Now dash’d upon the billow, Our
opening timbers creak, Each fears a watery pillow.
... To cling to slippery shrouds Each
breathless seaman crowds, As she lay Till the
day In the Bay of Biscay O! SEA SONG.
As it will only detain the narrative,
without being at all necessary for its development,
I shall not dwell upon the results of the engagement,
which was soon after decided, with very indifferent
success on our side. The soldiers were re-embarked,
the ships hauled out of reach of the enemy’s
guns, and a council of war summoned on which
it was agreed, nem con, that no more was to
be done. The despatches were sent home
they certainly differed a little, but that was of no
consequence. The sum total of killed and wounded
was excessively gratifying to the nation, as it proved
that there had been hard fighting. By-the-bye,
John Bull is rather annoying in this respect:
he imagines that no action can be well fought unless
there is a considerable loss. Having no other
method of judging of the merits of an action, he appreciates
it according to the list of killed and wounded.
A merchant in toto, he computes the value
of an object by what it has cost him, and imagines
that what is easily and cheaply obtained cannot be
of much value. The knowledge of this peculiar
mode of reasoning on his part, has very often induced
officers to put down very trifling contusions,
such as a prize-fighter would despise, to swell up
the sum total of the loss to the aggregate of the
honest man’s expectations.
To proceed. As usual in cases
of defeat, a small degree of accusation and recrimination
took place. The army thought that the navy might
have beaten down stone ramparts, ten feet thick; and
the navy wondered why the army had not walked up the
same ramparts, which were thirty feet perpendicular.
Some of the ships accused others of not having had
a sufficient number of men killed and wounded; and
the boats’ crews, whenever they met on shore,
fought each other desperately, as if it were absolutely
necessary, for the honour of the country, that more
blood should be spilt. But this only lasted
three weeks, when a more successful attempt made them
all shake hands, and wonder what they had been squabbling
about.
There was, however, one circumstance,
which occurred during the action, that had not been
forgotten. It had been witnessed by the acting
captain of the ship, and had been the theme of much
comment and admiration among the officers and men.
This was the daring feat of our little hero, in rolling
the shell over the side. Captain M –
(the new commander), as soon as his more important
avocations would permit, made inquiries among the
officers (being himself a stranger in the ship), relative
to Willy. His short but melancholy history was
soon told; and the disconsolate boy was summoned from
under the half-deck, where he sat by the body of Adams,
which, with many more, lay sewed up in his hammock,
and covered over with the union-jack, waiting for the
evening, to receive the rites of Christian burial,
before being committed to the deep.
Knowing that Adams had been his only
protector, a feeling of compassion for the bereaved
and orphan boy, and admiration of his early tokens
of bravery, induced Captain M –,
who never formed a resolution in haste, or abandoned
it if once formed, to take the boy under his own protection,
and to place him as an officer on that quarter-deck
upon which he had so distinguished himself.
Willy, in obedience to orders received, stood by the
captain, with his hat in his hand.
“What is your name, my boy?”
said the captain, passing a scrutinising glance over
his upright and well-proportioned figure.
“Willy, sir.”
“And what’s your other name?”
“King’s Own, sir.”
This part of the boy’s history
was now explained by the second-lieutenant, who was
in command, in consequence of the first-lieutenant
being wounded.
“He must have a name,”
replied the captain. “William King’s
Own will not do. Is he on the books?”
“No, sir, he is not; shall I
put him down as William Jones, or William Smith?”
“No, no, those are too common.
The boy has neither father, mother, nor name, that
we know of: as we may, therefore, have a choice
of the latter for him, let it be a good one.
I have known a good name make a man’s fortune
with a novel reading girl. There is a romance
in the boy’s history; let him have a name somewhat
romantic also.”
“Ay, ay, sir,” replied
the lieutenant “here, marine, tell
my boy to bring up one of the volumes of the novel
in my cabin.”
The book made its appearance on the
quarter-deck. “Perhaps, sir, we may find
one here,” said the lieutenant, presenting the
book to the captain.
The captain smiled as he took the
book. “Let us see,” said he, turning
over the leaves “`Delamere!’
that’s too puppyish. `Fortescue!’ don’t
like that. `Seymour!’ Yes, that will do.
It’s not too fine, yet aristocratic and pretty.
Desire Mr Hinchen, the clerk, to enter him on the
books as Mr William Seymour, midshipman. And
now, youngster, I will pay for your outfit, and first
year’s mess: after which I hope your pay
and prize-money will be sufficient to enable you to
support yourself. Be that as it may, as long
as you do credit to my patronage, I shall not forget
you.”
Willy, with his straw hat in one hand,
and a supererogatory touch of his curly hair with
the other, made a scrape with his left leg, after the
manner and custom of seafaring people in
short, he made the best bow that he could, observing
the receipt that had been given him by his departed
friend Adams. D’Egville might have turned
up his nose at it; but Captain M –
was perfectly satisfied; for, if not an elegant, it
certainly was a grateful bow.
Our young officer was not sent down
to mess in the berth of the midshipmen. His
kind and considerate captain was aware, that a lad
who creeps in at the hawse-holes i.e.,
is promoted from before the mast, was not likely to
be favourably received in the midshipmen’s mess,
especially by that part of the community who, from
their obscure parentage, would have had least reason
to complain. He was therefore consigned to the
charge of the gunner.
Sincere as were the congratulations
of the officers and men, Willy was so much affected
with the loss of his fond guardian, that he received
them with apathy, and listened to the applause bestowed
upon his courage with tears that flowed from the remembrance
of the cause which had stimulated him to the deed.
At the close of the day, he saw the body of his old
friend committed to the deep, with quivering lips and
aching brow, and, as it plunged into the
clear wave, felt as if he was left alone in the world,
and had no one to love and to cling to.
We do not give children credit for
the feelings which they possess, because they have
not, at their early age, acquired the power of language
to express them correctly. Treat a child as you
would an equal, and, in a few months, you will find
that the reason of his having until then remained
childish, was because he had heretofore been treated
as a being of inferior capacity and feelings.
True it is, that at an early age, the feelings of
children are called forth by what we consider as trifles;
but we must recollect, in humility, that our own pursuits
are as vain, as trifling, and as selfish “We
are but children of a larger growth.”
The squadron continued to hover on
the French coast, with a view of alarming the enemy,
and of making a more fortunate attempt, if opportunity
occurred. Early in the morning of the fourth
day after Willy had been promoted to the quarter-deck,
a large convoy of châsse-marées (small coasting
vessels, lugger-rigged) were discovered rounding a
low point, not three miles from the squadron.
A general signal to chase was immediately thrown
out, and in half an hour the English men-of-war were
in the midst of them, pouring broadside after broadside
upon the devoted vessels, whose sails were lowered
in every direction, in token of submission.
The English men-of-war reminded you of so many hawks,
pouncing upon a flight of small birds; and the vessels,
with their lowered sails just flapping with the breeze,
seemed like so many victims of their rapacity, who
lay fluttering on the ground, disabled, or paralysed
with terror. Many escaped into shoal water,
others ran ashore, some were sunk, and about twenty
taken possession of by the ships of the squadron.
They proved to be part of a convoy, laden with wine,
and bound to the Garonne.
One of the châsse-marées, being
a larger vessel than the rest, and laden with wine
of a better quality, was directed by the commodore
to be sent to England; the casks of wine on board
of the others were hoisted into the different ships,
and distributed occasionally to the crews. Captain
M – thought that the departure of
the prize to England would be a favourable opportunity
to send our hero to receive his outfit, as he could
not well appear on the quarter-deck as an officer without
his uniform. He therefore directed the master’s
mate, to whose charge the prize was about to be confided,
to take William with him, and wrote to his friends
at Portsmouth, whither the vessel was directed to proceed,
to fit him out with the requisite articles, and send
him back by the first ship that was directed to join
the squadron. The prize was victualled, the
officer received his written orders, was put on board
with our hero and three men, and parted company with
the squadron.
The master’s-mate, who was directed
to take the vessel to Portsmouth, was the spurious
progeny of the first-lieutenant of a line-of-battle
ship, and a young woman who attended the bum-boat,
which supplied the ship’s company with necessaries
and luxuries, if they could afford to pay for them.
The class of people who obtain their livelihood by
these means, and who are entirely dependent upon the
navy for their subsistence, are naturally anxious
to secure the good-will of the commanding officers
of the ships, and usually contrive to have on their
establishment a pretty-looking girl, who, although
very reserved to the junior officers of the ship,
is all smiles to the first-lieutenant, and will not
stand upon trifles for the benefit of her employer.
Beauty for men gold for women! Such
are the glittering baits employed, in this world,
to entice either sex from the paths of duty or discretion.
The service was indebted to this species
of bribery for the officer in question. The
interest of his supposed father was sufficient to put
him on the quarter-deck; and the profits of his mother,
who, having duly served her apprenticeship, had arrived
to the dignity of bumboat woman herself, and was a
fat, comely matron of about forty years of age, were
more than sufficient to support him in his inferior
rank. His education and natural abilities were
not, however, of that class to procure him either
friends or advancement; and he remained in the capacity
of master’s-mate, and was likely long to continue
so, unless some such event as a general action should
include him in a promotion which would be regulated
by seniority. He was a mean-looking, vulgar little
man, with a sharp face and nose the latter
very red, from the constant potations of not only
his own allowance, but of that of every youngster
in the ship whom he could bully or cajole.
His greatest pride and his constant
study was “slang,” in which he was no
mean proficient. He always carried in his pocket
a colt (i.e. a foot and a half of rope, knotted at
one end, and whipped at the other), for the benefit
of the youngsters, to whom he was a most inordinate
tyrant. He could judge a day’s work, which
he sent in with the rest of the midshipmen, and which
proofs of theoretical knowledge of their profession
were in those days little attended to; but he was very
ignorant, and quite unfit to take charge of any vessel.
Captain M –, who, as we before stated,
had joined the ship as acting captain, and had not
had time to ascertain the merits or demerits of the
officers, had given the prize to his charge because
he was the senior mate of the ship.
The prize had scarcely trimmed her
sails and shaped her course, when Mr Bullock, the
master’s-mate, called our hero to him, and addressed
him in the following elegant phraseology:
“Now, you rebellious spawn touch
your hat, you young whelp,” (knocking
off poor Willy’s only hat, which flew to leeward,
and went overboard) “mind what I
say, for I mean to be as good as a father to you.
You’re not an officer yet and if
you were, it would be all the same so no
capers, no airs. You see I’ve only three
men in the vessel besides myself; they are in three
watches; so your duty will be to attend to me in the
cabin. You’ll mull my claret I
always drinks a noggin every half-hour to keep the
wind out, and if it an’t ready and an’t
good do you see this?” (taking
the colt out of his pocket.)
“Stop, you’d better feel
it at once, and then, when you knows what the taste
of it is, you’ll take care how you’re slack
in stays.” So saying, he administered
three or four hearty cuts on the back and shoulders
of our hero, who had been sufficiently drilled into
the manners and customs of a man-of-war, to know the
value of the proverb, “The least said, the soonest
mended.”
A spigot had been already inserted
into one of the casks of claret which were lashed
on deck; and, as the small vessel was very uneasy in
the heavy swell of the Bay of Biscay, our hero had
sufficient employment in watching the pot of claret,
and preventing it from being upset by the motion of
the vessel, as it was constantly heating on the stove
in the cabin. This potation was regularly presented
by Willy every half-hour, as directed, to his commanding
officer, who, if it was too sweet, or not sweet enough,
or if he could not drink the whole, invariably, and
much to the annoyance of our hero, threw the remainder
into his face, telling him that was his share of it.
This arrangement continued in full
force for three days and three nights for
Willy was roused up five or six times every night to
administer the doses of mulled claret which Mr Bullock
had prescribed for himself, who seemed, thin and meagre
as he was, to be somewhat like a bamboo in his structure
(i.e. hollow from top to bottom), as if to enable
him to carry the quantity of fluid that he poured down
his throat during the twenty-four hours. As
for intoxicating him, that appeared to be impossible:
from long habit, he seemed to be like a stiff ship
that careened to her bearings, and would sooner part
company with her masts than heel any further.
On the fourth day, a strong gale sprang
up from the north-west, and the sea ran very high.
The châsse-marée, never intended to encounter
the huge waves of the Bay of Biscay, but to crawl
along the coast and seek protection from them on the
first indication of their fury, labouring
with a heavy cargo, not only stowed below, but on the
decks, was not sufficiently buoyant to
rise on the summits of the waves, which made a clean
breach over her, and the men became exhausted with
the wet and the inclemency of the season. On
the third day of the gale, and seventh since they
had parted company with the fleet, a squall brought
the mainmast by the board; the foresail was lowered
to close-reef, when a heavy sea struck the vessel,
and pouring a torrent over her decks, swept overboard
the three men who were forward reefing the sail.
Mr Bullock, the master’s mate, was at the helm Willy,
as usual, down below, attending the mulled claret,
which had been more than ever in request since the
bad weather had come on.
The mate quitted the helm, and ran
forward to throw a rope to the seamen who were struggling
in the water with the wreck to leeward. He threw
one, which was seized by two of them (the other had
sunk); and as soon as they had hold of it and it became
taut from their holding on, he perceived to
his dismay that he had stood in the remaining part
of the coil, and that it had encircled itself several
times round his body, so that the men were hauling
him overboard. “Let go, let go, or I’m
overboard!” was a useless exclamation to drowning
men; they held on, and the mate too held on by the
rigging for his life, the efforts of the
drowning men dragging him at last from off his legs,
and keeping his body in a horizontal position, as
they hauled at his feet, and he clung in desperation
to the lee-shrouds. “Willy, Willy, a knife quick,
quick!” roared the mate in his agony. Willy,
who, hearing his name called, and followed up by the
“quick, quick,” had no idea that anything
but the mulled claret could demand such unusual haste,
stopped a few seconds to throw in the sugar and stir
it round before he answered the summons. He
then started up the hatchway with the pot in his hand.
But these few seconds had decided
the fate of Mr Bullock, and as Willy’s head
appeared up the hatchway, so did that of Mr Bullock
disappear as he sank into a grave so dissonant to his
habits. He had been unable to resist any longer
the united force of the drowning men, and Willy was
just in time to witness his submersion, and find himself
more destitute than ever. Holding on by the shroud
with one hand, with the pot of mulled claret in the
other, Willy long fixed his eyes on the spot where
his tyrannical shipmate had disappeared from his sight,
and, forgetting his persecution, felt nothing but
sorrow for his loss. Another sea, which poured
over the decks of the unguided vessel, roused him
from his melancholy reverie, and he let go the pot,
to cling with both hands to the rigging as the water
washed over his knees, then, seizing a
favourable opportunity, he succeeded in regaining the
cabin of the vessel, where he sat down and wept bitterly bitterly
for the loss of the master’s mate and men, for
he had an affectionate and kind heart bitterly
for his own forlorn and destitute situation.
Old Adams had not forgotten to teach him to say his
prayers, and Willy had been accustomed to read the
Bible, which the old man explained to the best of
his ability. The vessel laboured and groaned
as she was buffeted by the waves the wind
howled, and the sea struck her trembling sides and
poured over her deck. In the midst of this wild
discord of the elements, the small voice of the kneeling
child, isolated from the rest of the world, and threatened
soon to be removed from it, was not unheard or unheeded
by an omniscient and omnipotent God, who has said that
not a sparrow should fall to the ground without his
knowledge, and has pointed out of how much more value
are we than many sparrows.
Willy ended his devotions and his
tears; and, feeling wet and cold, recollected that
what would warm his departed friend the mate, would
probably have the same effect upon him. He crawled
up the companion-hatch with another tin pot, and having
succeeded in obtaining some wine from the cask, returned
to the cabin. Having warmed it over the fire,
and sugared it according to the well-practised receipt
of Mr Bullock, he drank more of it than, perhaps,
in any other situation, he would have done, and, lying
down in the standing bed-place at the side of the
cabin, soon fell into a sound sleep.