And oft his smooth and bridled tongue
Would give the
lie to his flushing cheek:
He was a coward to the strong:
He was a tyrant
to the weak.
SHELLEY.
My father, as soon as he had obtained my promotion, asked for my being
employed; and having had a promise from the Admiralty, that promise, unlike
thousands of its predecessors and successors, was too rapidly fulfilled. I
received a letter from my father, and a bouncing one from the Admiralty, by the
same post, announcing officially my appointment to the D brig, of eighteen guns,
at Portsmouth, whither I was directed to repair immediately,
and take up my commission. In this transaction
I soon after found there was an underplot, which I
was too green to perceive at the time; but the wise
heads of the two papas had agreed that a separation
between the lovers was absolutely necessary, and that
the longer it was delayed, the worse it would be for
both of us: in short, that until I had attained
my rank, nothing should be thought of in the way of
matrimony.
As the reader is, no doubt, by this
time pretty well versed in all the dialogue of parting
lovers, I shall not intrude upon his or her patience
with a repetition of that which has been much too often
repeated, and is equally familiar to the prince and
the ploughman. I should as soon think of describing
the Devil’s Punch Bowl, on the road to Portsmouth,
where I arrived two days after my appointment.
I put up at Billett’s, at the
George, as a matter of course, because it was the
resort of all the naval aristocracy, and directly opposite
to the admiral’s office. The first person
for whom I made my kind inquiries was my captain elect;
but he herded not with his brother épaulettes.
He did not live at the George, nor did he mess at the
Crown; he was not at the Fountain, nor the Parade Coffee-house;
and the Blue Posts ignored him; but he was to be heard
of at the Star and Garter, on the tip of Portsmouth
Point. He did not even live there, but generally
resided on board. This does not savour well; I
never like your captains who live on board their ships
in harbour; no ship can be comfortable, for no one
can do as he pleases, which is the life and soul of
a man-of-war, when in port.
To the Star and Garter I went, and
asked for Captain G. I hoped I should not find him
here; for this house had been, time out of mind, the
rendezvous of warrant-officers, mates, and midshipmen.
Here, however, he was; I sent up my card, and was
admitted to his presence. He was seated in a
small parlour, with a glass of brandy and water, or
at least the remains of it, before him; his feet were
on the fender, and several official documents which
he had received that morning were lying on the table.
He rose as I entered, and shewed me a short, square-built
frame, with a strong projection of the sphere, or what
the Spaniards call bariga. This rotundity
of corporation was, however, supported by as fine
a pair of Atlas legs as ever were worn by a Bath chairman.
His face was rather inclined to be handsome; the features
regular, a pleasant smile upon his lips, and a deep
dimple in his chin. But his most remarkable feature
was his eye; it was small, but piercing, and seemed
to possess that long-sought desideratum of
the perpetual motion, since it was utterly impossible
to fix it for one moment on any object: and there
was in it a lurking expression, which, though something
of a physiognomist, I could not readily decipher.
“Mr Mildmay,” said my
skipper, “I am extremely happy to see you, and
still more so that you have been appointed to my ship;
will you be seated?”
As I obeyed, he turned round, and,
rubbing his hands, as if he had just laid down his
soap, he continued, “I always make it a rule,
previous to an officer joining my ship, to learn something
of his character from my brother captains; it is a
precaution which I take, as I consider that one scabby
sheep, &c. is strictly applicable to our service.
I wish to have good officers and perfect gentlemen
about me. There are, no doubt, many officers
who can do their duty well, and with whom I should
have no fault to find; but then there is a way of
doing it a modus in rebus, which
a gentleman only can attain to; coarse manners, exécrations,
and abusive language render the men discontented,
degrade the service, and are therefore very properly
forbidden in the second article of war. Under
such officers, the men always work unwillingly.
I have taken the liberty to make some inquiries about
you; and can only say, that all I have heard is to
your advantage. I have no doubt we shall suit
each other; and be assured it shall be my study to
make you as comfortable as possible.”
To this very sensible and polite address,
I made a suitable reply. He then stated that
he expected to sail in a few days; that the officer
whom I was to supersede had not exactly suited his
ideas, although he believed him to be a very worthy
young man; and that, in consequence, he had applied
and succeeded in obtaining for him another appointment;
that it was necessary he should join his ship immediately;
but, of course, he must first be superseded by me.
“Therefore,” said he, “you had better
meet me on board the brig to-morrow morning at nine
o’clock, when your commission shall be read;
and after that I beg you will consider yourself your
own master for a few days, as I presume you have some
little arrangements to prepare for your cruise.
I am aware,” pursued he, smiling most benignantly,
“that there are many little comforts which officers
wish to attend to; such as fitting their cabins and
looking to their mess, and a thousand other nameless
things, which tend to pass the time and break up the
monotony of a sea-life. Forty years have I trod
the king’s planks, man and boy, and not with
any great success, as you may perceive, by the rank
I now hold, and the life I am leading; for here I
sit over a glass of humble grog, instead of joining
my brother captains in their claret at the Crown;
but I have two sisters to support, and I feel more
satisfaction in doing my duty as a brother, than indulging
my appetite; although I own I have no dislike to a
glass of claret, when it does not come before me in
a questionable shape: I mean when I have not got
to pay for it, which I cannot afford. Now do
not let me take up any more of your time. You
have plenty of acquaintances that you wish to see,
I have no doubt; and as for my yarns, they will do
to pass away a watch, when we have nothing more attractive
to divert us.” So saying, he held out his
hand, and shook mine most cordially. “To-morrow,
at nine o’clock,” he repeated; and I left
him, much pleased with my interview.
I went back to my inn, thinking what
a very fortunate fellow I was to have such an honest,
straight-forward, bold, British hero of a captain,
on my first appointment. I ordered my dinner at
the George, and then strolled out to make my purchases,
and give my orders for a few articles for sea service.
I fell in with several old messmates; they congratulated
me on my promotion, and declared I should give them
a dinner to wet my commission, to which I readily consented.
The day was named, and Mr Billett was ordered to provide
accordingly.
Having dined solus, I amused
myself in writing a long letter to my dear Emily;
and with the assistance of a bottle of wine, succeeded
in composing a tolerably warm and rapturous sort of
a document, which I sealed, kissed, and sent to the
post-office; after which, I built castles till bed
time; but not one castle did I build, in which Emily
was not the sole mistress. I went to bed, and
slept soundly; and the next morning, by seven o’clock,
I was arrayed in a spick-span new uniform, with an
immensely large epaulette stuck on my right shoulder.
Having breakfasted, I sallied out, and, in my own conceit,
was as handsome a chap as ever buckled a sword belt.
I skimmed with a light and vigorous foot down High-street.
“Boat, your honour?” said
a dozen voices at once, as I reached New Sallyport;
but I was resolved that Point-street should have a
look at me, as well as High-street; so I kept a profound
and mysterious silence, and let the watermen follow
me to Point, just like so many sucking fish after
a shark. I had two or three offers for volunteers
to serve with me as I went along; but they were not
of the right sex, so I did not take them.
“Boat to Spithead, your honour?”
said a tough old waterman.
“Ay, you’ll do,”
said I; so I jumped into his wherry, and we shoved
off.
“What ship is your honour going to?” said
the man.
“To the D brig.”
“Oh, you are a-going to she, are you? To
belong to her, mayhap?”
“Yes,” I replied.
The waterman gave a sigh, feathered
his oar, and never spoke another word till we came
alongside. I did not regret his taciturnity, for
I was always more amused with my own thoughts, than
in conversing with illiterate people.
The brig was a most beautiful vessel.
She mounted eighteen guns, and sat on the water like
a duck. I perceived that the pendant was up for
punishment, and this I thought rather an unusual sight
at Spithead: I took it for granted that some
aggravated offence, such as theft, or mutiny, had
been committed. Seeing I was an officer, I was
admitted alongside; so I paid the waterman, and sent
him away. As I went up the side, I saw a poor
fellow spread-eagled up to the grating, “according
to the manners and customs of the natives,” while
the captain, officers, and ship’s company stood
round witnessing the athletic dexterity of a boatswain’s
mate, who, by the even, deep, and parallel marks of
the cat on the white back and shoulders of the patient,
seemed to be perfectly master of his business.
All this did not surprise me: I was used to it;
but after the address of my captain on the preceding
day, I was very much surprised to hear language in
direct violation of the second article of war.
Cursings and exécrations poured
out of his mouth with a volubility equal to any the
most accomplished lady on the back of the Point.
“Boatswain’s mate,” roared the captain, “do your duty, or by G
I will have you up, and give you four dozen yourself. One would
think, d n your b d, that you were brushing flies off a sleeping Venus, instead
of punishing a scoundrel, with a hide as thick as a buffalo’s, and be d d to him
do your duty, Sir, d n your soul.”
During this elegant address, the unhappy
wretch had received four severe dozen, which the master-at-arms
had counted aloud, and reported to the captain.
“Another boatswain’s mate,” said
he. The poor creature turned his head over his
shoulders with an imploring look, but it was in vain.
I watched the countenance of the captain, and the peculiar
expression, which I could not decipher at my first
interview, I now read most plainly: it was malignant
cruelty, and delight in torturing his own species;
he seemed to take a diabolical pleasure in the hateful
operation which we were compelled to witness.
The second boatswain’s mate commenced, with
a fresh cat, and gave a lash across the back of the
prisoner, that made me start.
“One,” said the master-at-arms, beginning
to count.
“One!” roared the captain; “do you call that one? not a quarter of a one.
That fellow is only fit for fly-flapper at a pork shop! I’ll disrate you,
by G d, you d d Molly Mop; is that the way
you handle a cat; that’s only wiping the dirt
off his back. Where’s the boatswain?”
“Here,” said a stout,
gigantic, left-handed fellow, stepping forward, with
a huge blue uniform coat and a plain anchor button,
holding his hat in his left hand, and stroking his
hair down his forehead with his right. I surveyed
this man, as he turned himself about, and concluded,
that the tailor who worked for him had been threatened
with a specimen of his art, if he stinted him in cloth;
for the skirts of his coat were ample, terminating
in an inclined plane, the corners in front being much
lower than the middle of the robe behind; the buttons
on the hips were nearly pistol shot asunder.
“Give this man a dozen, Sir,”
said Captain G.; “and if you favour him, I’ll
put you under arrest, and stop your liquor.”
This last part of the threat had more
effect with Mr Pipe than the first. He began
to peel, as the boxers call it; off came his capacious
coat; a red waistcoat full-sized for a Smithfield
ox was next deposited; then he untied a
black silk handkerchief, and showed a throat, covered
like that of a goat, with long brown hairs, thick as
pack-thread. He next rolled up his shirt-sleeves
above his elbow, and showed an arm and a back very
like the Farnese Hercules, which, no doubt, all my
readers have seen at the foot of the staircase at
Somerset-house, when they have been to the exhibition.
This hopeful commentator on articles
of war, seized his cat: the handle was two feet
long, one inch and three quarters thick, and covered
with red baize. The tails of this terrific weapon
were three feet long, nine in number, and each of
them about the size of that line which covers the
springs of a travelling carriage. Mr Pipes, whose
scientific display in this part of his art, had no
doubt procured for him the warrant of a boatswain,
in virtue of which he now stood as the vindicator
of the laws of his country, handled his cat like an
adept, looked at it from top to bottom, cleared all
the tails, by the insertion of his delicate fingers,
and combing them out, stretched out his left leg for
he was left-legged as well as left-handed and
measuring his distance with the accurate eye of an
engineer, raised his cat high in air with his left
hand, his right still holding the tips of the tails,
as if to restrain their impatience; when, giving his
arm and body a full swing, embracing three-fourths
of the circle, he inflicted a tremendous stroke on
the back of the unfortunate culprit. This specimen
seemed to satisfy the amateur captain, who nodded
approbation to the inquiring look of the amateur boatswain.
The poor man lost his respiration from the force of
the blow; and the tails of the cat coming from an opposite
direction to the first four dozen, cut the flesh diamond-wise,
bringing the blood at every blow.
I will not wound the feelings of my
readers with a description of the poor wretch’s
situation. Even at this distance of time, I am
shocked at it, and bitterly lament the painful necessity
I have often been under of inflicting similar punishment;
but I hope and trust I never did it without a cause,
or in the wanton display of arbitrary power.
The last dozen being finished, the
sum total was reported by the master-at-arms, “five
dozen.”
“Five dozen!” repeated
Captain G; “that will do cast him
off. And now, sir,” said he, to the fainting
wretch, “I hope this will be a warning to you,
that the next time you wish to empty your beastly
mouth, you will not spit on my quarter-deck.”
“Heavens!” thought I,
“is all this for spitting on the quarter-deck?
and this, from the moralist of yesterday, who allowed
neither oaths nor exécrations, and has uttered
more blasphemy in the last ten minutes, than I have
heard for the last ten weeks?”
I had not yet caught the captain’s
eye he was too intent on his amusement.
As soon as the prisoner was cast loose, he commanded
to pipe down, or in other words, to dismiss the people
to their usual occupations, when I went up to him,
and touched my hat.
“Oh! you are come, are you?
Pipe, belay there send every body aft on
the quarter-deck.”
My commission was then read:
all hats off in respect to the sovereign, from whom
the authority was derived. After this, I, being
duly inaugurated, became the second lieutenant of
the sloop; and the captain, without condescending
to give me another word or look, ordered his gig to
be manned, and was going on shore. I was not
presented by him to any of the officers, which, in
common courtesy, he ought to have done. This
omission, however, was supplied by the first lieutenant,
who invited me down into the gun-room, to introduce
me to my new messmates. We left the tiger pacing
up and down on his quarter-deck.
The first lieutenant was of the medium
stature, a suitable height for a sloop of war, a spare
figure of about forty years of age; he had but one
eye, and that eye was as odd a one as the captain’s.
There was in it, however, unlike the captain’s,
an infinite deal of humour, and when he cocked it,
as he constantly did, it almost spoke. I never
saw three such eyes in two such heads. There
was a lurking smile in the lieutenant’s face,
when I told him that the captain had desired me to
come on board and read my commission, after which I
might have two or three days to myself to prepare
for sea.
“Well,” said he, “you
had better go and ask him now; but you will find him
a rum one.”
Accordingly, up I went to him.
“Have you any objection to my going on shore,
Sir?”
“Shore, Sir!” bellowed he “and who the devil is to carry on the duty, if you
go on shore? Shore, eh! I wish there was no shore, and then d n the
dog that couldn’t swim! No, Sir; you have had shore enough. The
service is going to h l, Sir! A parcel of brats, with lieutenants’
commissions before they should have been clear of the nursery! No, Sir:
stay on board, or, d n me, I’ll break you, like an egg-shell, before you have
taken the shine out of that fine new epaulette! No, no, by G ; no more
cats here than catch mice. You stay on board, and do your duty:
every man does his duty here; and let me see the that don’t do it!”
I was in some measure prepared for
this sublime harangue; but still there was sufficient
room in my mind to admit of great astonishment at
this sudden change of wind. I replied that he
had promised me leave yesterday, and that, upon the
strength of that promise, I had left all my things
on shore, and that I was not in any way prepared to
go to sea.
“I promised you leave, did I? Perhaps I did; but that was only to get
you on board. I am up to your tricks, you d d young chaps: when you
get on shore, there is no getting you off again. No, no; no-catchee
no-habee! You would not have made your appearance these three days, if I
hadn’t sugared the trap! Now I have got you, I’ll keep you, d n
my eyes!”
I repeated my request to go on shore; but, without condescending to offer any
farther reasons, he answered
“I’d see you d d
first, Sir! And observe, I never admit of expostulation.
Nothing affords me more pleasure than to oblige my
officers in every thing reasonable; but I never permit
reply.”
Thought I to myself, “You certainly
have escaped from hell, and I do not see how the infernal
regions can do without you. You would have been
one of the most ingenious tormentors of the damned.
Domitian would have made you admiral, and your boatswain
captain of the fleet!”
Having made this reflection, as I
took a turn or two on deck, thinking what was best
to be done, and knowing that “the king could
do no wrong,” the officer whom I had just superseded
came up the hatchway, and, touching his hat very respectfully
to the captain, asked whether he might go on shore.
“You may go to hell, and be d d, Sir!” said the captain
(who hated bad language); “you are not fit to
carry guts to a bear! you are not worth
your salt; and the sooner you are off, the cleaner
the ship will be! Don’t stand staring at
me, like a bull over a gate! Down, and pack up
your traps, or I’ll freshen your way!”
raising his foot at the same time, as if he was going
to kick him.
The young officer, who was a mild,
gentlemanly, and courageous youth, did as he was bidden.
I was perfectly astonished: I had been accustomed
to sail with gentlemen. I had heard of martinets,
and disciplinarians, and foul-mouthed captains; but
this outdid all I ever could have conceived, and much
more than I thought ever could have been submitted
to by any correct officer. Roused to indignation,
and determined not to be treated in this manner, I
again walked up to him, and requested leave to go
on shore.
“You have had your answer, Sir.”
“Yes, I have, Sir,” said
I, “and in language that I never before heard
on his Majesty’s quarter-deck. I joined
this ship as an officer and a gentleman, and as such
I will be treated.”
“Mutiny, by G!”
roared the captain. “Cock-a-hoop with your
new commission, before the ink is dry!”
“As you please, Sir,”
I replied; “but I shall write a letter to the
port-admiral, stating the circumstances and requesting
leave of absence; and that letter I shall trouble
you to forward.”
“I’ll be d d if I do!”
said he.
“Then, Sir,” said I, “as
you have refused to forward it, and in the presence
of all the officers and ship’s company, I shall
forward it without troubling you.”
This last shot of mine seemed to produce
the same effect upon him that the last round does
upon a beaten boxer; he did not come to time, but,
muttering something, dived down the companion, and
went into his cabin.
The first lieutenant now came up,
and congratulated me on my victory. “You
have puzzled and muzzled the bear completely,”
said he; “I have long wanted a coadjutor like
yourself. Wilson, who is going to leave us, is
the best creature that ever lived: but though
brave as a lion before an enemy, he is cowed by this
incarnate devil.”
Our conversation was interrupted by
a message from the captain, who desired to speak with
me in his cabin. I went down; he received me
with the benignant smile of our first acquaintance.
“Mr Mildmay,” said he,
“I always assume a little tartness with my officers
when they first join” ("and when they quit you
too,” thought I), “not only to prove to
them that I am, and will be the captain of my own
ship, but also as an example to the men, who, when
they see what the officers are forced to put up with,
feel themselves more contented with their lot, and
obey more readily; but, as I told you before, the
comfort of my officers is my constant study you
are welcome to go ashore, and have twenty-four hours’
leave to collect your necessaries.”
To this harangue I made no reply;
but, touching my hat, quitted the cabin. I felt
so much contempt for the man that I was afraid to speak,
lest I should commit myself.
The captain shortly after quitted
the ship, telling the first lieutenant that I had
permission to go on shore. I was now left at
liberty to make acquaintance with my companions in
misery and nothing conduces to intimacy
so much as community of suffering. My resistance
to the brutality of our common taskmaster had pleased
them; they told me what a tyrant and what a disgrace
to the service he was, and how shameful it was that
he should be entrusted with the command of so fine
a vessel, or of any vessel at all, except it were a
convict ship. The stories they told me of him
were almost incredible, and nothing but the too well
founded idea, that an officer trying his captain by
a court-martial, had a black mark against him for ever
after, and was never known to rise, could have saved
this man from the punishment he so richly deserved:
no officer, they said, had been more than three weeks
in the ship, and they were all making interest to leave
her.
In my report of what occurred in this
vessel during the time I belonged to her, I must,
in justice to the captains and commanders of his Majesty’s
navy observe, that the case was unique of its kind such a character as Captain G was rarely
met with in the navy then, and, for reasons which
I shall give, will be still more rare in future.
The first lieutenant told me that I had acted very
judiciously in resisting at first his undue exertion
of authority; that he was at once a tyrant, a bully,
and a coward, and would be careful how he attacked
me again. “But be on your guard,”
said he, “he will never forgive you; and, when
he is most agreeable, there is the most mischief to
be dreaded. He will lull you into security, and,
whenever he can catch you tripping, he will try you
by a court-martial. You had better go on shore,
and settle all your business, and, if possible, be
on board before your leave is out. It was only
your threat of writing to the port-admiral that procured
you leave of absence. You have nothing to thank
him for: he would have kept you on board if he
dared. I have never quitted the ship since I
joined her; and never has a day passed without a scene
similar to what you have this morning witnessed.
And yet,” continued he, “if it were not
for his cruelty to the men, he is the most amusing
liar I ever heard. I am often more inclined to
laugh than to be angry at him; he has a vein of wit
and rich humour that runs through his composition,
and never quits him. There is drollery even in
his malice, and, if we cannot get clear of him, we
must make the best of him.”
I went on shore, collected all my
clothes and the other articles of which I stood in
need, and was on board my ship again the next morning
before eight o’clock.