Finding that the last news from Lord
Nelson was that he was sailing to join the fleet blockading
Toulon, Sir Sidney Smith remained but a couple of
days at the Pireus, and then continued his voyage to
Constantinople. They had had no intercourse with
any of the natives, and Edgar’s services had
consequently not been called into requisition.
In the afternoon Condor came up to
Edgar, who was talking with some of the other midshipmen,
and said:
“Now, Mr. Blagrove, if you really
meant what you said, I think this is a good opportunity
to settle our affair. Your valuable services are
not likely to be required for a few days, and if you
don’t wish to back out you had better come with
me below.”
“With pleasure,” Edgar
said quietly. “I have had some difficulty
in waiting, and have several times been on the verge
of stopping your pleasant habit of bullying youngsters.”
“Well, you need not say any
more,” Condor said savagely; “let us see
what you can do.”
Wilkinson and two or three others
who were off duty went down at once with Edgar, and
as the news spread among the others, every midshipman
who could possibly get away unnoticed, stole off also,
and joined them on the lower deck. Half a dozen
lanterns were lighted and hung up from the beams.
A few of the sailors, seeing so many midshipmen going
down there, guessed that there was a fight coming
off, and descending the hatchway forward, stole noiselessly
aft to watch it.
Wilkinson had said nothing to the
others of what he had heard in the cabin. The
general belief was that although Edgar, no doubt, would
make a plucky fight of it, he had no chance whatever
with an opponent nearly three years his senior, two
or three stone heavier, and with a reputation for
being able to use his fists well.
The opponents stripped to the waist
and faced each other. Wilkinson acted as Edgar’s
second; none of the older ones would act for Condor,
but a lad of fifteen, who dared not refuse his request,
did so.
The combat is best described in the
language in which one of the tars who witnessed it
related it to his comrades.
“I never seed such a thing in
all my born days,” he said. “It did
not look a fair thing, for it was like a man against
a boy. Condor is about three inches taller than
the young ’un, and much more strongly built.
The young ’un stripped well, and looked a wonderfully
wiry young chap; there was a determined look about
his face, and I guessed that he was game to the backbone;
but his chance did not seem worth speaking of.
Well, they stood up. The young one moved about
quick on his pins for a moment, and then, it was so
quick that you could scarce see how it was done, he
gave a sort of bound, and hit out with his right, and
the next moment Condor was on his back.
“I never saw such a clean, knock-down
blow in all my life. The mids, they all cheered,
and it was plain enough to see which way their ’pinions
went. Condor was not down a moment; up he jumped
again, looking as savage as a bull, but somewhat dazed.
He meant mischief this time, and went with a rush
at the young ’un; but lor, the latter just jumped
out of his way, and hit him such a smack in the eye
that it staggered him altogether. But he did
not lose his legs this time, and made another rush.
It was the same thing over and over again. The
young ’un did just what he liked with him, and
after five minutes he knocked him silly, his eyes
were beginning to close, he was just bleeding like
a pig at the nose; but it was a cut on the mouth that
finished him, and knocked him out of time altogether,
and the young ’un had never been as much as
touched once.
“You should have heard how the
middies cheered. As to the young ’un, he
seemed to take it as a matter of course, and said,
’There is nothing in it. Condor fought
pluckily enough, but he knows next to nothing of boxing,
while, though I say it myself, I am a first-rate boxer.
I ought to be, having been taught by the best masters
in London for a couple of years.’
“They had to chuck some water
on Condor’s face to get him round, for the force
with which he struck the deck stunned him. When
he was helped to his feet, the young ’un went
up to him and held out his hand. ’I hope
there will be no more ill-feeling between us, Condor,’
he said. ’You have made a bad mistake,
and have had to pay for it. Only I say this,
that as long as I am on board there shall be no more
bullying in the cockpit. We are all gentlemen,
I hope. As long as we are on duty, of course,
we obey the orders of our superiors, and, as our senior
officer, we should all obey you; but when off duty
we are equals. And if anyone attempts to bully
anyone else, he has got me to reckon with.
“’There is no reason why
we should not have a pleasant time when we are below,
and I will do my best to see that we do have it.
You are the senior of the mess, and as such have to
keep order; but beyond that you have no right to interfere.
Now let us shake hands and say no more about it.’
“Condor shook hands without
saying a word, and then slipped away. I have
seen many a fight since I first took to the sea, but
never such a fight as this before. It were just
a massacre of the innercents, and I don’t think
a fellow was ever more thoroughly sucked in than Master
Condor when he undertook the job.”
Condor had to go on the sick-list
half an hour after the fight was over. His eyes
were almost closed, his face was enormously swollen,
and he had lost three teeth-the effect
of the blow that had brought the conflict to a close.
“Did you know how it was going
to be, Wilkinson?” one of the other seniors
said as they went up on the deck again.
“I guessed pretty well, from
what Blagrove was telling Sir Sidney when he dined
with him, that Condor would meet his match, but I did
not think that it was going to be a hollow thing like
that.”
“What do you mean, sir, by skulking
below?” the second lieutenant angrily asked
one of the midshipmen of his watch as he returned on
deck.
“I just slipped below for a
few minutes, sir,” the lad said.
“Well, you had better be careful,
or you will find yourself at the mast-head,”
the lieutenant said sharply.
“I fancy there has been a fight,”
the first lieutenant said as Mr. Knight passed him,
grumbling to himself. “I noticed just now
that there were only two midshipmen on deck.
Do you see, they are coming up the hatchway, one by
one, looking as innocent as a cat that has been at
the cream-jug. They seem to be pretty nearly
all here now, but I don’t see any signs in any
of their faces that they have been in trouble.
“Well, well, midshipmen are
only boys, and boys will quarrel. I expect we
both had our share of it before we got our épaulettes.”
The other laughed. “I suppose
so,” he said; “and after all it does them
no harm, and it is much better, if two boys do quarrel,
that they should fight it out and have done with it,
instead of always wrangling.”
“I thought it might have been
Blagrove,” the first lieutenant said. “A
new hand generally has a fight before he has been on
board a fortnight. After that he finds his level.
However, it is not him, for there he is, looking as
cool as a cucumber. It must have been some sort
of meeting to discuss some fancied grievance.
I daresay we shall hear something about it sooner
or later.”
Half an hour afterwards the doctor
came on deck. There was a smile on his face as
he went up to the first lieutenant.
“One of your officers is on the sick list, Mr.
Canes.”
“What is the matter with him?”
“I should say that it would come under the head
of contusions.”
The lieutenant laughed.
“Bad contusions?”
“Rather more serious than is
usual in these cases. Face greatly swelled, eyes
closed, very great enlargement of the nose, lips puffed
and badly cut, three front teeth missing.”
“By Jove, that is severe punishment! Who
is it?”
“Master’s mate Condor.”
“Why, who has he been fighting with?”
The doctor laughed. “I
could hardly believe it when I heard. I waylaid
young Jocelyn, who was executing a war-dance of delight,
and questioned him. It is your last acquisition,
Blagrove.”
“Impossible, Doctor! There
is the lad himself, without the slightest sign of
having been engaged in a fight. I have been looking
at them all rather closely, for they nearly all disappeared
about half an hour ago, and one knows what that generally
means. Mr. Knight was very angry about it, so
when they came back again I glanced at them; and as
none of them were marked in any way, or showed any
signs of their having been engaged in a bout of fisticuffs,
I came to the conclusion that there had been no fight.
And you mean to say that Blagrove punished Condor in
that fashion without receiving a mark himself?
Condor is a powerful fellow, and must be nearly three
years older than the lad. It seems well-nigh
impossible!”
“I was astonished myself, but,
if you remember, he told us the other evening at the
captain’s table that he had earned the good-will
of those Arabs by rescuing the sheik’s son from
an attack by two European ruffians. He certainly
told it in a very modest tone; but that a lad could
thrash two men armed with knives seemed to me to border
on romancing. Young Jocelyn said that the fight
did not last more than five minutes, and that Blagrove
did not receive a scratch. His delight was excessive,
and I fancy Condor is rather a bully. You see
there is nobody else in the mess anywhere near his
weight and age, and he took advantage of it accordingly.
The boy said that after it was over and they shook
hands, Blagrove told Condor that there should be no
bullying in the mess in future.
“I asked what the affair was
about. Jocelyn did not know, but said that he
heard that something had happened when Blagrove first
came on board, and that they all knew that there was
going to be a fight, but he thinks that it was put
off until they left the Pireus for some reason or
other.”
“That young fellow must be a
marvellously good boxer to be able to punish a fellow
so superior in age and weight without showing a mark
himself. The lesson is certainly likely to do
Condor good. I have heard from Mr. Bonnor, who
was in the same ship with him on his last commission,
that the fellow had a bad name as a bully, but that,
unlike most fellows of that sort, he had pluck, and
could fight, which makes Blagrove’s victory
all the more surprising. However, of course we
shall take no notice of it. I have merely your
official report that Mr. Condor is on the sick-list
suffering from severe contusions. I suppose it
will be some days before he can show up?”
“I should say that it will be
a week before he is fit to come on deck. As to
the loss of his teeth, it will be a serious disfigurement
until he gets home again and can be fitted with some
fresh ones. Well, at any rate this will give
Blagrove a good standing among the others. It
is always awkward for a lad who joins a good bit later
than usual.”
It was not only among the midshipmen
that the defeat of Condor established Edgar as the
most popular member of the mess. During the voyage
out, Condor had already rendered himself obnoxious
to the men by the roughness of his tone when speaking
to them, and by his domineering manner whenever the
officer of the watch was engaged elsewhere, and the
report of the manner in which he had been punished
excited great delight among them, and rendered Edgar
a most popular personage. They had noticed his
behaviour the first time that he had gone aloft, and
had agreed that the new middy was a good sort and
no greenhorn.
“He will make a first-rate officer,”
one old tar said. “You mark my words if
he don’t. New hand as he is, you will see
that he will show up well on the first opportunity.”
The fight, too, raised rather than
lowered Condor in their opinion. The men who
had seen it all agreed that, although he had not a
shadow of chance from the first, he had fought with
unflinching pluck, and struggled on most gamely until
knocked out of time. Consequently, when he returned
to duty he was treated with the same respect as before,
and with none of the covert grins that he had expected
to notice among them.
The young fellow was not a fool, and
while in the sickbay had thought matters over a good
deal. It was of course mortifying to have been
thrashed by an antagonist he despised, but he was conscious
that he had brought the punishment upon himself.
Hitherto he had not, since he first joined the service,
met with his match among those of his own age and
standing, and had come to think himself an exceptional
sort of fellow; but the discovery that he was but
a child in the hands of a really good boxer, while
it humiliated him, was extremely useful. A lesson
of this kind is sure to have an effect, good or bad.
Among some it sours the temper, produces an active
hatred of the person who gave it, and renders a lad
savage and morose. On the other hand, among more
generous natures it has an opposite effect. Thinking
matters over, a lad will feel that he has been going
in the wrong direction, that he has been puffed up
with an exaggerated idea of his own powers, and he
will determine to get into a better groove, and to
break himself of his faults.
Condor belonged to the latter class.
As he lay in bed he saw clearly that he had made a
great mistake, that his successes had been won simply
because those he licked were less skilled or strong
than himself, and that, in point of fact, instead
of being, as he believed, a good boxer, he knew next
to nothing about it.
Edgar had, after the first day, gone
in regularly to have a chat with him. He had
been somewhat doubtful as to how his advances would
be received, but had determined to do his best to
become friends with Condor, whom he felt, rather remorsefully,
he had punished terribly severely.
“I hope, Condor,” he said
the first time he entered, “that you will believe
that I have come in because I am really sorry that
you have been hurt so much, and not from any idea
of triumphing over you. It was only natural that
I should have got the best of it. I knew beforehand
that I was sure to do so. I learned boxing for
over two years from some of the best light-weight
fighters in London. I worked very hard, and at
the end of that time, except that I was of course
their inferior in strength, I could hold my own very
fairly with them. That was more than a year ago,
and since then I have gained a lot in height, in length
of reach, and in strength, so you really need not
feel mortified that you were so easily beaten, because
I consider that if you had been twice as strong as
you are, and four or five years older, it would have
come to the same thing. A man who can box only
in what you may call a rough-and-ready way has practically
no chance whatever with a really scientific pugilist,
which I may say I am. I hope you bear me no malice,
and that we shall be friends in future.”
“I hope so too, Blagrove.
I feel that I deserve what I have got, and it will
be a lesson that I shall not forget. You have
taken me down a great many pegs in my own estimation,
and I shall try and make a fresh start when I am about
again.”
“I am very glad to hear it,”
Edgar said warmly. “I am sure it must be
very much more pleasant to be liked by everyone than
to be disliked; and one is just as easy as the other.”
“I don’t know that I ever
thought of it before,” Condor said, “but
I suppose it must be. I will try the experiment
when I get up. I shall feel very small among
the others.”
“I don’t see why you should.
You did all that you could, and no one could have
done better who had not been taught as I have, and
I am sure that no one will think the least degree
the worse of you because you had no chance with me.
Why, I thrashed a couple of ruffians in Alexandria,
armed with knives, in a quarter of the time that it
took me to beat you.”
“At any rate I shall know better
in future,” Condor said, with a poor attempt
to smile with his swollen lips. “I have
learned not to judge from appearances. Who would
have thought that a fellow brought up in Egypt would
have been able to fight like a professional pugilist.
You said that you had been a couple of years at school
in England, but that didn’t go for much.
We have all been at school in England, and yet not
many of us know much of boxing. How was it that
you came to learn?”
“Well, you see that there is
a very rough population in Alexandria-Greek,
Maltese, and Italian, in fact the scum of the Mediterranean-and
my father, who is a very sensible man, thought that
the knowledge of how to use my fists well might be
of much greater value to me than anything else I could
learn in England, so he asked my uncle, with whom
I lived when I was at school, to get me the best masters
in boxing that he could find. I got to be very
fond of it, and worked very hard. I had three
lessons a week all the time I was at school, and the
last year changed my master three times, and so got
all their favourite hits. Of course I used to
get knocked about, for some boxers can’t help
hitting hard, and to the end I used to get punished
pretty heavily, because though I might hit them as
often as they hit me, they were able to hit much harder
than I was, but I fancy now that they would find it
pretty hard work to knock me out of time. My father
used to say that being really a good boxer kept a
man or a boy out of trouble. A man who knows
that he can fight well can afford to be good-tempered
and put up with things that another man wouldn’t,
and if he is driven to use his fists gets off without
being knocked about; and besides, as soon as it is
known that he can fight, others don’t care about
quarrelling with him. I know that it was so with
me. I had a fight or two at first, but I very
quickly improved, and after that I never had a quarrel
for the rest of the nearly three years I was at school.”
“One thing is certain, Blagrove,
you are not likely to have another quarrel as long
as you remain on board the Tigre. You will
come and see me again, won’t you?”
“Certainly I will. I can
see that it hurts you to talk now, but you will soon
get over that, and then we can have some good chats.”
During the voyage up to the Dardanelles,
the Tigre encountered changeable weather; the
sails had often to be shifted. When he was on
watch, Edgar always went aloft with his friend Wilkinson
and took his place beside him, listened to the orders
that he gave, and watched him at work. In a few
days he was able to act independently and to do his
duty regularly, and to aid in tying down a reef when
a sudden squall came on.
They caught sight of many islands
as they passed through the Aegean. Edgar was
disappointed with the Dardanelles, but delighted with
his first view of Constantinople. It was on the
day that they cast anchor that Condor for the first
time put in an appearance at mess. His face had
resumed its normal appearance, save that there were
greenish-yellow patches under the eyes. Wilkinson,
who was by a week or two the senior midshipman, and
had occupied the president’s chair with reluctance,
at once left it. They had not expected him until
the next day, or he would not have taken it.
Edgar had that morning particularly asked the others
as a personal favour to give Condor a hearty welcome
on his return.
“I think you will find him a
much more pleasant fellow than he was before,”
he said. “At any rate he has been punished
heavily, and I think that you ought to welcome him
heartily.”
Wilkinson and two or three of the
older midshipmen had gone in several times to see
Condor, and had been pleased at the friendly way in
which he had spoken of Blagrove. There had, however,
been little talk between them, for Condor had not
seemed disposed for conversation. Condor walked
to his accustomed seat at the head of the table.
“I hope things will go on better
than they have done,” he said gruffly.
“All I can say is, it sha’n’t be
my fault if they don’t;” and without more
words he proceeded to cut up the salt meat placed in
front of him. For a short time the conversation
was constrained, and it was evident that those who
spoke were talking for the sake of talking; but this
soon wore off, and by the end of the meal even the
youngest mids were talking and laughing with a feeling
that somehow a change had come over the place.
A quarter of an hour after the meal had ended, a boat
was lowered.
“Mr. Wilkinson, you will take
charge,” the first officer said. “Mr.
Blagrove, you will accompany the captain on shore.”
A few minutes later they reached the
landing-place. A number of men at once crowded
round to proffer their services, and the captain said:
“Choose one of them for a guide,
Mr. Blagrove. Ask him to take us to our embassy.”
Edgar at once chose a quiet-looking
Turk, and, to the latter’s surprise, addressed
him in his own language. The others fell back
disappointed, and the guide soon conducted them to
the embassy.
“I shall not want you here,
Blagrove. I shall be engaged for at least a couple
of hours. You can either stroll about and have
a look round or go back to the boat as you please.
It is now two o’clock; call again here for me
at four.”
Cairo had prepared Edgar for Constantinople,
and indeed he thought the former city more picturesque
in the variety of costume than the latter. The
views from the hill of Pera, whether looking up the
Golden Horn, across it at Stamboul, over to Scutari
and the shores of the Sea of Marmora, or up the Bosphorus,
were beautiful beyond anything that he had ever seen,
and leaving the exploration of the city for another
day, he sat down under the shade of some cypress trees
close to a Turkish cemetery and entered into a conversation
with the guardian of the tombs, who pointed out the
various mosques and places of interest to him.
At the end of two hours he repaired to the embassy.
Presently a dragoman came down and asked him if his
name was Blagrove, and on his replying in the affirmative,
said that Sir Sidney Smith had ordered him to say that
he could return in the boat to the ship, for that he
would dine ashore, and the boat was to be at the wharf
at ten o’clock.
Sir Sidney Smith remained two months
at Constantinople. His duty, in conjunction with
his brother, Mr. Seymour Smith, was to engage the
Sultan in an active alliance with England, and to concert,
as a naval officer, the best plan to be pursued to
render that alliance effective. The former portion
of the commission had already been carried almost to
a successful termination by his brother, and the treaty
was signed on the first week of January, 1799.
The details of the latter were arrived at in the course
of several meetings between Sir Sidney Smith and the
Turkish pasha and admiral. To these latter meetings
Edgar always accompanied his chief as interpreter,
Sir Sidney preferring his services to those of the
dragoman of the embassy, as he was better able to
understand and explain the naval points discussed.
The Porte, indeed, was able to do
but little towards aiding in the naval operations.
Two bomb ships and seventeen gun-boats were all the
vessels that they were able to produce, but it was
some time before they would agree to place these entirely
under Sir Sidney Smith’s command. Ahmed
Pasha, or, as he was generally called, Djezzar Pasha-Djezzar
meaning the butcher, from the cruel and brutal nature
of the man-the Governor of Syria, was in
Constantinople at the time, and was present at these
meetings. He was aware that Napoleon was marching
against him; and although usually he paid but little
attention to the Porte, or recognized any orders received
from it, he had now hurried there to represent the
situation and ask for assistance.
Bonaparte lost no time after hearing
that Djezzar had sent forward a force to occupy the
fort of El-A’rich in the desert, between Syria
and Egypt, and on the 8th of February set out with
12,428 men for the conquest of Syria. Djezzar,
who had returned to his pachalik, having early
news of the movement, despatched a force, consisting
principally of cavalry, to support the garrison of
El-A’rich, and they were joined there by Ibrahim
Bey with a force of Mamelukes. The march of the
French was painful, and they suffered greatly from
thirst. However, they defeated the Turk and Mameluke
cavalry with heavy loss, and El-A’rich at once
surrendered. The garrison were allowed to depart
on undertaking not to serve again, and four days later
the army entered Palestine, and believed that their
fatigues and sufferings were at an end.
Two days later, however, a cold rain
set in, and the troops, who had been suffering greatly
from heat, felt the change painfully. On the 3rd
of March they arrived in front of Jaffa. A Turk
was sent in to summon the garrison to surrender.
The commandant simply ordered his head to be struck
off and sent no reply. The fire of the field artillery
in a few hours effected breaches at several points.
The French, in spite of opposition, burst into the
town, which was given up to sack, and a large number
of the inhabitants, as well as the soldiers, were massacred.
Between 3000 and 4000 prisoners were taken, among these
doubtless were some of those who had been allowed
to march away from El-A’rich. The difficulties
in the way of provisioning the army were great.
Many were ill from the effects of the change of climate,
and the position was becoming serious.
To feed 3000 or 4000 prisoners added
greatly to the difficulties, and Napoleon took a step
which has been a foul blot on his reputation.
They were marched into a vast square formed of French
troops; as soon as all had entered the fatal square
the troops opened fire upon them, and the whole were
massacred. The terrible slaughter occupied a considerable
time; and when their cartridge-boxes were emptied,
the French soldiers had to complete the massacre with
their bayonets. Of the whole of these victims
one only, a mere youth, asked for mercy; the rest met
their fate with heroic calmness and resolution.
Napoleon’s excuse for this hideous massacre
was that the soldiers had broken the engagement they
took at El A’rich, but this applied to only
a very small proportion of the garrison, and the massacre
was wholly indefensible, for if unable to feed his
prisoners, they should have been allowed to depart
unarmed to seek subsistence for themselves.
The effects of this horrible massacre
recoiled upon those who perpetrated it. The great
number of dead bodies speedily tainted the air, and
the maladies from which the troops suffered became
vastly more serious, and the plague broke out among
them and carried off a considerable number. Kleber’s
division made a reconnaissance towards Jerusalem,
but the people of Nablous and the mountaineers assailed
them with so terrible a fire, as they endeavoured
to make their way up the narrow valleys, that they
were forced to retire and join the main body of the
army. When the French marched from Jaffa there
were still many of their men stricken with the plague
in hospital. Napoleon has been accused of having
had these poisoned.
The statement has been repeated over
and over again, and has been as often vehemently denied,
among others by Bonaparte himself. It still remains,
and always will remain, doubtful. There can be
no doubt that the transport of plague-stricken men
would have been a source of danger to the whole army;
and as very few of those once attacked by the plague
ever recovered, but few would have benefited by the
operation, while the condition of the great majority
would have been rendered still more hopeless and painful
by the journey. Upon the other hand, had they
been left behind they would assuredly have been massacred
by the inhabitants, who had suffered so terribly at
the hands of the French. Rather than be so left,
the unfortunate men would assuredly have vastly preferred
some painless form of death at the hands of their
friends. The probabilities are that all the sick,
whose final recovery was considered by the surgeons
as within the limits of probability, were taken on,
and that those whose cases were absolutely hopeless
were not allowed to fall alive into the hands of their
foes.
Napoleon’s position was an extremely
difficult one. He had shown much solicitude for
the wounded. When the whole army were panic-stricken
at the outbreak, he had himself visited the hospitals,
been present at operations, talked encouragingly to
the sick, and had done all in his power to relieve
their condition. But he could keep the army no
longer in the tainted air of Jaffa. He could
not take men at the point of death away with him to
communicate the malady to those who had so far escaped,
nor could he leave them to be murdered in their beds
by the infuriated population. It is uncertain
really what course was taken; but it must be assumed
that Napoleon, who was always anxious to win the affection
and regard of his troops, would, putting all other
matters aside, not have perpetrated any act that would
have been condemned by the soldiers of his army.