A DAY WITH THE TORPEDOES
The sentence with which I finished
the last chapter appears to me essential, because
what I am now about to describe may seem to many readers
more like the dreams of fancy than the details of sober
fact.
When my mother and I, with Nicholas
and Bella, arrived at Portsmouth, we were met by my
naval friend, a young lieutenant, who seemed to me
the beau-ideal of an embryo naval hero.
He was about the middle height, broad, lithe, athletic,
handsome, with a countenance beaming with good-will
to, and belief in, everybody, including himself.
He was self-possessed; impressively attentive to
ladies, both young and old, and suave to gentlemen;
healthy as a wild stag, and happy as a young cricket,
with a budding moustache and a “fluff”
on either cheek. Though gentle as a lamb in
peace, he was said to be a very demon in war, and
bore the not inappropriate name of Firebrand.
“Allow me to introduce my friend,
Lieutenant Naranovitsch, Mr Firebrand, my mother and
sister; not too late, I hope,” said I, shaking
hands.
“Not at all. In capital
time,” replied the young fellow, gaily, as he
bowed to each. “Allow me, Mrs Childers take
my arm. The boat is not far off.”
“Boat!” exclaimed my mother, “must
we then go to sea?”
“Not exactly,” replied
Firebrand, with a light laugh, “unless you dignify
Portchester Creek by that name. The Nettle
target-ship lies there, and we must go on board of
her, as it is around and in connection with her that
the various experiments are to be tried, by means of
gunboats, launches, steam-pinnaces, and various other
kinds of small craft.”
“How very fortunate that you
have such a charming day,” said my mother, whose
interest was at once aroused by the youth’s cheery
manner. “Do you expect many people to
witness the experiments, Mr Firebrand?”
“About five hundred invitations
have been issued,” answered the lieutenant,
“and I daresay most of those invited will come.
It is an occasion of some importance, being the termination
of the senior course of instruction in our Naval Torpedo
School here. I am happy to think,” he
added, with an arch smile, “that an officer of
the Russian army will have such a good opportunity
of witnessing what England is preparing for her enemies.”
“It will afford me the greatest
pleasure to witness your experiments,” replied
Nicholas, returning the smile with interest, “all
the more that England and Russia are now the best
of friends, and shall, I hope, never again be enemies.”
In a few minutes we were conveyed
on board the Nettle, on whose deck was a most
animated assemblage. Not only were there present
hundreds of gaily-dressed visitors, and officers,
both naval and military, in bright and varied uniforms,
but also a number of Chinese students, whose gaudy
and peculiar garments added novelty as well as brilliancy
to the scene.
“Delightful!” murmured
Bella, as she listened to the sweet strains of the
Commander-in-chief’s band, and gazed dreamily
at the sun-flashes that danced on the glassy water.
“Paradise!” replied Naranovitsch,
looking down into her eyes.
“What are they going to do?”
asked my mother of young Firebrand, who kept possession
of her during the whole of the proceedings, and explained
everything.
“They are going to illustrate
the application of torpedo science to offensive and
defensive warfare,” said the lieutenant; and
just now I see they are about to send off an outrigger
launch to make an attack with two torpedoes, one on
either bow, each being filled with 100 pounds of gunpowder.
Sometimes gun-cotton is used, but this 100 pounds
charge of powder is quite sufficient to send the vessel
in which we stand to the bottom in five or ten minutes.
Come this way we shall see the operations
better from this point. Now, don’t be alarmed,
there is not the slightest danger, I assure you.
He spoke in reassuring tones, and
led my mother to the side of the ship, whither I followed
them, and became at once absorbed in what was going
on.
The outrigger launch referred to was
a goodly-sized boat, fitted with a small engine and
screw propeller. Its chief peculiarities were
two long poles or spars, which lay along its sides,
projecting beyond the bows. These were the outriggers.
At the projecting end of each spar was fixed an iron
case, bearing some resemblance in shape and size to
an elongated kettle-drum. These were the torpedoes.
I heard the lieutenant explain to my mother that
if one of these torpedoes chanced to explode where
it hung, it would blow the boat and men to atoms.
To which my mother replied, “Horrible!”
and asked how, in that case, the crew could fire it
and escape. Whereupon he responded, “You
shall see presently.”
Another peculiarity in the launch
was that it had a species of iron hood or shield,
like a broad and low sentry-box, from behind which
protection the few men who formed her crew could steer
and work the outriggers and the galvanic battery,
without being exposed.
This little boat seemed to me like
a vicious wasp, as it left the side of the ship with
a rapid throbbing of its engine and twirling of its
miniature screw.
When at a sufficient distance from
the ship, an order was given by the officer in charge.
Immediately the outrigger on the right or starboard
side was run out by invisible hands to its full extent apparently
fifteen feet beyond the bow of the launch; then the
inner end of the outrigger was tilted violently into
the air, so that the other end with its torpedo was
thrust down ten feet below the surface of the water.
This, I was told, is about the depth at which an enemy’s
ship ought to be struck. The launch, still going
at full speed, was now supposed to have run so close
to the enemy, that the submerged torpedo was about
to strike her. Another order was given.
The operator gave the needful touch to the galvanic
battery, which, like the most faithful of servants,
instantly sent a spark to fire the torpedo.
The result was tremendous. A
column of seething mud and water, twenty feet in diameter,
shot full thirty feet into the air, overwhelming the
launch in such a shower that many of the unprofessional
spectators imagined she was lost. Thus an imaginary
ironclad was sent, with a tremendous hole in her,
to the bottom of the sea.
That this is no imaginary result
will be seen in the sequel of our tale.
“Why, the shock has made the
Nettle herself tremble!” I exclaimed,
in surprise.
“Oh, the poor boat!” cried my mother.
“No fear of the boat,”
said young Firebrand, “and as to the Nettle
why, my good fellow, I have felt our greatest ironclad,
the mighty Thunderer, of which I have the honour
to be an officer, quiver slightly from the explosion
of a mere five-pounds torpedo discharged close alongside.
Few people have an adequate conception of the power
of explosives, and still fewer, I believe, understand
the nature of the powers by which they are at all
times surrounded. That 100-pounds torpedo, for
instance, which has only caused us to quiver, would
have blown a hole in our most powerful ship if fired
in contact with it, and yet the cushion
of water between it and the tiny launch that fired
it is so tough as to be quite a sufficient protection
to the boat, as you see.”
We did indeed “see,” for
the waspish little boat emerged from the deluge she
had raised and, steaming swiftly on, turned round and
retraced her track. On reaching about the same
position as to the Nettle, she repeated the
experiment with her second torpedo.
“Splendid!” exclaimed
young Naranovitsch, whose military ardour was aroused.
“It means, does it not,”
said Bella, “a splendid ship destroyed, and
some hundreds of lives lost?”
“Well yes ”
said Nicholas, hesitatingly; “but of course it
does not always follow, you know, that so many
lives ”
He paused, and smiled with a perplexed
look. Bella smiled dubiously, and shook her
head, for it did not appear to either of them that
the exact number of lives lost had much to do with
the question. A sudden movement of the visitors
to the other side of the ship stopped the conversation.
They were now preparing to show the
effect of a gun-cotton hand-grenade; in other words,
a species of bomb-shell, meant to be thrown by the
hand into an enemy’s boat at close-quarters.
This really tremendous weapon was an innocent-looking
disc or circlet of gun-cotton, weighing not more than
eight ounces. Innocent it would, in truth, have
been but for the little detonator in its heart, without
which it would only have burned, not exploded.
Attached to this disc was an instantaneous fuse of
some length, so that an operator could throw the disc
into a passing boat, and then fire the fuse, which
would instantly explode the disc.
All this was carefully explained by
Firebrand to my astonished mother, while the disc,
for experimental purposes, was being placed in a cask
floating in the water. On the fuse being fired,
this cask was blown “into matchwood” a
wreck so complete that the most ignorant spectator
could not fail to understand what would have been the
fate of a boat and its crew in similar circumstances.
“How very awful!” said
my mother. “Pray, Mr Firebrand, what is
gun-worsted I mean cotton.”
The young lieutenant smiled rather
broadly as he explained, in a glib and slightly sing-song
tone, which savoured of the Woolwich Military Academy,
that, “gun-cotton is the name given to the explosive
substance produced by the action of nitric acid mixed
with sulphuric acid, on cotton fibre.”
He was going to add, “It contains carbon, hydrogen,
nitrogen, and oxygen, corresponding to ”
when my mother stopped him.
“Dear me, Mr Firebrand, is a
popular explanation impossible?”
“Not impossible, madam, but
rather difficult. Let me see. Gun-cotton
is a chemical compound of the elements which I have
just named a chemical compound,
you will observe, not a mechanical mixture,
like gunpowder. Hence it explodes more rapidly
than the latter, and its power is from three to six
times greater.”
My mother looked perplexed.
“What is the difference,” she asked, “between
a chemical compound and a mechanical mixture?”
Firebrand now in his turn looked perplexed.
“Why, madam,” he exclaimed, in modulated
desperation, “the ultimate molecules of a mixture
are only placed beside each other, so that
an atom of gunpowder may be saltpetre, charcoal, or
sulphur, dependent on its fellow-atoms for power to
act; whereas a chemical compound is such a perfect
union of substances, that each ultimate molecule is
complete in its definite proportions of the four elements,
and therefore an independent little atom.”
“Now, the next experiment,”
continued Firebrand, glad to have an opportunity of
changing the subject, “is meant to illustrate
our method of countermining. You must know that
our enemies may sometimes sink torpedoes at the entrance
of their harbours, to prevent our ships of war entering.
Such torpedoes consist usually of casks or cases of
explosives, which are fired either by electric wires,
like the telegraph, when ships are seen to be passing
over them, or by contact. That is to say,
an enemy’s ship entering a harbour runs against
something which sets something else in motion, which
explodes the torpedo and blows it and the ship into
what natives of the Green Isle call smithereens.
This is very satisfactory when it happens to an enemy,
but not when it happens to one’s-self, therefore
when we have to enter an enemy’s harbour
we countermine. This operation is now
about to be illustrated. The last experiments
exhibited the power of offensive torpedoes.
There are several different kinds, such as Mr Whitehead’s
fish-torpedo, the Harvey torpedo, and others.”
“Dear me,” said my mother,
with a perplexed air, “I should have thought,
Mr Firebrand, that all torpedoes were offensive.”
“By no means; those which are
placed at the entrance of harbours and navigable rivers
are defensive. To protect ourselves from the
offensive weapon, we use crinolines.”
My mother looked quickly up at her
polite young mentor. “You play with the
ignorance of an old woman, sir,” she said, with
a half-jocular air.
“Indeed I do not, madam, I assure
you,” returned Firebrand, with much earnestness.
“Every iron-clad is provided with a crinoline,
which is a powerful iron network, hung all round the
ship at some distance from her, like pardon
me a lady’s crinoline, and is intended
to intercept any torpedo that may be discharged against
her.”
Attention was called, at this point,
to the counter-mining experiments.
It may be said, in regard to these,
that they can be conducted in various ways, but always
with the same end in view, namely, to destroy an enemy’s
mines by exploding others in their midst.
For the sake of illustration, it was
supposed that the surrounding sea-bottom was studded
with invisible torpedoes, and that the Nettle
was a warship, determined to advance into the enemy’s
harbour. To effect this with safety, and in
order to clear away the supposed sunken torpedoes,
a counter-torpedo was floated between two empty casks,
and sent off floating in the desired direction by
means of the tide. This countermine consisted
of an iron cylinder, containing 300 pounds of powder,
and was electrically connected with the Nettle.
A small charge of gun-cotton was fixed to the suspender
that held the torpedo to its casks. When at
a safe distance from the ship, this charge was fired.
It cut the suspender and let the torpedo sink to the
bottom. There it was exploded with terrific violence,
as was quickly shown by the mighty fountain of mud,
water, and smoke that instantly shot up into the air.
It has been proved by experiment that 500 pounds of
gun-cotton exploded below water, will destroy all
the torpedoes that lie within a radius of 120 yards.
It is obvious, therefore, that a warship could advance
into the space thus cleared and then send a second
countermine ahead of her in the same way. If
neither tide, current, nor wind will serve to drift
the casks, the operation might be accomplished by a
small boat, which could back out of danger after laying
each torpedo, and thus, step by step, or shot by shot,
the advance could be made in safety through the enemy’s
defences.
After this, twelve small charges of
gun-cotton were sunk in various directions, each representing
a countermine of 500 pounds. These were discharged
simultaneously, to demonstrate the possibility of extending
the operations over a wide area. These miniature
charges were sent down in small nets, and were quite
unprotected from the water, so that the gun-cotton
was wet when fired.
This fact caught the attention of my mother at once.
“How can it go off when wet?”
she exclaimed, turning her bright little eyes in astonishment
on her young companion.
“Ha, that is one of the strange
peculiarities of gun-cotton,” replied Firebrand,
with an amused look; “you don’t require
to keep it dry like powder. It is only necessary
that there should be one small lump of dry gun-cotton
inside the wet stuff, with a detonator in its heart.
A detonator, you must know ”
“Oh, I know what a detonator
is,” said my mother, quickly.
“Well then,” continued
Firebrand, “the exploding of the detonator and
the dry disc causes the wet gun-cotton also to go off,
as you have seen. Now they are going to exhibit
one of the modes of defending harbours. They
have sunk four mines, of 300 pounds of gunpowder each,
not far from where you see yon black specks floating
on the water. The black specks are buoys, called
circuit-closers, because they contain a delicate
contrivance a compound of mechanism and
galvanism which, when the buoys are bumped,
close the electric circuit and cause the mine
to explode. Thus when a ship-of-war sails against
one of these circuit-closers, she is immediately blown
up.”
“Is not that rather a sneaking
way of killing one’s enemies?” asked my
mother.
Young Firebrand laughed, and admitted
that it was, but pleaded that everything was fair
in love and war.
In actual warfare the circuit-closers
are placed just over the mines which they are designed
to explode, but for safety on this occasion they were
placed at a safe distance from their respective mines.
A steam-launch was used to bump them, and a prodigious
upheaval of water on each explosion showed clearly
enough what would have been the fate of an iron-clad
if she had been over the mine.
“Oh, shade of Nelson!”
I could not help exclaiming, “how shocked you
must be if you are permitted to witness such methods
of conducting war.”
“Ah, yes!” sighed Firebrand;
“the bubble reputation, you see, is being transferred
from the cannon’s mouth to the torpedo.”
I made no reply, for my mind reverted
to my laboratory in Devonshire, where lay the working-model
of the terrible weapon I had spent so much time in
perfecting. It seemed strange to me now, that,
in the eager pursuit of a scientific object, I had
scarcely ever, if at all, reflected on the dire results
that the use of my torpedo involved, and I felt as
if I were really guilty of the intent to murder.
Just before leaving home I had charged my model,
which was quite a large one, capable of holding about
50 pounds of dynamite, in the hope that I might prevail
on the First Lord of the Admiralty and some of his
colleagues to come down and see it actually fired.
I now resolved to throw the dynamite into the sea,
break up my model, and have done with explosives for
ever.
While my mind was running on this,
I was startled by an explosion close alongside.
On turning towards the side of the ship, I found that
it was caused by the rending of a huge iron chain,
the links of which were more than one and a quarter
inch in thickness. This powerful cable, which
could have held an iron-clad, was snapped in twain
like a piece of thread by the explosion against
it of only two and a half pounds of gun-cotton.
“Very well done,” I said
to Firebrand, “but I think that a much smaller
quantity of dynamite would have done it as effectively.”
“Now, Mrs Childers,” said
the young lieutenant, “the last experiment is
about to be made, and I think it will interest you
even more than the others. See, they are about
to send off the electrical steam-pinnace.”
As he spoke, a boat was being prepared
alongside the ship.
“Why!” exclaimed my mother,
almost speechless with surprise, “they have
forgotten to send its crew in it.”
“No, madam,” said Firebrand,
with one of his blandest smiles, “they have
not forgotten her crew, but there are services so dangerous,
that although the courage of the British sailor will
of course enable him to face anything, it has
been thought advisable not to put it to too severe
a test, hence this automatic boat has been invented.
It is steered, and all its other operations are performed,
by means of electricity, applied not on board the
boat but on board of the Nettle.”
This was indeed the case. The
electric pinnace went off as he spoke, her steam-engines,
steering-gear, and all the other apparatus being regulated
by electric wires, which were “paid out”
from the ship as the boat proceeded on her mission
of supposed extreme danger. Right under the
withering fire of the imaginary enemy’s batteries
she went, and having scorned the rain of small shot
that swept over her like hail, and escaped the plunging
heavy shot that fell on every side, she dropped a
mine over her stern, exploded it by means of a slow
fuse, turned round and steamed back in triumph, amid
the cheers of the spectators.
This last was really a marvellous
sight, and the little boat seemed indeed to deserve
the encomiums of Firebrand, who said, that, “If
cool, calm pluck, in the face of appalling danger,
merited anything, that heroic little steam-pinnace
ought to receive the Victoria Cross.”
I was still meditating on this subject,
and listening to the animated comments going on around
me, when I myself received a shock, compared to which
all the explosions I had that day witnessed were as
nothing.
It suddenly recurred to my memory
that I had left a compound in my laboratory at home
in a state of chemical preparation, which required
watching to prevent its catching fire at a certain
part of the process. I had been called away from
that compound suddenly by Nicholas, just before we
left for London, and I had been so taken up with what
he had to tell me, that I had totally forgotten it.
The mere burning of this compound would, in itself,
have been nothing, for my laboratory was an old out-house,
quite unconnected with the dwelling; but in the laboratory
also lay my torpedo! The worst of it was that
I had inserted a detonator and affixed a fuse, feeling
quite secure in doing so, because I invariably locked
the door and carried the key in my pocket.
My face must have turned very pale,
for Nicholas, who came up at the moment, looked at
me with anxious surprise, and asked if I were ill.
“No,” said I, hurriedly;
“no, not ill but yes it
is a slow process at best, and not always certain sometimes
takes a day or two to culminate. The fusion may
not have been quite completed, or it may have failed
altogether. Too late, I fear, too late, but I
cannot rest till I know. Tell my mother I’m
off home only business don’t
alarm her.”
Regardless of the amazed looks of
those who stood near me, I broke from the grasp of
Nicholas, leaped into one of the boats alongside, seized
the oars, and rowed ashore in mad haste.
Fortune favoured me. The train
had not left, though it was just in motion.
I had no time to take a ticket, but leaping upon the
moving footboard, I wrenched open a carriage-door
and sprang in.
It was an express. We went at
full sixty miles an hour, yet I felt as if we moved
like a snail. No words can adequately explain
the state of my mind and body the almost
uncontrollable desire I felt to spring out of the
train and run on ahead. But I was forced to sit
still and think. I thought of the nearness of
the laboratory to our kitchen windows, of the tremendous
energy of the explosive with which the model-torpedo
was charged, of the mass of combustibles of all kinds
by which it was surrounded, of the thousand and one
possibilities of the case, and of my own inexcusable
madness in not being more careful.
At last the train pulled up at the
town from which our residence is about two miles distant.
It was now evening; but it was summer, and the days
were long. Hiring a horse at the nearest hotel,
I set off at a break-neck gallop.
The avenue-gate was open. I
dashed in. The laboratory was not visible from
that point, being at the back of the house. At
the front door I pulled up, sprang to the ground,
let the horse go, and ran forward.
I was met by Lancey coming round the
corner. I saw at once that all was over!
His face and hands had been scorched, and his hair
singed! I gasped for breath.
“No one killed?” I asked.
“No, sir, nobody killed, but most of us ’orribly
scared, sir.”
“Nobody hurt, Lancey?”
I asked again, leaning against the side of the house,
and wiping my forehead.
“No, sir, nor ’urt,”
continued my faithful groom, hastening to relieve
my mind; “you’ve no need to alarm yourself,
sir, for we’re all alive and ’earty, though
I must say it’s about the wüst buster, sir,
that you’ve yet turned out of ’ands.
It sent in the kitchen winders as if they’d
bin made of tissue paper, sir, an’ cook she went
into highstericks in the coal-bunker, Margaret she
swounded in the scullery, and Mary went into fits
in the wash’us. But they’re all right
again, sir, only raither skeery ever since.
We ‘ad some trouble in puttin’ it out,
for the cumbustibles didn’t seem to care much
for water. We got it under at last, early this
morning.”
“This morning?”
“Yes, sir. It blow’d
up about two hours arter you left for London, an’
we’ve bin at it ever since. We was
so glad your mother was away, sir, for it did
make an uncommon crack. I was just sayin’
to cook, not ’alf an hour since, the master
would have enjoyed that, he would; it was such
a crusher.”
“Any of of the
torpedo left, Lancey?” I asked, with some hesitation.
“The torpedo, sir. Bless
your ’art, it went up to the ’eavens like
a sky-rocket, an’ blowed the out-’ouse
about to that extent that you couldn’t find
a bit big enough to pick your teeth with.”
On hearing this I roused myself, and
hastened to the scene of devastation.
One glance sufficed. The spot
on which my laboratory had stood was a blackened heap
of rubbish!
“Now, mother,” said I
next day, after relieving her mind by a full and rapid
account of what had happened, “there is nothing
that I know of to detain me at home. I will
therefore see to having the yacht got ready, and we
shall all go to sea without delay.”