The Majestic was one of the
four ships which sailed into action in the wake of
the Admiral. Our hero, Bill Bowls, and his friend
Ben Bolter, were stationed at one of the guns on the
larboard side of the main deck. Flinders stood
near them. Everything was prepared for action.
The guns were loaded, the men, stripped to the waist,
stood ready, and the matches were lighted, but as
yet no order had been given to fire. The men
on the larboard side of the ship stood gazing anxiously
through the portholes at the furious strife in which
they were about to engage.
“Ah, then! but it’s hot
work is goin’ on,” said Flinders, turning
to Ben Bolter just after a crash of artillery somewhat
louder than usual.
“It’s hotter work ye’ll
see soon, when the Admiral gits into action,”
said Ben.
“True for ye,” answered
Flinders; “he’s a broth of a boy for fightin’.
It’s an Irishman he should have been born.
Hooroo, my hearties! look out!”
This latter exclamation was drawn
forth by the crashing of a stray shot, which entered
the ship close to the spot where they stood, and passed
out on the starboard side, sending splinters of wood
flying in all directions, without hurting any one.
“There goes the first!”
said Bill Bowls, looking up at the ragged hole that
was left.
“Faix, but it’s not the
last!” cried Flinders, as another stray shot
hit the ship, wounding one of the men, and sending
a splinter so close past the Irishman that it grazed
his cheek. “Hooroo, boys! come on, the
more the merrier! Sure it’s death or victory
we’ll be havin’ in half-an-hour.”
At this moment of intense excitement
and expectation, when every man’s nerves tingled
to be called into vigorous action, Ben Bolter saw fit
to give Flinders a lecture.
“Ye shouldn’t ought to
speak misrespectful of death, boy,” said he
gravely. “He’s a rough customer when
he gits hold of ‘e, an’ is sartin sure
to have the upper hand. It’s my opinion
that he’ll pay this ship a pretty stiff visit
to-night, so you’d better treat him with respect,
an’ belay yer jokin’-of which
yer countrymen are over fond.”
To this Flinders listened with a humorous
expression about the corners of his eyes, while he
stroked his chin, and awaited a pause in order to
make a suitable reply, but an exclamation from Bill
Bowls changed the subject abruptly.
“Ho! boys,” he cried, “there goes
the Admiral.”
A tremendous crash followed his words,
and the Vanguard was seen to pour a broadside
into the Spartiate-as before related.
The men of the Majestic gazed
eagerly at the Admiral’s ship, which was almost
enveloped in thick smoke as they passed ahead, but
an order from Captain Westcott to be ready for action
called the attention of every man on his duty.
Whatever might have been, at that moment, the thoughts
of the hundreds of men on board the Majestic,
the whole soul and body of every man appeared to be
concentrated on his own gun, as he awaited in stern
silence the order to act.
It came at last, but somewhat differently
from what had been expected. A sudden and peculiar
motion was felt in the ship, and it was found that
she had got entangled with the main rigging of one
of the French vessels astern of the L’Orient.
Instantly men were sent aloft to cut clear, but before
this could be accomplished a perfect storm of shot
and shell was sent into them from the towering sides
of the three-decker. Men fell on all sides before
they had an opportunity of firing a shot; again and
again the crushing shower of metal came; spars and
masts fell; the rigging was cut up terribly, and in
a short time the Majestic would certainly have
been sunk had she not fortunately managed to swing
clear. A moment afterwards Captain Westcott,
finding himself close alongside the Heureux-the
ninth ship of the enemy’s line-gave
the word to open fire, and Bill Bowls had at last
the satisfaction of being allowed to apply a light
to the touch-hole of his gun. Seventy-four men
had for some time past felt their fingers itching
with an almost irresistible desire to do this, and
now upwards of thirty of them were allowed to gratify
their wish. Instantly the good ship received
a shock that caused her to quiver from the trucks
to the keel, as her broadside went crashing into the
Heureux.
No longer was there impatient inaction
on board the Majestic, for not only did the
Heureux reply vigorously, but the Tonnant-the
eighth of the enemy’s line-opened
fire on their other side. The Majestic
therefore fought on both sides. Throughout the
whole ship the stalwart, half-naked men heaved at
the huge guns. Everywhere, from stem to stern,
was exhibited in full swing the active processes of
sponging out, passing along powder and ball, ramming
home the charges, running out, working the handspikes,
stepping aside to avoid the recoil-and the
whole operation of working the guns, as only British
seamen know how to work them! All this was done
in the midst of smoke, flame, crashing shot, and flying
splinters, while the decks were slippery with human
blood, and strewn with dead men, from amongst whom
the wounded were raised as tenderly as the desperate
circumstances in which they were placed would admit
of, and carried below. Many of those who were
thus raised never reached the cockpit, but again fell,
along with those who bore them.
One of the men at the gun where Bill
Bowls was at work was in the act of handing a round
shot to Bill, when a ball entered the port-hole and
hit him on the head, scattering his brains over the
gun. Bill sprang forward to catch him in his
arms, but slipped on the bloody deck and fell.
That fall saved his life, for at the same moment a
musket ball entered the port and passed close over
his head, shattering the arm of a poor boy-one
of those brave little fellows called powder-monkeys-who
was in the act of carrying a cartridge to Ben Bolter.
Ben could not delay the loading of the piece to assist
the little fellow, who used his remaining strength
to stagger forward and deliver the cartridge before
he fell, but he shouted hastily to a passing shipmate-
“Here, Davis, carry this poor
little chap to the cockpit.”
Davis turned and took the boy in his
arms. He had almost reached the main hatchway
when a shell entered the ship and burst close to him.
One fragment killed the boy, and another almost cut
Davis in two. They fell and died together.
For a long time this terrible firing
at short range went on, and many men fell on both
sides. Among others, Captain Westcott was killed.
He was the only captain who fell in that battle,
and was one who, had his life been spared, would certainly
have risen to the highest rank in the service.
He had “risen from the ranks,” having
been the son of a baker in Devonshire, and gained
the honourable station in which he lost his life solely
through his conspicuous abilities and courage.
Up to this point none of those who
are principally concerned in this tale had received
any hurt, beyond a few insignificant scratches, but
soon after the death of the little boy, Tom Riggles
received a severe wound in the leg from a splinter.
He was carried below by Bill and Ben.
“It’s all over with me,”
he said in a desponding tone as they went slowly down
the ladders; “I knows it’ll be a case o’
ampitation.”
“Don’t you go for to git
down-hearted, Tom,” said Ben earnestly.
“You’re too tough to be killed easy.”
“Well, I is tough, but
wot’ll toughness do for a feller agin iron shot.
I feels just now as if a red-hot skewer wos rumblin’
about among the marrow of my back-bone, an’
I’ve got no feelin’ in my leg at all.
Depend upon it, messmates, it’s a bad case.”
His comrades did not reply, because
they had reached the gloomy place where the surgeons
were engaged at their dreadful work. They laid
Tom down on a locker.
“Good-bye, lads,” said
Tom, as they were about to turn away, “p’r’aps
I’ll not see ye again, so give us a shake o’
yer flippers.”
Bill and Ben silently squeezed their
comrade’s hand, being unable to speak, and then
hastened back to their stations.
It was about this time that the L’Orient
caught fire, and when Bill and his friend reached
the deck, sheets of flame were already leaping out
at the port-holes of the gigantic ship. The sides
of the L’Orient had been recently painted,
and the paint-buckets and oil-jars which stood on
the poop soon caught, and added brilliancy to the great
conflagration which speedily followed the first outbreak
of fire. It was about nine o’clock when
the fire was first observed. Before this the
gallant French Admiral had perished. Although
three times wounded, Brueys refused to quit his post.
At length a shot almost cut him in two, but still
he refused to go below, and desired to be left to die
on his quarter-deck. He was spared the pain
of witnessing the destruction of his vessel.
Soon the flames got the mastery, and
blazing upward like a mighty torch, threw a strong
and appropriate light over the scene of battle.
The greater part of the crew of the L’Orient
displayed a degree of courage which could not be surpassed,
for they stuck to their guns to the very last; continuing
to fire from the lower deck while the fire was raging
above them, although they knew full well the dire and
instantaneous destruction that must ensue when the
fire reached the magazine.
The position and flags of the two
fleets were now clearly seen, for it was almost as
light as day, and the fight went on with unabated fury
until about ten o’clock, when, with a terrific
explosion, the L’Orient blew up.
So tremendous was the shock that it seemed to paralyse
the combatants for a little, for both fleets ceased
to fire, and there ensued a profound silence, which
continued for some time. The first sound that
broke the solemn stillness was the splash of the falling
spars of the giant ship as they descended from the
immense height to which they had been shot!
Of the hundreds of human beings who
manned that ship, scarcely a tithe were saved.
About seventy were rescued by English boats.
The scattered and burning fragments fell around like
rain, and there was much fear lest these should set
some of the neighbouring vessels on fire. Two
large pieces of burning wreck fell into the Swiftsure,
and a port fire into the Alexander, but these
were quickly extinguished.
On board the Majestic also,
some portions of burning material fell. While
these were being extinguished, one of the boats was
ordered out to do all that was possible to save the
drowning Frenchmen. Among the first to jump
into this boat were Bill Bowls and Ben Bolter.
Bill took the bow oar, Ben the second, and in a few
moments they were pulling cautiously amid the debris
of the wreck, helping to haul on board such poor fellows
as they could get hold of. The work was difficult,
because comparative darkness followed the explosion,
and as the fight was soon resumed, the thunder of
heavy guns, together with the plunging of ball, exploding
of shell, and whizzing of chain-shot overhead, rendered
the service one of danger as well as difficulty.
It was observed by the men of the
Majestic’s boat that several French boats
were moving about on the same errand of mercy with
themselves, and it was a strange as well as interesting
sight to see those who, a few minutes before, had
been bent on taking each other’s lives, now as
earnestly engaged in the work of saving life!
“Back your starboard oars,”
shouted Ben, just as they passed one of the French
boats; “there’s a man swimming on the port
bow-that’s it; steady; lend a hand,
Bill; now then, in with him.”
A man was hoisted over the gunwale
as he spoke, and the boat passed onward. Just
then a round shot from one of the more distant ships
of the fleet-whether English or French
they could not tell-struck the water a
few yards from them, sending a column of spray high
into the air. Instead of sinking, the shot ricochetted
from the water and carried away the bow of the boat
in passing, whirling it round and almost overturning
it. At the same moment the sea rushed in and
swamped it, leaving the crew in the water.
Our hero made an involuntary grasp
at the thing that happened to be nearest him.
This was the head of his friend Ben Bolter, who had
been seated on the thwart in front of him. Ben
returned the grasp promptly, and having somehow in
the confusion of the plunge, taken it into his head
that he was in the grasp of a Frenchman, he endeavoured
to throttle Bill. Bill, not being easily throttled,
forthwith proceeded to choke Ben, and a struggle ensued
which might have ended fatally for both, had not a
piece of wreck fortunately touched Ben on the shoulder.
He seized hold of it, Bill did the same, and then
they set about the fight with more precision.
“Come on, ye puddock-eater!”
cried Ben, again seizing Bill by the throat.
“Hallo, Ben!”
“Why, wot-is’t
you, Bill? Well, now, if I didn’t take
’e for a Mounseer!”
Before more could be said a boat was
observed rowing close past them. Ben hailed it.
“Ho!” cried a voice, as
the men rested on their oars and listened.
“Lend a hand, shipmates,” cried Ben, “on
yer port bow.”
The oars were dipped at once, the
boat ranged up, and the two men were assisted into
it.
“It’s all well as ends
well, as I’ve heerd the play-actors say,”
observed Ben Bolter, as he shook the water from his
garments. “I say, lads, what ship do you
belong to?”
“Ve has de honair to b’long
to Le Guillaume Tell,” replied one of
the men.
“Hallo, Bill!” whispered
Ben, “it’s a French boat, an’ we’re
nabbed. Prisoners o’ war, as sure as my
name’s BB! Wot’s to be done?”
“I’ll make a bolt, sink or swim,”
whispered our hero.
“You vill sit still,”
said the man who had already spoken to them, laying
a hand on Bill’s shoulder.
Bill jumped up and made a desperate
attempt to leap overboard, but two men seized him.
Ben sprang to the rescue instantly, but he also was
overpowered by numbers, and the hands of both were
tied behind their backs. A few minutes later
and they were handed up the side of the French ship.
When day broke on the morning of the
2nd of August, the firing still continued, but it
was comparatively feeble, for nearly every ship of
the French fleet had been taken. Only the Guillaume
Tell and the Genereux-the two
rear ships of the enemy-had their colours
flying.
These, with two frigates, cut their
cables and stood out to sea. The Zealous
pursued, but as there was no other British ship in
a fit state to support her, she was recalled; the
four vessels, therefore, escaped at that time, but
they were captured not long afterwards. Thus
ended the famous battle of the Nile, in regard to
which Nelson said that it was a “conquest”
rather than a victory.
Of thirteen sail of the line, nine
were taken and two burnt; and two of their four frigates
were burnt. The British loss in killed and wounded
amounted to 896; that of the French was estimated at
2000.
The victory was most complete.
The French fleet was annihilated. As might
be supposed, the hero of the Nile was, after this,
almost worshipped as a demigod. It is worthy
of remark here that Nelson, as soon as the conquest
was completed, sent orders through the fleet that
thanksgiving should be returned, in every ship, to
Almighty God, for the victory with which He had blessed
His Majesty’s arms.