The Waterwitch was commanded
at this time by Captain Ward, a man possessed of great
energy and judgment, united to heroic courage.
He had received orders to join that portion of the
British fleet which, under Nelson, was engaged in
searching for the French in the Mediterranean, and
had passed Cape St. Vincent on his way thither, when
he fell in with the French vessel.
During the morning a thick fog had
obscured the horizon, concealing the enemy from view.
When the rising sun dispersed it he was suddenly
revealed. Hence the abrupt order on board the
Waterwitch to prepare for action. As
the fog lifted still more, another French vessel was
revealed, and it was soon found that the English frigate
had two Frenchmen of forty-four guns each to cope
with.
“Just as it should be!”
remarked Captain Ward, when this was ascertained.
“There would have been no glory in conquering
one Frenchman equal to my own ship in size!”
The Waterwitch was immediately
steered towards the ship that was nearest, in the
expectation that she would show fight at once, but
the French commander, probably wishing to delay the
engagement until his other vessel could join him,
made sail, and bore down on her. Captain Ward,
on perceiving the intention, put on a press of canvas,
and endeavoured to frustrate the enemy’s design.
In this he was only partially successful.
“Surely,” said Bill Bowls
to his friend Ben Bolter, with whom he was stationed
at one of the starboard guns on the main deck, “surely
we are near enough now to give ’em a shot.”
“No, we ain’t,”
said Tom Riggles, who was also stationed at the same
gun; “an’ depend on it Cap’n Ward
is not the man to throw away his shot for nothin’.”
Ben Bolter and some of the other men
at the gun agreed with this opinion, so our hero,
whose fighting propensities were beginning to rouse
up, had to content himself with gazing through the
port-hole at the flying enemy, and restrained his
impatience as he best could.
At last the order was given to fire,
and for an hour after that a running fight was maintained,
but without much effect. When, however, the
two ships of the enemy succeeded in drawing sufficiently
near to each other, they hove to, and awaited the
advance of the Waterwitch, plying her vigorously
with shot as she came on.
Captain Ward only replied with his
bow chasers at first. He walked the deck with
his hands behind his back without speaking, and, as
far as his countenance expressed his feelings, he
might have been waiting for a summons to dinner, instead
of hastening to engage in an unequal contest.
“Cap’n Ward niver growls
much before he bites,” said Patrick Flinn, an
Irishman, who belonged to Bowls’s mess.
“He minds me of a spalpeen of a dog I wance
had, as was uncommon fond o’ fightin’ but
niver even showed his teeth till he was within half
a yard of his inemy, but, och! he gripped him then
an’ no mistake. You’ll see, messmates,
that we won’t give ’em a broadside till
we’re within half pistol-shot.”
“Don’t take on ye the
dooties of a prophet, Paddy,” said Ben Bolter,
“for the last time ye tried it ye was wrong.”
“When was that?” demanded Flinn.
“Why, no longer ago than supper-time
last night, when ye said ye had eaten such a lot that
ye wouldn’t be able to taste another bite for
a month to come, an’ didn’t I see ye pitchin’
into the wittles this mornin’ as if ye had bin
starvin’ for a week past?”
“Git along wid ye,” retorted
Flinn; “yer jokes is as heavy as yerself, an’
worth about as much.”
“An’ how much may that be?” asked
Ben, with a grin.
“Faix, it’s not aisy
to tell. I would need to work it out in a algibrabical
calkilation, but if ye divide the half o’ what
ye know by the double o’ what ye don’t
know, an’ add the quarter o’ what ye might
have know’d-redoocin’ the whole
to nothin’, by means of a compound o’
the rule o’ three and sharp practice, p’r’aps
you’ll-”
Flinn’s calculation was cut
short at that moment by the entrance of a round shot,
which pierced the ship’s side just above his
head, and sent splinters flying in all directions,
one of which killed a man at the next gun, and another
struck Bill Bowls on the left arm, wounding him slightly.
The exclamations and comments of the
men at the gun were stopped abruptly by the orders
to let the ship fall off and fire a broadside.
The Waterwitch trembled under
the discharge, and then a loud cheer arose, for the
immediate result was that the vessel of the enemy which
had hit them was partially disabled-her
foretopmast and flying jibboom having been shot away.
The Waterwitch instantly resumed
her course and while Bill Bowls was busily employed
in assisting to reload his gun, he could see that the
two Frenchmen were close on their lee bow.
Passing to windward of the two frigates,
which were named respectively La Gloire and
the St. Denis, Captain Ward received a broadside
from the latter, without replying to it, until he
had crossed her bow within musket range, when he delivered
a broadside which raked her from stem to stern.
He then wore ship, and, passing between the two, fired
his starboard broadside into the Gloire, and,
almost immediately after, his port broadside into
the St. Denis.
The effect on the two ships was tremendous.
Their sails and rigging were terribly
cut up, and several of the yards came rattling down
on their decks. The Gloire, in particular,
had her rudder damaged. Seeing this, and knowing
that in her crippled state she could do him no further
damage, Captain Ward passed on, sailed round the stern
of the St. Denis, and, when within six yards
of her, sent a broadside right in at her cabin windows.
Then he ranged alongside and kept up a tremendous
fire.
The Frenchmen stuck to their guns
admirably, but the British fired quicker. At
such close quarters every shot told on both sides.
The din and crash of such heavy artillery was terrific;
and it soon became almost impossible to see what was
going on for smoke.
Up to this point, although many of
the men in the Waterwitch had been killed or
wounded, only one of those who manned the gun at which
Bill Bowls served had been hit.
“It’s too hot to last
long,” observed Flinn, as he thrust home a ball
and drew out the ramrod; “run her out, boys.”
The men obeyed, and were in the act
of pulling at the tackle, when a shot from the enemy
struck the gun on the muzzle, tore it from its fastenings,
and hurled it to the other side of the deck.
Strange to say, only one of the men
who worked it was hurt by the gun; but in its passage
across the deck it knocked down and killed three men,
and jammed one of the guns on the other side in such
a way that it became for a time unserviceable.
Ben Bolter and his comrades were making desperate
efforts to clear the wreck, when they heard a shout
on deck for the boarders. The bowsprit of the
Waterwitch had by that time been shot away;
her rigging was dreadfully cut up, and her wheel smashed;
and Captain Ward felt that, if the St. Denis
were to get away, he could not pursue her. He
therefore resolved to board.
“Come along, lads,” cried
Tom Riggles, on hearing the order; “let’s
jine ’em.”
He seized his cutlass as he spoke,
and dashed towards the ladder, followed by Bowls,
Bolter, Flinn, and others; but it was so crowded with
men carrying the wounded down to the cockpit that they
had to pause at the foot.
At that moment a handsome young midshipman
was carried past, apparently badly wounded.
“Och!” exclaimed Flinn,
in a tone of deep anxiety, “it’s not Mister
Cleveland, is it? Ah! don’t say he’s
kilt!”
“Not quite,” answered
the midshipman, rousing himself, and looking round
with flashing eyes as he endeavoured to wave his hand
in the air. “I’ll live to fight
the French yet.”
The poor boy almost fainted from loss
of blood as he spoke; and the Irishman, uttering a
wild shout, ran towards the stern, intending to gain
the deck by the companion-hatch, and wreak his vengeance
on the French. Bill Bowls and Ben Bolter followed
him. As they passed the cabin door Bowls said
hastily to Bolter, “I say, Ben, here, follow
me; I’ll show ye a dodge.”
He ran into the cabin as he spoke
and leaped out upon the quarter gallery, which by
that time was so close to the quarter of the St.
Denis that it was possible to jump from one to
the other.
Without a moment’s hesitation
he sprang across, dashed in one of the windows, and
went head foremost into the enemy’s cabin, followed
by Bolter. Finding no one to oppose them there,
they rushed upon deck and into the midst of a body
of marines who were near the after-hatchway.
“Down with the frog-eaters!”
cried Ben Bolter, discharging his pistol in the face
of a marine with one hand, and cleaving down another
with his cutlass.
The “frog-eaters,” however,
were by no means despicable men; for one of them clubbed
his musket and therewith hit Ben such a blow on the
head that he fell flat on the deck. Seeing this,
Bill Bowls bestrode his prostrate comrade, and defended
him for a few seconds with the utmost fury.
Captain Ward, who had leaped into
the mizzen chains of the enemy, leading the boarders,
beheld with amazement two of his own men on the quarter-deck
of the St. Denis attacking the enemy in rear.
Almost at the same moment he observed the fall of
one of them. His men also saw this, and giving
an enthusiastic cheer they sprang upon the foe and
beat them back. Bill Bowls was borne down in
the rush by his friends, but he quickly regained his
legs. Ben Bolter also recovered and jumped up.
In five minutes more they were masters of the ship-hauled
down the colours, and hoisted the Union Jack at the
Frenchman’s peak.
During the whole course of this action
the Gloire, which had drifted within range,
kept up a galling fire of musketry from her tops on
the deck of the Waterwitch. Just as the
St. Denis was captured, a ball struck Captain
Ward on the forehead, and he fell dead without a groan.
The first lieutenant, who was standing
by his side at the moment, after hastily calling several
men to convey their commander below, ordered the starboard
guns of the prize to be fired into the Gloire.
This was done with such effect that it was not found
necessary to repeat the dose. The Frenchman
immediately hauled down his colours, and the fight
was at an end.
It need scarcely be said that the
satisfaction with which this victory was hailed was
greatly modified by the loss of brave Captain Ward,
who was a favourite with his men, and one who would
in all probability have risen to the highest position
in the service, had he lived. He fell while
his sun was in the zenith, and was buried in the ocean,
that wide and insatiable grave, which has received
too many of our brave seamen in the prime of life.
The first lieutenant, on whom the
command temporarily devolved, immediately set about
repairing damages, and, putting a prize crew into
each of the French ships, sailed with them to the nearest
friendly port.
The night after the action Bill Bowls,
Ben Bolter, and Tom Riggles sat down on the heel of
the bowsprit to have a chat.
“Not badly hit?” asked
Ben of Bill, who was examining the bandage on his
left arm.
“Nothin’ to speak of,”
said Bill; “only a scratch. I’m lucky
to have got off with so little; but I say, Ben, how
does your head feel? That Mounseer had a handy
way o’ usin’ the handspike. I do
believe he would have cracked any man’s skull
but your own, which must be as thick as the head of
an elephant. I see’d it comin’, but
couldn’t help ye. Hows’ever, I saved
ye from a second dose.”
“It wos pritty hardish,”
said Ben, with a smile, an’ made the stars sparkle
in my brain for all the world like the rory borailis,
as I’ve see’d so often in the northern
skies; but it’s all in the way o’ trade,
so I don’t grumble; the only thing as bothers
me is that I can’t git my hat rightly on by
reason of the bump.
“You’ve no cause to complain-neither
of ye,” said Tom Riggles, whose left hand was
tied up and in a sling, “for you’ve lost
nothin’ but a little blood an’ a bit o’
skin, whereas I’ve lost the small finger o’
my right hand.”
“Not much to boast of, that,”
said Ben Bolter contemptuously; “why, just think
of poor Ned Summers havin’ lost an arm and Edwards
a leg-not to mention the poor fellows that
have lost their lives.”
“A finger is bad enough,” growled Tom.
“Well, so it is,” said
Bowls. “By the way, I would advise you
to try a little of that wonderful salve invented by
a Yankee for such cases.”
“Wot salve wos that?”
asked Tom gruffly, for the pain of his wound was evidently
pretty severe.
“Why, the growin’ salve,
to be sure,” replied Bill. “Everybody
must have heard of it.”
“I never did,” said Tom.
“Did you, Ben?”
“No, never; wot is it?”
“It’s a salve for growin’
on lost limbs,” said Bill. “The Yankee
tried it on a dog that had got its tail cut off.
He rubbed a little of the salve on the end of the
dog, and a noo tail grow’d on next mornin’!”
“Gammon!” ejaculated Tom Riggles.
“True, I assure ye, as was proved
by the fact that he afterwards rubbed a little of
the salve on the end of the tail, and a noo dog growed
on it in less than a week!”
“H’m! I wonder,”
said Tom, “if he was to rub some of it inside
o’ your skull, whether he could grow you a noo
set o’ brains.”
“I say, Bill,” interposed
Ben Bolter, “did you hear the first lieutenant
say where he intended to steer to?”
“I heard somethin’ about
Gibraltar, but don’t know that he said we was
goin’ there. It’s clear, hows’ever,
that we must go somewhere to refit before we can be
of any use.”
“Ay; how poor Captain Ward would
have chafed under this delay!” said Bill Bowls
sadly. “He would have been like a caged
tiger. That’s the worst of war; it cuts
off good and bad men alike. There’s not
a captain in the fleet like the one we have lost,
Nelson alone excepted.”
“Well, I don’t know as
to that,” said Ben Bolter; “but there’s
no doubt that Admiral Nelson is the man to lick the
French, and I only hope that he may find their fleet,
and that I may be there to lend a hand.”
“Ditto,” said Bill Bowls.
“Do,” added Tom Riggles.
Having thus expressed their sentiments,
the three friends separated. Not long afterwards
the Waterwitch sailed with her prizes into
Gibraltar.
Here was found a portion of the fleet
which had been forwarded by Earl St. Vincent to reinforce
Nelson. It was about to set sail, and as there
was every probability that the Waterwitch would
require a considerable time to refit, some of her
men were drafted into other ships. Among others,
our friends Bill Bowls, Ben Bolter, and Tom Riggles,
were sent on board the Majestic, a seventy-four
gun ship of the line, commanded by Captain Westcott,
one of England’s most noted captains.
This vessel, with ten line-of-battle
ships, set sail to join Nelson, and assist him in
the difficult duty of watching the French fleet.