of the day to show they wear trousers,
-<i>whose scientific, Oriental name, by-the-bye, is fatimas</i>.
-To the young ladies I have a pretty little anecdote to
-relate. I knew a very gallant officer who fell deeply
-in love with a lady merely from handing her into a
-carriage. The moment she put her pretty feet upon
-the carriage steps he was pierced by Cupid’s arrows.
-He dreamed of them all night; thought of them when
-he awoke in the morning; he could not drive them
-from his imagination during the day. The pretty feet<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_40"></a>[Pg 40]</span>
-again appeared before his fancy when asleep the next
-night, and the third day found him prostrate before
-them, acknowledging their beauty, and supplicating
-that he might call them his own. He was accepted.
-Were this not an “olla”&mdash;which means in Spanish
-something of all sorts&mdash;I should not have ventured to
-have written the above.</p>
-
-<p>To return to my ride. As I said before, I was in
-full dress, with cocked hat, long coat, and side-arms,
-that I might appear in camp in a becoming manner.
-The landlord at the inn told me he knew sailors liked
-to ride fast, and promised to give me a quiet blood
-mare he had in his stables, who would show me the
-way. She was shortly equipped, and brought out.
-Upon her back I mounted; but scarcely were we out
-of the town of Chatham when off she started at full
-speed, and ran away with me along the turnpike road,
-to the amusement of some of his Majesty’s liege subjects,
-and to the terror and dismay of others&mdash;up hill,
-down dale, splashing myself, and every person I met,
-with mud, for the roads were wet, and it began to pour
-with rain. The ladies and gentlemen in their carriages
-as I passed them stared at me with astonishment.
-Having got to a place, called Kit’s Cot Hill, I ran on
-board of a man riding upon a donkey, with two sacks
-of flour, knocking him, donkey and cargo, head over
-heels; but my steed being pretty nearly blown, I at
-length stopped her.</p>
-
-<p>The miller was, fortunately, not hurt, but came up
-in a great passion to attack me. Luckily just at the
-moment some soldiers, who belonged to the same<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_41"></a>[Pg 41]</span>
-regiment as my brother, were passing by: they took
-my part, and, a parley ensuing, I explained how the
-untoward event had happened, and it ended in a laugh.
-Not far from this was a small inn, where I put up my
-flyaway, having had enough riding for one day, hired a
-gig, and at last got safe to the regiment without any
-broken bones.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after this the ship was paid off, and I joined
-the <i>Barfleur</i> (98), having had six weeks’ leave to see
-my friends and relate the wonders of my four years’
-voyage in foreign parts.</p>
-
-<p>Throughout the four months I passed in the <i>Barfleur</i>
-we were attached to the channel fleet.</p>
-
-<p>In May, 1805, I removed to the <i>Neptune</i> (98 guns),
-Captain T. F. Fremantle, a clever, brave, and smart
-officer, who sent me home to pass my examination at
-Somerset House, in August, which I did, before old
-Captain Sir Alexander Snap Hammond, whose character
-for turning mids back frightened me not a little.
-The one examined before me not having been sent, as
-from Oxford or Cambridge, to rusticate in green fields
-and sylvan groves, but condemned to study six months
-longer in a mid’s berth on the briny element in order
-to finish his nautical education, and eat peas-pudding,
-burgoo and molasses, salt-junk, lobscouse, sea-pie, and
-study Hamilton Moore. However, the passing captains,
-seeing I was alarmed on first entering, civilly
-desired me to be seated a few minutes and take courage.
-Having waited a short time, and got rather better of
-some odd qualms and palpitations which the unfortunate
-candidate turned back before me had created,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_42"></a>[Pg 42]</span>
-I was ordered to find the time of high-water at Plymouth,
-work an azimuth amplitude, double altitude,
-bearings and distances, &amp;c., which being performed, I
-was desired to stand up, and consider myself on the
-quarter-deck of a man-of-war at Spithead&mdash;“unmoor”&mdash;“get
-underway”&mdash;“stand out to sea”&mdash;“make
-and shorten sail”&mdash;“reef”&mdash;“return into port”&mdash;“unrig
-the foremast and bowsprit, and rig them again.”
-I got into a scrape after reefing for not overhauling
-the reef tackles when hoisting the sails. However,
-they passed me, and desired me to come again the
-next day to receive my passing certificate. I made
-the captains the best bow I could, and, without staying
-to look behind me, bolted out of the room, and was
-surrounded in a moment by other poor fellows, who
-were anxiously waiting their turn to be called in for
-examination, who asked what questions had been put
-to me, and the answers I made, &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p>This important event over, I spent a few days of
-September with my friends; then repaired to Plymouth,
-and was ordered a passage to join the <i>Neptune</i>
-(98), off Cadiz, in the <i>Belleisle</i> (74), one of the very
-last ships that sailed to join the fleet of Lord Nelson.</p>
-
-<p>We had a very quick run out, and ten days before
-the ever-memorable and glorious 21st of October,
-1805, I rejoined my ship.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_43"></a>[Pg 43]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VI">CHAPTER VI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">The Battle of Trafalgar, and extracts from the log of His Majesty’s
-Ship <i>Neptune</i>, on the 21st, 22nd, and 23rd October, 1805.</p>
-
-<h3>FEELINGS OF A CREW GOING INTO ACTION. BY LIEUT. H.
-GASCOIGNE, R.M.</h3>
-
-<p class="center"><i>Extracted from a Poem called “Fame.”</i></p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The man who pants not for his country’s fame</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Is lost to virtue and the sense of shame;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">For here the common parent of us all,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Bears every claim of those whom dear we call&mdash;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Our father, mother, brother, sister, wife,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Religion, friendship&mdash;all that’s good in life,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The whole united in the single name</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Of country! ever our support must claim.</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Poor is the soul who could outlive the day</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When honour called him, and he shunn’d the fray;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Poor is the man who yet could wish to live</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">When to his country death would glory give!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Pardon, O God! thou righteous Judge of all,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">If willing we obey our country’s call,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Though ill-prepared; for Thou didst plant these laws,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And to Thy mercy we submit our cause!</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">Full expectation gives the mind to wait,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">And moments lengthen in the hands of fate.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p class="p2">I shall never forget the 18th, 19th, 20th, and 21st
-of October, 1805. Signs of a movement in the combined
-fleets of France and Spain in Cadiz were made<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_44"></a>[Pg 44]</span>
-by signal on the 18th by the inshore squadron, and on
-the 19th the enemy came out of port. The wind was
-light and the day rather hazy, so that the body of our
-fleet never perceived them. Sunday we had a fresh
-breeze, when some of the headmost ships saw the
-enemy in shore, but they were too close under the
-land to be attacked. All hearts towards evening beat
-with joyful anxiety for the next day, which we hoped
-would crown our anxious blockade labours with a successful
-battle. When night closed in, the rockets and
-blue lights, with signal guns, informed us the inshore
-squadron still kept sight of our foes, and, like good
-and watchful dogs, our ships continued to send forth
-occasionally a growling cannon to keep us on the
-alert, and to cheer us with the hope of a glorious day
-on the morrow.</p>
-
-<p>And the morrow came; and with it the sun rose,
-which, as it ascended from its bed of ocean, looked
-hazy and watery, as if it smiled in tears on many
-brave hearts which fate had decreed should never see
-it set. It was my morning watch; I was midshipman
-of the forecastle, and at the first dawn of day a forest
-of strange masts was seen to leeward. I ran aft and
-informed the officer of the watch. The captain was
-on deck in a moment, and ere it was well light, the
-signals were flying through the fleet to bear up and
-form the order of sailing in two columns.</p>
-
-<p>The wind had moderated considerably in the night,
-but still our fleet, which consisted of twenty-seven sail
-of the line, four frigates, a schooner, and cutter, was
-much scattered. Our ship had been previously pre<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_45"></a>[Pg 45]</span>pared
-for battle, so that with the exception of stowing
-hammocks, slinging the lower yards, stoppering the
-topsail-sheets, and other minor matters, little remained
-to be done. All sail was set, and the different ships
-tried to form the line in two divisions, but the lightness
-of the wind, and the distance of the sternmost
-from the van, prevented anything like speed in the
-manœuvre; in short, the line never was properly
-formed, for the brave and gallant chiefs of each division
-were too eager to get into battle to wait for this.
-The old <i>Neptune</i>, which never was a good sailer, took
-it into her head to sail better that morning than I
-ever remember to have seen her do before. About
-ten o’clock we got close to the <i>Victory</i>, and Captain
-Fremantle had intended to pass her and break the
-enemy’s line, but poor Lord Nelson himself hailed us
-from the stern-walk of the <i>Victory</i>, and said, “<i>Neptune</i>,
-take in your studding-sails and drop astern; I shall
-break the line myself.” A signal was then made for
-the <i>Téméraire</i> (98) to take her station between us and
-the <i>Victory</i>, which consequently made us the third
-ship in the van of his lordship’s column.</p>
-
-<p>At this period the enemy were forming their double
-line in the shape of a crescent. It was a beautiful
-sight when their line was completed: their broadsides
-turned towards us, showing their iron teeth, and now
-and then trying the range of a shot to ascertain the
-distance, that they might, the moment we came within
-point blank (about six hundred yards), open their fire
-upon our van ships&mdash;no doubt with the hope of dismasting
-some of our leading vessels before they could<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_46"></a>[Pg 46]</span>
-close and break their line. Some of them were
-painted like ourselves&mdash;with double yellow sides;
-some with a broad single red or yellow streak; others
-all black; and the noble <i>Santissima Trinidada</i> (138),
-with four distinct lines of red, with a white ribbon
-between them, made her seem to be a superb man-of-war,
-which indeed she was. Her appearance was
-imposing; her head splendidly ornamented with a
-colossal group of figures, painted white, representing
-the Holy Trinity, from which she took her name.
-This magnificent ship was destined to be our opponent.
-She was lying-to under topsails, top-gallant
-sails, royals, jib, and spanker; her courses were hauled
-up; and her lofty, towering sails looked beautiful,
-peering through the smoke, as she awaited the onset.
-The flags of France and Spain, both handsome,
-chequered the line, waving defiance to that of Britain.</p>
-
-<p>Then, in our fleet, union-jacks and ensigns were
-made fast to the fore and fore-topmast-stays, as well
-as to the mizen-rigging, besides one at the peak, in
-order that we might not mistake each other in the
-smoke, and to show the enemy our determination to
-conquer. Towards eleven, our two lines were better
-formed, but still there existed long gaps in Vice-Admiral
-Collingwood’s division. Lord Nelson’s van
-was strong: three three-deckers (<i>Victory</i>, <i>Téméraire</i>,
-and <i>Neptune</i>), and four seventy-four’s, their jib-booms
-nearly over the others’ taffrails, the bands playing “God
-save the King,” “Rule Britannia,” and “Britons strike
-home;” the crews stationed on the forecastle of the different
-ships, cheering the ship ahead of them when the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_47"></a>[Pg 47]</span>
-enemy began to fire, sent those feelings to our hearts
-that ensured us victory. About ten minutes before
-twelve, our antagonists opened their fire upon the
-<i>Royal Sovereign</i> (110), Vice-Admiral Collingwood,
-who most nobly, and unsupported for at least ten
-minutes, led his division into action, steering for the
-<i>Santa Anna</i> (112), which was painted all black, bearing
-the flag of Admiral Gravina, during which time
-all the enemy’s line that could possibly bring a gun
-to bear were firing at her. She was the admiration
-of the whole fleet.</p>
-
-<p>To show the great and master mind of Nelson, who
-was thinking of everything even in the momentous
-hour of battle, when most minds would have been
-totally absorbed in other matters, it was remarked by
-him that the enemy had the iron hoops round their
-masts painted black; orders were issued by signal to
-whitewash those of his fleet, that in the event of all
-the ensigns being shot away, his ships might be distinguished
-by their white masts and hoops.</p>
-
-<p>In order to convey a more accurate notion of the
-commencement and of the ensuing events of this
-glorious day, I shall introduce an extract from the
-log-book of His Majesty’s Ship <i>Neptune</i> (98 guns):&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“<span class="allsmcap">A.M.</span>, moderate and fine weather; at daylight discovered 39 strange
-ships to leeward. At 6, answered the signal from the <i>Victory</i>, Lord
-Nelson’s flag-ship, No. 76, to form the order of sailing in two lines;
-bore up and made all sail, the fleet consisting of twenty-seven ships of
-the line, four frigates, a cutter, and schooner, in company; cleared ship
-for action. At 11, answered the general telegraph signal, ‘England
-expects every man will do his duty’; Captain Fremantle inspected the
-different decks, and made known the above signal, which was received<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_48"></a>[Pg 48]</span>
-with cheers. At 11.30, the signal to break the enemy’s line, and
-engage to leeward.</p>
-
-<p>“At 12, the <i>Royal Sovereign</i> (110), Vice-Admiral Collingwood,
-most nobly broke the enemy’s line, and engaged the Spanish Admiral
-Gravina, whose flag was flying in the <i>Santa Anna</i> (112), cutting off the
-19th ship from their rear; the French and Spanish fleet, of 33 sail of
-the line, 4 frigates, and 2 brigs, lying-to for us to leeward, with their
-heads to the northward.</p>
-
-<p>“At 12.15, the <i>Victory</i> (100), Vice-Admiral Lord Nelson, followed
-by the <i>Téméraire</i> (98), Captain Eliab Hervey, and <i>Neptune</i> (98), Captain
-Fremantle, broke the line of the enemy by the French Commander-in-Chief’s
-ship, Admiral Villeneuve, in the <i>Bucentaure</i> (84), and
-<i>Santissima Trinidada</i> (138), of four decks, bearing the flag of Rear-Admiral
-Don Cisneros Baltazar, the eleventh ship from the van.</p>
-
-<p>“At 12.25, three of the enemy’s ships of the line opened their fire
-upon us, raking us fore and aft. At 12.35, we broke their line, passed
-between, and opened our broadside and raked them on both sides. At
-12.47, we engaged a two-deck ship, with a flag at her mizen. At 1.30,
-entirely dismasted her, she struck her colours; but before that, the
-<i>Leviathan</i> (74), also opened her broadside upon her, we passed on (first
-giving her three hearty cheers), and bore down and attacked the <i>Santissima
-Trinidada</i>, a Spanish four-decker of 140 guns, with a flag at
-her mizen; raked her as we passed under her stern; and at 1.50 opened
-our fire on her starboard quarter. At 2.40, shot away her main and
-mizen masts; at 2.50, her foremast; at 3, she cried for quarter, and
-hailed us to say they had surrendered; she then stuck English colours
-to the stump of her mainmast; gave her three cheers. At this time the
-<i>Leviathan</i> and <i>Conqueror</i> (74’s), on our starboard quarter, firing on some
-of the enemy’s ships. Our standing and running rigging much cut;
-foretop-gallant and royal-yard shot away; the foremast and foretop-mast
-very badly wounded; three shot in the main-mast; one cheek of the
-mizen mast shot away, and wounded in other places; foreyard nearly
-shot in two, and ship pulled in several places; sent down men to get
-up more shot, having nearly fired away all that was on deck.</p>
-
-<p>“When the smoke cleared away, observed the <i>Victory</i>, <i>Royal
-Sovereign</i>, and <i>Téméraire</i> warmly engaged, and the six van ships of the
-enemy who had not been engaged had tacked, and were bearing down
-to attack us. At 3.30, opened our fire on them, assisted by the
-<i>Leviathan</i> and <i>Conqueror</i>; observed one of them to have all her masts<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_49"></a>[Pg 49]</span>
-shot away by our united fire; the rest then hauled their wind (we
-learned afterwards it was Rear-Admiral Dumanoir), and making off to
-the southward, and we not in a condition to follow them, our sails
-being nearly shot from the yards, and, in addition to other defects, not
-a brace or bowline left. Turned the hands up to knot and splice, and
-bend new sails. At 5, observed 18 sail of the enemy making off, viz.,
-13 sail of the line, 3 frigates, and 2 brigs, leaving to us 20 ships of the
-line, 2 of which were first-rates, viz., <i>Santissima Trinidada</i> and <i>Santa
-Anna</i>. At 5.15, a French ship of the line, <i>L’Achille</i>, blew up with
-nearly all her crew. Observed the <i>Victory</i> with her mizen-mast and all
-her topmasts shot away; the <i>Royal Sovereign</i> with only her foremast
-standing; unable to see the condition of the rest of the fleet. At 6,
-we hailed the <i>Ajax</i> (74), and told her to go and take possession of a
-French ship of the line dismasted; saw the <i>Prince</i> (98) take the <i>Santissima
-Trinidada</i> (138) in tow, which had struck to us. Found we had
-10 men killed, and 35 wounded, 4 of whom shortly after died of their
-wounds.</p>
-
-<p>“At midnight, having repaired what damages we could, made sail.
-At 4 in the morning of the 22nd, we were spoke by the <i>Pickle</i> schooner,
-who told us it was Admiral Collingwood’s orders. We took some ship
-in tow. At daylight, observed Admiral C.’s flag in the <i>Euryalus</i>
-frigate, with the <i>Royal Sovereign</i> in tow, who made our signal to take
-her in tow, which we did.</p>
-
-<p>“At daylight, it blew a fresh gale from the S.S.W.; the ships very
-much scattered; all the prizes dismasted and drifting about, most of
-them having been cast off from the ships that had them in tow; and
-the French 84-gun ship, <i>Rédoutable</i>, while in tow of the British <i>Swiftsure</i>,
-foundered with nearly all her unfortunate crew. At daylight of
-the 23rd, we picked up four of her people floating upon a piece of her
-wreck. Came on board of us, as prisoner from the <i>Mars</i> (74), Admiral
-Villeneuve, the French commander-in-chief.</p>
-
-<p>“In this battle we lost the brave Vice-Admiral Viscount Nelson,
-who was killed on board the <i>Victory</i> by a musket-ball from the maintop
-of the French 84-gun ship, <i>Rédoutable</i>. The news of the death of
-this lamented hero threw a damp over our victory, which we were not
-prepared for. At noon on the 23rd, the signal was made that the
-remnant of the enemy’s fleet was coming out of Cadiz to try and
-pick up some of the dismasted ships and prizes; cast off the <i>Royal
-Sovereign</i>, and bore up with the rest of the ships that were able, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_50"></a>[Pg 50]</span>
-formed the line of battle to leeward of our dismasted ships and prizes
-for their protection; on seeing which, the enemy returned into port
-without accomplishing his object, but losing another ship, the <i>El Rayo</i>
-(100), for his pains!”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>Thus ended this noble fight, the consequences of
-which were felt from one end of Europe to the other,
-indeed, I may say, in all parts of the world; and,
-surely, for such a day’s work, the country ought to
-have voted a medal, not only to the admirals and
-captains, but (as was the case at Waterloo) to every
-officer, seaman, and marine, in the fleet.</p>
-
-<p>The loss of the <i>Neptune</i> in this action, considering
-what she did, was comparatively small; but the ship
-was admirably managed by her gallant captain, who
-was ably supported by a clever scientific first lieutenant
-(the present Captain George Acklom), who
-justly merited every praise for his coolness and abilities
-on that memorable day.</p>
-
-<p>During the time we were going into action, and
-being raked by the enemy, the whole of the crew, with
-the exception of the officers, were made to lie flat on
-the deck, to secure them from the raking shots, some
-of which came in at the bows and went out at the
-stern. Had it not been for the above precaution, many
-lives must have been sacrificed. My quarters were
-the five midship-guns on each side of the main-deck.
-I was sent on board the <i>Santissima Trinidada</i>, a few
-days after the action, to assist in getting out the
-wounded men, previous to destroying her. She was a
-magnificent ship, and ought now to be in Portsmouth
-harbour. Her top-sides, it is true, were perfectly rid<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_51"></a>[Pg 51]</span>dled
-by our beautiful firing, and she had, if I recollect
-right, 550 killed and wounded; but from the lower
-part of the sills of the lower-deck ports to the water’s
-edge, few shot of consequence had hurt her between
-wind and water, and those were all plugged up. She
-was built of cedar, and would have lasted for ages,
-a glorious trophy of the battle; but “sink, burn, and
-destroy,” was the order of the day, and after a great
-deal of trouble, scuttling her in many places, hauling
-up her lower-deck ports,&mdash;that when she rolled the
-heavy sea might fill her decks,&mdash;she did at last go
-unwillingly to the bottom.</p>
-
-<p>I have now by me a gilt dirk that I brought away
-from her, it belonged to the Spanish admiral’s son,
-Don Baltazar Cisneros; I would not part with it for
-its weight in gold. Of all our hard-earned prizes, only
-four got safe to Gibraltar; viz., <i>San Ildefonso</i> (74),
-<i>San Juan Nepomuceno</i> (74), <i>Bahama</i> (74), and the old
-English <i>Swiftsure</i> (74), the rest were either sunk or
-burnt. Nothing being talked of now but horizontal
-firing, it is to be hoped we shall fire as well and with
-the same precision and effect next war, as the British
-fleet did on this memorable day.</p>
-
-<p>The establishment of the school for naval gunnery
-on board the <i>Excellent</i> at Portsmouth, placed as it is
-under the superintendence of Sir Thomas Hastings,
-and other scientific officers, will, in my humble opinion
-however some persons may affect to despise teaching
-seamen the science of naval gunnery, be of general
-benefit to the service. One of the originators of it, the
-gallant Captain Sir John Pechell, Bart., C.B., K.C.B.,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_52"></a>[Pg 52]</span>
-deserves great credit, and the thanks of the service for
-the interest, zeal, and attention he has paid to it; as
-also does Captain George Smith, who invented the
-moveable target, now used on board our men-of-war,
-and several other ingenious and clever inventions
-of his have been before the public. He has lately
-invented paddle-box life boats for steam ships.</p>
-
-<h3><i>List of the English Fleet, under Lord Nelson, on the 21st October,
-1805-27 sail of the line, 4 frigates, 1 cutter, 1 schooner.</i></h3>
-
-<table summary="Catalogue of ships">
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8"><h4><span class="smcap">Lord Nelson’s Division.</span></h4></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-<th colspan="2">Guns.</th>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-<th colspan="2">Killed.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Wounded</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Victory</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padl">100</td>
-<td class="tdr brace">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">Vice-Admiral Viscount Nelson<br />Captain T. M. Hardy</td>
-<td class="tdl brace">}</td>
-<td class="tdr padr">51</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;75</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Téméraire</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;98</td>
-<td class="tdl">Eliab Harvey</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">47</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;76</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Neptune</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;98</td>
-<td class="tdl">T. F. Fremantle</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">10</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;35</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Conqueror</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">Israel Pellew</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">3</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;&#8199;9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Leviathan</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">H. W. Bayntum</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">4</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;22</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Ajax</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">Lieut. J. Pilfold</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">0</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;&#8199;9</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Orion</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">Edward Codrington</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">1</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;23</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Agamemnon</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;64</td>
-<td class="tdl">Sir Edward Berry</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">2</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;&#8199;7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Minotaur</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">C. J. M. Mansfield</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">3</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;22</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Spartiate</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">Sir F. Laforey, Bart.</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">3</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;20</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Britannia</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padl">100</td>
-<td class="tdr brace">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">Rear-Admiral the Earl Northesk<br />Captain Charles Bullen</td>
-<td class="tdl brace">}</td>
-<td class="tdr padr">10</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;42</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Africa</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;64</td>
-<td class="tdl">Henry Digby</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">18</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;44</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc">Total</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2"><span class="btb">154</span></td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;<span class="btb">383</span></td>
-</tr>
-
-<tr>
-<td colspan="8"><h4><span class="smcap">Vice-Admiral Collingwood’s Division.</span></h4></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-<th colspan="2">Guns.</th>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-<th colspan="2">Killed.</th>
-<th colspan="2">Wounded</th>
-</tr>
-
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Royal Sovereign</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padl">100</td>
-<td class="tdr brace">{</td>
-<td class="tdl">Vice-Admiral Collingwood<br />Captain Rotherham</td>
-<td class="tdl brace">}</td>
-<td class="tdr padr">47</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;94</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Mars</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">G. Duff (killed)</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">29</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;69</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Belleisle</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">W. Hargood</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">33</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;93</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Tonnant</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;80</td>
-<td class="tdl">C. Tyler</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">26</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;50</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Bellerophon</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">J. Cook (killed)</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">27</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;133<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_53"></a>[Pg 53]</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Colossus</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">J. N. Morris</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">40</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;160</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Achille</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">Richard King</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">13</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;59</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Polyphemus</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">R. Redmill</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">2</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;&#8199;4</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Revenge</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">R. Moorson</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">28</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;51</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Defiance</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">P. C. Durham</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">17</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;53</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Swiftsure</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">W. G. Rutherford</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">9</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;&#8199;7</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Defence</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">G. Hope</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">7</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;29</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Thunderer</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdl">Lieut. Stockham</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">4</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;16</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Prince</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;98</td>
-<td class="tdl">R. Grindall</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">0</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;&#8199;0</td>
-</tr>
-<tr><td class="tdl"><i>Dreadnought</i></td>
-<td class="tdl padlr" colspan="2">&#8199;98</td>
-<td class="tdl">John Conn</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2">7</td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;&#8199;26</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc"> Total</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2"><span class="bt">263</span></td>
-<td class="tdc">&#8199;<span class="bt">794</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td>&nbsp;</td>
-<td colspan="2">&nbsp;</td>
-<td class="tdc">Grand Total</td>
-<td class="tdr padlr" colspan="2"><span class="btb">417</span></td>
-<td class="tdc"><span class="btb">1177</span></td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<h4>FRIGATES.</h4>
-
-<table summary="Catalogue of ships: Frigates">
-<tr>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-<th>Guns.</th>
-<th>&nbsp;</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Euryalus</i></td>
-<td class="tdc padlr">36</td>
-<td class="tdl">Hon. H. Blackwood.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Sirius</i></td>
-<td class="tdc padlr">36</td>
-<td class="tdl">William Prowse.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Phœbe</i></td>
-<td class="tdc padlr">36</td>
-<td class="tdl">Hon. T. B. Capel.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Naiad</i></td>
-<td class="tdc padlr">36</td>
-<td class="tdl">T. Dundas.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Pickle</i> (schooner)</td>
-<td class="tdc padlr">12</td>
-<td class="tdl">Lieut. J. R. Lapenotiere.</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl"><i>Entreprenant</i> (cutter)</td>
-<td class="tdc padlr">12</td>
-<td class="tdl">Lieut. R. B. Young.</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h3><i>List of the French and Spanish combined fleets in action, off
-Cape Trafalgar, near Cadiz, 21st October, 1805&mdash;33 sail of
-the line, 3 frigates, 3 brigs.</i></h3>
-
-<table summary="Catalogue of ships: French and Spanish">
-<tr>
-<th class="tdl">No.</th>
-<th>Guns.</th>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">&#8199;1. <i>San Ildefonso</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">&#8199;2. <i>San Juan Nepomuceno</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">&#8199;3. <i>Bahama</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">&#8199;4. <i>Swiftsure</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdc" colspan="4">(The above four ships arrived safe at Gibraltar.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">&#8199;5. <i>Monarca</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken and wrecked.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">&#8199;6. <i>Fougueux</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do., do., and all her crew.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">&#8199;7. <i>Indomptable</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;84</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do.,<span class="longsp">&nbsp;</span>do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_54"></a>[Pg 54]</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">&#8199;8. <i>Bucentaure</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken and wrecked, and most of her crew.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">&#8199;9. <i>San Francisco de Asis</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken and wrecked.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">10. <i>El Rayo</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">100</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">11. <i>Neptuno</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;84</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do. and destroyed.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">12. <i>Argonaut</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Driven on shore, but got off again.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">13. <i>Berwick</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken and wrecked.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">14. <i>L’Aigle</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do., do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">15. <i>L’Achille</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Blew up in action, with most of her crew.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">16. <i>Intrépide</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken, and burnt after the action.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">17. <i>San Augustin</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do., do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">18. <i>Santissima Trinidada</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">140</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken by the <i>Neptune</i>; sunk after the action by the <i>Prince</i> and <i>Neptune</i>, in consequence of orders to destroy her.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">19. <i>Rédoutable</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;84</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken, and foundered with all her crew except four.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">20. <i>Argonauta</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;80</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken and destroyed.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">21. <i>Santa Anna</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">112</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken, but got into Cadiz dismasted.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">22. <i>Algesiras</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken, but escaped in the gale into Cadiz.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">23. <i>Pluton</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do., do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">24. <i>San Juste</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do., but got into Cadiz with her foremast only standing.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">25. <i>San Leandro</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;64</td>
-<td class="tdh">Taken&mdash;got into Cadiz.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">26. <i>Le Neptune</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;84</td>
-<td class="tdh">Escaped.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">27. <i>Le Héros</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Escaped&mdash;lost topmasts.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">28. <i>Principe di Asturias</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">112</td>
-<td class="tdh">Lost all her masts&mdash;escaped into Cadiz.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">29. <i>Montanez</i></td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Escaped.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Spanish.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">30. <i>Formidable</i>*</td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;84</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">31. <i>Mont Blanc</i>*</td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_55"></a>[Pg 55]</span></td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">32. <i>Scipion</i>*</td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="tdh">Escaped.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(French.)</td>
-</tr>
-<tr>
-<td class="tdl altop nobr">33. <i>Duguay Trouin</i>*</td>
-<td class="tdc altop">&#8199;74</td>
-<td class="padl1h">Do.</td>
-<td class="tdc albottom padl">(Do.)</td>
-</tr>
-</table>
-
-<p class="center">(The four ships marked thus (*) were taken a few days after the action
-by Sir Richard Strachan’s squadron.)</p>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<h3><i>Names and Rank of French and Spanish Flag Officers in the
-battle.</i></h3>
-
-<ul class="hanging"><li>Admiral Villeneuve, Commander-in-Chief&mdash;taken. (French.)</li>
-<li>Rear-Admiral Magon&mdash;killed. (French.)</li>
-<li>Rear-Admiral Dumanoir&mdash;escaped; taken afterwards by Sir Richard Strachan. (French.)</li>
-<li>Admiral Gravina&mdash;escaped. (Spanish.)</li>
-<li>Vice-Admiral Alava&mdash;taken in <i>Santa Anna</i> (112). (Spanish.)</li>
-<li>Rear-Admiral Cisneros&mdash;taken in <i>Santissima Trinidada</i>(140). (Spanish.)</li>
-</ul>
-
-<p>The loss of the combined fleet was twenty ships of
-the line, one admiral killed, and three taken; the total
-killed, wounded, and taken prisoners, was near 16,000
-men and officers. In concluding the account of the
-Battle of Trafalgar, I think I shall be excused for
-copying into this <i>olla</i> two beautiful extracts from unknown
-authors. The first lines on the particular circumstance
-of each of the different powers having a
-ship of the line, called the <i>Neptune</i>, in the battle:&mdash;</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“Three different powers to rule the main,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Assumed old Neptune’s name;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">One from Gallia, one from Spain,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">And one from England came.</div>
- </div>
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent0">“The British <i>Neptune</i>, as of yore,</div>
- <div class="verse indent2">Proved master of the day;</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">The Spanish <i>Neptune</i> is no more,<a id="FNanchor_6" href="#Footnote_6" class="fnanchor">[F]</a></div>
- <div class="verse indent2">The French one ran away.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_56"></a>[Pg 56]</span></p>
-
-<h3><span class="smcap">Lord Nelson’s Death and Triumph.</span></h3>
-
-<p class="center"><i>From the Sheffield Paper, 1805.</i></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“Intelligence of a most glorious event, accompanied with tidings of
-an awful calamity (like the angels of mercy and affliction travelling together),
-has arrived on our shores, and awakened the public mind from
-the agony of despondence to a tumult of mingled emotions, sorrow and
-joy, mourning and triumph.</p>
-
-<p>“On the 21st of October, 1805, while the cowardly and incapable
-Austrian, General Mack, was surrendering himself and army into the
-hands of Bonaparte, the noble and lamented Lord Nelson, once more,
-and for the last time, fought and conquered the united foes of his
-country; but he fell in the meridian of victory, and in one moment
-became immortal in both worlds.</p>
-
-<p>“His career of services had been long; but it was only in the last
-war that he burst upon the eye of the public as a luminary of the first
-magnitude. At the battle of Aboukir, he rose like the sun in the east,
-and like the sun too, after a summer’s day of glory, he set in the west,
-at the battle of Trafalgar, leaving the ocean in a blaze as he went down,<a id="FNanchor_7" href="#Footnote_7" class="fnanchor">[G]</a>
-and in darkness when he descended.</p>
-
-<p>“In ages to come, when the stranger who visits our island shall
-enquire for the monument of Nelson, the answer will be, ‘Behold his
-country which he has saved.’”</p></blockquote>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_57"></a>[Pg 57]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VII">CHAPTER VII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Join the <i>Melpomene</i> (38)&mdash;Sent up the Mediterranean&mdash;Tremendous
-weather, with thunder, lightning, and water-spouts&mdash;Ship loses her rudder
-and main-topmast&mdash;Proceed to Malta.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">Ten days after the action, I was appointed acting
-lieutenant of the <i>Melpomene</i> (38), Captain Peter Parker.
-The weather having moderated, we sailed in company
-with the <i>Orion</i> (74), Captain Codrington: <i>Endymion</i>
-(44), and <i>Weazle</i> brig, (18); to look into Toulon, and
-scour the Mediterranean, in search of a squadron of
-French frigates. We parted from the fleet on the 8th
-of November, 1805, with every prospect of a most
-delightful cruise, and the chance of picking up some
-prizes; but a few days after leaving Gibraltar, our
-golden hopes were dashed to nought, and we were
-sent a wreck, without a rudder, to Malta.</p>
-
-<p>The weather continued moderate until the 11th,
-when we captured a small Spanish settee, laden with
-stores of little value, and took her in tow, for the
-purpose of conveying her to the commodore, but a
-heavy squall coming on, we destroyed her.</p>
-
-<p>On the 12th, we saw the island of Majorca, and
-finding the main-yard sprung, we lowered it down,
-and fished it. On the 13th, owing to the violence of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_58"></a>[Pg 58]</span>
-the gale and heavy sea, we bore up, with the <i>Weazle</i>
-brig in company, to take shelter under Majorca; at
-this time the ship was labouring very hard, in consequence
-of a heavy cross swell. On the 14th, none of
-the squadron were in sight; the morning of the 15th,
-about nine o’clock, a most tremendous squall came on,
-accompanied with thunder, lightning, rain, and sleet,
-which obliged us to clew up all our sails; shortly
-afterwards the main-mast was struck by lightning, the
-fluid exploded by the pumps, and knocked myself
-and a seaman down; the sensation I felt was that of
-a severe electric shock, shaking every bone in my
-body, but, thank God! it did me no further injury;
-the seaman, poor fellow! was a good deal burnt, but
-he afterwards recovered. On examining the mainmast,
-we found it splintered in many places, particularly
-about the hoops, and in the wake of the trusses,
-where copper had been nailed on.</p>
-
-<p>The next day we stood towards Barcelona, in the
-hopes of rejoining the <i>Orion</i>, but between nine and
-ten in the morning of the 17th, the sea rose all round
-us, angry, black, threatening clouds, accompanied with
-water-spouts, and heavy flashes of lightning, gave us
-warning that a tempest of no common kind was
-approaching; several land birds of various descriptions,
-blown from land not in sight, settled on the deck and
-rigging, in hopes of shelter from the pitiless storm;
-a woodcock tried to rest upon the capstern on the
-quarter-deck; a hoopoe, linnets, greenfinches, and
-other small birds, also endeavoured, poor things! to
-find shelter, but when the first burst of the tempest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_59"></a>[Pg 59]</span>
-came on, they were blown to leeward, and probably
-perished. In the midst of all this we had to fire guns
-at the water-spouts to break them, furl the sails, and
-prepare for another gale. At eleven a heavy sea pooped
-us, stove in the dead lights, and filled the captain’s
-cabin with water; the wind increased to a perfect
-hurricane, and at one, the lightning again struck the
-ship and hurt the main-topmast and the main-mast.
-At two the storm stay-sails were blown to atoms, and
-the ship became entirely unmanageable; whole seas,
-at times, rolled over her, one of which, breaking on
-the quarter, struck the rudder, and the rudder-head
-gave way, it was immediately chocked, and the ship
-was then steered by the rudder pennants. Between
-three and four, the main-topmast was blown over the
-side, the rudder-chains gave way, and we found the
-main-mast sprung a few feet above the quarter-deck.
-The whole of the night, the rudder, having nothing to
-confine it, thumped about a great deal, and made us
-fear it would shake the stern-post. In the morning of
-the 18th, the ship fortunately took a heavy plunge,
-and the rudder unshipped itself from the stern and
-sank. The sea at this period was most heavy and
-breaking; it stove the quarter boats, and caused
-the ship to strain so much that it was necessary to
-keep the pumps constantly going. Towards noon of
-the 18th we veered a cable astern with hawsers, etc.,
-and struck the mizen-topmast to try and wear ship,
-but found it impossible, for the moment we got the
-ship four or five points from the wind, she flew to
-again. On the 19th, the weather began to moderate,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_60"></a>[Pg 60]</span>
-but still there was a heavy sea; yet, notwithstanding
-the ship laboured a great deal, we commenced making
-a Pakenham’s jury rudder out of a spare maintopmast-jibboom,
-and other spars.</p>
-
-<p>Towards evening we saw the Columbretes, small
-rocky uninhabited islands, near Ivica, on the lee bow,
-distant four or five leagues; finding ourselves drifting
-bodily down on them, we made all sail on the foremast,
-in the hopes of getting the ship on the other
-tack, veered away a cable astern, and with hawsers
-bowsed it over to windward; but the heavy swell,&mdash;the
-moment we got way upon the ship, and she was a few
-points from the wind, striking her abaft the beam,&mdash;made
-her fly to the wind again. We therefore furled
-our sails, and let go an anchor in 60 fathoms, with a
-spring on the cable, which for a time brought us up;
-but soon after midnight, during my watch, there came
-on a heavy squall with thunder, lightning and rain,
-the ship drove, when we cut the cable and set new
-storm stay-sails and fore-sail; she evidently would not
-weather the rocks, but when pretty near them, it
-pleased Providence to send us a shift of wind in
-another severe squall, which enabled us to clear them.
-On the morning of the 20th the weather became
-moderate, and towards evening, having completed our
-jury-rudder, we succeeded in shipping it, and found to
-our great joy it answered with a little care very well.
-The 21st we had a steady breeze from the S.W.,
-which enabled us to shape our course for Malta. It
-was necessary to keep a sharp look out upon our
-rudder guys and braces, for the constant friction<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_61"></a>[Pg 61]</span>
-against the ship’s sides, soon chafed the woulding.
-On the 22nd, at night, it again blew very heavy, our
-starboard fore channel was very badly started, and
-we found the fore-yard sprung; however the ship
-steered very well, going before the gale at the rate
-of ten and eleven knots per hour. On the 26th we
-arrived at Malta, and moored safely from the gales in
-La Valette harbour. The defects of the ship were as
-follows: a rudder, main-mast, two top-masts, both
-lower yards, maintop-sail-yard, the starboard fore
-channel had to be secured, and general caulking was
-wanted. In short, the ship was strained all to pieces.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_62"></a>[Pg 62]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_VIII">CHAPTER VIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Siege of Gaeta by the French&mdash;Boat affairs&mdash;My capture&mdash;Leghorn.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">After the repairs were made good, which took nearly
-two months, we sailed for Messina, and found there
-some transports waiting for a convoy to take a reinforcement
-of troops, with General Sherbrooke, to
-Egypt.</p>
-
-<p>The service being most pressing, we took them
-under convoy, and after a passage of three weeks,
-made the low sandy coast to the westward of Alexandria,
-on which were growing a few date or palm trees,
-planted in a cluster. We got off the port on the
-following day, where we no sooner discovered the
-British squadron, under Capt. Benjamin Hallowell, in
-the <i>Tigre</i> (80), all snug, than we hove to; and putting
-the general and his staff on board one of the transports,
-started back to Messina. The <i>Tigre</i> fired guns
-and made the signal of recall, which the captain,
-much to our satisfaction, would not notice, for we had
-no particular relish to exchange the chance of a good
-cruise, for the burning sands of Egypt, to fire at Turks
-behind sand banks and stone walls.</p>
-
-<p>This, however, very nearly got Captain Peter Parker
-into a serious scrape; for the gallant old Ben. was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_63"></a>[Pg 63]</span>
-most wroth, and nothing saved him from a court
-martial but his being a great friend of Lord Collingwood.</p>
-
-<p>On our return to Sicily we went from Messina to
-Palermo, and from thence to succour the fortress of
-Gaeta, near Terracina, besieged by Marshal Massena,
-with 30,000 men. We ran in and engaged a battery
-and a French man-of-war brig near Mola. The
-battery was thrown up in Cicero’s Garden. Night,
-and a very heavy thunder storm coming on, which
-blew dead on shore, obliged us to haul off and get an
-offing; the brig taking advantage of the darkness, cut
-her cable, and got safe into Naples.</p>
-
-<p>A few days afterwards, I went with some other
-officers on shore, to be introduced to the Prince of
-Hesse Philippsthal, who commanded the fortress, and
-to look round the works and observe the French lines.
-It appearing to our captain that we could flank the
-enemy’s works to the N.W. of the peninsula, with the
-ship, in the afternoon, we stood in and fired a few
-broadsides, which put them to confusion, however the
-wind failing obliged us to haul off. A day or two
-afterwards the wind changing and permitting us to do
-the same thing, again we stood in, but the French had
-got something prepared for us this time, in the shape
-of a good masked battery, which was so well directed
-that every shot hit us, and we were glad to get off
-with the loss of three men badly wounded; one poor
-fellow lost both his legs, another his right leg, and the
-third was severely wounded by a splinter. We took
-the hint and did not go there any more. Shortly after<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_64"></a>[Pg 64]</span>
-this, Rear-Admiral Sir Sidney Smith came and assumed
-the command of the squadron, he used to send
-the launches, armed with a carronade, every dark
-night to flank the French camp on the Terracina side,
-with orders the moment the gun was fired to pull
-either to starboard or port, in order to avoid the
-enemy’s shot. Our being low on the water prevented
-them seeing us, so that they could only fire at the
-flashes of our guns. Some shot occasionally passed
-over us, but the greater part went either to the right
-or left. One of the Sicilian gun-boats was sunk one
-night, and some of the oars knocked out of the men’s
-hands, but by attending to the orders of the gallant
-admiral we generally escaped. Our other orders from
-him were not to go within musket shot, and directly
-the moon began to appear, to disperse and return
-on board. One night we killed a French general
-named Vaubois, who had come down to the beach
-with some field pieces to return our fire.</p>
-
-<p>We went hence to Palermo and landed our wounded
-men, when we proceeded off Naples with a spy, dispatches,
-and proclamations, from King Ferdinand the
-VII., to his beloved subjects, calling upon them to
-rise and make a diversion to raise the siege of Gaeta;
-but they were too wise to follow his advice, having
-neither leaders, spirit, nor enterprise for such dangerous
-work. To get the above gentleman with his dispatches,
-proclamations, &amp;c., on shore, being a service
-of danger, with the prospect at least of a dungeon for
-the remainder of the war, should they even escape
-hanging, volunteers were necessary; myself and a fine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_65"></a>[Pg 65]</span>
-gig’s crew and a sergeant of marines, offered our services,
-and engaged not to return without performing
-the service if it were possible.</p>
-
-<p>We were all well armed and left the ship in the gig,
-with the spy, soon after dark, at the entrance of the
-Bay of Naples; the oars were well muffled and greased
-to prevent them from making a noise. We first rowed
-under the land towards Baia and Pansilippo; the
-night was favourable, being very dark, and rather
-inclined to be stormy, with an occasional flash of sheet
-lightning, which latter we could have dispensed with;
-however, on we pulled, taking care not to feather the
-oars, and to row as easy as possible, that we might
-make no splashing in the water. At last we got to
-what I thought a favourable place, and we pulled in,
-when just as the boat was touching the shore a whole
-host of fishermen bawled out and gave the alarm.
-The alarm fires were lit along the shore in a minute,
-and we were instantly challenged; off we shoved the
-boat and told the Italian to say we were fishermen
-looking for our companions. While he was talking
-the wind being off the land, soon blew us out of
-hearing and musket shot, when we again rowed along
-shore nearer Naples, and tried to land upon the rocks,
-not far from Castle del Ovo; here again, however, the
-fellows were upon the <i>qui vive</i>, and we again shoved
-off, when I determined to put a good face upon the
-matter, and after passing the castle to land right under
-the houses. They not expecting us there, we succeeded,
-and our friend the spy, with his dispatches
-and proclamations, went at once into the city, and I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_66"></a>[Pg 66]</span>
-then shoved off and got safe back to the ship by a
-little after midnight; the captain was quite happy to
-see us safe returned, having so well accomplished our
-object. Having seen the alarm fires and signals from
-the ship, he was very anxious on our account.</p>
-
-<p>The spy being a clever fellow, managed his business
-well, and in a fortnight after returned safe to Palermo
-with answers. Nothing was done, for King Joe and
-his police kept too sharp a look out, to allow his
-Sicilian Majesty’s corps of lazzaroni to make, or
-attempt to make, any disturbance.</p>
-
-<p>On our way off Cività Vecchia, near Mount Circello,
-in company with the <i>Juno</i> (32), we fell in with two
-French settees, who were steering along shore towards
-Mola; one we sunk with our two guns, and the other
-we took; both were laden with charcoal for the forges
-of the French army before Gaeta; the <i>Juno</i> went
-thither with our prize, and we continued off the above
-place in the hope of falling in with a French squadron,
-but in this we were anticipated by the <i>Sirius</i> (36),
-who fell in with them, took a corvette, and dispersed
-the rest. From thence we proceeded off Leghorn,
-and on the 18th of May, 1806, at noon, I was sent,
-with seven men, armed with merely four cutlasses, two
-muskets, and having only eight ball cartridges, after a
-French row-boat, with orders also to attack a convoy
-close in shore under the town of Leghorn. This adventure
-having nearly cost me my life, I shall enter
-more fully into it. All hands were upon deck, ready
-to carry any orders given into execution; a French
-row-boat passed close to the ship, armed with muske<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_67"></a>[Pg 67]</span>toons
-and muskets, and having a crew of sixteen men.
-The ship had French colours flying at the time, trying
-to entice out the enemy’s convoy in shore, and therefore
-Captain Parker would not permit a musket to be
-fired to bring-to the small vessel passing near us. The
-wind was light, and the row-galley had no sooner got
-out of musket shot astern, than they out sweeps and
-began to pull away, suspecting, notwithstanding our
-French flag, that we were an English frigate. At this
-time our distance from Leghorn might be about seven
-or eight miles. A large polacre ship was seen to leeward,
-which was taken for an enemy; we bore up and
-made all sail after her, when I was called off the forecastle,
-and ordered to jump into the starboard cutter
-and go after the aforesaid galley; so much was I
-hurried that permission was not even allowed me to
-run below to my cabin, in the gun-room, to get my
-sword and pistols, but, obeying orders, let the consequences
-be what they might, having always been
-drilled into me, away I went, rather sulkily I confess,
-and when lowered down in the quarter-boat, I found
-that instead of the proper boat’s crew, any men that
-happened to be nearest, had been ordered into her;
-amongst others, an Italian, a native of Leghorn, who
-for some crime had been severely punished three days
-before. Just as we were shoving off I discovered there
-were neither muskets, pistols, nor swords in the boat;
-after some little delay, two muskets, and four cutlasses,
-with two cartouch boxes, were given us. With this
-equipment, I ordered the boat tackles to be unhooked,
-and away we pulled, but guess my astonishment, when<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_68"></a>[Pg 68]</span>
-upon opening the cartouch boxes, I found the gunner’s
-mate had given me the wrong ones, for one contained
-five, and the other only three ball cartridges. In about
-ten minutes after leaving the ship, the gig was sent to
-join me, with orders to attack the convoy, and take as
-many as possible. I therefore ordered the gig to go
-and attack a merchant vessel, which I pointed out,
-while I went after the row-galley. A short time
-brought us within musket shot; at this period the
-ship was four or five miles off to leeward, and we
-about the same distance from the shore. The few
-musket balls I had, were soon expended; observing,
-however, that whenever I took up the musket and
-pointed it the Frenchmen bobbed down, we pulled
-alongside and boarded her, and for a few minutes we
-had the vessel in possession, when a gun fired from
-the shore unfortunately drew my attention. The
-Italian whom I brought with me thinking it a good
-opportunity for revenge, joined the Frenchmen, and
-excited them to rise, and they being more than double
-our numbers, soon overpowered us&mdash;stabbed one of
-my men, threw two overboard, laid me sprawling by
-a blow on the head and a cut in my right hand. In
-half-an-hour I was safely landed in the lazaretto at
-Leghorn. I must do the enemy the justice to say,
-that the moment they had recaptured their vessel,
-they picked up the two men thrown overboard.</p>
-
-<p>We remained in the lazaretto three weeks, a surgeon
-coming occasionally to see the wounded man
-and myself, and give us some plasters. We not being
-touchable on account of our quarantine, old Sangrado<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_69"></a>[Pg 69]</span>
-brought a long slender white stick, with which he used
-to feel the seaman’s wound,&mdash;a stab in the left side,&mdash;and
-my hand; however we did not trouble the old
-fellow long, for low diet and good constitutions soon
-healed flesh wounds.</p>
-
-<p>At the expiration of three weeks, we were considered
-free from any possibility of our having the
-plague; a guard of French soldiers was therefore sent
-down to the door of the lazaretto, and we were committed
-to their charge and marched to the sound of an
-old brass drum to the fortress at Leghorn, where I had
-the option, either to sign a parole not to attempt to
-quit it, or be locked up in a prison. Of two evils
-always choose the least,&mdash;escape was impossible, for
-the castle or citadel was built upon a small islet joined
-to the town by a draw-bridge; a strong guard was
-constantly mounted there, and at sunset the bridge
-was hauled up, and the sea surrounded the place on
-all sides, while sentinels were posted at every angle.
-I therefore was glad to have permission from ten in
-the morning until six in the evening to walk round
-the fortress to breathe fresh air, with a young Russian
-mid who was taken with me. After that period we
-were locked up in the prison of the fortress until the
-next morning, when we were again let out to enjoy
-fresh air.</p>
-
-<p>For prisoners, we were treated very well. I was
-allowed tenpence a day to live upon, which, with occasional
-presents received from kind, friendly people
-in the town, we managed very well. For the first
-few nights our beds were rather too full of light and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_70"></a>[Pg 70]</span>
-heavy cavalry; but by adopting the plan of lying
-down in them a good half-hour before going to sleep,
-and then throwing off the clothes, and setting to
-work with a good will, in the course of a week most
-of the bugs and fleas were got rid of, and we enjoyed
-tolerable rest.</p>
-
-<p>At this period Leghorn was placed in a happy state
-of suspense, between being in actual possession of the
-French and under the government of the Queen of
-Etruria. The former held all the fortifications, as an
-army of observation, while the latter was acknowledged
-for a short time longer, because it suited the views of
-the French emperor, and we were permitted to have a
-kind of acting consul there, who was a most worthy,
-excellent man&mdash;the Rev. J. Hall&mdash;whose kindness I
-shall never forget. He had a very delightful family.
-What became of them after the French took the
-entire possession of the country I never knew. Some
-American merchants also (particularly a Mr. Purviance)
-showed me every attention when I was let out of
-prison. I tried, through the Rev. J. Hall, to get myself
-and boat’s crew liberated, claiming the protection of
-the Etrurian Government, they not being actually at
-war with England, and professing neutrality, but I
-soon found it was useless, for they dare do nothing to
-displease the French. However, most luckily for me,
-a friend of Joseph Bonaparte’s, who was at that
-time King of Naples, had been captured in a French
-corvette, <i>La Bergère</i>, and he sent out a flag of truce
-to Admiral Sir Sidney Smith, offering me in exchange
-for his friend, who was at Malta, which our admiral<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_71"></a>[Pg 71]</span>
-agreed to. At the expiration of six weeks I was,
-to my great joy, liberated, and took up my quarters
-in the town, where I remained more than a fortnight,
-visited Pisa, and Monte Negro, and amused myself
-about the town, until an opportunity offered of my
-getting to Palermo.</p>
-
-<p>Luckily, a Danish merchant brig was at this time
-ready for sailing, and I took my passage on board
-her, for, just when I was going to embark, an order
-came from King Joseph for me to be sent to him
-at Naples. My passport was signed and given me,
-and my bill of health from the quarantine office was
-likewise in my possession; the wind being fair, the
-brig was getting under. Had I been differently
-situated with regard to money and clothes, I would
-have risked placing myself in the hands of King
-Joseph, for the delight of travelling, even as a prisoner,
-by land to Naples, for the novelty of the thing; but
-my thread-bare coat, empty pockets, and tattered
-garments decided me to get on board the Dane as
-fast as possible, and run the risk of being taken out
-“<i>vi et armis</i>,” rather than go in such a shabby plight
-to Naples. Our acting consul hurried me off, telling
-me the police were after me. I was immediately put
-into a boat, and got safe on board, with two of my
-men, and the young Russian, who, by-the-bye, afterwards
-turned out to be a Frenchman, sent into our
-service by Bonaparte, through Russian influence, with
-some of their own youngsters, and passed off on our
-Government as a Russian. All that I can say is, that
-he was a clever, smart lad. I met him in Paris in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_72"></a>[Pg 72]</span>
-1818 (Lieutenant de Vaisseau), when he laughed at
-the trick that had been played, and told me several
-more Russian midshipmen in our service were young
-Frenchmen. This was done by some of the Emperor
-Alexander’s official servants, when it was the
-policy of Russia after the fatal battle of Austerlitz, in
-December, 1805, to endeavour to please Napoleon.
-Very probably the Russian agent received a douceur
-for the transaction, and as for humbugging John
-Bull, and taking advantage of his good-nature, this,
-added to a breach of faith and confidence, was of
-little consequence when compared with other matters.<a id="FNanchor_8" href="#Footnote_8" class="fnanchor">[H]</a></p>
-
-<p>I must confess that, until the time we were safe
-under sail, which was more than an hour after we
-got on board, my eye watched every boat with
-anxiety, expecting to see some French soldiers sent
-to take me out; nor was I quite satisfied of my
-safety until we had sailed through the Piombino
-Passage, which we did before dark, when I began
-to think I might whistle with safety, being well “out
-of the wood,” and in the probable track of some of
-our cruisers.</p>
-
-<p>After a pleasant passage of five days, we arrived
-safe at Palermo, and from thence I proceeded in a
-transport for Malta to look for the <i>Melpomene</i>.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_73"></a>[Pg 73]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_IX">CHAPTER IX.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Malta&mdash;Dreadful accident by the Explosion of a Magazine in the
-town, on the Bermola side&mdash;Nearly get into a scrape about breaking
-quarantine&mdash;Kind answer of the gallant Admiral Sir Sidney Smith to
-the complaint&mdash;Rejoin the <i>Melpomene</i>&mdash;Mutiny in Fribourg’s regiment&mdash;Cruise
-in the Adriatic.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">On my arrival at Malta I learnt that the ship was on
-a cruise, and that she had lost, a short time after I was
-taken, our gallant first lieutenant, Andrew Thompson,
-who was killed, with most of his boat’s crew, in
-boarding,&mdash;in the middle of the day, with the barge
-alone,&mdash;a French armed settee, with six long nine-pounders,
-off Leghorn; but the few survivors&mdash;Lieutenant
-Gascoigne, R.M.; Mr. W. Butler, mid;
-and a noble fellow, a sergeant of marines, named
-Milligan, with eight seamen, all that remained out
-of twenty-five men&mdash;gallantly hooked on the boat,
-and carried the vessel, driving some of her crew
-overboard, and causing the rest to beg for quarter.</p>
-
-<p>At the prize agent’s I found my chest of clothes,
-which had been left behind to be forwarded to England,
-it not being expected I should rejoin the ship.
-This was a great and unexpected comfort. The
-delight of a nice new coat, linen, &amp;c., after my poor<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_74"></a>[Pg 74]</span>
-ragged dress was a treat, which, fully to enjoy, a
-person should be placed in a similar situation.</p>
-
-<p>I was sent on board the <i>Madras</i> (guard-ship) to
-wait for a passage to join the <i>Melpomene</i>, when,
-in August, a dreadful accident happened. I was
-awakened out of sleep about six in the morning by
-a tremendous noise, and the bursting of shells. I
-jumped out of bed, and ran upon deck, thinking we
-were in action, when a shell fell upon the wharf to
-which the ship was secured, burst, and killed the
-gunner of the <i>Madras</i>. An immense cloud of black
-smoke and dust was hovering in the air, and cries,
-shrieks, and groans were heard in every direction:
-a magazine in the centre of the town of Bermola,
-nearly opposite the dockyard, in which many live
-shells had been placed by the French during the
-siege in 1800, had exploded. A party of artillerymen
-had been sent to take out the fuses, and by some
-unfortunate accident one shell had gone off, for one
-or two explosions were heard before the magazine
-blew up. How the event happened of course not a
-soul employed was left to tell, and, in addition to
-a sergeant’s party of artillerymen, nearly 300 of the
-inhabitants were killed or seriously injured; part of
-two streets were thrown down, and many more houses
-were severely shaken.</p>
-
-<p>A short time after this shocking event, a transport
-was directed to sail for Palermo, and a passage thither
-was ordered for me to look for my ship. Outside of
-Malta harbour we were boarded by a boat, bringing a
-lieutenant and some men from a vessel in quarantine<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_75"></a>[Pg 75]</span>
-to join their ship also at Palermo. The wind, which
-had been fair, suddenly changed, and the weather
-appearing unsettled, the master prudently bore up,
-and returned into harbour. I thought it very hard
-to be placed in quarantine, because we had taken
-the above officer and men out from the lazaretto,
-therefore the moment the ship dropt anchor, without
-waiting for the pratique boat to come alongside, I
-got into a shore boat, and landed in the town of
-Valette.</p>
-
-<p>Fortunately, as soon as I had landed, the captain
-of the <i>Madras</i> met me, and instantly sent me back
-to the transport, saying, if the quarantine officer found
-me out, I should be sent to prison. The next
-morning the wind came fair, and we put to sea.
-Just when we had got clear of the harbour&mdash;the
-pratique office having gained intelligence of my visit
-to the shore&mdash;a boat was sent after the ship to take
-me out, and place me in the lazaretto; but the wind
-freshening, we left her astern, and proceeded on our
-voyage to Palermo, where I expected that nothing
-more would have been thought of the matter.</p>
-
-<p>From thence I went on board the <i>Thunderer</i> (74),
-for a passage to Naples, where I was taken very ill
-with a kind of cholera morbus, which in a few hours
-reduced me very much, but a good constitution
-enabled me soon to recover from its attack, although
-it left me very weak for some time.</p>
-
-<p>On our arrival off Naples we found cruising at the
-entrance of the bay the gallant Admiral Sir Sidney
-Smith, who sent for me on board the <i>Pompée</i> (80),<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_76"></a>[Pg 76]</span>
-and said, “What is this you have been doing? You
-are a very pretty fellow! This morning a brig came
-from Malta, bringing a formal complaint against you
-from the governor for breaking quarantine, and requesting
-me to send you back there to be tried; but,”
-added he, in the kindest manner, “never mind, I have
-answered them, and told them they, not you, were to
-blame, for had they done their duty you could never
-have got on shore, and it was entirely owing to their
-neglect that you transgressed the quarantine laws.”
-That answer settled the matter, and I never heard
-anything more of the affair, although, after joining the
-<i>Melpomene</i>, which I did in the course of a few days,
-the ship was sent to Malta to refit.</p>
-
-<p>I was quite delighted to get back to my old ship,
-and be under the command of her dashing gallant
-young captain, who, had he not been killed afterwards
-in America, would have now been one of the best
-officers in the service. Shortly after our arrival at
-Malta, in September, a most serious mutiny broke out
-in a foreign regiment in our service, quartered at Fort
-Recazzoli, called “Fribourg’s,” or the Greek Light
-Infantry. It was composed of Germans, Swiss,
-French, Greeks, Istrians, Dalmations, and Albanians.
-Most of the officers were Germans, and the discipline
-of the regiment did not suit the ideas of these mercenaries;
-added to which, some of the Albanians and
-Dalmatians had been most shamefully cajoled by
-emissaries, under false promises, into our service. In
-those countries a kind of clanship prevails, and some
-of the heads of those clans were told, that if they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_77"></a>[Pg 77]</span>
-would enter, with their followers, into this regiment,
-they would receive the rank of captain. These wild
-chiefs, thinking it a great thing to be made captain at
-once in the British service, embarked with their followers,
-and came to Malta, where, instead of being
-placed in the situation they expected, they were put
-into the ranks, and one or two of them made a sergeant
-or corporal. This, with other causes, created a general
-disgust, and a secret plan was formed by these wild
-tribes to rush into the officers’ mess-room, while at
-dinner, and murder every one of them indiscriminately.
-Suspecting, however, that their plan had been discovered,
-they did not wait for dinner time, but about
-two or three o’clock in the afternoon, rose upon the
-few officers that were in the fort at the time, killed a
-captain, the adjutant, and quarter-master, wounded
-the colonel and major, whose lives were saved by the
-Germans, and hauling up the drawbridge, demanded
-terms, which were that the regiment should be disbanded,
-and themselves sent back to their own
-country.</p>
-
-<p>In the fort at this time was a gallant young officer
-of artillery, Lieutenant Fead, with a few of his men,
-one or two of whom refusing, like good soldiers, to
-quit their post without orders from their own officer,
-the mutineers killed them, making Lieutenant Fead
-prisoner, obliging him to point the guns and mortars
-towards the town of La Valette.</p>
-
-<p>Fort Recazzoli is a strong isolated fortress on the
-left hand side of Malta harbour as you come in from
-the sea, and in which was a large magazine of gun<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_78"></a>[Pg 78]</span>powder.
-The mutineers held out several days, and
-threatened to fire upon the town of La Valette if their
-terms were not immediately agreed to. One day
-indeed they did fire a few shells, but Lieutenant Fead
-purposely gave the mortars so much elevation, that
-the shells dropped quite clear of the town. Things
-had remained in this state for two or three days, with
-all the garrison at Malta and the seamen and marines
-of the few ships in harbour on the alert, boats rowing
-guard, the batteries manned, and a cordon of troops
-drawn round the fort; when, on the afternoon of the
-second day a grand tiraillade was heard within it, the
-Germans and Swiss, with the few artillerymen who
-had taken no part in the mutiny, and had been disarmed
-by the others, watching an opportunity, made
-a rush, destroyed the guard at the drawbridge, let it
-down, and sallied forth out of the fortress, bringing
-with them one or two wounded officers and forty-five
-of the principal malcontents; the remainder hauled up
-the drawbridge and held out for several days, again
-demanding terms, and threatening to blow up the
-magazine if they were not complied with.</p>
-
-<p>The mutineers being now reduced to a few, early
-in the morning, we stormed the place with scaling
-ladders, when part of the 44th Regiment and some
-sailors got possession of most of the fort; but the
-mutineers had not been idle, they had built up a kind
-of high breast-work of large loose stones before the
-magazine, within which they retreated, and kept up a
-brisk fire of musketry&mdash;a ball from which grazed my
-hat and stuck in the wall near me. They used<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_79"></a>[Pg 79]</span>
-occasionally, from behind this breast-work, to demand
-a parley and terms, always ending with the threat of
-blowing up the magazine, with themselves, in which
-were several hundred barrels of gunpowder. General
-Valette, who commanded the garrison, very properly
-refused to listen to any but an unconditional surrender&mdash;things
-having gone too far.</p>
-
-<p>We stationed our men under the bomb proofs,
-it being the general opinion of the engineer officers
-that when the magazine did blow up the greatest
-explosion would be towards the sea, where the wall
-of the magazine was weakest, and that under the
-bomb proof the men would be comparatively safe;
-and as these desperate fellows had declared, that if
-when St. John’s clock should strike the hour of nine
-in the evening, their terms, free pardon and safe conduct
-back to their own country, were not complied
-with, they would set fire to the train and blow themselves
-and the fortress up, we awaited the event with
-much anxiety. A strong suspicion existing that they
-had undermined the garrison, and had made a passage
-out for themselves at the back of it, I was sent to row
-guard to intercept any attempt they might make to
-escape by water. At about nine, off went the train,
-and a most awful explosion took place; the whole
-sea wall was blown to atoms, and the shock like that
-of an earthquake was felt far and near, some fish in the
-harbour made a spring out of the water, which showed
-they also were sensible of the vibration. Three of the
-44th Regiment who were posted sentinels were killed
-by the falling stones, and a few more were hurt. I<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_80"></a>[Pg 80]</span>
-immediately pulled on shore and had communication
-with the fort, and then went and made my report to
-the senior naval officer. These desperate wretches, at
-first, were considered to have perished, but, about a
-week afterwards they were brought in, nearly starved
-to death, having been unable to make their escape
-from the island. They were immediately tried by a
-court martial and hanged.</p>
-
-<p>To return to those forty-five mutineers dragged out
-of the fortress by the sortie. They were also brought
-before a military tribunal; fifteen of them were condemned
-to be hanged, and most of the remainder
-to be shot. The execution was most terribly mismanaged:
-it presented, indeed, a shocking spectacle.
-But I will say no more upon the subject, further than
-to the last moment these poor wretches continued to
-vent their abuse on the English, and the men sentenced
-to be hanged endeavoured to keep up the
-spirits of those that were about to be shot&mdash;even
-when the ropes were round their necks they called
-to them, saying, “What are you crying for? It is
-we that ought to bewail our fate of being hanged like
-dogs instead of being shot like men.”</p>
-
-<p>I recollect seeing a Catholic priest very busy on
-the scaffold, wishing to persuade the criminals to kiss
-the crucifix before they were launched into eternity,
-but they kicked him off, and spat in his face, telling
-him he was no better than themselves.</p>
-
-<p>In November we sailed on a cruise off Corfu, and
-from thence up the Adriatic, where we spent a very
-stormy winter, blockading Venice, anchoring occa<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_81"></a>[Pg 81]</span>sionally
-at Trieste, and under Cape Salvatore, the
-islands of Lissa, Sansego, and various other places.
-The N.E. winds in winter blow most furiously from
-the Istrian and Dalmatian mountains, and, if caught
-by these winds on the Italian coast, a ship is placed
-in a most critical situation; a heavy, short sea rises
-with the wind, and you are obliged to carry a press of
-canvas to prevent being driven on a lee shore.</p>
-
-<p>A Russian squadron of seven sail of the line,
-besides frigates and transports, with troops on board,
-arrived from Naples early in the spring of 1807, and
-anchored off Trieste, the Emperor of Russia having
-withdrawn his alliance from us, professing neutrality,
-in consequence of the great success of the French
-army under Napoleon in Austria, &amp;c. The Russian
-admiral, Greig, very politely sent to Captain Pat.
-Campbell, of the <i>Unité</i>, the senior officer in the
-Adriatic, to say that he intended to send a ship of
-the line with the transports to land the troops they
-had on board at Venice, we being off the port
-blockading it, in company with the <i>Unité</i>. Captain
-P. Campbell replied that two British frigates would
-never suffer one Russian seventy-four, with her convoy,
-to break the blockade, and therefore requested,
-if that was the admiral’s intention, he would take
-his whole force, which would prevent any collision
-between us.</p>
-
-<p>Admiral Greig very properly did so, and saw his
-convoy enter safely the port of Venice.</p>
-
-<p>During the nine months we cruised in this sea we
-took and destroyed a great many of the enemy’s<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_82"></a>[Pg 82]</span>
-small vessels; but our prize concerns were unfortunately
-entrusted to agents, who became insolvent,
-and our hard-earned money was in consequence lost.
-I shall in the sequel suggest a plan for the management
-of prize-money, in the event of our again being
-engaged in war, it having fallen to my lot to lose
-every penny by the breaking of four agents in different
-parts of the world, into whose hands we
-entrusted the management of our prize affairs.</p>
-
-<p>These honest people have an easy way of getting
-rid of money committed to their charge. A ship
-brings captured vessels into harbour; on board comes
-Mr. A., B., C, or D., with a smirking face and soft
-tongue, making low bows, hoping he may have the
-honour,&mdash;being an accredited agent under a bond for
-£20,000,&mdash;to transact the affairs of H.M. ship! Officers
-generally being strangers in the port, and having
-orders frequently to proceed to sea again in forty-eight
-hours, after completing water and provisions,
-have no time to look after or make inquiries about
-<i>stability</i> of prize agents, and therefore trust the concerns
-to the first that comes. The moment a ship is
-fitted out she goes to sea on another cruise&mdash;probably
-for three or four months; the prizes in the meanwhile
-are sold by the agent. Now, what does he generally
-do with the money? Why! speculates with it on his
-own account. If the scheme answers, he puts the
-amount of his speculation into his own pocket&mdash;we,
-whose the money ought to be, never getting any part
-of it. If it fails, the prize agent breaks, and off he
-starts, paying perhaps not a shilling in the pound.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_83"></a>[Pg 83]</span>
-Oh! but then you have got his bond for £20,000!
-What matters this amongst a whole fleet, when he
-runs away with perhaps more than £100,000 of their
-money!</p>
-
-<p>I am not putting an extreme case&mdash;this did happen
-more than once&mdash;and it would astonish the public if
-the whole system of prize-plundering agents that was
-carried on last war could be laid open. They would,
-indeed, wonder men could be so easily led to trust
-persons with large sums of money without knowing
-more about them. My reply is, necessity obliges them.</p>
-
-<p>Now, the remedy I propose is this. Let the Government,
-in the event of another war, take the prize
-agency into their own hands, and deduct an eighth or
-a quarter to cover all expenses, and, whenever ships
-leave a station, let the money be sent to England.
-Government would have the use of it; the officers
-and ships’ companies would be sure to receive the
-remainder; and it would be much better to give up
-an eighth or a quarter to Government to make sure
-of the rest than to lose, as has happened in many
-cases, every sixpence of our hard-earned reward.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to our cruise. One morning watch,
-during the time we were washing decks, and when
-the after-skylight gratings were off, a strange sail
-was seen from the topmast-head. Without thinking
-of such things as hatchways, back I ran from the fore
-part of the quarter-deck to hail the maintop-masthead,
-and to ask the man looking out what she
-looked like, when, just as I had placed my speaking-trumpet
-to my mouth, head over heels down the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_84"></a>[Pg 84]</span>
-after-hatchway I fell, bang into the gun-room. Fortunately,
-I came off with only a severe bruise, and
-the spraining of my right ankle, which laid me up for
-three weeks.</p>
-
-<p>The vessel proved to be an enemy’s small coaster,
-called a “trabaculo,” the rig of which is merely two
-large lug-sails, with a boom at the foot of them, with
-a jib, and sometimes a stay-sail and top-sail, to be
-set flying when going before the wind. She was in
-ballast, from Chiozza, bound to Ancona for a cargo.
-On searching the prisoners for letters and papers, we
-found concealed in their waistbands and linings of
-their clothes seven hundred and sixty-eight gold
-Venetian zechins, besides some dollars, which we
-took the liberty of extracting. They belonged to a
-rich Venetian merchant, and he had sent the money
-on board, under the charge of the master of the
-vessel, to purchase her cargo. On our chasing him,
-seeing no means of escape, he distributed the money
-amongst the men to sew in their dresses.</p>
-
-<p>When we first captured him, finding the vessel
-without anything in her, Captain Parker was on the
-eve of letting her go, when the prying eyes of a
-young mid made the discovery of the concealed
-money, which we took from them, and then allowed
-the vessel, with her crew, to return to her own port,
-she not being worth the trouble of sending to Malta.</p>
-
-<p>Some prizes in a gale of wind having been driven
-on shore near Pesaro, on the coast of Italy, a flag
-of truce came off to offer an exchange of prisoners, to
-which we gladly acceded. I was sent thither, with<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_85"></a>[Pg 85]</span>
-two boats, to bring back our seamen and petty officers.
-The French, seeing us coming, got the men
-down on the pier, to have them ready. Several
-officers of that nation, who were standing there, came
-bowing and scraping to the stairs of the landing-place,
-making a great number of fine speeches, and
-offering me refreshments of all kinds, if I would do
-them the honour to walk up into the town, which
-I gladly accepted, hoping to rest my boats’ crews
-and stretch my legs for half-an-hour on shore, after
-blockading their ports for six months.</p>
-
-<p>Just when I was stepping out of the boat I observed
-they held a consultation. Afterwards one of the officers
-came up to me, and said that he was very sorry,
-but orders had just arrived for them on no account
-to suffer me to come out of my boat. Now this was
-utterly false, no one having come near them, for I
-kept my eye upon them the whole time. “It was
-very unfortunate&mdash;they were quite in despair about
-it,” holding up their hands, shrugging up their
-shoulders, and making wry faces all the time; “they
-wished so much to show me civility&mdash;refreshments
-were already laid out at their lodgings&mdash;but what
-could they do?&mdash;they were so sorry&mdash;but orders must
-be obeyed.” So, taking off their cocked hats, they
-wished me adieu. I returned the salute, thanked
-them for the trouble they had taken in getting a
-repast ready for me, which the authorities would not
-permit me to enjoy; then off we shoved the boats,
-and, after a long pull, got back to the ship with our
-exchanged shipmates, much amused with the French<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_86"></a>[Pg 86]</span>
-offer of refreshments, which it was never intended I
-should partake of.</p>
-
-<p>We continued in the Adriatic until the end of
-September, 1807, when we proceeded to Trieste to
-embark Lord Pembroke and suite, and carry them
-to England. They had come from Vienna. Amongst
-his lordship’s suite were Sir William A’Court, the
-present Lord Heytesbury, and a Mr. Hammond. They
-were all pleasant, gentlemanly men, and although bred
-in Courts, where little else than cold-heartedness and
-deceit are learned, they in a short time won the esteem
-of us unsophisticated sailors.</p>
-
-<p>After a stormy passage of nearly six weeks, we
-anchored at Spithead, when I found myself appointed
-lieutenant of H.M. Ship <i>Swiftsure</i> (74), bearing the
-flag of my much-esteemed friend and admiral, Sir
-John Borlase Warren, who had been appointed commander-in-chief
-on the Halifax station.</p>
-
-<p>After an absence from England of three years, the
-ship being on the point of sailing, I could only get
-one day’s sight of home, when I set off to join my
-new ship at Plymouth, and the end of November
-sailed for the North American station to relieve
-Admiral Berkeley, where we remained three years
-and a half.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_87"></a>[Pg 87]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_X">CHAPTER X.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">North American station, from 1808 to 1811&mdash;Bermuda&mdash;Anecdote&mdash;Death
-of Captain Conn.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">We had a long passage out, running far to the southward,
-and crossing the tropic of Cancer before we
-hauled to the westward for the islands of Bermuda.
-In a squall we carried away the fore-yard, which,
-being a bad stick, went in three pieces. However,
-we soon made another, which answered our purposes
-remarkably well, and at the end of six weeks we
-arrived in Murray’s anchorage.</p>
-
-<p>These islands consist of a group of three hundred
-and sixty-five, which the Bermudians tell you is the
-reason there are three hundred and sixty-five days in
-the year. They are very picturesque, and covered
-chiefly with sweet-smelling cedar trees, of whose
-timber several fine 18-gun sloops-of-war and small
-schooners have been built.</p>
-
-<p>Had the Bermudians been permitted to follow their
-own plan, no doubt these would have been very safe
-vessels: but our Navy Board took out a <i>patent for
-making coffins</i>, and sent them out plans and dimensions,
-from which they were by no means to deviate.
-The consequence was, such a tribe of little tubs, in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_88"></a>[Pg 88]</span>
-the shape of two and three-masted schooners, were
-built, that it was absolutely throwing money away
-to construct them. Several of them, indeed, did
-founder, with all their crews. The ship-sloops were
-certainly better&mdash;I may say, with truth, they were
-favourites&mdash;very good sea boats, and in every respect
-excellent vessels.</p>
-
-<p>Besides cedar trees, these islands produce arrow-root
-of the best quality, tobacco, Indian corn, &amp;c.,
-but not in sufficient quantities for their own consumption:
-they, therefore, import flour and other
-articles of food from the United States, and other
-places. Abundance of fish is taken, such as grouper&mdash;which
-is a fine, firm fish of the rock species, frequently
-weighing several pounds&mdash;chub, porgay, and
-various other kinds; and in the spring of the year
-a spermaceti whale fishery is carried on, this species
-frequenting those seas at that period.</p>
-
-<p>The scenery of these islands is very pretty. Everything
-here is in miniature&mdash;little hills, valleys, and
-lakes; whilst blue and red birds, flitting about under
-a brilliant sun, give the whole the appearance of fairy
-land. The heat in summer is very oppressive, and
-the heavy tempests of wind, or, to use the native
-expression, “the blow,” accompanied with frightful
-storms of thunder and lightning, are most terrific.
-In winter the gales generally commence from the
-S.S.W. to S.W., and then fly round to the N.W. at
-once in a most severe squall.</p>
-
-<p>The approach to the Bermudas, amongst coral rocks
-and breakers, is attended with great danger, unless<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_89"></a>[Pg 89]</span>
-you are quite sure of your reckoning. Before the
-great improvements in navigation, many an unfortunate
-vessel was wrecked on them.</p>
-
-<p>The whole chain of these islands is formed like the
-coral banks in the south seas; there are no real
-springs of fresh water, and most of the inhabitants
-get this necessary article from tanks attached to their
-houses to catch the rain, and when these are dry they
-go to wells dug in different parts of the sea coast,
-through which the salt water filters, and becomes
-tolerably sweet. From these the men-of-war, too,
-generally get their supply, which has the effect of
-Cheltenham water, and saves the trouble of applying
-to the doctor.</p>
-
-<p>With regard to society, much depends upon the
-military and naval commanders-in-chief, the regiments,
-and king’s ships. Some of the Bermudian
-families are highly respectable.</p>
-
-<p>Much merriment was afforded one evening at a
-party, to which a naval captain, who is now dead, was
-invited. He had come in from a long cruise, and had
-been paying his addresses to a certain young lady living
-on one of the islands; but the tongue of slander had
-been busy against him during his absence, and on his
-making a proposal she refused him. This came to
-the ears of the lady of the house, who, wishing to quiz
-the poor man, and to be very facetious, forgetting that
-her husband had but one eye, and was not very
-handsome otherwise, began her attack thus: “So,
-Captain &mdash;&mdash;, I hear Miss &mdash;&mdash; has refused you,” and
-went on very cruelly to torment the poor man, in his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_90"></a>[Pg 90]</span>
-distress, as ladies <i>can</i> do sometimes when they wish to
-be <i>mischievous</i>. He bore it all for a long time with
-great patience and forbearance; being goaded at
-length beyond endurance, he rose from his chair and
-said, “Mrs. &mdash;&mdash;, when such an old, ugly fellow as your
-husband, with but one eye, can get a pretty young
-woman like yourself for a wife, I ought never to
-despair.” And out he walked, the tables fairly turned
-on the facetious dame. Having mentioned the word
-“slander” in the above anecdote, I am induced to add
-another story by way of advice to young ladies.</p>
-
-<p>Whenever your friend&mdash;and many young ladies
-have a confidential one&mdash;abuses or throws out hints
-to the prejudice of your absent lover, listen to her
-with caution. The following little tale will point out
-the necessity of not relying entirely upon the recommendation
-of bosom friends in love affairs, for it is an
-old saying that all advantages in love, war, law, and
-elections are considered fair. Two young ladies from
-twenty-three to twenty-five years of age, who lived in
-a large town in the north, were first cousins, and dear
-confidential friends; the one, a widow, had soft, pretty,
-languishing, blue eyes, that said, “pray do love me;”
-the other, a spinster, had black, sparkling eyes, that
-said, “you shall love me.” The former had an offer
-of marriage from a widower, who had a son about
-fifteen years of age, whom he wished to put into a
-profession previous to his marriage, but wanted some
-ready money to do so. He, therefore, proposed that
-the fair widow should advance him the money necessary
-to enable him to do it. She, very properly, consulted<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_91"></a>[Pg 91]</span>
-her friends; some gave one opinion, some another.
-She hesitated between love and money&mdash;she called in
-her cousin, Miss Black-eyes, who strongly advised her
-by no means to part with her cash. She still hesitated,
-asked other advice&mdash;sent for her cousin again&mdash;went
-so far as to purchase her wedding dress and make
-preparations for furnishing a house. In the meanwhile
-Miss Black-eyes had had frequent communications
-with the gentleman, and also with her cousin. At last,
-she got some friends to back her opinion, and, finally,
-the match was broken off. But the same day the
-spinster gave the money to the gentleman, who had a
-license ready&mdash;off they went to the next parish and
-were married. Therefore, I say, be very cautious in
-adopting any opinion where the least chance of a clash
-of interest is likely to exist, particularly in <i>love</i> affairs.</p>
-
-<p>Our cruises in winter, during the time we were on this
-station, were generally to the southward. Sometimes
-we ran down to the island of Porto Rico, the Mona
-passage, and off Anegada, with the hope of picking
-up some of the French vessels from Martinique or
-Guadaloupe; but the whole time we remained here,
-nearly four years, only one ship letter-of-marque, a
-schooner, and brig, fell into our hands.</p>
-
-<p>In our summer cruises, we, on one occasion, went to
-Madeira; another time to Fayal, one of the western
-isles, and when there, paid our respects to the nuns in
-the convents, and bought some of their pretty wreaths
-for ladies’ hair, beautifully made of parrots’ feathers, in
-imitation of myrtle. When first we went to the bars
-of the convent, the abbess sent some of the elder<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_92"></a>[Pg 92]</span>
-sisters to offer flowers for sale, but these finding no
-market, she changed her set, and the next time some
-pretty, interesting young nuns offered their goods,
-which we immediately bought from such fair hands.
-If the old harpy of an abbess went away for a minute
-they used to smile, talk, and give us their hands to
-kiss through the grates; and their handsome dark eyes
-seemed to say, “Oh! that these bars were removed,
-that I might get out of this horrid prison, to which I
-am consigned by sordid parents to make way for some
-male branch of the family.” Several of these young
-ladies, we were informed, had been expatriated from
-Portugal, from that motive. A short time after we left
-Fayal, one young nun did make her escape with a
-captain in the navy, who very honourably married her;
-but her poor friend, who tried to accompany her, met
-with a serious accident, falling down and breaking her
-leg, when getting out of the convent window. She
-was taken back to her cell, where, it was said, she
-underwent purgatory upon earth.</p>
-
-<p>When on the North American station I met with a
-severe hurt, while making sail in chase, which laid me
-up for a considerable period. A rope having got loose,
-struck me on the face, broke my jaw, and knocked out
-five of my teeth.</p>
-
-<p>In winter, the ships used to rendezvous at Bermuda;
-during summer at Halifax, Nova Scotia. At the latter
-place we used to enjoy pleasant society, amongst
-very kind-hearted and friendly people, whose pretty
-daughters made sad havoc with the hearts of both the
-army and navy.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_93"></a>[Pg 93]</span></p>
-
-<p>After one of our long summer cruises I got leave of
-absence for ten days, and travelled with a friend, an
-officer of the Royal Engineers, in his gig, across the
-country to Annapolis Royal; the scenery did not
-strike me as being particularly interesting. I saw a
-great deal of barren, dreary, uncultivated land, that
-wanted the hand of man to clear it, and make it “bring
-forth its fruit in due season.”</p>
-
-<p>Driving along the road we frequently started coveys
-of spruce partridges. I used occasionally, when time
-permitted, to get a shot at them. These birds do not,
-like our partridges, take to the fields, but on rising from
-the ground always fly into fir trees; they are very stupid,
-and once in a tree will allow you to shoot them all, provided
-you begin with the lowest and proceed upwards.</p>
-
-<p>I recollect at one place where we breakfasted after
-leaving Windsor, a large brown bear and two cubs
-had been caught during the night in a pit fall; the old
-one was shot in the pit, and the young ones kept alive,
-probably to be sent to England.</p>
-
-<p>The native Mic Mac Indians are a poor race, those,
-at least, that I saw in Halifax and its neighbourhood.
-They are confined to a few families. They used to
-come to the town in their slight bark canoes, bringing
-game, and skins of the silver and black fox, and boxes
-made of the bark of the birch tree, ornamented with
-the small quills of the porcupine, dyed of various
-colours. I have often been in their wigwams, and
-always found the people civil. Some of the young
-squaws were passable, but the old women frightful.
-These wigwams are easily built: half a dozen poles<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_94"></a>[Pg 94]</span>
-placed triangularly and covered with the bark of the
-birch tree, is the general plan; the fire is in the middle
-of the hut, the smoke finding its way out at the top,
-and by the door-way. These habitations appear
-warm, and the inmates healthy. When travelling, the
-women carry their babies in a kind of basket, strapped
-to their back, which resembles the lower part of a
-fiddle-case, peeping out of which their little smoked
-faces have a curious appearance. After disposing of
-their wares, these people generally get drunk and fight,
-the men beating the squaws, who, in their turn, belabour
-the men. It not unfrequently happens that
-those who return by water contrive to upset their
-canoes, when they lose all the articles they have bought;
-it is, however, very rare that any of the crew are
-drowned. Fish of various sorts are most abundant,
-and the market very good. The harbour of Halifax
-is safe, but sometimes difficult to make, on account of
-the thick fogs, which in particular winds,&mdash;those from
-south-east to south-west,&mdash;hang about the coast.</p>
-
-<p>A very provoking circumstance occurred to one of
-the lieutenants, who was a Welchman, and a married
-man, during a cruise, caused by a nanny-goat eating
-his letters that he had just received from England,
-previous to his having read them.</p>
-
-<p>A schooner joined us at sea from Bermuda, bringing
-the mail and letters from there and Halifax, Nova
-Scotia. We all felt very anxious about news, for it
-was nearly ten months since we had heard from “sweet
-home;” in consequence of our being out cruising, and
-going from place to place, they had missed us.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_95"></a>[Pg 95]</span></p>
-
-<p>The weather was squally when the above vessel
-joined us with the letters, and by the time her boat
-had reached us, and they were delivered to their owners,
-it was necessary to turn the hands up to reef the topsails.
-Poor M&mdash;&mdash;, for fear his letters should get wet
-in his pocket, for it began to rain as well as blow, left
-them for safety on the rudder-head in the wardroom,
-and went on deck to his station. No sooner was the
-evolution performed than down he ran below, thinking,
-poor fellow! to have a nice, quiet reading of his two
-letters from his wife, giving an account of a new bit
-of mischief that had been added to his establishment
-during his absence, for he had left his wife near her
-confinement, previous to his leaving England. Now,
-only imagine M&mdash;&mdash;’s rage, vexation, and consternation,
-on beholding Mrs. Taffy, the Welch goat,
-mounted on the rudder-head, very quietly eating up
-the letters. One was quite gone, and a very small
-corner of the other sticking out of the goat’s mouth,
-which she was endeavouring to masticate with all
-possible dispatch. “Nanny” was seized by the throat
-in a moment, and measures adopted to make her
-disgorge the precious writing, but all in vain, for she
-had taken such good care to bite them in small pieces,
-in order that they might the more easily be swallowed,
-and readily digested, that not a fragment larger than
-a crown piece was recovered, and he had to wait eight
-long months more, before he got others to tell him the
-contents of those, and give him information about his
-family.</p>
-
-<p>This was a trial of temper. We commiserated,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_96"></a>[Pg 96]</span>
-sympathised, and found fault with him for not putting
-them in his pocket, writing-desk, or any safer place
-than where he had left them; in short, he had all Job’s
-comforters, but was obliged to have recourse to Dame
-Patience, hoping that some other vessel might soon
-come from home and bring him others. Eight long
-months elapsed ere he received information from England&mdash;making
-in the whole nearly eighteen months&mdash;a
-vexatious period at any time, but still more so in his
-case. The goat had been used to run in and out of the
-ward-room, for she was a great pet, and generally
-after dinner had some biscuit and a little wine or
-grog given to her, which she was very fond of. After
-the unfortunate affair of the letters she was banished
-for a month. After that period it was forgotten, and
-she came in for her biscuit and grog as usual.</p>
-
-<p>On one of our spring cruises, in May, 1810, we lost
-our captain (John Conn), who, in a fit of derangement,
-jumped overboard out of his stern cabin, and
-was drowned. He was a thorough seaman, and very
-much beloved by us all. He served in Lord Rodney’s
-fleet in the action of the 12th of April, 1782, and
-commanded the <i>Dreadnought</i> (98), at the battle of
-Trafalgar. He was mate of the <i>Ramilies</i> (74), Rear-Admiral
-Thomas Graves, when she was lost in that
-dreadful gale, which proved fatal to the <i>Ville de Paris</i>
-(110), <i>Glorieux</i> (74), <i>Centaur</i> (74), and various other
-men-of-war, transports, and merchant ships, in the
-gulf stream, not far from the latitude of Bermuda,
-when returning to England in August of that year
-with the prizes taken by Lord Rodney.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_97"></a>[Pg 97]</span></p>
-
-<p>He gave me a piece of advice respecting the coast
-of America which I shall never forget, and as it is
-of that sort which all seamen liable to be sent on the
-North American station ought to be acquainted with,
-I shall mention it here. “Never lay your ship to at
-night in a gale of wind to the S.S.W. on the coast of
-America on the larboard tack, for the wind generally
-flies round at once to the N.W. with a heavy squall,
-and takes the ship flat back.” It was this, and lying-to
-under a main-sail, which caused the loss of the
-<i>Ramilies</i> at that period. He often gave me an
-account of that misfortune. It was as follows:&mdash;“We
-were on the larboard tack, with a reefed main-sail
-set. The gale commenced from S.E., and gradually
-came round to the S.S.W., blowing extremely
-hard. When in the middle watch of the night of the
-16th of October, 1782, the wind flew round in a most
-tremendous squall to the N.W., taking the ship aback,
-and throwing her nearly on her beam ends. We
-tried to brace the main-yard round, but, finding it
-impossible, we cut the foot rope of the main-sail,
-which was quite a new one, with the hope of splitting
-it, but it was bound so tight against the mast and
-rigging that we could not effect this. The ship at
-this time had great stern-way upon her; the sea,
-breaking over her poop, stove in the dead-lights and
-windows, and filled the ward-room and admiral’s
-cabin with water, and before anything could be done
-the main-mast, mizen-mast, and foretop-mast went
-over the side; the stern-post was much shaken, and
-the ship, nearly a new one, sprung a dangerous leak.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_98"></a>[Pg 98]</span>
-At daylight the whole convoy was scattered; many
-of the vessels dismasted&mdash;some had foundered&mdash;and
-the sea was covered with wreck; the wind blowing a
-hurricane. By dint of perseverance, having thrown
-overboard most of her guns and heavy stores, we
-succeeded in keeping the ship afloat until the 22nd,
-when, finding she would not float much longer, we
-took advantage of a lull of wind, and saved the crew
-on board a few of the merchant ships that had continued
-by her.”</p>
-
-<p>Captain J. Conn also mentioned that had the orders
-of Rear-Admiral Graves been attended to the ship
-would probably not have been lost. The admiral
-came out of his cabin in the middle watch, and, after
-looking about him and making his remarks to the
-officer on deck, said, “It looks black under the lee
-bow, and I see some flashes of lightning. Should the
-clouds appear to near you, immediately haul up the
-main-sail and wear ship.” Unfortunately the admiral
-went into his cabin without sending for the captain,
-who slept in the ward-room. The moment the admiral
-had gone in, the officer of the watch ran down to
-Captain S. M., and mentioned the directions he had
-received. The captain replied, “It is my positive
-order you do no such thing without first coming to
-acquaint me.” The lieutenant of the watch had
-scarcely got on deck when he saw that a most violent
-squall, with shift of wind, was about to take place.
-Down he ran to acquaint his captain, according to
-orders, but before he could get again upon the deck
-to give the necessary directions the mischief had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_99"></a>[Pg 99]</span>
-done: she was taken aback, lost her masts, and was
-finally abandoned and burnt&mdash;all owing to adhering
-too closely to etiquette. The captain very properly
-was never employed afterwards.</p>
-
-<p>From Bermuda we sailed to Halifax, where, one
-afternoon, a man fell from the main-top, and striking
-first against the main-rigging, then against the spare topsail-yard
-in the chains, dropped into the sea. Being
-on deck, I ran to the gangway, and, seeing no time
-was to be lost, jumped overboard, and, fortunately,
-getting hold of the man just as he was sinking, I kept
-him up until a boat was sent to our assistance. His
-fall having been broken by the main-rigging, previous
-to his striking the topsail-yard, was probably the
-cause of his life being saved.</p>
-
-<p>After remaining in port some time, orders arrived
-from England for the 7th Fusiliers, commanded by
-Lieutenant-Colonel Blakeney, to proceed to join the
-army of Lord Wellington. We embarked the headquarters
-and four hundred men of this fine regiment.
-The remainder were sent out in other men-of-war,
-and, after a passage of three weeks, were landed at
-Lisbon. The officers were a most pleasant, gentlemanly
-set of men; but out of the whole of those
-whom we took thither only the gallant Sir Edward
-Blakeney (now a Major-General) and another are
-alive.</p>
-
-<p>After returning to Halifax nothing of interest occurred
-on the station for the remainder of our time,
-except that Captain Charles Austen, a very amiable
-man and excellent officer, who had been placed in<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_100"></a>[Pg 100]</span>
-command of the <i>Swiftsure</i> in lieu of Captain Conn,
-who was drowned, was appointed to the <i>Cleopatra</i>,
-Captain Lloyd joining the former ship in his stead.</p>
-
-<p>We returned to England in the spring of the year
-1811, and the ship was paid off at Chatham.</p>
-
-<p>After a month at home, I took a passage in the
-<i>Port Mahon</i>, brig, of 18 guns, to Lisbon, and on the
-11th of June arrived in the Tagus, and was placed on
-the Admiralty list for promotion.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_101"></a>[Pg 101]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XI">CHAPTER XI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Lisbon&mdash;Trip to the Army of Lord Wellington&mdash;Montemor Novo,
-O’Rodondo, Villa Vicosa, Elvas, Fort le Lippe.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">I was appointed to a ship in the Tagus by the commander-in-chief,
-Admiral Sir G. Berkeley, whose
-amiable family treated me with great kindness and
-attention.</p>
-
-<p>Having but little to do, I passed much time in
-examining the beautifully situated, but dirty town of
-Lisbon. If it were not for the scavenger dogs which
-prowl about and take “pot luck,” the streets would be
-impassable from filth. Having a brother<a id="FNanchor_9" href="#Footnote_9" class="fnanchor">[I]</a> in the 14th<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_102"></a>[Pg 102]</span>
-Dragoons, with the army of Lord Wellington, whom
-I had not seen for more than seven years, and a
-remount of horses arriving from England for the
-regiment, amongst which was one for my brother, I
-thought it a very good opportunity of going to see
-him.</p>
-
-<p>The admiral having been so obliging as to grant
-me a month’s leave of absence, on the 19th of July, I
-accordingly left Lisbon, placing on the horse a pair of
-saddle bags, blanket, great coat, sword and pistols,
-together with some hams and brandy, which I was
-told would be very acceptable in camp.</p>
-
-<p>After a short ride, I embarked in a Portuguese
-passage boat, with a motley group of persons. A sail
-of three hours brought me safe to Aldea Galega, a
-small town on the southern bank of the Tagus.</p>
-
-<p>I was now about to travel in a strange country.
-Unable to speak the language, and having no servant
-to take care of my horse, the troops having gone forward
-the previous day, I began to fear I should be<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_103"></a>[Pg 103]</span>
-placed in some difficulty. Before me was a march of
-five or six days,&mdash;during which my steed would require
-that care a groom only could bestow,&mdash;I determined,
-however, to push on and trust to fortune, and my
-Portuguese vocabulary. Looking about the miserable
-town of Aldea Galega for mules, I was lucky enough
-to meet with a dismounted dragoon, belonging to the
-14th, going to Lisbon, who informed me that the
-detachment of his regiment, which I ought to have
-accompanied, had marched from Galega only the day
-before, and that by my making all haste, I most likely
-should overtake them in less than forty-eight hours.
-I pressed this man into my service, went to a commissary,
-got two mules, on one of which I put my
-baggage, mounting the soldier, with three days’ rations
-for myself and cattle, on the other. In the evening
-we left this town for a place called Pegoeus, twenty
-miles distant, and after a most disagreeable ride
-through a long stunted wood, with a heavy sandy soil,
-in which the horse and mules sank half-way up their
-knees at every step, a little before midnight reached
-Pegoeus, a most wretched place, consisting of three
-miserable dirty hovels, very much resembling cow-houses,
-into one of which we entered, in order to rest
-the horse and mules. Sitting down upon my baggage,
-I loaded my pistols, as the house was full of ill-looking
-Portuguese and Spanish muleteers and peasantry,
-nearly all armed, and half drunk, and making a great
-noise. Some people I was informed had been robbed
-a few hours before of everything, near this very place.
-Although very much tired, sleeping was out of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_104"></a>[Pg 104]</span>
-question; I was therefore glad when daylight arrived.
-While my cattle were being saddled, I was fain to
-undress by the road-side, and shake off some score of
-fleas that were scampering over me in all directions:
-then mounting my horse, a cool ride of five hours
-brought me to a small village called Vendas Novas,
-where I remained a short time to get something to
-eat, and rest the animals. Here we were fortunate
-enough to get tea and eggs for breakfast, and I heard
-to my great joy, that the detachment was only three
-hours’ march ahead of me. At half-past nine we left
-this place, and after riding sixteen miles in the heat of
-the day, almost broiled, reached a tolerably good town
-called Montemor Novo, built on a hill. At this place
-are the remains of a Moorish castle.</p>
-
-<p>I joined the troops going to the army under the
-Hon. Major Butler, with whom I took up my quarters,
-and the next day sent the dragoon back with the
-mules. On the following morning at five we marched
-for a town called Arryoles, where we arrived at ten.</p>
-
-<p>Most of the Portuguese villages and towns in the
-Alemtejo are dull and uninteresting, at least they
-appeared so to me. The next morning early, we
-moved to a small clean town called Vemeiro, only
-eight miles distant, which, losing our way, we did not
-reach until noon. I found it very pleasant marching
-with the troops, not but that it was distressing to put
-the inhabitants to so much trouble and inconvenience
-turning them out of their rooms to quarter officers and
-soldiers in them. It is but justice however to say that
-the British officers and men generally conducted them<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_105"></a>[Pg 105]</span>selves
-with so much propriety, forbearance, and good
-feeling towards the natives of the different towns where
-they were billeted, that mutual regrets frequently took
-place at parting. God forbid, old England ever should
-be the scene of warfare. Contending armies are one of
-the greatest scourges with which Divine providence
-can afflict a nation. Even your allies cannot avoid
-bringing with them desolation for a time, by destroying
-crops of all kinds, to prevent their falling into the
-hands of the enemy. In short, ruin and devastation
-follow in the train of an army, whether friend or
-foe.</p>
-
-<p>Being near the town of Usagree, in Estramadura,
-with a brigade of dragoons, I remember seeing whole
-fields of wheat, &amp;c., cut down and given as green
-food to the horses of our army. The French being
-expected almost immediately to occupy the position
-we were then in, the commanding officer very properly
-thought it better to secure the grain for
-ourselves than leave it to fall into the hands of the
-enemy. A poor old Spaniard came up to the gallant
-colonel, the late Sir Felton Harvey, and, shaking his
-grey locks, implored him to spare his only field, which
-was to preserve himself and family from starving,
-and which he beheld our troops cutting to feed their
-horses. The reply was that we were his friends; that
-we were obliged to take the corn, since our horses
-must not starve; that, if they did not eat it, those of
-the French, his mortal enemies, would. The colonel
-concluded by giving the poor man an order on the
-commissary to pay him in dollars equal to what had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_106"></a>[Pg 106]</span>
-been taken away. I give this anecdote for the edification
-of such of my countrymen as are apt, through
-ignorance, let us hope, to malign the conduct of our
-soldiers in the Peninsula, and who grudge the officers
-and men of both army and navy their hard-earned
-half-pay or pension, a return surely not more than
-sufficient for averting the horrors of war from the
-hearths of their fellow subjects.</p>
-
-<p>The constant state of alarm and anxiety that the
-whole of Spain and Portugal suffered while the contending
-armies were hovering about was extreme. As
-long as the British troops occupied their towns and
-villages, the poor inhabitants knew they had nothing
-to fear; but the moment the French came, plunder
-and destruction were the order of the day, and in very
-many cases, outrages were committed through mere
-wantonness: houses unroofed, the sides of others stove
-in, and the furniture destroyed. Our soldiers were the
-“lion and the lamb”; those of the French, to use
-Voltaire’s expression, the “tiger and the monkey.”</p>
-
-<p>I was informed at Villa Vicosa, by a genteel Portuguese
-family, of the continual fear they lived in, and
-they related to me the following circumstance:&mdash;One
-night the alarm was given that the French were advancing
-into the town, nearly every person having
-gone to bed. Immediately all the church bells began
-tolling to give warning; everyone, even the sick, arose,
-these latter were put into cars, each person taking
-what things he could carry with him&mdash;one a bed,
-another articles of clothing, chairs, tables, or whatever
-else might be useful in their hiding places. After they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_107"></a>[Pg 107]</span>
-had gone a short distance, it was found to be only a
-false alarm. An enemy’s foraging party had been
-seen during the evening in the neighbourhood, but
-had, fortunately for them, taken another direction. At
-this period our troops were in the north of Portugal,
-and the French having a strong garrison in Badajoz,
-used to send out occasionally a marauding party,
-which caused the above consternation!</p>
-
-<p>We left Vemiero on the 23rd July, and arrived at
-Estramoy the same day. It is rather a large inland
-town, and once had been a garrison, the works of the
-fortifications remained, but the guns had been removed,
-the city being commanded by an eminence at
-the back of it still higher than the hill on which it is
-built. Unlike most other towns in Portugal, it is
-tolerably clean. On the following morning we marched
-from hence to a pretty neat little village called
-O’Rodondo, where we arrived at ten, and I had the
-pleasure of once more meeting my brother, who had
-just recovered from a sabre cut in his face, received at
-the battles of Fuentes d’Onor, which knocked out
-two of his teeth and split his tongue.</p>
-
-<p>Since we had parted in the year 1804 on the peaceful
-shores of England, what trials and scenes had we
-both gone through and witnessed. He had been on
-the expedition under Sir Samuel Achmuty, at the
-taking of Monte Video, in South America; in four
-general actions; the two bloody days of Talavera in
-1809; the battle of the Coa, Busaco, Fuentes d’Onor,
-where he was wounded, besides several warm affairs
-and skirmishes; and since then he was in the battles<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_108"></a>[Pg 108]</span>
-of Llerena, Salamanca, Vittoria, Pyrenees, Orthes,
-Toulouse, and numerous outpost affairs.</p>
-
-<p>He has lately been sent with Lord William Russell
-as one of the Lieut.-Colonels employed by our Government
-as military reporters when Don Pedro returned
-to Portugal, the events of which period he has
-published in his “rough leaves.” He at present commands
-the 15th Hussars, and is with his regiment at
-Madras, having sailed from Gravesend, with the headquarters
-of his regiment, on board the <i>Herefordshire</i>,
-East Indiaman, on the 4th of June, 1839.</p>
-
-<p>I, too, had been tried in fire at Trafalgar, and
-on various boat expeditions, etc., and had been
-wounded, and taken prisoner.</p>
-
-<p>We remained at O’Rodondo three days, during
-which time I rode with my brother to various places
-in the neighbourhood. On the 28th of July, the
-regiment moved to Villa Vicosa, where we found some
-fine infantry regiments preparing for a march to the
-northward to invest Ciudad Rodrigo.</p>
-
-<p>I liked Villa Vicosa much better than any other
-town I had yet seen in Portugal, the inhabitants were
-very civil, and I was introduced to several families,
-and did hope we should remain here for some days;
-the country round about it was pleasant, and a park
-full of deer, belonging to the Prince Regent, used to
-furnish us occasionally with venison. Those officers
-who had a regency certificate had permission to shoot
-in it.</p>
-
-<p>Operations against Ciudad Rodrigo having been
-determined upon, we only remained here three days,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_109"></a>[Pg 109]</span>
-during which time I visited Elvas, Borba, Alandroal,
-and other places. From Elvas, I had a very good view
-of Badajoz, with the river Guadiana, and the surrounding
-flat country. The town and fortifications of Elvas
-are well worth seeing, they are on a large scale, and
-built on a high hill. This being one of the principal
-frontier towns of Portugal, great pains had been taken
-by Count Le Lippe<a id="FNanchor_10" href="#Footnote_10" class="fnanchor">[J]</a> to render the works as strong as
-possible. After he had completed the fortifications,
-he found it necessary to erect a strong fortress or
-castle, on a high hill, which commanded the best part
-of them, and which is considered so strong, that it is
-supposed to be impregnable; it is named after himself.
-Report says that a garrison of 15,000 men in Elvas,
-and 1200 in Fort Le Lippe, with plenty of provisions,
-would keep those places in defiance of any numbers
-that might be brought against them.</p>
-
-<p>There is at Elvas a very large, fine, and curious
-aqueduct, differing from any I had yet seen: it has
-three tiers of arches, raised one above the other, and
-of great height.</p>
-
-<p>The French army having made a movement to
-the northward, orders arrived in the evening for the
-14th Dragoons to march at daylight the next morning
-for Estramoy, where they halted for the night. Next
-day they moved forward to Frontiera, and from thence
-to O’Crato, where are the remains of an old Moorish
-castle. We left this town on the morning of the 5th
-of August, and on our arrival at the miserable village<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_110"></a>[Pg 110]</span>
-of Gafete, my leave of absence having expired, I was
-obliged, to my great sorrow, to return to Lisbon. So,
-bidding my brother and friends of the regiment adieu,
-I struck off for Abrantes, thirty miles distant.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Hervey very kindly sent a dragoon to escort
-me thither, the road being rendered dangerous by
-marauding parties of the natives. I was now mounted
-upon a nice little French horse. He had belonged to
-the French 1st Hussars, and had been taken from the
-enemy in a charge by my brother’s troop. I reached
-Abrantes by five in the evening, and, having got a
-tolerable billet and something to eat, was glad to go
-to rest.</p>
-
-<p>At ten the next morning I quitted Abrantes alone,
-the soldier having gone back to his regiment, which
-was ordered to cover the siege of Ciudad Rodrigo.</p>
-
-<p>I had still eighty-four miles to ride to Lisbon, which
-was not very pleasant to do alone at that period, considering
-the excited state and wretched poverty of the
-country.</p>
-
-<p>At sunset I arrived at Santarem, thirty-six miles
-from Abrantes. This latter is a large, dirty town,
-standing upon a hill that commands the country
-around it. The river Tagus runs at its foot, over
-which is a bridge of boats that can be removed at
-pleasure. The French marshal, Junot, derived his
-title from this city.</p>
-
-<p>At Santarem I picked up an English soldier, who
-undertook the care of my horse. This is a large
-town. Part of it is built on a high hill: the remainder
-standing in a valley.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_111"></a>[Pg 111]</span></p>
-
-<p>When here last year the French committed great
-devastation, unroofing some of the houses, and staving
-in the sides of others, besides plundering and destroying
-whatever they could lay their hands on.</p>
-
-<p>My billet had been unroofed, and part of its sides
-were torn down. I found a mattrass spread on the
-floor, but without the necessary accompaniment of
-clothes. The fleas, as is usual in such places, were
-exceedingly troublesome; but, having ridden all day
-under a hot sun, sleep soon overcame this annoyance,
-and I remained unconscious of their attacks till seven
-the next morning, when I arose, and, after taking a
-refreshing swim in the Tagus in order to get rid of
-my lively bed-fellows, ate my breakfast, and then
-rode to Villa Franca, twenty-four miles. The heat
-of the weather being very great, and my horse loaded
-with my saddle bags, it was impossible for me to
-go faster than a walk, so that it was evening before I
-reached that place.</p>
-
-<p>In the course of the day I passed through several
-small villages that the French had nearly destroyed.
-The inhabitants were beginning to return and put the
-remains of their houses in order.</p>
-
-<p>At Villa Franca I got a tolerably good dinner, but
-was almost talked to death by the landlady, an Irishwoman,
-at whose house I had put up, and who
-inquired the news of the army&mdash;what they were
-about&mdash;whither going&mdash;where such a regiment was,
-&amp;c., &amp;c., forgetting that I was tired and wanted rest.</p>
-
-<p>Early next morning I left for Lisbon, and, after a
-ride of six hours, passing by part of the lines of<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_112"></a>[Pg 112]</span>
-Torres Vedras, at which men were still working,
-I reached that city.</p>
-
-<p>I had ridden, for the first time in my life, more
-than five hundred miles, and nearly the whole of it
-in the sun during the hottest part of the day, in the
-months of July and August, without its doing me
-the least harm, and never feeling over fatigued.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_113"></a>[Pg 113]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XII">CHAPTER XII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Lisbon, Cintra, Mafra, etc., 1811, 1812&mdash;Second trip to the Army&mdash;Taking
-of Badajoz.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">I spent the remainder of the year in the Tagus,
-making, when duty permitted, excursions up that
-river to some of the small islands, near Alhandra,
-where we used to find snipe, quail, and other wild
-fowl. Sometimes we landed on the south side of the
-Tagus, to shoot red-legged partridges and woodcocks,
-which we occasionally met with near the Prince’s
-Quinta. But the most delightful place for snipe and
-wild fowl was Loares, on the road towards Torres
-Vedras: the swamps being there alive with various
-kinds of them, and amongst others, bittern, kites,
-hawks, and I have seen, now and then, an osprey.</p>
-
-<p>In March, 1812, I made a very pleasant excursion
-to Cintra, Mafra, and Colares, with the present Lord
-By&mdash;&mdash;, and some other officers of the <i>Barfleur</i>.
-On our road, we went to see the palace of Calous,
-where, in some of the rooms are, very well painted,
-the whole of the adventures of Don Quixote.</p>
-
-<p>Cintra, fifteen miles distant from Lisbon, is situated
-on the north-east side of the rock. It is certainly one
-of the most romantic places I have seen, and commands<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_114"></a>[Pg 114]</span>
-an extensive and beautiful view of the country and of
-the sea. The buildings most worthy of observation
-are: first, the Penia convent, rising from the rock of
-Lisbon; it is about three hundred and twenty years’
-old, and is tenanted by three monks. From hence is
-a fine prospect, comprising Cape Espichel, Peniche,
-and the Burling islands. Another convent, called the
-Cork, from its being lined with that wood, built also
-on the rock, and having fifteen monks for its inmates,
-next attracts attention. This was founded about
-three hundred years ago. Beyond, on an extreme
-point of the rock, are the ruins of a Moorish castle,
-mosque, prison, and baths: the latter supposed by
-some to be of Roman origin. The Marquess of
-Marialva’s palace, where the convention was signed,
-is very fine, and pleasantly situated.</p>
-
-<p>Rising amongst rocks, and embosomed in orange,
-lemon, and pomegranate trees, Penia Verde must not
-pass unnoticed. Its original possessor, Don Juan de
-Castro, who died <span class="allsmcap">A. D.</span> 1723, and whose remains, at
-his request, were interred in a particular spot in the
-garden, discovered much of the interior of Brazil:
-besides being of great use to the Government in
-several important matters. On his return to Lisbon
-he petitioned for a pension, which being most ungratefully
-refused, he so willed his property and
-possessions as to prevent them in any way benefiting
-his country, which had turned a deaf ear to his claims
-for compensation for the services he had rendered her.
-This fact our guide adduced as a reason for the grounds
-being found in their wild and neglected condition.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_115"></a>[Pg 115]</span></p>
-
-<p>The king’s palace, an old gloomy edifice, did not
-much take my fancy. What most struck me there
-was a shower-bath, lined with white marble, or,
-perhaps, pantiles, and which, on turning a pipe, throws
-the water in all directions. It not unfrequently
-happened that visitors were taught a practical lesson
-of its powers. It used to be a joke to get them to
-step into the bath room, the machinery was put in
-motion, and they underwent a good drenching as the
-reward of their curiosity.</p>
-
-<p>The prince’s palace of Romalyan I thought pretty,
-and its situation, looking towards Lisbon and the sea,
-quite delightful. The Marquis of Marialva has other
-gardens than those adjoining his palace, which we
-went to see, on account of the figures they contain;
-amongst them are shoemakers, and an old woman
-spinning, all as large as life; by touching some wires
-they are set in motion and immediately begin their
-work.</p>
-
-<p>We one day rode to the village of Colares, prettily
-situated near the sea, and famous for its wine, which
-is so excellent that I am surprised it is not more
-frequently met with in England; it is something in
-flavour between claret and burgundy.</p>
-
-<p>In the garden of a Signor Tomazine, at the above
-place, is a mineral spring, but I am ignorant of its
-qualities. Would not this afford a capital speculation
-to an M.D. Let me advise one to analyse the spring,
-rent it&mdash;write a pamphlet upon its good qualities&mdash;recommend
-it strongly for the cure of all kinds of
-complaints, particularly consumptions and pulmonary<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_116"></a>[Pg 116]</span>
-affections. The fine beautiful air of Cintra, and its
-romantic scenery he could always call in to his aid as
-a good and faithful ally in all extreme cases; and
-when he occasionally failed, he might say the case
-was desperate, and the patient’s time was come. With
-the assistance above mentioned, he would be sure to
-effect some cures, and make his fortune; steam vessels
-would bring him patients and friends to attend them,
-some of the latter would probably in time fall sick,
-and, therefore, he might justly calculate upon getting
-a few of them also on his books as patients. I hope,
-should any medical gentleman take this hint, he will
-remember me gratefully in his will, for depend upon
-it, the speculation will answer much better than many
-of the railroads.</p>
-
-<p>Before leaving Cintra, on our return to Lisbon, we
-made an excursion to Mafra to see an eminent building,
-containing, besides a convent and church, a palace
-for the king, and another for the queen. I believe
-that, with the exception of the Escurial in Spain, this
-is the largest pile of building in Europe. I was told
-that in one quadrangle alone, the French, previous to
-the convention, had quartered 15,000 men. From the
-roof is a fine view of the country for many miles.
-There is also a topada, or park, of some extent,
-belonging to it. From the church rises a dome, something
-like that of St. Paul’s in London. There are
-likewise two steeples. The interior, which contains
-some good paintings, and several pieces of sculpture
-in alto-relief, on scriptural subjects, is well worth inspection.
-These were executed at Rome, and showed<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_117"></a>[Pg 117]</span>
-the hand of a great master. There are also statues of
-all the saints, in white marble. Its six organs are considered
-very fine, and according to the padres, the
-Mafra ring of bells is the best in the world. This
-palace, at the time we saw it, was the depôt for the
-formation of the Portuguese army.</p>
-
-<p>I have not dwelt much on Lisbon, a city so generally
-known, that to notice its public buildings, aqueduct,
-etc., would be superfluous in a narrative like the
-present. We had a few slight shocks of an earthquake
-during the time I was there, which created a little
-alarm, and caused all the church bells to be set ringing
-for the people to come to mass.</p>
-
-<p>On the 16th of March I had permission to accompany
-my brother to his regiment, which was then at
-Olivença, in Spain, covering the siege of Badajoz.
-Our route to the army was the same as before, through
-the Alemtejo to Elvas; we crossed the river Guadiana
-by the ford of Xerumaha to Olivença, in Estramadura,
-where the regiment remained until the 4th of April.</p>
-
-<p>Marshal Soult having advanced towards Badajoz to
-try and raise the siege, the cavalry, both heavy and
-light, were sent forward as far as Villaloa, Almandralajo,
-and Villa Franca, to oppose him; some brigades
-of infantry occupying Albuera on nearly the same
-spot where Lord Beresford fought the battle.</p>
-
-<p>I remained behind to see the siege, and pay a visit
-to my old friends of the 7th Fusiliers, with a Captain
-Daniel Capel, of the 14th. On the 5th of April I
-went with them to look at the breaching batteries,
-and to visit an old acquaintance, who had been<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_118"></a>[Pg 118]</span>
-wounded the day before by a musket-ball through the
-side, while doing duty as an engineer in the trenches.
-Poor fellow! he was afterwards killed on the Pyrenees
-by lightning; he belonged to the 37th Regiment. I
-spent a very pleasant day with the Fusiliers, but it was
-doomed alas! to be the last with several of my gallant
-friends, and amongst others, poor Saint Pol, who the
-next night was mortally wounded at the storming of
-the large breach.</p>
-
-<p>On my return, late in the evening, to my quarters at
-Olivença, what with the haze in my head, occasioned
-by wine, the foggy state of the evening, the smoke
-from the fire of the different batteries, the captain of
-dragoons and myself lost each other, and our way.
-By mistake my horse, who had been taken from the
-enemy, took the wrong road, and instead of going to
-the left, towards a ford that we had to cross at some
-distance in rear of the camp, he chose to take me to
-the foot of the bridge leading to Badajoz, where the
-enemy had a cavalry picket; fortunately for me, we
-had a strong covering party of the 43rd Regiment
-lying down on the ground. Being unable to give the
-countersign, these were going to shoot me for a French
-officer. They seized my steed, and knocked me off
-his back with the butt end of a musket. I was dragged
-on the ground back to the camp, where I had to encounter
-the jokes of my friends, softened it is true by
-sincere congratulations on my escape. My horse,
-whose head had been turned from Badajoz, got loose,
-and managed to find his way back to Olivença, where
-I was <i>lucky</i> enough to find him the next day; for<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_119"></a>[Pg 119]</span>
-sometimes lost horses were borrowed to carry baggage,
-commissary stores, or other articles, and they undergoing
-various metamorphoses, such as cropping the
-ears and tails, with other little changes in their appearances,
-the lawful owners could with great difficulty
-recognise their own steeds.</p>
-
-<p>These slight-of-hand tricks used occasionally to be
-played; and with an army consisting of so many
-thousand troops, composed of various nations, and
-covering a vast extent of country, it was not a very
-easy matter to trace a lost animal, whether horse,
-mule, or donkey.</p>
-
-<p>On the evening of the 6th, Badajoz was stormed
-and taken. <i>No other troops in the world</i> could have
-carried a citadel so strong, and so manfully defended;
-they behaved most <i>nobly</i>, in spite of death and destruction,
-which were dealt around with <i>no sparing
-hand</i>.</p>
-
-<p>Our army was indeed a gallant band of warriors,
-such as we shall never see again; such as the world
-probably will never again produce.</p>
-
-<p>Having rejoined the 14th Dragoons at Valverde, I
-proceeded with them to the several towns of Almendrab,
-Santa Martha, Villalva, Villa Franca, Fuente de
-Meastro, Rebeiro, and nearly to Usagre. Marshal
-Soult pushed forward his cavalry, and some outpost
-skirmishing took place. Near Villa Franca, the 12th,
-14th, and 16th Light Dragoons, with six regiments of
-heavy horse, having joined and drawn up, we expected
-a general cavalry action. It passed over, however,
-with some skirmishing in front with a numerous body<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_120"></a>[Pg 120]</span>
-of the enemy’s dragoons, who manœuvred to cover the
-retreat of their army.</p>
-
-<p>I recollect one of Soult’s scouts, a Spaniard, being
-taken by a patrol of the 14th Dragoons. This fellow
-was observed stealing, under cover of night, in the
-direction of our pickets, when he was seized and
-brought in. Being threatened with instant death
-unless he gave up his despatch, he fell on his knees
-and implored for mercy, directing the officer to cut
-the third leather button from his coat, when he would
-find what he demanded. On taking off the button,
-a tiny slip of paper was discovered, on which was
-written these words, “Hold out: I am coming.” I
-saw this <i>morceau</i>; it was short and to the purpose.
-It had been sent by the marshal to the governor of
-Badajoz.</p>
-
-<p>My leave of absence having expired, I was obliged
-to return towards Lisbon. I had been all day with
-my brother on the advanced picket, looking at our
-videttes and those of the French, near Usagre, when,
-having laid down in my clothes to get a little rest,
-orders arrived to again advance. No engagement,
-however, being expected, I was advised to remain
-where I was for the night, and to set out in the
-morning on my route for the Tagus.</p>
-
-<p>Next day, whilst quietly retracing my steps thither,
-a brilliant cavalry affair took place near the above-named
-town and Llerena, when the French were
-completely routed, and many prisoners made. I was
-sorry I had not remained to witness the rencontre, but
-consoled myself with the reflection that I had pro<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_121"></a>[Pg 121]</span>bably
-been saved a broken head, where I should have
-gained neither credit nor thanks.</p>
-
-<p>The second day after leaving the army I reached
-Badajoz, and went over the defences of that city,
-which bore strongly the marks of recent strife. Not
-the least affecting evidence of mortal affray were the
-bodies of several of my gallant countrymen floating
-in the ditch, and which people were employed in
-removing in order to their being buried. The more I
-examined the works, the greater my astonishment at
-the bravery and perseverance of our troops. By one
-unacquainted with military tactics, time alone would
-have been pronounced capable of effecting the ruin
-before him. He could never have conceived it possible
-that walls so apparently impregnable would
-have yielded to the force of a besieging army. But
-for the escalade, indeed, failure had been inevitable
-where success was now complete, insured as it had
-been by immense sacrifice of life.</p>
-
-<p>My road from Badajoz lay through Olivença, where
-I crossed the river Guadiana to Xerumaha, and proceeded
-thence to Villa Vicosa and San Miguel de
-Mechada, where I fell in with some French prisoners
-marching, under a strong escort, to Lisbon. They
-had formed part of a division, under General Girard,
-when he was surprised and routed by the gallant Sir
-Rowland Hill near Miranda.</p>
-
-<p>The fifth day brought me to Evora, where, announcing
-to the inhabitants glad tidings of victory, I got an
-excellent billet at the house of a padre, who gave me
-the best dinner and bed I had had for some time.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_122"></a>[Pg 122]</span></p>
-
-<p>Evora, the capital of the Alemtejo, is a fine old
-town, and has still visible the remains of a Roman
-wall. Here, too, is the aqueduct, built by the General
-Sertorius, which is in tolerable repair after the lapse
-of so many ages. This place is fortified, and contains
-an episcopal palace.</p>
-
-<p>Time pressing, I set forward the next morning, my
-friend, the priest, having obtained an order from the
-Juis de Fori for a muleteer to attend me, and convey
-my baggage on a mule. The fellow turned rather
-sulky, so much so that I was obliged to drive him on
-with my pistol to Vendas Novas, where, after a hot
-ride of thirty-six miles, I had to sit up all night to
-guard my baggage and prevent the rascal running
-away, such I had been informed being his intention
-the moment I had gone to bed. The window of my
-room looking into the street, I told my friend that if
-he attempted to escape I would shoot him on the
-spot. This had the desired effect, and next morning
-I proceeded, still driving the Spaniard on before me,
-to that dirty place, Pegoeus, where, falling in with a
-party of English soldiers, I gave him in charge to
-them.</p>
-
-<p>The following day I arrived, after a ride of five
-hours, at Aldea Galega, where, dismissing my muleteer,
-who made many humble apologies for his behaviour,
-I embarked in the ferry-boat, and crossed over to
-Lisbon. The fellow, it appeared, was fearful of being
-again pressed at Aldea Galega into the service of the
-commissaries to carry stores or provisions to the
-army.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_123"></a>[Pg 123]</span></p>
-
-<p>Captain Hood Linze, of H.M.S. <i>Ocean</i> (98), being
-obliged to invalid on account of a severe wound from
-the stab of a madman, I was, on the 11th June, 1812,
-appointed acting commander of H.M.S. <i>Brune</i>.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_124"></a>[Pg 124]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIII">CHAPTER XIII.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Cadiz, Minorca, Majorca, Alicant, Carthagena, Algiers, Oran, Altea
-Bay&mdash;Drive a French Privateer on shore near Denia.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">On the 13th of June I sailed in H.M. Ship <i>Brune</i> for
-Cadiz, at that time besieged by Marshal Soult. I
-waited on Admiral Legg, and our ambassador (Sir
-Henry Willesley), and delivered my despatches, and,
-after remaining there two days, proceeded to Gibraltar
-and Minorca, where I was placed under the orders
-of Rear-Admiral Benjamin Hallowell, who, on the
-4th July, sent me to Palma Bay, Majorca, to collect
-Spanish troops, and embark them on board transports
-and the <i>Brune</i>. After making two or three trips
-between the two above-named islands, I embarked
-Major-General Whittingham’s brigade of Spanish
-troops, who were not a bad-looking body of men.</p>
-
-<p>I dined occasionally with his Excellency the
-Governor-General of the Balearic islands, the Marquis
-de Coupigny, who was a very pleasant, gentlemanly
-person, and at whose table I met several of the
-Spanish <i>noblesse</i>, who had taken refuge at Palma
-during the troubles on the continent.</p>
-
-<p>I observed that smoking was not uncommon with
-the Spanish ladies. Whence this custom originated<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_125"></a>[Pg 125]</span>
-it is perhaps difficult to determine, unless, indeed, the
-habit of using tobacco&mdash;to which the other sex are
-immoderately addicted&mdash;has gradually, from social
-motives, been adopted by the fair; for we can hardly
-suppose that a practice so generally reprobated by
-them should at once be resorted to by ladies as a
-recreation, or even solace. The compliment, if such
-it be, ought to be duly appreciated by their husbands.
-But what will not woman do or suffer to conduce to
-the comfort or to mitigate the care of him she loves!</p>
-
-<p>In Spain are to be seen beautiful women in every
-rank of life, with very fine eyes, pretty feet and
-hands. They generally carry a fan&mdash;a most useful
-auxiliary whilst conversing; indeed, they would be
-hardly able to talk without one. Their dress is calculated
-to set off a good figure and fine features to
-great advantage.</p>
-
-<p>After embarking the brigade of General Whittingham,
-we proceeded to Alicant. The castle and fortress
-of this place make a figure in history, particularly
-during the war of succession, and bring to remembrance
-the brave and chivalric conduct of the Earl of
-Peterborough. The anchorage in the bay is good,
-and, with a long scope of cable, ships may ride out a
-heavy gale with the wind in, for the under-tow is so
-great that you ride with little strain on the cables.</p>
-
-<p>After the battle of Salamanca, Soult, thinking his
-situation before Cadiz insecure, raised the siege, and
-retired into the interior; but it being doubtful whether
-he might not make a dash at Carthagena, Rear-Admiral
-Sir Sidney Smith proceeded thither from<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_126"></a>[Pg 126]</span>
-Gibraltar in the <i>Tremendous</i> (74), to communicate
-with the general commanding our army at Alicant
-and Rear-Admiral Hallowell on the subject. I was,
-therefore, sent thither with two Spanish regiments,
-embarked on board transports, to be ready to act in
-case of necessity, but with orders on no account to
-land the troops, unless the place was threatened, as a
-bad periodical yellow fever was raging in the town
-with great violence. The gallant admiral (Sir Sidney
-Smith), however, would take me on shore to show me
-the best places to plant cannon and take up position
-in case of attack. After this, we must go to the
-hospital to inquire into the nature of the fever, &amp;c.
-Every now and then he gave me a pinch of snuff,
-telling me not to swallow my saliva, and there would
-be no danger of catching the disease. In the course
-of a week I was attacked by fever, but, being in the
-outer roadstead, the fresh air probably prevented its
-attaining that malignancy it had reached in the town,
-but it was some weeks before I perfectly recovered.</p>
-
-<p>The <i>Tremendous</i> (74), with the admiral, sailed the
-day after our visit to the city to join the fleet off
-Toulon. Several other men-of-war arrived in the
-course of a few days with more troops from headquarters.
-Whether Soult was deterred by the sickness
-prevailing in the place, or had heard of the
-reinforcements, he passed on his route, and we all
-returned to Alicant.</p>
-
-<p>Shortly after, I was sent to Altea Bay, to lie there
-and protect any transports that might arrive to procure
-water.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_127"></a>[Pg 127]</span></p>
-
-<p>During my stay there the French sent a detachment
-of three hundred infantry and a squadron of cavalry
-from Denia to forage and levy contributions. Having
-only my own ship’s company&mdash;which altogether, men
-and boys, amounted to only one hundred and forty&mdash;it
-was impossible for me to land and fight them, but
-by making a show with our boats, and firing a few
-shots, we dislodged them from the town, and prevented
-their plundering it or getting any contributions
-from the inhabitants. They succeeded, however, in
-our neighbourhood, and in the course of a couple
-of days collected a quantity of forage, &amp;c., and retired
-upon Denia.</p>
-
-<p>Within one day’s march of Altea was a Spanish
-division of troops, to whom I immediately sent the
-moment intelligence of the enemy’s intention of paying
-us a visit reached me.</p>
-
-<p>The officer I dispatched got to them the same
-evening, and returned back the following morning,
-three hours before the arrival of the enemy. The
-Spaniards, with their usual alertness, sent two regiments&mdash;about
-twelve hundred men&mdash;<i>exactly five days</i>
-after the French had retired.</p>
-
-<p>On the 8th of December, 1812, a convoy of transports
-were placed under my orders to proceed to
-Oran, on the coast of Barbary, to procure corn and
-bullocks for the army and navy, but heavy gales
-from the S.W. obliged us to run into the bay of
-Algiers, where we remained about a fortnight.</p>
-
-<p>Our consul, Mr. MacDonald, was extremely civil,
-and occasionally I slept at his country house, a few<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_128"></a>[Pg 128]</span>
-miles out of the town; but being unaccustomed to the
-noise of the jackals that came nightly to the very
-walls of his yard in search of food, I was frequently
-disturbed by them.</p>
-
-<p>The Dey of Algiers ordered us a daily supply of
-fresh provisions and vegetables. On my departure
-I proffered my services to take whatever his Highness
-might have to send to his servant, the Bey of Oran.
-He thanked me, through our consul, and requested
-me to take a stone coffin for the Bey’s son, which I
-delivered safe. The Dey was so much indisposed
-during my stay that I was unable to obtain an
-audience. We had a great deal of saluting&mdash;twenty-one
-guns on anchoring&mdash;twenty-one guns on landing;
-three guns whenever he sent off his present of fresh
-meat and vegetables, which latter was considered in
-the light of three salaams.</p>
-
-<p>After a passage of two days from Algiers, we
-reached the fine, safe bay of Marsalquiver, three miles
-from the town of Oran, where all ships anchor in
-winter, it being nearly land-locked.</p>
-
-<p>No time was lost in having an interview with the
-Bey, who was civil; but I had a long discussion
-previously with his guards, who refused me admittance
-to his presence unless I took off my boots,
-and employed menaces to enforce their demands.
-However, finding me obstinate, and our vice-consul,
-who was a Spaniard, telling them I had come from
-Algiers with a present from his Highness the Dey,
-they permitted me to pass, and I never was troubled
-afterwards.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_129"></a>[Pg 129]</span></p>
-
-<p>The Bey was a venerable-looking man, of about
-sixty-five years of age, thin, and of middle stature, with
-a fine, long, white beard, hard features, but a scowl
-upon his countenance that showed he could, when he
-thought proper, play the tiger.</p>
-
-<p>He promised the supplies I requested in ten days,
-said he wished to be on the best terms with the
-English, and thanked me for bringing the stone coffin
-for his son’s tomb; gave me coffee without sugar, and
-a pipe to smoke, and appeared much amused with
-my awkward manner of sitting cross-legged like a
-Turk.</p>
-
-<p>He was surrounded by his principal officers, in
-full dress, with silver-gilt swords and pistols in their
-girdles.</p>
-
-<p>The admiral or captain of the port was a handsome,
-mild, gentlemanly person. The old Bey, the morning
-of my arrival, had been administering summary justice,
-for on my going into the market-place I saw three ill-looking
-Moors hanging by the neck. It is not the
-fashion in Barbary to place caps over the criminals’
-faces before they are executed. Upon inquiring what
-those three wretches had been doing, the vice-consul
-gave me the following account:&mdash;“A Moorish merchant,
-with a special passport from the Bey, had
-permission to travel into the interior to traffic, when
-he and his party were waylaid on the mountains,
-robbed, and all, except one, murdered. The person
-who escaped immediately informed the proper
-authorities, who reported it to the Bey. A body
-of troops was instantly sent to the mountains, who<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_130"></a>[Pg 130]</span>
-arrested all the chiefs of the tribes, and brought them
-before his Highness. He, looking at them sternly,
-said, ‘On such a day a merchant from my city, with
-my passport, was murdered and robbed on the mountains.
-If in three days from this time you do not
-bring before me the whole of the offenders, your own
-heads shall answer for it. Begone!’ In less than
-forty-eight hours eleven fellows were brought in, and
-led directly to the palace. The Bey demanded who
-committed the murder. Three men were pointed out.
-They did not deny it. ‘Very well,’ said the Bey,
-‘take these men, and instantly hang them up in the
-market-place.’ Three others, who had been most
-active in plundering, had their right hands cut off,
-and the remaining five received each from three to
-five hundred bastinadoes on the soles of their feet.”
-The third evening, at sunset, the murderers were cut
-down and buried.</p>
-
-<p>They have a very expeditious way of staunching
-the blood after amputation. The stumps of the arms
-are plunged into a kind of boiling pitch, which has
-the effect of searing the arteries. Over this is placed a
-dressing and bladder, when the sufferers are turned out.</p>
-
-<p>I used to go occasionally, with our vice-consul and
-some of my own officers, out shooting. We always
-found the people tolerably civil&mdash;except the boys,
-who used to abuse and spit at us, calling us, amongst
-other names, Christian dogs. Now and then we got
-a shove and a sly stone.</p>
-
-<p>Coming home one evening from an excursion to a
-small lake, about sixteen miles distant, where we had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_131"></a>[Pg 131]</span>
-been for the purpose of shooting flamingos, &amp;c., we
-got into a serious scrape, owing to a young commissary
-having taken his servant, a Portuguese boy,
-with him, who did not understand managing a horse.</p>
-
-<p>We had ridden fast across the country from the
-lake to get back before the gates of Oran were shut,
-which they always were at sunset, when, just as we
-were entering the town and trotting on, we met a
-party of Turkish and Moorish boys, who tried to
-frighten our horses by throwing up their loose garments
-in the animals’ faces, and making a great noise.
-All our horses stood this, except the one on which
-the servant boy was mounted, which reared up, and,
-dashing forward, knocked down with his fore feet one
-of the young Turks who had been most forward in
-the mischief. His head was a good deal cut, and
-bled profusely. We should have said he was very justly
-served. Not so the Moors and Kabiles. A hue and
-cry was instantly raised, and we were followed by a
-mob, demanding the life of the poor Portuguese for
-having, he being a Christian, drawn the blood of a true
-follower of the prophet. Pushing on to the vice-consul’s,
-we jumped off our horses, shoved in the
-young Portuguese, and locked and barricaded the
-doors. The Moors and Kabiles surrounded the house,
-making a great clamour, insisting that the servant
-should be immediately given up and put to death.
-Nothing but their fear of the English prevented them
-breaking into the place. We hoisted our colours
-on the flagstaff at the consul’s house, when it was
-considered a fortress, and respected accordingly.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_132"></a>[Pg 132]</span></p>
-
-<p>In a city like Oran, where each man is a spy on
-his neighbour, the news was fortunately not long in
-reaching the ears of the Bey, who, on the first
-intimation of the danger that threatened the consul’s
-residence, sent down a party of troops, with the
-captain of the port, to restore order, and act as
-circumstances might require. Some management was
-necessary to get the captain of the port into the
-house, as also to keep out the Moors, who, had they
-laid hold of the boy, would certainly have murdered
-him.</p>
-
-<p>We at length succeeded, and then explained that,
-returning from shooting, we had ridden full trot into
-the town in order to get home before the gates were
-closed at sunset, clearly showing that but for the
-boys frightening our horses no harm could possibly
-have happened. He said that he did not in the least
-doubt the truth of our story, but should the boy die,&mdash;accidents
-not being provided against in their code of
-laws,&mdash;nothing short of the death of the Portuguese
-lad would appease the populace, since blood, and
-Turkish blood, too, had been spilt.</p>
-
-<p>I proposed putting on my uniform and attending
-the vice-consul and captain of the port to the palace,
-which was done. Passing through the crowd was not
-very agreeable, but, under the protection of a guard,
-we reached our destination in safety.</p>
-
-<p>The old Bey laid down the Moorish law with great
-clearness, arguing the point calmly, and evidently
-with a friendly feeling towards us.</p>
-
-<p>He had been making enquiries, he said, and had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_133"></a>[Pg 133]</span>
-found our account of the transaction to be quite
-correct; that he knew the Turkish boy was a great
-rascal, and though he had been rightly served, it
-would be difficult to pacify the Moors, especially since
-the offender was not an Englishman. “True,” I replied;
-“but he is a subject of our ally, and under my protection,
-and nothing but extreme necessity shall
-compel me to give him up.” “Keep him out of sight,”
-replied his Highness, “and never again let eyes be cast
-on him in this place, or I will not be answerable for
-his life. Come here to-morrow.”</p>
-
-<p>We returned to the consul’s, and the captain of the
-port dispersed the mob, assuring them the Bey would
-take care that justice was done. With the morning’s
-dawn again came our clamorous foes; but having in
-the meantime had communication, through our friend
-the captain of the port, with the boy’s parents, we had
-learned there was no fear of the young Turk dying,
-who, though he had received a severe cut and some
-bruises, was doing well. A hint, too, was given us
-that a few dollars would assist to heal the wound and
-soften the rigour of justice. We went early next
-morning to the palace, when the Bey informed us of
-what we already knew, that the boy would not die
-from the injuries he had sustained. Then entering
-into conversation, “Consider,” said he, “if a like event
-had happened to you in a town in England? You
-knew it was wrong to ride fast near a populous town.”
-We pleaded our apprehensions of being locked out all
-night. “You ought to have come home sooner then;
-but to return to my first question. If in your own<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_134"></a>[Pg 134]</span>
-country such an accident had happened, what would
-be the consequence?” I replied that we should have
-had to pay the doctor’s bill, and in the case of a poor
-person to give something extra to the parents for the
-loss of time in nursing him. “Very well, then, you
-shall do the same here; but, take my advice, never
-ride fast through a large town again, and smuggle
-your Portuguese off to the ships for fear of accident;”
-which I did the earliest opportunity. The Bey then
-said, “Who furnished you with horses?” The vice-consul
-informed him. “What! my slave? they were
-mine, and the fellow had let them to you without my
-leave; he has been the cause of the whole. Here,”&mdash;clapping
-his hands, that an officer might come,&mdash;“go
-directly and give my groom five hundred bastinadoes
-for letting out my horses without asking my permission.”
-Making our bows we retired, when just outside
-the door we met Achmet the groom in the hands of
-two fierce looking Moorish officers of justice, taking
-him to the market-place to undergo his punishment.
-He fell on his knees, and implored us to ask his
-master to pardon him. We stopped the officers of
-vengeance, and after a little solicitation, the Bey listened
-to our request, and the man was pardoned, who,
-when he met us, wanted to kiss our feet for saving
-him from being bastinadoed. I believe the fellow was
-a rogue, who intended to pocket the money, thinking
-his master would not find him out. Thus ended the
-affair, the commissary paying sixty Spanish dollars to
-the mother of the young vagabond.</p>
-
-<p>Having embarked our supplies for the army, we<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_135"></a>[Pg 135]</span>
-returned to Alicant with the convoy, and the 21st of
-January, 1813, proceeded to Gibraltar to refit, where
-we remained three weeks, and then rejoined Rear-Admiral
-Hallowell, who sent us to our old station in
-Altea Bay,<a id="FNanchor_11" href="#Footnote_11" class="fnanchor">[K]</a> and from thence to cruize off Denia, near
-which place we drove a French felucca privateer on
-shore, mounting two brass nine-pounders and swivels,
-with small arms, and bilged her. Our next destination
-was another trip to Oran, on the coast of Barbary,
-with four transports, for cattle and corn. We had a
-capital run there and back with our live cargo.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_136"></a>[Pg 136]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XIV">CHAPTER XIV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Siege of the Col de Balaguer&mdash;A Reconnoitering Party&mdash;Raising of
-the Siege of Tarragona&mdash;Lieutenant-General Sir John and Lady Murray&mdash;Rear-Admiral
-Benjamin Hallowell&mdash;Viscount and Viscountess Mahon&mdash;Palermo,
-Veniros; upset in a boat&mdash;Valencia&mdash;Holland.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">Towards the end of May, 1813, embarking 300 men
-of the 67th Regiment, under Colonel Prevost, an officer
-who had distinguished himself at the battle of Barrosa,
-we sailed with the expedition from Alicant to lay siege
-to the castle of the Col de Balaguer and the city of
-Tarragona. The land forces, under the command of
-Lieut.-General Sir John Murray, consisted of about
-20,000 men, but, unfortunately, not more than 5000
-were British and Germans, the rest being Spaniards
-and Sicilians. The naval part was under the orders
-of that intelligent and indefatigable officer, Rear-Admiral
-Benjamin Hallowell.</p>
-
-<p>On the 3rd of June, when off the castle of the Col
-de Balaguer, the whole of the 67th Regiment, with
-Rolle’s and Dillon’s, and a company of artillery,
-making together about 900 men, were ordered to
-invest it. The navy was placed under the command
-of the gallant Captain Charles Adams, of the <i>Invincible</i>
-(74), by whose great exertions the troops, guns, and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_137"></a>[Pg 137]</span>
-stores were soon landed, and who personally superintended
-every difficult and dangerous undertaking
-during the siege. Captain Carroll, of the <i>Volcano</i>,
-was landed to assist troops, and a more intrepid and
-excellent officer could not have been selected.</p>
-
-<p>The fortress was situated on a high hill, in a most
-difficult pass, through which winds the main road from
-Tortosa to Tarragona. It was armed with twelve
-heavy pieces, two ten-inch mortars, two howitzers, and
-had a garrison of more than a hundred men. Its
-elevated position, and surrounding heights, difficult of
-access, required the greatest labour to drag up the
-guns and mortars necessary to establish our batteries.
-No time, however, was to be lost; Marshal Suchet, with
-10,000 men, being in full march from the neighbourhood
-of Valencia to relieve it, and succour Tarragona.</p>
-
-<p>After a siege of five days the place surrendered.
-I had the pleasure of assisting, with a party of seamen,
-to form the mortar battery, which was no sooner
-opened than the shells were thrown with such precision
-by the artillery that an expense magazine was blown
-up in the castle, which, just as our breaching battery
-was about to open, capitulated. An artilleryman and
-myself had a most providential escape. Being very
-busy placing sand bags on the battery, on the morning
-of the 8th, just before day-break, down came three of
-the enemy’s shells. I ordered the working party to
-get behind the sand bags, and lie flat on their faces to
-avoid the splinters. One shell from an howitzer exploded
-behind us; two ten-inch followed, one fell about
-a couple of yards in front of me and the artilleryman,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_138"></a>[Pg 138]</span>
-which made us both jump to get out of its way, when
-down came the second on the other side of us. The
-man called out very coolly&mdash;“I’ll be d&mdash;&mdash; if we are
-not done now!” After falling on the ground both fuses
-went out, and, much to our satisfaction, the shells, of
-course, did not explode.</p>
-
-<p>Captain Stodart, of the <i>Strombolo</i>, a brave officer,
-was employed to form the breaching battery, and
-Lieutenants Corbyn and P&mdash;&mdash;, of H.M.S. <i>Invincible</i>,
-worked like slaves with their party to drag the heavy
-guns up hills, or what in England would be called
-mountains, by tackles and purchases.</p>
-
-<p>The commander of the French fort was perfectly
-astonished to see the places the guns had been dragged
-up in so short a time; and Suchet, who calculated
-upon its holding out ten days, was in a great rage
-when he heard it had been taken in five. I have his
-address to his corps upon the subject by me now, in
-which he informs his army “that a military commission
-will sit upon the conduct of the commander of the
-fortress of Balaguer.”</p>
-
-<p>We had done our part, and were looking for intelligence
-from our army before Tarragona with anxiety,
-as we could at night see the shells in the air, and hear
-the firing on both sides.</p>
-
-<p>Colonel Prevost, and Captain Charles Adam, of the
-<i>Invincible</i>, thinking it advisable to make a reconnaissance
-towards Tortosa to gain intelligence of the
-advance of the French marshal (for the information
-we got from the Spaniards was so vague that we
-could place no dependence upon it), on the morning<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_139"></a>[Pg 139]</span>
-of the 9th of June they, in company with Lieutenant-Colonel
-Hamilton, Captain Arabin (Royal Artillery),
-Captain Du Cane, of the 20th Light Dragoons, with
-four of his men and myself, started from the castle we
-had taken, at three in the morning, all well mounted,
-to try and get a peep into Tortosa, about twenty
-miles from Balaguer, and where it was reported
-Suchet was to arrive in the course of the day.</p>
-
-<p>After a pleasant ride of about sixteen miles, and
-as we had just got a glimpse of Tortosa, on reaching
-the summit of a hill we all at once entered a serpentine
-road, surrounded by high banks and ravines,
-which completely prevented our seeing beyond a short
-distance. Jogging on quietly, we met an old Spanish
-woman thumping two mules past us as hard as she
-could, calling out, “Los Franceses, los Franceses,”
-but not a word more could we get out of the <i>signora</i>.
-We, therefore, rode on to the next turn of the road,
-when, just at the corner, plump we came upon the
-advance guard of the French army, a regiment of
-cuirassiers. They for a moment stopped their horses,
-being as much surprised to see us as we were to meet
-them. With one glance they saw who we were&mdash;out
-came their carbines and swords&mdash;pop, pop, and a
-charge, which knocked over one of our dragoons, and
-“<i>sauve qui peut</i>,” or the devil take the hindmost,
-became the order of the day. Away we scampered&mdash;they
-after us, with a regular view halloa, and a
-flourish of French fashionable words, but not of the
-most select phraseology. Reader, if you wish to
-know them, I refer you to the scene of Madame<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_140"></a>[Pg 140]</span>
-Rambouillet and the Novice in Sterne’s “Sentimental
-Journey.” After a capital gallop of four miles, we
-regularly beat them, with the loss of only one of our
-party, who in the charge was knocked head over heels
-and taken prisoner. Luckily for us we had left a
-corporal’s guard of the 20th Light Dragoons about
-four miles in our rear upon a steep eminence, which
-commanded a good view of part of the road. The
-corporal, seeing how matters stood, and that we were
-coming back a deuced deal faster than we went, with
-a French regiment of cavalry after us, very cleverly
-came trotting up, and showed himself at the top of
-the hill with his men. The enemy, thinking we had
-a strong body of cavalry there, pulled up their horses
-and gave over the chase.</p>
-
-<p>Our ride had not been for nothing&mdash;we had had a
-good gallop, and found out where our neighbours
-were, who towards evening drove in our picket of
-dragoons, and established themselves not far from us.</p>
-
-<p>News was immediately sent to Lieutenant-General
-Sir John Murray, who was before Tarragona, of the
-arrival of the French army in our neighbourhood.</p>
-
-<p>Our situation was strong, and having the castle,
-which commanded the road, neither cannon nor
-cavalry could pass from Tortosa. Marshal Suchet
-came the next day and had a peep at the fortress,
-sent some light troops across the mountains to feel
-us, and halted his army a few miles off.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant-General Sir John Murray, as I said
-before, had nearly 20,000 men, but, unfortunately for
-him, only 5000 were British and Germans&mdash;the rest<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_141"></a>[Pg 141]</span>
-Spaniards and Sicilians, on whom he could place no
-dependence in the hour of need&mdash;otherwise no general
-ever had a better opportunity of beating a divided
-army.</p>
-
-<p>We had stopped Suchet, with his 10,000 men, from
-advancing on the Valencia side by the capture of the
-castle of Col de Balaguer: therefore he would only
-have had to cope with the Barcelona corps of 8000,
-and the Lerida of 2000 men, so that, after leaving
-a sufficient number of men to carry on the siege for a
-day or two, which the rear-admiral even offered to
-do with the sailors and marines alone, he might have
-beaten the enemy in detail. I am speaking, supposing
-he had had 16,000 or 20,000 British or German
-soldiers; but really with such a set, strong in point
-of numbers, but wanting the vigour and bottom of
-English troops, it certainly would have been running
-a great risk, and he had not the nerve to
-attempt it.</p>
-
-<p>Great blame was attached to the general for embarking
-in such a hurry, and leaving his guns and
-stores behind. The gallant, clever naval chief felt it
-most severely, fearing lest any blame should be
-attached to him for not taking on board the stores
-and artillery: he, therefore, remonstrated very warmly
-upon the subject, but it was in vain.</p>
-
-<p>The whole may be summed up in a few words.
-Marshal Suchet retired to Tortosa&mdash;the Lerida corps
-back to their old quarters&mdash;the Barcelona retrograded
-also&mdash;the Anglo-Spanish and Sicilian army embarked
-in a hurry&mdash;we blew up the castle of Balaguer that<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_142"></a>[Pg 142]</span>
-had been taken&mdash;the French garrison of Tarragona
-sallied forth, took all our battering train and stores,
-which we had been collecting, at a great expense, for
-months before, into the town, and played checkmate
-with the guns that had taken Badajos, for it was the
-same train. In short, all the troops ran away from
-each other the same day.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner was the army embarked than the commander
-of the forces, learning that the French corps
-had retired, requested they might be re-landed the
-next day, which was complied with, but it was then
-too late&mdash;we had lost our battering guns and stores,
-and nothing could be done.</p>
-
-<p>Lieutenant-General Lord William Bentinck arrived
-shortly afterwards, the troops were again embarked,
-and I was ordered to proceed to Alicant and take on
-board Sir John and Lady Murray, and convey them
-to Palermo, he being appointed to the command of
-the forces there.</p>
-
-<p>I found the Honourable Lady John Murray a
-most agreeable, clever, sensible, pleasant woman, and
-Lieutenant-General Sir John Murray a very amiable
-man in private life, and although much condemned at
-the time for not fighting Marshal Suchet and taking
-Tarragona, yet neither those who had the command
-of the army previous to him, nor General Lord
-William Bentinck, who took the command of the
-troops from Sir John Murray, gained more laurels or
-succeeded much better than he did.</p>
-
-<p>To move and manage a Spanish army in those
-days was next to an impossibility. They were too<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_143"></a>[Pg 143]</span>
-proud to be taught, and too ignorant and obstinate to
-do anything of themselves.</p>
-
-<p>Having landed my passengers at Palermo, I embarked
-three hundred of the 44th Regiment to join
-the army of Lord William Bentinck on the coast of
-Catalonia. I met at the above city Viscount and
-Viscountess Mahon, with their two children, fine boys
-of ten and eleven years’ old. His lordship wished to
-go to Minorca, and, as we had orders to touch there,
-I had much pleasure in giving them a passage.</p>
-
-<p>On our arrival at Port Mahon we were placed
-under quarantine, which prevented my landing Lord
-and Lady Mahon and family. The accommodation
-being not suited to ladies at the lazaretto, I was
-delighted when my amiable passengers made up
-their minds to remain on board.</p>
-
-<p>Having received orders to proceed to the coast of
-Catalonia with the troops, we sailed at the end of
-August for the mouth of the river Ebro, but, not
-finding the expedition there, we shaped our course
-for Tarragona, and on the 4th of September joined
-the admiral, who directed me to land the 44th Regiment
-at Villa Nova. The town of Villa Nova and
-the village of Veneros nearly join. There is an open
-roadstead for ships, and the winds from the S.E. to
-S.W. throw in a heavy swell upon the bar and beach.
-The holding ground is good, and numerous vessels
-during many parts of the year arrive for the purpose
-of shipping wine, which is either rafted off or taken
-on board in the country boats. The wine is most
-excellent, and of different kinds, both white and red.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_144"></a>[Pg 144]</span>
-The latter is so good, and so much resembles port,
-that when I was there ten ships and brigs were lying
-in the roads taking it in, to be landed at Oporto, and
-converted into port wine for the English market. I
-was informed that there were annually sent from this
-place to Portugal ten thousand pipes. Another very
-pleasant wine there was, “Alba Flora,” besides sweet
-wines of various kinds, one of which had the sparkling
-qualities of champagne.</p>
-
-<p>It had been blowing strong from the southward
-previous to our arrival, and the swell had not gone
-down.</p>
-
-<p>Between the ships and the landing-place was a
-bar, on which the sea broke with great violence, and
-which boats had to pass. Those belonging to the
-country being well calculated for going through the
-breakers, and whose crews were acquainted with the
-place, dashed through the surf extremely well.</p>
-
-<p>I thought that by following them in my shell of a
-gig, and waiting for a smooth, after three successive
-waves had broken upon the bar, I might get safe also;
-but I was soon taught a different lesson&mdash;the sea was
-more nimble than the gig, and although the men pulled
-to the utmost to go faster than the breakers, yet they
-beat us hollow, and taking the boat up on one of their
-white tops, spun us over in a moment. Fortunately
-we had not far to swim, and as soon as the waves had
-beaten us over the bar we got into quite smooth water,
-when, sticking to the boat and oars, we soon reached
-the shore, though not without a precious good ducking.
-We had, unfortunately, the viscountess’s poor abigail<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_145"></a>[Pg 145]</span>
-in the boat, who never before had had such a swim in
-salt water, so it was something new to her, and gave
-her an opportunity of adding a paragraph to her letter
-when she wrote home, describing her foreign travels by
-sea, land, and <i>under the water</i>. She was nearly
-drowned, poor thing! but keeping her on her back we
-swam with her ashore. She was carried to a Spanish
-house, wrapped up in blankets, where a few drops of
-comfort in the shape of brandy, and some hours’ repose,
-made her as lively as a lark again.</p>
-
-<p>By the way of drying myself, and getting the salt
-water out of me, I mounted a mule, and rode to Villa
-Franca, the head-quarters of our army, distant about
-thirteen miles, to see some old military friends.</p>
-
-<p>The country around was very pretty, and we had a
-fine view of the celebrated Mount Serrat, rising from
-a plain in numerous mountains and spires,<a id="FNanchor_12" href="#Footnote_12" class="fnanchor">[L]</a> with
-convents upon them; but the whole of that part of
-the country was forbidden ground, being occupied by
-the French army. On my return in the evening I
-visited my water-nymph, and was happy to find her
-quite recovered from the severe morning’s ducking. I
-offered to take her off again with me in the gig, which
-she, like a wise woman, declined; being a novice in
-the art of swimming, and not liking the first lesson I
-gave her, she preferred returning to the ship next day
-in a country boat. The day having turned out fine,
-the swell towards evening had somewhat gone down,
-though it was still so great that I was nearly swamped
-going back to the ship.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_146"></a>[Pg 146]</span></p>
-
-<p>On taking leave of the gallant Rear-Admiral Benjamin
-Hallowell next day, he gave me a letter of
-thanks, and did me the honour to say he was sorry to
-part with me; the regrets were mutual, for it was a
-pleasure to be under the command of an officer of his
-abilities and experience. He has not many months
-ago paid the debt of nature, full of years and honours,
-beloved and respected by all who knew him, and
-generally regretted by the service. He was one of
-those</p>
-
-<div class="poetry-container">
-<div class="poetry">
- <div class="stanza">
- <div class="verse indent4">“Who take them for all in all,</div>
- <div class="verse indent0">We ne’er (I fear), shall see their like again.”</div>
- </div>
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<p>Such men as Lords Howe, Duncan, St. Vincent,
-Nelson, Saumarez, Keats, Hallowell, &amp;c., are not
-mushrooms of a day’s growth, but the experience of a
-long and hazardous service in all parts of the world
-had braced their nerves and trained their minds to the
-task, which they performed with such <i>credit</i> to themselves
-and <i>honour and glory to their country</i>.</p>
-
-<p>On the 8th September we sailed from this anchorage
-for Tarragona, which place the French had evacuated,
-having first destroyed most of the guns and blown up
-part of the fortifications. Everything looked miserable
-and wretched in the extreme. Many of the houses
-were knocked to pieces, and the poor inhabitants, returning
-back to view the birthplaces of themselves
-and ancestors, found them reduced to a heap of ruins.
-I rode with my agreeable passengers to Reus, the
-second largest town in the province of Catalonia,
-where we dined after the Spanish fashion upon olla
-podrida, and other messes, stuffed full of garlic and<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_147"></a>[Pg 147]</span>
-bad oil. After walking about the town, and looking
-at a handsome church, the windows of which were of
-stained glass, we returned on board and sailed for
-Valencia. The peasantry of this province and of
-Catalonia are as fine a race of men as I ever saw in
-any country&mdash;tall, strong, and well made.</p>
-
-<p>On the 15th September we anchored off the Grao de
-Valencia, and the next morning communicated with
-our consul according to orders, and landed Viscount
-and Viscountess Mahon and family, who took up their
-abode with Mr. Tupper, our representative, who was
-very civil and polite, and showed us the lions of the
-city. The cathedral was very fine, from the top of
-which we had a most magnificent view of a very fertile
-valley, producing rice, maize, flax, and other grain,
-besides almond and vine trees, the latter covered
-with beautiful purple and white grapes.</p>
-
-<p>A small river runs past Valencia, over which are
-two tolerably fine stone bridges. We had a view also
-of the lake of Albufera, from which the French
-marshal, Suchet, derives his dukedom.</p>
-
-<p>Valencia is one of the best towns I have seen in
-Spain, and the road from the grao, or beach, is extremely
-pretty, having trees planted on each side, to
-afford shelter from the sun. Neat little thatched
-cottages, scattered here and there, put me for a short
-time in mind of England.</p>
-
-<p>After dinner at the consul’s, which was served up in
-the Spanish style, we went to the opera, and sat in a
-box with some pretty Spanish ladies, friends of Mr.
-Tupper. The opera was in honour of the Marquis<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_148"></a>[Pg 148]</span>
-of Wellington. It represented the Spaniards driving
-the Moors out of Spain; afterwards we had a fandango,
-and the whole concluded with a farce, the
-subject taken from Gil Blas, where he entertains at
-supper the sycophant.</p>
-
-<p>Having re-embarked Viscount and Viscountess
-Mahon, I sailed for Altea Bay to complete our water.
-Altea has an export trade of almonds and raisins;
-several vessels during the summer and autumn months
-call there for a cargo. The anchorage is good, and
-sheltered from most winds, except those from south-east
-by east to south-south-west, which seldom blow
-direct on shore. I rode out several heavy gales there
-in the frigate I commanded, by giving her nearly two
-cables.</p>
-
-<p>From this place we proceeded to Alicant, where we
-landed some stores for the garrison; and after showing
-the Viscount and his amiable lady the celebrated
-castle, we went to Gibraltar, where we unfortunately
-found the yellow fever raging to that degree amongst
-the inhabitants, that all intercourse was forbidden.
-The garrison was encamped on Europe Point, for the
-benefit of more air.</p>
-
-<p>On the 5th October we sailed for England, touching
-at Lisbon on our way, and after a stormy passage of
-three weeks anchored in Plymouth Sound, from which
-place we were sent to the Motherbank to perform three
-weeks’ quarantine. On the 20th of November we
-moved to Spithead, where I landed my most agreeable
-and pleasant passengers with very great regret. I had
-had them on board for more than three months, so<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_149"></a>[Pg 149]</span>
-that my cabin felt quite a desert without their
-society.</p>
-
-<p>After being detained at Portsmouth a few days, we
-proceeded to the Downs, and on the 14th December
-between six and seven hundred of His Majesty’s
-37th and 56th Regiments were sent on board, with
-orders from Admiral Foley for me to land them at
-Goree, or the Brill, or Helveot Sluys; but owing to
-the winds and tide we were unable to fetch either.
-I therefore anchored off Schevelling, and communicated
-with our ambassador, Lord Clancarty, at the Hague,
-who desired the troops to be landed at the village of
-Schevelling. His excellency wishing to see me at the
-Hague, I went there to wait upon his lordship.</p>
-
-<p>The little I was enabled to see of Dutchland, gave
-me a favourable opinion of the cleanliness of its
-people; and the neat pretty cottages from the beach
-to the city struck me as being particularly picturesque.
-Schevelling itself is nothing but a fishing place amongst
-sand hills; but the town of the Hague was neat, and
-in summer must be a pleasant place. But as the
-severe winter of 1813 was just commencing, I was
-obliged to hurry off from the coast as fast as possible,
-for fear of being caught upon a lee shore.</p>
-
-<p>On our passage back to the Downs, the two branch
-pilots very nearly ran the ship upon the Galloper
-Sands in a fog, which obliged us to anchor off the
-light for a tide. The next day, however, we arrived
-safely in the Downs, and from thence we were sent to
-Sheerness to be docked and refitted.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_150"></a>[Pg 150]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XV">CHAPTER XV.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">1814&mdash;Sent to Bermuda&mdash;Operations in the Chesapeake&mdash;The River
-Patuxent&mdash;Expedition to Washington&mdash;Town of Rappahannock&mdash;River
-Rappahannock&mdash;Wedding Party&mdash;Commodore Robert Barrie,
-&amp;c., &amp;c.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">The ship having undergone the necessary repairs,
-which was very heavy work during the severe winter
-of 1813, towards the end of March we sailed for
-Spithead, where we embarked three hundred and
-fifty marines, and proceeded, in company with the
-<i>Tonnant</i> (80), <i>Regulus</i> (44), and <i>Melpomene</i> (38), <i>en
-flute</i> to Bermuda, at which place we arrived after a
-passage of eight weeks.</p>
-
-<p>Nothing particular occurred on our voyage out,
-except my having the measles very badly, which, not
-knowing what ailed me, I had driven inwardly by
-cold bathing.</p>
-
-<p>We remained at Bermuda until the 3rd of July,
-when, in company with the <i>Asia</i> (74), <i>Regulus</i>, and
-<i>Melpomene</i>, we proceeded to the Chesapeake, and
-made Cape Henry on the 11th, and anchored in
-Synhaven Bay. The following morning we proceeded
-up the Chesapeake, and on the 15th joined Rear-Admiral
-Cockburn in the <i>Albion</i> (74), who was lying<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_151"></a>[Pg 151]</span>
-at anchor, with two frigates, at the entrance of the
-river Patuxent.</p>
-
-<p>I was placed under the orders of Captain J. Nourse,
-of the <i>Severn</i> (44), and sent up the river Patuxent for
-the purpose of assisting to blockade the American
-flotilla, under Commodore Barney, whose broad
-pennant was flying in a sloop of eight guns, and
-who had under his command seventeen gun-boats,
-each carrying a long 32, 24, or 18-pounder in the
-bow, and a 32-pound carronade in the stern, and
-manned with a crew of from sixty to seventy men.</p>
-
-<p>We ran thirty miles up the river, to the village
-of Benedict, in company with the <i>Severn</i>, <i>Ætna</i>, and
-<i>Manly</i> (brig).</p>
-
-<p>Rear-Admiral Cockburn proceeded with the others
-into the river Potomac to annoy the enemy in that
-quarter. As we advanced, the gun-boats retreated up
-the river to a town called Nottingham, twenty-five
-miles above Benedict, where, from the shoalness of
-the water, we could not follow them with the ships.
-During the time we continued in the Chesapeake we
-had guard-boats rowing every night to prevent the
-Yankees from trying the effect of their torpedoes or
-fire ships.</p>
-
-<p>From the 17th of July until the 17th of August our
-time was taken up in making incursions into different
-parts of the country, with 300 marines, attacking and,
-to use an American expression, “scaring the militia,”
-getting fresh provisions, destroying their store-houses
-and other public buildings, with the arms found there.
-Some of the Americans used to say, “What did King<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_152"></a>[Pg 152]</span>
-George send you here from the old country to come
-and scare us for? We don’t go to yours to frighten
-you, I guess. Your confounded sarpents come and
-anchor in our waters; then send their barges, full of
-armed men, who are pulling about day and night,
-landing here and there, scaring us and our families
-very considerably&mdash;tarnation seize them.” Our reply
-used to be, “You must ask your President, Jim
-Madison: he invited us.”</p>
-
-<p>A great many black slaves, with their families, used
-to take advantage of our visits to come away with us.
-Some of their first exclamations were, “Me free man;
-me go cut massa’s throat; give me musket,” which
-many of them did not know how to use when they
-had it.</p>
-
-<p>Another favourite expression, when we wanted
-them to work, was, “No, me no work&mdash;me free man.”
-It was, therefore, necessary to explain to these new
-freemen&mdash;which explanation, I fear, will frequently
-have to be repeated in our West India colonies, with
-other arguments&mdash;that we must all work and gain
-our livelihood by the “sweat of our brow,” whether
-bond or free; but they considered work and slavery
-synonymous terms.<a id="FNanchor_13" href="#Footnote_13" class="fnanchor">[M]</a></p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_153"></a>[Pg 153]</span></p>
-
-<p>Republicans are certainly the most cruel masters,
-and the greatest tyrants in the world towards their
-fellow men. They are urged by the most selfish
-motives to reduce every one to a level with, or even
-below themselves, and to grind and degrade those
-under them to the lowest stage of human wretchedness.
-But American liberty consists in oppressing
-the blacks beyond what other nations do, enacting
-laws to prevent their receiving instruction, and working
-them worse than donkeys. “But you call this a
-free country, when I can’t shoot my nigger when I
-like&mdash;eh?”</p>
-
-<p>While on the coast of America we embarked from
-fifteen hundred to two thousand slaves&mdash;the young
-men we formed into a black corps, and, taking
-possession of the small islands of Tangiers, we drilled
-and endeavoured to make our recruits of some use.
-The aged men, with the women and children, were
-sent to Halifax, Nova Scotia, and from thence a free
-colony was formed at the island of Trinadada, in the
-West Indies.</p>
-
-<p>Towards the middle of July and the month of
-August some parts of this coast are subject to
-tornadoes. We had one of them on the 25th of July,
-which obliged us, although lying at anchor in a river,
-to let go a second. The previous day and that morning
-had been extremely close and sultry. The storm came
-on from the north-west, with the greatest violence, accompanied
-by a few claps of thunder and vivid flashes
-of lightning: such was its force that, although in
-smooth water, the ship heeled so much over that our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_154"></a>[Pg 154]</span>
-main-deck guns nearly touched the water; and a fine
-schooner of seventy tons burthen, tender to the <i>Severn</i>,
-with a long 18-pounder on board, at anchor near us,
-without topmasts, her sails furled and gaffs on deck,
-was turned bottom upwards in a moment, and one
-poor fellow drowned. Its fury was spent in about ten
-minutes, but during its continuance we saw immense
-trees torn up by the roots, barns blown down like card
-houses of children, and where the strength of the
-current of wind passed scarcely anything could withstand
-its violence. Trees and other things continued
-to be swept by us for sometime, and when the tornado
-was over we observed, at a turn of the river, so much
-large timber, lumber, and other articles floating down
-the tide that my gallant senior officer, Captain Nourse,
-who is since dead, poor fellow! thought at first it was
-the American flotilla coming to attack us, and he was
-just on the point of returning to his ship to prepare
-for a fight, he having come on board to dine with me,
-when I discovered, by means of a spy-glass, the
-approaching flotilla was perfectly harmless.</p>
-
-<p>This circumstance was mentioned a short time
-afterwards to that <i>most gallant</i> officer, Captain Napier,
-who commanded the <i>Euryalus</i>, but Charley would not
-believe that the force of wind could upset a schooner
-of seventy tons, lying at anchor with all her sails furled,
-with her gaffs on deck, and without even top-masts;
-however, on the dashing, brilliant expedition, under
-Sir James Gordon, up the Potomac to Alexandria,
-above Washington, he had an opportunity of judging
-for himself when (part of a tornado passing across the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_155"></a>[Pg 155]</span>
-bows of the frigate) he saw in a moment both his bowsprit
-and fore-topmast broken in two, like twigs.</p>
-
-<p>Having heard that the enemy’s gun boats had
-moved down from Nottingham towards Benedict, on
-the 10th August I was ordered to proceed twenty
-miles up the river with five boats to reconnoitre. On
-landing I was informed they had been there two days
-before, but that they had returned to Upper Marlborough.
-On rowing up the river we fell in with a
-canoe, containing one white man, who was pulling
-from Leonard creek to the opposite shore; on seeing
-us he endeavoured to get to land, but not being able
-to do so, jumped overboard and was drowned. We
-had every reason to believe he was one of our deserters.</p>
-
-<p>On the 13th I again went up the river to ascertain
-the movements of Commodore Barney, but gained
-little information further than that he was with the
-flotilla at Nottingham.</p>
-
-<p>The next day we received an account of a party of
-American militia having arrived in the woods, at the
-back of our watering-place, with the intention of surprising
-some of our men; we therefore landed before
-daylight between three and four hundred marines and
-seamen, headed by Captain Nourse and myself, accompanied
-by Captain Coles, R.M., and separated into
-four parties, with the hope of being able to cut some
-of them off; but from the thickness of the woods and
-their knowledge of the country, the enemy succeeded
-in getting away from us.</p>
-
-<p>On one of our foraging excursions we were beset
-by a being so well described by old Cobbet, in his<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_156"></a>[Pg 156]</span>
-“Cottage Economy,” ycleped “Methodist parson,” who
-put on his canonicals, and began to whine and cant,
-and wished to preach a sermon on peace. Captain
-Nourse very properly told him to be off&mdash;that we
-must attend to our “calling” as well as he to “his,”
-that Jim Madison had “called us,” and, therefore, we
-must perform our duty.</p>
-
-<p>About this time a private of the marines belonging
-to my ship did a very gallant thing: to use an Irishism
-he surrounded three American dragoons, and took
-them, horses and all, prisoners. His name was Pat
-Gallaghen, or Gahagen. He effected this extraordinary
-feat in the following manner:&mdash;whenever boats were
-sent for water a sergeant’s party of marines accompanied
-them, it being necessary to post videttes to watch for
-the approach of an enemy. The casks in the launch
-had been filled, and all the party, except this man,
-who was placed near a stack of hay, had withdrawn.
-While the picket, who had to descend a cliff towards
-their boats, were out of sight, Pat observed five dragoons
-ride down to the corner of a wood, near a gate; keeping
-his eye on the party, he concealed himself behind the
-hay-rick, two of the men remained inside the gate, a
-long musket-shot off, whilst the others, after ascertaining,
-as they thought, that no <i>Britishers</i> were near, came
-galloping up to see the boats go off, and without observing
-the sentry in his hiding place, halted. The
-marine, very bravely putting his musket to his shoulder,
-called out&mdash;“You three d&mdash;&mdash; rascals, if you do not
-immediately jump off your horses and deliver yourselves
-up prisoners I’ll shoot the whole of you at once,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_157"></a>[Pg 157]</span>
-for I have you all in a line.” Off they got, and the
-sergeant at that moment shewing his head above the
-cliff to recall the vidette, they were very quietly taken
-to the beach, and themselves and horses brought safely
-on board.</p>
-
-<p>This brave man, from his immoderate fondness of
-liquor, was unfit to be promoted; therefore, all that
-could be done for him was to give him the money
-arising from the sale of the horses. Now, here was a
-proper subject for a medal or order of merit, which
-might have had the effect of rousing his pride, and
-curing him of the baneful evil of drinking to excess.
-But alas! it was the fashion to confer such distinctions
-on a very few.</p>
-
-<p>Look at the brave fellows who gained the battles of
-the Peninsula! With the exception of Waterloo, no
-field was honoured with a medal.<a id="FNanchor_14" href="#Footnote_14" class="fnanchor">[N]</a> Of the navy, not
-a man below the rank of captain obtained any badge
-of distinction, notwithstanding the many general engagements
-that took place, and the numerous most
-daring boat expeditions met with the same neglect.
-Since it was impossible to grant promotion in every<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_158"></a>[Pg 158]</span>
-instance, this would have been an easy and gratifying
-mode of awarding the meed of praise to many deserving
-individuals.</p>
-
-<p>I am not particularly fond of France or of any
-foreign country, but I must do the continental powers
-the justice to say they understand human nature, and
-know when to reward their officers and men better
-than we do. The practice of making their sentries
-carry arms to the veteran with his medal or order of
-merit works wonders on the <i>morale</i> of their soldiers;
-and I do <i>most sincerely and conscientiously believe</i> that,
-had this plan been adopted in our army and navy
-during the late war, not one half of the <i>desertions or
-punishments</i> would have taken place in either service.</p>
-
-<p>It is revolting to honourable feeling to meet in
-society at home or abroad, foreigners from nearly all
-nations covered with insignias or medals; while we,&mdash;who
-have had the pleasure of beating them in every
-part of the world, and which, with God’s blessing,
-should our king and country need our services, we
-shall be too happy to do again,&mdash;have neither.</p>
-
-<p>On the 17th of August, the <i>Tonnant</i> (80), Vice-Admiral
-Sir A. Cochrane; <i>Royal Oak</i> (74), Rear-Admiral
-P. Malcolm; several frigates and smaller
-men-of-war, with twenty sail of transports, having on
-board the 4th, 21st, 44th, and 85th Regiments of foot,
-and the marine battalion, under Lieut.-Colonel Malcolm,
-joined the squadron under the command of
-Rear-Admiral Cockburn, at the mouth of the river
-Patuxent. The land forces were commanded by the
-gallant Major-General Ross. We weighed on the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_159"></a>[Pg 159]</span>
-morning of the 20th, and sailed up the river to Benedict,
-where we landed the troops, which, including
-artillery, sailors, and marines, did not muster more
-than 4500 men.</p>
-
-<p>On the evening of the above day all the boats of
-the fleet, manned and armed, divided into divisions
-and sub-divisions, of which I commanded one, left the
-ships, advanced up the river towards Lower Marlborough
-to attack the American gun-boats, under
-Commodore Barney, and likewise to act on the right
-flank of our army. As we advanced, the enemy’s
-flotilla retired sixty miles further up the river to a
-place called Pig Point, where, in a most favourable
-position for defence, surrounded by banks and narrow
-creeks, with a wooded country on one side, and hills
-on the other, which were to have been lined with
-riflemen and other troops, it was their intention to
-have awaited the attack.</p>
-
-<p>Late in the evening of the 21st the boats reached
-Nottingham, when we fired on a few American
-dragoons, and drove them out of the town. Our
-army arrived a short time afterwards. The next day,
-at noon, we came up with the vessels of the enemy,
-who on our approach set them on fire, and blew them
-all up, except one, which, together with five merchant
-schooners, we brought away. This service was performed
-with little loss on our side, for the advance of
-our infantry had driven the Americans from the
-woods, who had fallen back upon the main road to
-Washington. One division of boats proceeded to
-Upper Marlborough to keep up a communication<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_160"></a>[Pg 160]</span>
-with our army; the remainder occupied a position at
-Pig Point to cover a retreat.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner was the flotilla destroyed than the
-brave and dashing Rear-Admiral Cockburn joined
-the troops, and marched with them to attack the city
-of Washington.</p>
-
-<p>This most gallant and daring affair was accomplished
-by 4500 British infantry, after first beating an
-American army of more than four times their own
-number, with their President, “Jim Madison,” at their
-head, who appeared on the field of battle mounted
-upon a white horse, and wearing a huge cocked hat.
-He addressed the American army previous to the
-battle of Bladensburgh, and recommended them to
-do their duty and fight well for the honour of their
-country, kill and make prisoners of all the Britishers,
-and then, wishing them success, and saying fighting
-was not in his province&mdash;he left that to the gallant
-generals who understood the art of war&mdash;he put spurs
-to his horse, and rode off to Washington to order refreshments
-and a grand <i>fête</i> to be got ready at the
-capital for the victorious army of the United States.</p>
-
-<p>General Ross, Rear-Admiral Cockburn, and all the
-field officers of the to-be-captured army, were to have
-been invited; but they forgot the advice of Mrs.
-Grundy in her cookery book, “Catch your hare first.”
-This is an absolute fact, for when our troops entered
-Washington the evening of the battle, tables were
-very elegantly laid out in the rooms of the President’s
-house, and wine placed in coolers ready iced, which
-the <i>great politeness</i> of the Americans left free for us to<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_161"></a>[Pg 161]</span>
-drink, for fear their presence might prevent our people
-feeling quite at home and at their ease.</p>
-
-<p>But to return to the advance of our troops. No
-sooner did the enemy see the steady and undaunted
-forward movement of part of the 4th, with the whole
-of the gallant 85th Regiment,&mdash;commanded by two
-fine, brave, dashing fellows, Colonel Thornton and
-Major Brown,&mdash;attempt to pass the bridge over the
-river Potomac, “which they had left to allow the
-Britishers to cross, that they might take them all
-prisoners” (the Americans having destroyed all the
-others), than they opened a most destructive fire from
-their heavy batteries of 24-pounders, which they had
-thrown up to enfilade it, and which were commanded
-by a brave old fellow of the United States’ Navy,
-Commodore Barney, who was wounded and taken
-prisoner, and whose flotilla of gun-boats we had
-previously destroyed at Pig Point, in the river
-Patuxent. He, however, made his escape with seven
-or eight hundred seamen, joined the American army,
-and was of great service in working and firing the guns
-in their field batteries, which were supported by a
-very heavy fusilade of musketry.</p>
-
-<p>The round and grape shot from the heavy guns
-in battery made fearful gaps in the ranks of the
-advancing column, but, nothing daunted, they gave
-three cheers, and rushed on in the most daring
-manner, which the enemy observing, it created a
-panic amongst them, and they gave way, declaring,
-I was informed, “that it was of no use their staying
-there to be shot, for the Britishers did not mind being<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_162"></a>[Pg 162]</span>
-killed at all.” So off they went, and never stopped
-until they got on the other side of Washington.</p>
-
-<p>The whole of the narrative of the attack on Washington
-and Baltimore has been so ably and faithfully
-described by the gallant author of the “Subaltern,”
-that I shall confine myself to our naval affairs, but
-I thought the above anecdotes, which are not mentioned
-in his work, were worth preserving to show
-the character of the natives.</p>
-
-<p>After having been twelve days and nights in an
-open boat, I was not sorry to return to my ship, but
-the moment the troops were re-embarked, a difficult
-navigation down the river precluded all idea of rest.</p>
-
-<p>The fag to officers and men of every description,
-during the whole of the operations in the Patuxent,
-was very harassing, and the labour of getting up to
-Baltimore without pilots, feeling our way with the
-lead, whilst boats on each bow and one a-head were
-sounding also, gave little time for respite. The heat
-of the weather too was very great, the thermometer
-varying only from 79° to 82° in the shade, during
-most of our severest services, which added much to
-the exhaustion.</p>
-
-<p>On the 8th of September we again landed the troops,
-now reduced to four thousand men, at a place called
-North Point, on the right hand side of the Patapsco
-river, leading to Baltimore. It was unfortunate that
-we ever attempted it, for most of the enemy’s army
-beaten at Washington had been sent to strengthen
-the works, and the whole population were in arms
-against us. The Americans seeing us approach, very<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_163"></a>[Pg 163]</span>
-wisely brought out several large ships and sunk them
-in the channel, under the guns of Fort Mac-Henry,
-which prevented the naval part of the expedition from
-acting near enough to be of any use with their guns.</p>
-
-<p>The only chance perhaps that might have given any
-hope of success was the offer of the gallant Rear-Admiral
-Cockburn to make a dash with all the boats
-of the fleet, and try and storm Fort Mac-Henry,
-keeping the troops on board until the issue of this
-measure was decided. Could we have once got possession
-of it, the little army might have been landed
-with ease, and the place been our own in a few hours.
-But the higher powers decided against his plan. Poor
-General Ross was killed, having been shot by a rifleman
-from a tree. He was brought down, wrapped
-up in a union jack, attended by his aide-de-camp;
-I placed the body in my boat, and sent it on board.
-He was beloved and universally respected by both
-the army and navy. By his untimely fall the little
-hope we had of succeeding vanished, and although
-the gallant Brook did all that a man could do, yet
-the strength of the enemy’s field-works that they had
-thrown up was so great,&mdash;and there being ten to one
-against us, intrenched as they were behind breast-works
-bristling with cannon,&mdash;caused the admiral to
-request the army to fall back, and we re-embarked
-them.</p>
-
-<p>Just before Sir Alexander Cochrane left the Chesapeake
-some Americans came on board of Sir Pultney
-Malcolm’s ship to treat for the exchange of prisoners.
-Colonel Brook, and Captain Dix, who commanded<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_164"></a>[Pg 164]</span>
-the <i>Menalaus</i>, frigate, were on board at the time.
-Boasting of their good marksmen, Jonathan thought
-to be very witty by telling Captain Dix, who was fat
-and broad made, “I guess, captain, you cover a deal
-of ground. You had better not come on shore, for
-our riflemen can shoot a duck through the head with
-a single ball at two hundred yards: therefore you will
-stand no chance.” “Very probably they are good
-shots,” replied Colonel Brook, “but you forget one
-thing&mdash;the poor duck was not a soldier with a red
-jacket on his back, and a musket, with a bayonet at
-the end of it, in his hand, ready to return the fire and
-use the steel. That makes a deal of difference with
-regard to steady shooting.”</p>
-
-<p>I was placed under the orders of Captain Robert
-Barrie, of the <i>Dragon</i> (74), and left with him in
-the Chesapeake, having on board part of Colonel
-Malcolm’s battalion of marines, commanded by Captain
-Coles of that corps, a good and clever officer; the
-remainder were embarked in other ships, while the
-fleet and transports, under Sir Alexander Cochrane,
-proceeded out of the Chesapeake to the southward.</p>
-
-<p>No sooner did our senior officer, Captain Robert
-Barrie, find himself free to act according to his own
-able judgment, than, with a mind capable of planning,
-and a heart as bold as a lion to execute, he undertook
-all kinds of expeditions, or, as our commodore used
-to call them, “shooting parties.” “Come,” he used
-to say, “we have not had a shooting party this some
-time: I have just had information that a body of
-Yankee militia, with a field-piece or two, are in such<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_165"></a>[Pg 165]</span>
-a place&mdash;we must go and take it from them.” Boats
-were manned and armed&mdash;the marine battalion, under
-Lieutenant-Colonel Malcolm, about 400 strong, the
-commodore always at their head, were put into them,
-and away we used to go. Bang, bang from the field-pieces&mdash;a
-tiraillade from the American musketry&mdash;three
-cheers and a dash from us, and the guns were
-ours: the militia taking themselves off to the woods, and
-we dragging the guns to our boats, frequently five,
-six, and seven miles, with an enemy’s force, double
-and treble our numbers, looking at us. In short,
-during the time we continued in the Chesapeake the
-American militia had no sinecure, for they never
-knew where we intended to land, and we had too
-much sense to go twice to the same place without an
-object in view.</p>
-
-<p>At this period provisions of all kinds began to run
-short; it was therefore necessary to put all hands on
-half allowance, and make frequent excursions to try
-and procure flour and cattle.</p>
-
-<p>On one of these foraging parties, the late Captain
-Tom Alexander, at the head of 200 seamen and
-marines, did a very gallant thing: he was attacked
-by 1,100 American troops,&mdash;with two squadrons of
-cavalry and five field pieces,&mdash;while he was busy
-getting cattle; the enemy’s horse made a charge, but
-not knowing that a swamp was between them and
-Alexander’s party, the horses sank up to their chests
-in mud, and began floundering about; he immediately
-commenced his fire upon them, which put them to the
-right-about, leaving half-a-dozen dragoons, who had<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_166"></a>[Pg 166]</span>
-been thrown from their horses, sticking with their
-heads in the mud; some of the sailors mounted these
-fellows in a moment, and shoving their heads deeper
-into the mire, there left them. After this, he embarked
-his men with the exception of three, who were made
-prisoners, and returned on board, leaving the cattle
-for a more convenient opportunity.</p>
-
-<p>The commodore, on the 1st of November, gave the
-following order to his squadron in the Chesapeake:&mdash;</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="right">“H.M. Ship <i>Dragon</i>, Nov. 1st, 1814.<br />
-“Chesapeake Bay.
-</p>
-
-<p>“The provisions of the squadron under my command getting extremely
-low, and it being very uncertain at this advanced season of the
-year when a supply can arrive, I find myself under the painful necessity
-of placing the ship’s company and marine battalion on short allowance.</p>
-
-<p>“You are therefore to place the crew and marines on board your
-ship upon half allowance, so as to make your provisions last for two
-months from this date.</p>
-
-<p>“You will signify to your crew that I trust it will not be necessary
-to continue this restriction long, and that I shall try by every means in
-my power to procure temporary supplies from the enemy. In the
-meantime, I am satisfied their zeal for their country’s cause will point
-out the absolute necessity of persevering in the blockade of the Chesapeake
-to the last extremity, and that the temporary privations they are
-reduced to will be borne with the utmost cheerfulness.”</p>
-
-<p class="right">“(Signed) <span class="smcap">Robert Barrie</span>,<br />
-“Captain and Senior Officer.”
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<p>In November we proceeded up the river Rappahannock
-for the purpose of attacking the American
-militia, 600 strong, who had some fieldpieces posted
-at Farnham Church.</p>
-
-<p>We first took the town of Rappahannock, driving
-the enemy out of it, who ran away so fast that they<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_167"></a>[Pg 167]</span>
-dropped their colours, which we took. On one side of
-them, under the American eagle, was this motto,
-“Death or victory”; on the other, “Down with the
-tyrants.” However, they were “scared” from death,
-and ran away from victory. We then attacked the
-militia at Farnham Church, and captured two of their
-fieldpieces; afterwards returning to Rappahannock we
-embarked some flour and tobacco, and then retired
-down the river to our ships, without in the least injuring
-the town.</p>
-
-<p>We had with us on this expedition Major Brown,
-of the 85th Regiment, who had been severely wounded
-at the battle of Bladensburgh, and on the falling back
-of our army from Washington, he, with several other
-officers and men, who were too ill to be removed,
-were left behind. He was a fine gallant fellow, and
-now commands the 2nd Battalion of Rifles.</p>
-
-<p>I must take this opportunity of confirming two
-statements of my gallant friend Captain J. Scott,
-which he mentions in his memoirs. First, with regard
-to the unjust accusation of plundering: all I can say
-is, that I saw nothing of the kind, unless taking provisions
-when we were starving upon half allowance
-may be called so; but on every principle of war we
-were entitled to forage, and for which in many cases
-we paid. The orders of both Admiral Cockburn and
-Captain Barrie were positive against plundering.</p>
-
-<p>With respect to the second, I can vouch for his
-account of the poisoning the spirits at Benedict being
-perfectly true. In consequence of what had taken
-place, if we wished to eat or drink anything that was<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_168"></a>[Pg 168]</span>
-found in their houses placed out ready for us upon
-their tables, we used to force the natives to eat a part
-first, that, in the event of its being poisoned, they
-might die with the Britishers.</p>
-
-<p>We used occasionally to purchase cattle from the
-Americans. The plan agreed on was this: they were
-to drive them down to a certain point, where we were
-to land and take possession; for the inhabitants being
-all militiamen, and having too much patriotism to sell
-food to “King George’s men,” they used to say, “put
-the money under such a stone or tree, pointing to it,
-and then we can pick it up, and say we found it.”
-More ways than one to cheat the old gentleman.</p>
-
-<p>Having seen in some publications several comments
-upon our mode of warfare in America, and no person
-yet ever having taken the trouble to place the facts
-before the public in its different bearings, it is high
-time that our side of the question should appear.
-According to the old proverb, “there are always
-two sides to a story.” The truth of the matter was
-this:&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>At the commencement of hostilities, America invaded
-Upper Canada, took York Town, and at the
-very beginning of a severe winter, having first sacked
-the place, and turned the inhabitants out into the
-snow to perish, burnt it to the ground. Had it been
-taken by storm, after a severe resistance, the laws of
-war would have sanctioned the proceedings; but the
-case was far different, little or no resistance being
-made.</p>
-
-<p>General Sir George Prevost wrote a letter of re<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_169"></a>[Pg 169]</span>monstrance,
-not only to the American officer commanding
-the division, but also to the Government,
-reprobating the mode of warfare they had just adopted,
-and calling upon both to disapprove of it by a public
-manifesto, and punish the parties concerned. An
-evasive answer was returned, and we got no redress.
-Sir George Prevost sent copies of the correspondence
-to the naval commander-in-chief, and retaliation was
-in consequence determined upon; and that their
-Government might feel we had the power to repay the
-favour they had conferred upon poor York Town,
-and other places, we had orders to destroy all
-public buildings, and such private houses also as
-had been fortified or fired from, inasmuch as they
-had been placed in the light of a fortress; <i>and the
-blaze that burnt York, in Upper Canada, reached
-Washington</i>.</p>
-
-<p>This, and the endeavouring to destroy our men-of-war
-by torpedoes,&mdash;the blowing up of Lieut. Geddes,
-and the barge’s crew of H.M. Ship <i>Ramilies</i> (74), by
-means of gun locks fixed in barrels of powder, with
-lines made fast to casks of flour, biscuits, or other
-“notions,” as Jonathan used to call them,&mdash;were among
-the causes which led to our system of warfare.</p>
-
-<p>Small vessels, called coasters, were laden in this
-manner:&mdash;the upper part of the hold consisted of an
-assortment of all kinds, and the under filled with casks
-of gunpowder; they were then placed directly in the
-way of our ships at anchor off their harbours, their
-crews taking to a boat and making their escape on
-shore when they observed our’s near them in chase.<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_170"></a>[Pg 170]</span>
-A vessel of this kind was taken by the boat of the
-<i>Ramilies</i> (74), off New London, commanded by that
-most intelligent and excellent officer, Sir Thomas
-Hardy, who, suspecting from the manner she was
-thrown in his way that all was not right, had her
-anchored two good cables’ length from his ship, and
-kept her there two or three hours before he would
-allow any person to go on board, thinking that by
-that time any mechanism invented for so diabolical a
-purpose would explode. After the above period poor
-Lieut. Geddes, whom I knew well, volunteered to go
-with the barge’s crew to examine the cargo very carefully;
-Sir Thomas Hardy still felt doubtful, but was
-at length induced by the repeated solicitations of
-Geddes to allow him to go, but with particular injunctions
-to be careful. It is supposed that in hoisting
-up a cask of flour or biscuits they pulled the line that
-was made fast from it to the barrel of powder, the
-explosion immediately took place, when a lieutenant,
-midshipman, and barge’s crew, sixteen in number,
-some of the best men in the ship, were blown to
-atoms.</p>
-
-<p>This fatal and melancholy catastrophe probably
-saved many of our gallant countrymen, as well as
-some of our men-of-war, by acting as a warning, and
-putting us on our guard against this <i>most dastardly</i>
-method of carrying on the war.</p>
-
-<p>The Americans had observed that several of our
-ships, the moment they captured a coasting vessel,
-hauled her alongside to take out her cargo, which
-frequently consisted of flour, biscuits, or other useful<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_171"></a>[Pg 171]</span>
-articles. They, therefore, fitted out several explosion
-vessels on the above plan, hoping thereby to blow up
-some of our seventy-four gun ships or frigates, and
-very probably they would have succeeded with any
-other except the <i>Ramilies</i>, but her wary captain,
-fortunately suspecting some trick would be attempted,
-never suffered them to come sufficiently near.</p>
-
-<p>These circumstances combined brought about our
-visit to Washington. The above is the real state of
-the case: it requires no comments, and every just man
-must say they were rightly served.<a id="FNanchor_15" href="#Footnote_15" class="fnanchor">[O]</a></p>
-
-<p>On the 10th November, I was ordered up to Sharp’s
-Islands, near Baltimore, to cover the <i>Dragon’s</i> tender
-and boats, that were sent to capture the steam packet
-that went occasionally from thence to French Town,
-but they arrived too late, she having crossed before
-they arrived. However, they took several schooners
-and sloops, and the packet from Baltimore to Elk
-Town.</p>
-
-<p>On the 15th of December, Rear-Admiral Cockburn
-rejoined the squadron from Bermuda, and gave us
-orders to proceed in company with the <i>Dragon</i> (74),
-and <i>Regulus</i> (44), and a schooner, to the coast of
-South Carolina. Having completed our provisions<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_172"></a>[Pg 172]</span>
-from a transport brought by the admiral, we left the
-Chesapeake on the 18th of December, which none of
-the squadron very much regretted, for the heavy north
-gales and cold weather made our boat operations in
-the Chesapeake anything but agreeable.</p>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_173"></a>[Pg 173]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="CHAPTER_XVI">CHAPTER XVI.</h2>
-</div>
-
-<p class="summary">Operations in South Carolina&mdash;Capture of Cumberland Island and
-the Fort of Point-à-Petre&mdash;An Affair with the American Riflemen in the
-Woods&mdash;An Abattis&mdash;Anecdotes of the 2nd West India Regiment&mdash;A
-Rattlesnake&mdash;Capture of the Town of St. Mary’s&mdash;Destruction of the
-Forts and Barracks&mdash;Nassau, New Providence&mdash;Compliment to the
-Royal Marines&mdash;Return Home&mdash;Concluding Remarks.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">On the 11th of January, 1815, we took possession of
-Cumberland Island without meeting any resistance.
-The marine battalions, commanded by Colonel Richard
-Williams and Colonel Malcolm, and the two flank
-companies of the 2nd West India Regiment, under
-Major Bradley, were disembarked, encamped, and
-works thrown up for protection&mdash;rumours being afloat
-that the enemy intended to attack us.</p>
-
-<p>Having waited some days for the arrival of the
-rear-admiral, and the ships being greatly in want of
-water, Commodore Barrie determined on making an
-attack upon the fort of Point-à-Petre and the town
-of St. Mary’s, South Carolina. The boats of the
-squadron were ordered to attack the fort by water,
-under the command of two most excellent officers&mdash;Captain
-C. B. H. Ross<a id="FNanchor_16" href="#Footnote_16" class="fnanchor">[P]</a> and Captain Samuel Jackson,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_174"></a>[Pg 174]</span>
-of the <i>Albion</i> and <i>Lacedemonian</i>&mdash;while the Royal
-Marine battalion, with the commodore, part of the
-2nd West Indian Regiment, and a few seamen, with
-myself, landed, to march through the woods and assail
-it in the rear. After advancing about a couple of
-miles we saw a few riflemen, who immediately retired
-into the woods. We kept on a kind of footpath and
-soon came to an abattis, behind which the enemy was
-posted, who immediately opened a brisk fire, but by
-bugling, cheering, and blazing away right and left, we
-drove them out and arrived at the fort which they had
-abandoned, just as the boats landed. The battery
-mounted six 24-pounders, and two brass 6-pounder
-field pieces. During this bush-fight a tragic economical
-occurrence, worthy of Joey Hume, took place. While
-scrambling over the fallen timber of the abattis, after
-the American sharpshooters, two blacks of the 2nd
-West Indian Regiment stumbled upon one of them;
-the rifleman fired and missed, one of the blacks put
-his musket to his shoulder and was going to shoot him
-when the other called out “Ta’am, why for you poil
-king cartridge? tick him, Ta’am, tick him!” which
-between the two was immediately accomplished. Each
-party lost some killed and wounded, but the woods
-being very thick we made few prisoners.</p>
-
-<p>During the time we were here, and at Cumberland
-Island, we had some sharp white frosts and a little
-ice, two things the West Indian blacks had never seen;
-they were puzzled not a little, particularly when they
-beheld their own breath. The keen morning air having
-rendered their faces of a sickly purple colour, their<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_175"></a>[Pg 175]</span>
-major enquired what was the matter; their reply was:
-“Major, me no know&mdash;me no like it at all&mdash;me no see
-’um, but he bity me toe a my finger.” When we
-laughed at their droll description, they said, breathing
-hard, “Eh! you no see smoke come out of my mouth,
-ah! massa major, he bity me toe a my finger!” shaking
-and rubbing their hands, and stamping with their feet,
-“Bad country this, no like em at all.” Several of these
-poor fellows were frost bitten, and lost their limbs.</p>
-
-<p>After the capture of the fort and barracks we embarked,
-and proceeded up the river to the town of St.
-Mary’s, which surrendered without further opposition.
-We made the inhabitants pull down their own fort
-and stockade in the town, took possession of the
-shipping and stores, and destroyed the public buildings.</p>
-
-<p>A curious thing occurred on board one of the ships:
-a rattlesnake <i>versus</i> grog or, finding a Tartar. During
-the time I was pulling about, taking possession of
-some of the vessels, and sending boats to others, I
-was startled by a tremendous noise on board one of
-the prizes, and saw the men running up the rigging
-in all directions, while others took to the boats. I
-went directly alongside to see what was the matter,
-thinking that some torpedo or clock-work, such as
-had blown up poor Lieut. Geddes, of the <i>Ramilies</i>,
-off New London, had been discovered. Upon inquiry
-I found that a rattlesnake had been the cause
-of all the row. Some of the boats’ crews on going on
-board very naturally went down below into the cabin,
-and other parts of the ship to see what she contained.
-Jack spied in the master’s cabin a large case, the wire-<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_176"></a>[Pg 176]</span>work
-of which was placed against the ship’s side, and
-which in their hurry they had not observed. The
-vessel, I must remark, was bound to France. Seeing
-this case the thought instantly struck them that it
-must contain wine or spirits; they were determined,
-after all their toil, to have a good drink before any of
-the officers came below; an iron crowbar and cutlasses
-soon ripped open the top, when, instead of rum, wine,
-or brandy, out jumped a large rattlesnake, at least two
-yards’ long&mdash;away flew the sailors up the hatchways,
-some got into the boats, others in the rigging, the
-snake made one spring up the ladder, and was on deck
-after them in a moment&mdash;he soon jumped overboard,
-and, the vessel being pretty close to the shore, made
-his escape into the rushes and we saw no more of him.</p>
-
-<p>After remaining here a few days, I accompanied
-Captain Ross and Captain Jackson forty miles up the
-river, to bring down the <i>Countess of Harcourt</i> Indiaman,
-that had been captured by a privateer some months
-before. In going up and down the river St. Mary’s
-we saw several large alligators sleeping on the banks,
-which at a little distance were taken for logs of timber,
-until they began to plunge into the water; we fired at
-several, and observed the balls strike the scales, but
-they bounded off, apparently without doing them any
-injury. I saw some of the Americans with the upper
-part of their shoes made of the skin, it had been
-tanned, and wore well, the knobs looked curious. I
-regretted afterwards I did not procure some of the
-shoes and tanned skins, and bring them home with
-me to England.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_177"></a>[Pg 177]</span></p>
-
-<p>After returning with the Indiaman, which we loaded
-with cotton, etc., I was ordered to proceed to Nassau,
-New Providence, to bring 300 more of the 2nd West
-India Regiment, it being the intention of the rear-admiral
-to make some attack further to the northward.</p>
-
-<p>We reached the Bahamas in ten days, first making
-the hole in the rock at the island of Abacco, which is
-a most excellent land-mark: it lies in lat. 25°, 56 N.,
-long. 77°, 20 W. from London. Then, steering S. by
-E., 18 leagues, we arrived off the bar of New Providence,
-where we took a pilot to conduct us to the
-anchorage. An immense shark followed us over the
-bar, and remained by the ship during our stay, and
-proceeded with us again when we sailed. The water
-was so very clear that we saw him daily at the
-bottom. He was too cunning to take bait, though
-now and then he would come up to the top, eat
-the bones and bits of biscuit thrown overboard, and
-try and get the piece of beef off the hook, but never
-would swallow it.</p>
-
-<p>On my return from New Providence with troops,
-we again took on board part of the marine battalion
-from the fort and barracks of Fort Washington at
-Point-à-Petre, the guns of which we embarked; then,
-blowing up the works and burning the barracks, we
-returned to Cumberland Island to plan further
-annoyances to the enemy.</p>
-
-<p>While we were absent at the Bahamas, Captain
-Phillot, of the <i>Primrose</i>, brig, had been sent ninety
-miles up the river to attack some troops and destroy<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_178"></a>[Pg 178]</span>
-their stores of provisions, but the river becoming
-narrow, and the Americans lining the banks with
-sharpshooters, besides felling trees to stop the boats,
-he failed in the object, having lost several men killed
-and wounded, amongst the latter Captain Phillot
-himself severely. Had the enemy not prematurely
-shown their intention, they would have blocked up
-the boats, and probably captured them all. As it
-was, nothing but the coolness and bravery of the
-commander, and officers and men under his orders,
-prevented it.</p>
-
-<p>Just at this period we received the news of the
-total failure of our southern expedition to New
-Orleans, which event gave us deep and sincere
-regret, but we hoped by a gallant dash to wipe out
-our distressing feelings at such an unfortunate event;
-but while in the midst of preparations we received
-intelligence that the olive branch of peace was
-received, and the demon of war between parent and
-child had ceased. Had it arrived immediately after
-the taking of Washington, how great would have
-been our delight! As it was, although we could
-not help feeling a secret pleasure at the prospect
-of returning home to our families and friends, yet
-the throwing away so many valuable lives in the
-swamps of New Orleans cast a damp on our spirits,
-and a secret wish to try and blot it from our
-memories by some gallant achievement.</p>
-
-<p>Previous to returning to Nassau, I had the honour
-to receive a public letter of thanks from my brave
-and worthy commodore, Barrie. To have his appro<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_179"></a>[Pg 179]</span>bation
-was, indeed, a flattering testimonial, and I
-look back at this hour with pleasure when we served
-together on the other side of the Atlantic, and I
-hope, if ever England should be again plunged in
-war, that fortune may place me under his command.</p>
-
-<p>On the 6th of March the ship I commanded was
-ordered to proceed to Nassau with the 2nd West
-India Regiment, and from thence to Bermuda, where
-we arrived the beginning of April with a re-captured
-English brig. After remaining there a fortnight,
-and receiving letters of thanks from Sir Alexander
-Cochrane and Rear-Admiral Cockburn, addressed to
-my officers and ship’s company, as well as two others
-to myself, we proceeded to Halifax, Nova Scotia,
-at which place we embarked the 98th Regiment,
-Lieutenant-Colonel Douglass, and sailed, in a heavy
-snow-storm, on the 20th of May with a convoy of
-transports for England, and arrived at Spithead in
-June, after a passage of twenty-two days.</p>
-
-<p>From the period of our sailing from Britain (April,
-1814) until the same month, 1815, we had been constantly
-employed upon a variety of harassing services
-and desultory warfare, with the gallant Royal Marine
-battalions, under the present colonels, Sir R. Williams<a id="FNanchor_17" href="#Footnote_17" class="fnanchor">[Q]</a>
-and Sir John Malcolm, and it would be the height of
-injustice not to bear witness to their most brave,
-able, and steady conduct on every occasion. But<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_180"></a>[Pg 180]</span>
-where did they ever do otherwise? From the sun’s
-rising in the east to its setting in the west, in both
-hemispheres, it has witnessed the devoted bravery
-and loyalty of the whole corps of Royal Marines.</p>
-
-<p>After remaining sometime at Spithead, orders came
-for us to embark part of the suite of the Duchess
-D’Angoulême. After making the necessary preparations,
-and expending some of my own money in the
-outfit, we received counter orders.</p>
-
-<p>In August the ship was ordered to Sheerness to be
-paid off; on the 23rd I was promoted to the rank of
-captain, and on the 9th September the pennant was
-hauled down, and I parted from my old officers and
-ship’s company with very great regret. Thus ended
-my naval services for the present, after nearly seventeen
-of the best years of my life in active warfare;
-and I have now to thank God for His protection and
-providence on many trying occasions.</p>
-
-<p>I shall conclude by making a few remarks before
-closing this narrative upon the unfortunate mistake
-this country committed with regard to our quarrel
-with the United States, and also upon the actions
-which took place between our frigates and theirs, and
-upon the subject of searching for English sailors on
-board their vessels.</p>
-
-<p>The great error that England committed was her
-not having declared war against America two or three
-years earlier than she did. She ought to have done
-it on account of their having aided and assisted our
-mortal enemy, by carrying on the trade for France in
-vessels belonging to the United States, and not have<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_181"></a>[Pg 181]</span>
-allowed them to become the aggressors, to choose
-their own time, and make the first attack. Had she
-done so in 1808-1809, or even in 1810, America would
-have been completely in our power, for the whole of
-her merchant vessels covered the seas, and her few
-men-of-war were not particularly well manned. The
-embargo had been on two years, by which time most
-of her trading vessels were safely returned from every
-part of the world; and her seamen being thrown out
-of employ, were glad to enter on board their men-of-war
-and privateers for the chance of prize money.
-But she being now ready, and having secured nearly
-all her merchant vessels safe in their own ports, first
-insulted the British flag by sending a 58-gun frigate,
-the <i>Constitution</i>, to attack the <i>Little Belt</i> corvette
-of 18 guns then cruizing on the American coast to
-intercept French vessels. This large frigate of 58
-guns, and 487 men, <i>very gallantly</i> fired into the little
-sloop of war of 18 guns and 120 men, killed and
-wounded several of them; but she in a very spirited
-manner returned the fire of this greatly superior force,
-and killed some of her men. Commodore Rogers, of
-the American 58-gun ship, pretended to make an
-apology to Captain Bingham, of His Majesty’s ship
-<i>Little Belt</i>, by saying he took her for a frigate, or he
-should not have fired into her.</p>
-
-<p>This was done with the hope of making England
-declare war, and thereby putting the onus upon her,
-and making the war in America more popular; but
-that failing, and they having an army ready to invade
-Canada, urged on by Bonaparte in 1812, threw down<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_182"></a>[Pg 182]</span>
-the gauntlet, and commenced hostilities, uniting with
-France against the liberties of Europe.</p>
-
-<p>Their few frigates being beautifully manned, and
-immensely superior to ours in size, guns, and number
-of men, took three of our 48-gun frigates after a severe
-action. But I do maintain the British navy lost no
-honour. The enemy’s ships mounted 58 guns, 24 and
-42-pounders, with a complement of 487 picked seamen
-and marines; whereas our ships carried only 48 guns,
-18 and 32-pounders, all badly manned, and one, the
-<i>Guerrière</i>, with only 187 men at quarters, the other
-two, the <i>Java</i> and <i>Macedonian</i>, had nearly their complement
-of 300 men such as they were. The strength,
-size, and number of guns of the American ships were
-too great for ours.</p>
-
-<p>Persons not conversant with nautical affairs, imagine
-that one frigate is as good as another; but that is not
-the case, for it is very clear that a man of five feet
-four inches, weak in proportion, cannot stand against
-a man of six feet, with nearly double his strength,
-although both are called men.</p>
-
-<p>Another circumstance must be mentioned, which is
-this. A ship capable of carrying 58 or 60 heavy
-guns, 30 of which are long 24-pounders on her main
-deck, must be a much stronger and larger ship, both
-in hull, masts, and yards, and her masts several inches
-in diameter bigger than the smaller ship, carrying
-only 28 18-pounders on the main deck; therefore
-three, indeed two, if in a fresh breeze of wind, 24-lb.
-shot striking the main-mast in the same place or
-nearly so, of the smaller vessel, would knock it away,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_183"></a>[Pg 183]</span>
-whereas it would require double the number of the
-18-pound shot to cut away that of the larger ship,
-giving so many more advantages to the bigger ship
-against the smaller, by the latter being so much
-sooner crippled.</p>
-
-<p>The ridiculous, silly, and mischievous hue and cry
-that was raised in this country, in consequence of the
-above action, by a malicious, envious party, to pluck
-from the navy some of her laurels, needs no comment.
-It gave a lustre to the above frigate actions of our
-enemy all over the world which they did not deserve,
-and made them think themselves much more superior
-than they were, until the fight between the English
-frigate, <i>Shannon</i> (48), Captain Philip Broke, and the
-<i>Chesapeake</i> (49), Captain Laurence, off Boston. The
-latter had fifty more men than the former, but was
-taken in fifteen minutes by the gallant Captain Broke,
-and the ship’s company of the <i>Shannon</i>. This brilliant
-affair, followed a short time afterwards by the action
-of the <i>Endymion</i> (50), Captain Henry Hope, that
-mounted 24-pounders on her main deck, and 32-pounders
-on the quarter-deck, against the <i>President</i>
-(60), 24-pounders and 42-pounders, which she also
-captured, proved to them that, when we were more
-evenly matched, the navy of England was still mistress
-of the seas.</p>
-
-<p>It was long seen by those who chose to make use
-of their senses that the disputes between the two
-countries must end in a rupture; and that the
-American Government were determined to side with
-France, and pick a quarrel with us, and that a war<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_184"></a>[Pg 184]</span>
-was inevitable. They knew that the whole attention
-of the British Government was taken up by the great
-struggle in Europe, and therefore few, if any, troops
-could be spared from the great theatre of war on the
-Peninsula; they considered this the time therefore to
-demand new maritime law.</p>
-
-<p>The right of search (which for ages had been the
-acknowledged or assumed law of all European belligerent
-nations), for enemies’ merchandize carried in
-neutral vessels, America was determined to oppose.
-Instigated by intrigues, and offers of all kinds, made
-by French emissaries sent for that purpose, Bonaparte
-found his Milan decrees, declaring the whole coasts
-of Great Britain and her extensive colonies in the
-four quarters of the world in a state of blockade, to
-be of no use without a navy to support it, and not
-having one that dared show its face upon the ocean,
-had no means to carry his decrees into execution.
-His eagle eye at once saw that by making a tool of
-the United States, and embroiling them with England,
-he might make a great diversion in his favour. He,
-therefore, induced their cabinets to enter into his
-plans, backed, it was said, “<i>by good, weighty, golden
-reasons</i>, and insisted upon a new maritime law,” which
-would strike a death blow at our dominion of the sea,
-and at once evade all blockade. The law I allude to
-was, that the neutral flag or vessel should permit the
-ship wearing it to carry the cargo of an enemy free of
-capture from the other belligerent, who met it on the
-sea or elsewhere.</p>
-
-<p>It was very extraordinary that America found little<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_185"></a>[Pg 185]</span>
-fault with France, who first commenced the general
-blockade by the issue of her Milan decrees, and who
-confiscated all the United States’ vessels that were
-captured by her men-of-war or privateers with British
-colonial or other produce on board, coming directly
-or indirectly from any port of the United Kingdom
-of Great Britain and her colonies. Had they merely
-touched or been driven by stress of weather into an
-English port, or even boarded by a British cruiser, it
-was sufficient to condemn them as lawful prizes in a
-French Court of Admiralty, when met at sea by
-French armed vessels, and detained. England waited
-with great patience, thinking that all the neutral
-powers, but above all America, would protest against
-the measure, and join her who was fighting for the
-liberties of all the world against the iron grasp of
-Bonaparte, and his intended universal dominion. The
-United States, on the contrary, put up with the seizure
-of their vessels by France, and when Great Britain
-was obliged, after the greatest forbearance, to declare
-the whole coast of France and her allies in a state of
-blockade&mdash;which she had the means of doing, having
-more than one thousand men-of-war of different sizes
-at sea or in commission, ready effectually to carry this
-measure into operation&mdash;they grew outrageous because
-she would not permit them to be our secret enemy,
-and carry the trade of France in their ships, under
-the new maritime law they proposed, viz., that a
-neutral ship and flag were to make an enemy’s cargo
-neutral also. The above was one of the causes that
-led to the war.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_186"></a>[Pg 186]</span></p>
-
-<p>Impressment of seamen or sailors out of their
-vessels is another source of complaint against this
-country. To this latter act England was driven by
-the conduct of citizens of the United States, decoying
-men to desert whenever any of our ships, whether
-men-of-war or merchant vessels, put into their harbours.
-The enticing our seamen away to man
-their vessels naturally made us search for British
-subjects whenever British men-of-war boarded any of
-our ships, whether at sea or in foreign parts, particularly
-when we knew the easy method by which English
-subjects were naturalised and gained American protections.</p>
-
-<p>I recollect a very fine young seaman whom we took
-out of an American ship at Messina in Sicily, when I
-was a lieutenant of the <i>Melpomene</i> frigate. On being
-brought on board he produced his United States’ protection,
-and requested to be sent back to his ship.
-He wrote to the American consul to claim him, and
-the master of his ship came on board to demand him
-as an American citizen. Having strong suspicion
-that he was an English subject,&mdash;notwithstanding the
-clamour raised by the Yankee master and consul, and
-the production of his protection; yet, from his not
-having any nasal twang when he spoke, and not using
-the general slang words of that country, such as “I
-guess,” “I calculate,” etc.,&mdash;we kept him on board that
-night. The next morning he came on the quarter-deck
-of the frigate, and gave up his American protection
-and said, “I will not deny my country&mdash;I am
-a native of Swansea, in Wales, and I got that pro<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_187"></a>[Pg 187]</span>tection
-when I sailed last voyage in a merchant ship
-from Liverpool to New York, in the following manner.
-On my arrival at New York I was told that by paying
-two dollars I could get a protection of citizenship,
-which would prevent my being pressed on board an
-English man-of-war. The way it was managed was
-this:&mdash;I was put into a large cradle made on purpose
-to hold men; I was then rocked by them for a minute
-or two, and afterwards taken before the proper authorities
-by the old couple, who made oath they had known
-me ever since I was in my cradle&mdash;no further questions
-were asked, the matter being quite understood between
-the parties,&mdash;I paid the fees, the protection was granted,
-and, having given the old folks two dollars for their
-trouble, I became a ‘registered American citizen,’ and
-that, sir,” he said, “is the way British seamen are kidnapped
-in the States&mdash;in short, it is a regular trade,
-and hundreds of seamen that have protections got
-them in the same manner.”</p>
-
-<p>A knowledge of the various tricks played on the
-other side of the Atlantic to entice away our seamen,
-made the officers of the British navy more anxious to
-recover their sailors, which of course at times caused
-some irritating disputes with the masters and skippers
-of the American vessels. These magnified every trifle,
-and reported all the circumstances to people who were
-paid by that part of the press in the French interest
-to make the worst of everything, in order to inflame
-the public mind against this country, particularly after
-the affair of the <i>Leopard</i> (50), taking our deserters out
-of the American frigate <i>Chesapeake</i> (48), and the un<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_188"></a>[Pg 188]</span>fortunate
-event of H.M.S. <i>Leander</i>, when a man was
-killed by accident by her firing to bring-to a vessel
-under the United States’ flag off New York for the
-purpose of examining her.</p>
-
-<p>The Americans acted with great wisdom and foresight
-previous to their declaration of war, by putting
-on the embargo and passing the “Non-intercourse
-Bill” with England two years before. By that wise
-act they were enabled to get home their trade from all
-parts of the world, and having done this, they insulted
-our flag by sending a 58-gun ship, commanded by
-Commodore Rogers, to fire into the <i>Little Belt</i> corvette
-of 18-guns, commanded by Captain Bingham,
-cruising near their coast, and killing several of her
-men and wounding others. This affair had two meanings.
-First to revenge the death of their citizens slain
-in the <i>Chesapeake</i> frigate, and on board the merchant
-ship off New York; and secondly to induce us to
-declare war against them, to make it more popular
-with the generality of the people of the States, that
-the Government might be able to throw the blame
-upon England. Britain having her hands full in other
-places, fighting for the liberties of the world, making
-at the same time a desperate struggle for her own
-existence, and most nobly striving to liberate other
-powers from the grasp of Bonaparte, was not willing
-at this most critical period to have another foe; she
-therefore tried something in protocol fashion of the
-present day, but it failed as all half-measures generally
-do.</p>
-
-<p>America laughed at it, and commenced biting our<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_189"></a>[Pg 189]</span>
-heels, while John Bull was tossing the dogs in front.
-They had the wisdom to perceive the great error
-England had committed in not seeing that war was
-inevitable, and that she ought to have declared it two
-or three years before, and not have allowed her to get
-the whole of her vessels safe into port. Our politeness
-and good breeding enabled them to secure all or most
-of their shipping, in order to enable them to man
-their ships of war and privateers with picked sailors.
-Their seamen being thrown out of employ, were glad
-to enter on board their men-of-war and privateers for
-the almost certain chance of a rich harvest, by capturing
-our East and West Indiamen.</p>
-
-<p>This was the great mistake England committed;
-for had we gone to war at an earlier period when the
-seas were covered with American merchant ships,
-they would have been swept into our harbours, and
-she would have been completely at our mercy, and
-twelve months at that time would have settled our
-disputes far more amicably than the unsatisfactory
-method adopted in the year 1815.</p>
-
-<p>Natural affection, intimate connections with this
-country, a common language, and a wish to incline to
-a reasonable adjustment of claims, would probably have
-settled our quarrel, and not have left the boundary line
-as a further bone of contention. But we were unfortunately
-so delighted with the success of our allies and
-our own gallant army, by the capture of Paris, and
-other deeds in Europe, added to the abdication of
-Napoleon, that American matters were left nearly in
-the same state as before the war, although we had the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_190"></a>[Pg 190]</span>
-means at that period to have settled everything in a
-most satisfactory manner. The country was like,&mdash;or
-might be compared to,&mdash;soldiers and sailors who had
-received so much pay and prize-money that they got
-drunk. Great Britain was intoxicated with the honour
-and renown which their countrymen in the army and
-navy had gained for them, and never thought of the
-morrow. Indeed, up to the present time, 1839, they
-have been living upon the <i>principal</i> of <i>credit</i>, for we
-have put, I fear, very little by or out to interest which
-was <i>then gained</i>, and which has been most woefully
-frittered away ever since, until the country has at last
-almost run bankrupt: for we are spit upon in Spain,
-treated with contempt in Portugal, despised in France,
-laughed at in Russia, kicked in Canada, and in a fine
-olla podrida in India and China.</p>
-
-<p class="p4 center">FINIS.
-</p>
-
-<blockquote class="p4">
-<p><span class="smcap">Note.</span>&mdash;Vice-Admiral William Stanhope Lovell, R.N., K.H.,
-was born September 15th, 1788. Married, 2nd January, 1822, Selina,
-youngest daughter of Sir Henry Crewe, Bart., of Calke Abbey, Derby,
-and by her, who died on the 30th March, 1838, had issue one son and
-three daughters, who survive him. Vice-Admiral Lovell died in 1859,
-“<i>sans peur et sans reproche</i>.” Was buried at Bexley, Kent.</p></blockquote>
-<hr class="chap" />
-
-<div class="chapter">
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_191"></a>[Pg 191]</span></p>
-
-<h2 class="nobreak" id="APPENDIX"><i>APPENDIX.</i></h2>
-</div>
-
-<p>Having, in the foregoing narrative, stated, in justification of
-our mode of warfare in America, some of the causes which led
-to our adoption of the system of retaliation, I beg to subjoin two
-extracts from the Annual Register of the year 1814, as well as
-copies of public documents, which a friend has most kindly
-favoured me with, which fully bear me out in saying that we
-were in a manner compelled to adopt the system we pursued,
-<i>i.e.</i>, to teach the Americans that we had the power to return
-with interest the inhuman mode of warfare with which they
-began the campaign.</p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p>“From several causes it was not to be expected that the war between
-Britain and America would be carried on in the most humane and
-honourable mode, especially by the Americans; they had not yet
-forgotten the war of the revolution, and by our employment of the
-Indians, <i>though they set us the example</i>, the consequences were such as
-might be dreaded. In their different invasions of Canada, the greatest
-inhumanities were exercised; especially at Sandwich, at the settlements
-on the Thames, at York, and at Fort George. Finding that remonstrances
-against this mode of conducting the war produced no effect,
-General Sir George Prevost at length issued a proclamation announcing
-a severe retaliation on the Americans, while at the same time he earnestly
-deprecated this mode of warfare.”&mdash;<i>Annual Register</i>, p. 318, <i>Principal
-Occurrences</i>, 1814.</p></blockquote>
-
-<blockquote class="p2">
-<p>“A proclamation issued by General Sir George Prevost, Bart.,
-announces, after long forbearance, a severe retaliation on the Americans
-for their inhuman mode of warfare in their different invasions of Canada,<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_192"></a>[Pg 192]</span>
-especially for their having, in the midst of a severe Canadian winter,
-wantonly burnt the beautiful village of Newark, and turned out <i>four
-hundred helpless women and children</i> to perish in the snow, and through
-the severity of the season, <i>without shelter, and without a remnant of
-property</i>. This case is made out with the utmost distinctness against
-the Americans, not only in this, but in a number of other instances,
-at Sandwich, at the settlements on the Thames, at York, and at Fort
-George. General Sir George Prevost earnestly deprecates this mode of
-warfare; but he justly observes that ‘since it has been so long persevered
-in by the enemy, retaliation becomes an imperious duty.’
-But he at the same time says, ‘that he will no longer pursue a system of
-warfare so revolting to his own feelings, and so uncongenial to the
-British character, unless forced to it by the future measures of the
-enemy.’”&mdash;<i>Annual Register</i>, p. 27; <i>Principal Occurrences</i>, 1814.</p></blockquote>
-
-<p>I trust that I have fully vindicated our mode of warfare in
-America, by showing that we were driven to it by the great inhumanities
-so frequently committed by the enemy, and when
-forbearance and remonstrance failed, nothing was left but to
-teach them that when goaded beyond endurance&mdash;<i>four hundred
-helpless women and children turned out to perish in the frost and
-snow of a severe Canadian winter</i> from the village of Newark,
-besides wanton barbarities committed in various other places&mdash;the
-British lion was at length aroused from his slumber, and that
-the fires which the Americans had lit in other places, reached
-the public works of their capital&mdash;Washington.</p>
-
-<h3>Copies of Correspondence.</h3>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="right">“Head-quarters, British Troops,<br />
-“Bank of the St. Lawrence,<br />
-“14th Nov., 1813.
-</p>
-
-<p>“Sir,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“The object of the present communication, which is made
-by desire of the officers in command of the British forces in this neighbourhood,
-is, in the first instance, to claim as prisoners two American
-officers who were taken on the morning of the 11th, previous to the
-action, and deserted to their own shore while on the way to Prescott.</p>
-
-<p>“I enclose a copy of their paroles.</p>
-
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_193"></a>[Pg 193]</span></p>
-
-<p>“William Gilkinson, Esq., of Prescott, is the bearer of this flag,
-and I am instructed to request that you will facilitate his passage to
-the Commanding General of the United States’ Army, to whom he is
-desirous of making a representation on the subject of the plunder and
-destruction of his property by the American troops in this neighbourhood.
-And on this subject I am instructed to protest in the most
-solemn manner against that system of rapine and plunder of the property
-of the peaceful and unoffending inhabitants which has marked the
-progress of the American army during its short continuance in this
-province; and I am further to entreat that his Excellency the Commander-in-Chief
-of the United States’ Army will allow no consideration
-arising out of the circumstances of the disparity of rank of the British
-officer by whom he is so called upon, to restrain his Excellency from
-immediately disavowing this system so disgraceful to a civilized army,
-and affording every fair indemnity to the individual sufferers; or that
-he will, by an open avowal that the system complained of is an authorized
-one, leave it in the option of the general officer (hourly expected
-to assume the command of the powerful and rapidly increasing British
-force in this neighbourhood), to employ it in such acts of just retaliation
-upon the persons and property of the inhabitants of the right bank of
-the St. Lawrence as he may think fit, as commensurate with the treatment
-of the inhabitants on this side.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“I have the honour to be, Sir, very respectfully,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“Your most obedient humble servant,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“(Signed) T. HARVEY, Lieut.-Col.,<br />
-“D.C.G. to the British Forces<br />
-“in the Canadas.”
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="right">“Head Quarters, Montreal,<br />
-“2nd June, 1814.
-</p>
-
-<p>“Sir,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I have the honour to transmit to you a copy of a letter
-which I have written to Lieut.-General Drummond, in consequence of
-the late disgraceful conduct of the American troops in the wanton
-destruction of private property on the north shores of Lake Erie, in
-order that if the war with the United States continues, you may, should<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_194"></a>[Pg 194]</span>
-you judge it advisable, assist in inflicting that measure of retaliation
-which shall deter the enemy from a repetition of similar outrages.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“I have, &amp;c.,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“(Signed) GEORGE PREVOST,<br />
-“Commander of the Forces.</p>
-
-<div class="aspara">“To Vice-Admiral the Honourable<br />
-<div class="i2em">“Sir <span class="smcap">A. Cochrane</span>, K.B., &amp;c., &amp;c.”</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="right">“Head Quarters, Montreal,<br />
-“1st June, 1814.
-</p>
-
-<p>“Sir,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“It is with sincere regret and disappointment that I
-perused the detail of illiberal and wanton devastation and unjustifiable
-outrage reported in your letter of the 27th ult., and Major-General
-Riall’s of the 19th, to have been committed in the vicinity of the
-village of Dover, and on its unoffending inhabitants, by the conflagration
-of their dwelling-houses and their mills.</p>
-
-<p>“I cherished the hope that the severe, although just, retaliation
-inflicted for the destruction of the village of Newark would have
-deterred the enemy from similar acts of barbarity; under that impression,
-I issued a proclamation of the 4th January last, which has since been
-most scrupulously adhered to by the troops under my command, and it
-is with painful reluctance I now feel myself compelled to return to a
-system so abhorrent to those principles of humanity which have always
-animated and characterized Britons.</p>
-
-<p>“But such horrors cannot be suffered to remain without notice or
-unrevenged; you must, therefore, transmit by a flag of truce to the
-officer commanding the American force nearest to you a statement of
-those atrocities, with information that you have my instructions to
-inflict a severe retribution for them; you may assure him that the same
-will be repeated for every act of such outrage committed on the defenceless
-and peaceable settlers of our frontier, and that the British fleet on
-the coast of America will be called upon to assist in the measure of just
-retaliation.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“I have, &amp;c.,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“(Signed) GEORGE PREVOST,<br />
-“Commander of the Forces.</p>
-
-<div class="aspara">“To Lieut.-Gen. <span class="smcap">Drummond</span>, &amp;c., &amp;c.,
-<div class="i2em">“Com. Upper Canada.”</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-<p><span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_195"></a>[Pg 195]</span></p>
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="right">“Tonnant, Halifax,<br />
-“5th Oct., 1814.
-</p>
-
-<p>“Sir,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I have the honour to acknowledge the receipt of your
-Excellency’s letter of the 3rd August, acquainting me of the repetition
-on the part of the enemy of the disgraceful outrages committed by him
-on the north shores of Lake Erie.</p>
-
-<p>“I have therefore reiterated my order of retaliation of the 18th
-July, of which a copy was sent to your Excellency, and given further
-directions for the distressing him south of the Delaware, to the utmost
-of our power; from that river northward I have restrained the squadron
-from acting in full execution of its purport until I see what change the
-late events may produce in that quarter.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“I have the honour to be,</p>
-
-<p class="right">“Your Excellency’s most obedient humble servant,<br />
-“ALEXANDER COCHRANE,<br />
-“Vice-Admiral and Commander-in-Chief.</p>
-
-<div class="aspara">“To his Excellency
-<div class="i2em">“Lieut.-General Sir <span class="smcap">Geo. Prevost</span>, Bt.,</div>
-<div class="i4em">“Commander of the Forces, &amp;c., &amp;c.”</div>
-</div>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="right">“Head Quarters, Montreal,<br />
-“August 6, 1814.
-</p>
-
-<p>“My Lord,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I have the honour to transmit to your Lordship a copy
-of a letter I have addressed to Vice-Admiral the Hon. Sir A. Cochrane,
-respecting the late wanton and disgraceful conduct of the enemy in the
-burning of the villages of Queen Town and St. David’s, on the Erie
-frontier.</p>
-
-<p class="right">“J. W.</p>
-
-<p>“To <span class="smcap">Earl Bathurst</span>.”
-</p>
-</blockquote>
-
-<hr class="tb" />
-
-<blockquote>
-<p class="right">“Head Quarters, Montreal,<br />
-“30th Sept., 1814.
-</p>
-
-<p>“Sir,&mdash;</p>
-
-<p>“I have the honour to acknowledge your three letters of
-the 19th inst., which have been laid before the Commander of the<span class="pagenum"><a id="Page_196"></a>[Pg 196]</span>
-Forces, with regard to the miseries which the enemy have again made
-on Port Talbot; his Excellency is of opinion that it is the act of Westbrook,
-who is gratifying private animosities with a heartless band; he
-scarcely conceives it to have been authorized by the Government of the
-U.S., and requests to be informed who commanded the enemy’s force
-employed on this occasion. The Commander of the Forces hopes that
-precautionary measures have been taken to frustrate the design of the
-enemy upon Long Point, should the execution of it be attempted. If
-you consider it necessary to retaliate for the unjustifiable act of carrying
-off Colonel Burnell, you have his Excellency’s authority to do so, or
-else, if you prefer it, two respectable American citizens may be taken as
-hostages for him from Hamilton.</p>
-
-<p class="p2">“To Lieut.-General <span class="smcap">Drummond</span>.”</p></blockquote>
-
-<p class="p4 center small"><span class="smcap">Witherby &amp; Co.</span>, Printers, 325a, High Holborn, W.C.</p>
-
-<div class="footnotes"><h3>FOOTNOTES:</h3>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_1" href="#FNanchor_1" class="label">[A]</a> Colonel Thomas Stanhope Badcock, of Little Missenden Abbey,
-Bucks, and of Maplethorpe Hall, Lincolnshire, married Anne, daughter
-of William Buckle, Esq., of the Mythe House and Chasely, in Gloucestershire,
-by Anne, daughter of George Turberville, Esq. The
-family is descended from Sir Salathiel Lovell, of Harleston, co.
-Northampton, one of the Barons of the Exchequer, whose youngest
-daughter <i>Jane</i> married Richard Badcock, Esq. Of the two elder
-daughters, <i>Maria</i> married Joseph Townshend, Esq., and died without
-issue; <i>Penelope</i> married the Rev. Michael Stanhope, D.D., canon of
-Windsor, and died 1738, leaving with other issue Arthur Charles
-Stanhope, Esq., father of Philip Stanhope, who, succeeding to the
-honours of his family in 1773, became fifth Earl of Chesterfield. Sir
-Salathiel Lovell had two sons, <i>Samuel</i>, his heir, a Welsh judge, who
-married in 1692 Miss Sergeant, and left one son, <i>Samuel</i>, and one
-daughter, <i>Rachel Jane</i>, married in 1732 Richard Edgeworth, Esq., of
-Edgeworthstown, co. Longford, who died in 1764, leaving issue.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_2" href="#FNanchor_2" class="label">[B]</a> The eldest, <i>Anne</i> Bethia, married 21st September, 1809, Lieut.-General
-Sir Jasper Nicholls, K.C.B. (Commander-in-Chief at Madras
-and afterwards Commander-in-Chief in India), and had eight daughters
-and one son. Lady Nicholls died at Rome in 1844. <i>Sophia</i> Lovell
-married 9th June, 1814, the Rev. James Duke Coleridge, D.C.L.,
-eldest son of Colonel Coleridge, of Heath’s Court, Ottery St. Mary’s,
-Devon, and had two daughters. Mrs. Coleridge died at Torquay in
-1874.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_3" href="#FNanchor_3" class="label">[C]</a> <i>Torpedo vulgaris.</i></p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_4" href="#FNanchor_4" class="label">[D]</a> It was near a vintage.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_5" href="#FNanchor_5" class="label">[E]</a> Afterwards Sir John Chambers White.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_6" href="#FNanchor_6" class="label">[F]</a> Taken and destroyed.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_7" href="#FNanchor_7" class="label">[G]</a> The French ship of the line, <i>L’Achille</i>, on fire and blowing up.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_8" href="#FNanchor_8" class="label">[H]</a> Being a man of plain common-sense, I never could to this day
-understand the policy of our training up foreign officers of all nations
-in our service to sting ourselves. Surely our rulers forget the sensible
-fable of Æsop, “The countryman and the viper.” We took the Russians
-from frost and snow, thawed them in our bosoms, and the time
-may yet come when they may sting us. “<i>Tempus omnia monstrat.</i>”</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_9" href="#FNanchor_9" class="label">[I]</a> Sir Lovell Benjamin Lovell, K.C.B., K.H., commenced in the
-Royal Bucks Militia in 1804, and entered as cornet (by purchase) the
-14th Light Dragoons, November, 1805; served at the taking of Monte
-Video, under Sir Samuel Auchmuty, in 1807, and subsequently in the
-Peninsula, including the battles of Talavera, the Coa, Busaco, Fuentes
-d’Onor (wounded), Salamanca, Vittoria, the Pyrenees, Nive, Ortherg,
-and Toulouse; actions or skirmishes near Talavera, Sexmiro, Val de la
-Mula, La Meares, Freixeda, Guarda, Coimbra, Valle, Venda de Sierra,
-Pombal, Redinha, Miranda de Corvo, Coa, Galligos, Nave d’Aver,
-Espiga, near Fuentes d’Onor, Llerena, near Salamanca, St. Christova,
-Bueda, Castrillos, Foncastin, Matylla; at Burgos, Osma, Huarte, Pampeluna,
-Vale de Bastan, Pass of Maya, Lines of Ainho, Cambo, Hasparren,
-Helite, Garris, Sauveterre, St. Gladie, Buelho, Garlier, San
-Roman&mdash;total, 10 general actions, 40 minor actions or skirmishes,
-besides attending 7 sieges; was at the siege of Oporto, being one of the
-military reporters under Lord William Russell. Appointed to the
-Lieutenant-Colonelcy of the 15th Hussars, March 21st, 1834; appointed
-Brigadier-General of the cantonment of Bangalore, 1841, and Major-General
-in India, September, 1841; gazetted to the command of the
-Hyderabad subsidiary force, February 15th, 1847, and took command
-March 3rd, at Secunderabad; appointed Major-General in 1854, and
-Colonel of the 12th Lancers, 29th November, 1856. Sir Lovell
-Benjamin Lovell received the war medal, with eleven clasps, for Busaco,
-Fuentes d’Onor, Badajoz, Salamanca, Vittoria, the Pyrenees, Nive,
-Orthes, and Toulouse. He died at Brighton in 1861. Sir Lovell and
-his brother assumed by sign manual the surname and arms of Lovell
-in 1840.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_10" href="#FNanchor_10" class="label">[J]</a> Prince Lippe Bückeburg.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_11" href="#FNanchor_11" class="label">[K]</a> During our stay in Altea Bay, in 1812, I was invited by the
-Spanish authorities in the town to assist at the proclaiming of the new
-constitution, and accordingly landed my officers and marines to be
-present at the ceremony of reading them. A few of the Spaniards
-cheered, as well as ourselves, and called out, “Viva Fernando
-Septimo;” but it appeared to me they were not very enthusiastic about
-it at that period; indeed they did not seem to care two straws whether
-they had the old or new constitution&mdash;to get rid of the French was the
-first object.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_12" href="#FNanchor_12" class="label">[L]</a> (!) Peaks.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_13" href="#FNanchor_13" class="label">[M]</a> Amongst so many new black freemen in the West Indies, of
-course many cases of delinquency must occur. Why not transport all
-troublesome and bad characters to Africa? They originally came from
-thence, and it would be only returning them back to their own country.
-Just land them on the beach at Bonny, and leave them to find their
-own way amongst their countrymen, or send them to Fernando Po to
-clear the forests and make roads, which would ventilate the island and
-make it more healthy.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_14" href="#FNanchor_14" class="label">[N]</a> Medals were given in 1848(?) for the Peninsula wars, and to the
-survivors of the Battle of Trafalgar also in 1848. An English merchant,
-whose name I cannot remember, gave to some of those who were present
-at the Battle of Trafalgar (among the fortunate recipients was my
-father) medals, having on one side the profile of Lord Nelson, and on
-the reverse side the representation of the ships going into action, with
-the date, October 1st, 1804, and round it the memorable words signalled
-to the fleet: “England expects every man will do his duty.” This medal
-is much prized by the family, as is also the dirk previously mentioned.
-(M.S.L.)</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_15" href="#FNanchor_15" class="label">[O]</a> The revilers of our American mode of warfare should bear in
-mind other circumstances, viz.: that America seized the opportunity of
-declaring war against us at a most critical period, when we were not
-only making a desperate struggle for our existence as a nation, but also
-to liberate other powers from the iron grasp of Bonaparte, and fighting
-in the cause of liberty itself. That must not be forgotten on our side
-of the question.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_16" href="#FNanchor_16" class="label">[P]</a> The rear-admiral, in the <i>Albion</i>, arrived on the previous evening,
-when Captain Ross joined with the boats of that ship in the attack on
-the fort by water.</p>
-
-</div>
-
-<div class="footnote">
-
-<p><a id="Footnote_17" href="#FNanchor_17" class="label">[Q]</a> Lieutenant-Colonel Williams, of the Marines, was not at the
-capture of Washington. He was then in Canada, and joined us at
-Cumberland Island previous to the attack on Fort Washington, at
-Point-à-Petre.</p>
-
-</div>
-</div>
-
-<div class="figcenter" id="coverrear">
- <img src="images/coverrear.jpg" width="475" height="800" alt="" />
-</div>
-
-<div class="transnote">
-<p>Transcriber's Note:</p>
-
-<p>The following is a list of changes made to the original.
-The first line is the original line, the second the corrected one.</p>
-
-<p>Page 108</p>
-
-<p>We remained at <span class="u">O’Rodonto</span> three days, during<br />
-We remained at <span class="u">O’Rodondo</span> three days, during</p>
-
-<p>northward to invest <span class="u">Cuidad</span> Rodrigo.<br />
-northward to invest <span class="u">Ciudad</span> Rodrigo.</p>
-
-<p>Operations against <span class="u">Cuidad</span> Rodrigo having been<br />
-Operations against <span class="u">Ciudad</span> Rodrigo having been</p>
-
-<p>Page 110</p>
-
-<p>was ordered to cover the siege of <span class="u">Cuidad</span> Rodrigo.<br />
-was ordered to cover the siege of <span class="u">Ciudad</span> Rodrigo.</p>
-
-<p>Page 114</p>
-
-<p><span class="u">nexts</span> attracts attention. This was founded about<br />
-<span class="u">next</span> attracts attention. This was founded about</p>
-
-<p>Page 124</p>
-
-<p>4th July, sent me to Palma Bay, <span class="u">Minorca</span>, to collect<br />
-4th July, sent me to Palma Bay, <span class="u">Majorca</span>, to collect</p>
-
-<p>Page 138</p>
-
-<p><i>Invincible</i>, thinking it advisable to make a <span class="u">reconnoissance</span><br />
-<i>Invincible</i>, thinking it advisable to make a <span class="u">reconnaissance</span></p>
-
-<p>Page 183</p>
-
-<p>of the <i><span class="u">Eudymion</span></i> (50), Captain Henry Hope, that<br />
-of the <i><span class="u">Endymion</span></i> (50), Captain Henry Hope, that</p>
-</div>
-
-
-
-
-
-
-
-<pre>
-
-
-
-
-
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-1799 to 1815, by William Stanhope Lovell
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