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The theatres were then in the height of their prosperity, and never did the scenic art sustain itself better, except when interrupted by the temporary rage for the boy Betty; an event that reversed my previous ideas of the excellence of the public judgment, in things attaching to art and literature, more and more confirmed since. I saw Betty first in the Earl of Warwick. It was a humiliating spectacle to those who loved the drama, and its display by the better actors of the time. Betty’s performance was well enough for a boy, but he had no adequate conception of the author. I went more than once, and came away in disgust. It was Betty the chambermaid in male habiliments.
My very first sight of Mrs. Siddons was in Queen Catherine. Never did I behold anything more striking than the acting of that wonderful woman; for, no heroine off the boards, she was the ideal of heroic majesty in her personations. I have seen real kings and queens, for the most part ordinary people, and some not very dignified, but in Siddons there was the poetry of royalty, all that hedges round the ideal of majesty, the ideal of those wonderful creations of genius, which rise far beyond the common images exhibited in the
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Miss O’Neil has been called a fine actress. She did not appear to me as anything striking after Siddons. It is true her line of acting had not so much of the high heroic cast as that of Siddons, and the two performers could in no respect be compared, their styles were different. I saw George Frederick Cook several times in tragedy, but not in comedy, although his Pertinax M’Sycophant was so celebrated a stimulus to Scotch anger. His Richard III. was, as a whole, superior to that of Kean. It is true he looked the character well in every respect, which Kean’s insigni-
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 89 |
Grimaldi appeared at Covent Garden the first year I was in town, and about the same time Miss de Camp became a favourite in the “Forty Thieves.” Young and Kemble in Brutus and Cassius were much followed. I have stood on the back seats in the uppermost boxes to get a sight of the stage, when they have played, and
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I hold myself, after all, no reliable authority on stage-going matters, judging, perhaps, too much by my own impressions of excellence, in place of histrionic rules. Here, therefore, I must conclude my remarks upon a topic which, since Shakspeare has been abandoned in his native land, and the tendencies of the age in dramatic literature are so decidedly downwards, can excite small interest.
This same year, I lost my father, and paying a visit to my home for the first time after my departure, I passed through the town of Chudleigh, which had just been consumed. A town in ashes is a forlorn object of human helplessness.
A newspaper at Plymouth was projected, by the proprietors of the ‘Pilot,’ stimulated by a gentleman of that town intimate with Samuel. Towards the end of the year all was ready to start such a speculation. An active and experienced editor alone was wanting. This delayed the progress of the publication until the end of February, 1808. I took a share.
The seizure of the Danish fleet, or as our sailors called it, the pirate robbery, had just taken place, and the vessels were brought to England. Some came to Chatham, and an old friend being on board the Haf Fruen, who could not quit her, I went down with his brother on a Friday. We made merry among the spoils of the poor Danes for two or three days, lying close alongside the Victory, which had brought home the body of Lord Nelson about a year before. It was necessary we should be in town before Monday morning,
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My companion, a wild youth, was in a rage. While I was paying, he went back into the room and managed to smash half a dozen glasses on the side-board. When we arrived at the next stage, he quietly called the Gravesend post-boy aside, and bade him tell the waiter at home, that he would find gentlemen going to town that road could observe old customs as well as his master, as he would see if he examined the side-board. “The custom of the Dover road,” became a saying among naval youngsters.
We found an editor in a Scotch clergyman. The printer, his men and material were sent off. I went down with the embryo editor to set the machinery going. The first number appeared. Seeing all in order, and things likely to go on smoothly, I returned, having no idea of living out of London. No one can imagine the watchfulness necessary in those days to succeed with a country paper, where only a false and fictitious freedom of pen was to be maintained, under a ticklish dependence upon every opposing political interest. The difficulty was enhanced in a great naval and military arsenal, where every sentiment
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I cannot refrain from giving an extract of a part of the prospectus, because it paints faithfully the feeling and the style of address adopted on such occasions, in that eventful period.
“Threatened as we are by such a people directed by a head of unrivalled sagacity, assisted by the acquisition of an immeasurable force, it is not to be concealed that the danger of our country is imminent. To conceive that we risk only a few points of naval etiquette, or that we are only likely to concede on our failure a few privileges of trade, would be to flatter a prejudice most injurious to the public safety, and to destroy that patriotic sensibility which ought to be at every post alive and watchful. It cannot be too strongly impressed upon every mind, that it is nothing less than our all against which our enemy combines his efforts, and that the variety and extent of means which his combination embraces are the most formidable that were ever arrayed against any nation of the world. ‘Proud Islanders’ as we are termed in reproach, and Proud Islanders as we may be, and in a proper scene we ought to be, let us not suffer either the privileges we enjoy from one political consti-
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I returned to town and resumed my customary duties. The ministry had determined, by the irresistable argument of an obedient majority, that all done in India, right or wrong, was to be sanctioned. Samuel became less anxious about the paper he had set up to advocate a worthy cause. He left the editorship to Compton, or as he was called at Madras “lotta Compton,” from the frequent use and odd pronunciation of a word, he often adopted in his addresses to the bench.
After Compton’s departure for India, when Fitzgerald became editor, the “Pilot” rose into favour at the Horse Guards. The Duke of York subsequently supported it so far as to impart to it the exclusive intelligence in his department. I had then quitted town, Perceval having betrayed his client, the unfortunate Queen Caroline, and “the Book” he compiled in her vindication, had become
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The Duke of York replied to Perceval, that if he could not have his own way in similar matters, relating solely to his own department, their substance should not go to any paper at all, save the Gazette. The general heads only were all the Duke had permitted to be communicated.
The “Courier” had, by its apostacy, attained an enormous circulation. Messrs. Street and Dan Stuart were the proprietors. There was a brother of Dan, if I recollect rightly, who once edited the “Post,” and then possessed the “Oracle.” The latter was a morning paper, published on the south-side of Fleet Street. Dan Stuart was a Whig, and stated upon the change of the politics
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 95 |
He still took his share of the profits, and ultimately retired into Oxfordshire with a large fortune, afterwards serving the office of Sheriff for the county. Street, who was an anythingarian in politics, conducted the paper, lived liberally, and I believe died poor. Neither of them were men of any literary talent. Street had written a poem, not poetic, and Stuart had been delivered of a mediocre pamphlet. It is curious that many years afterwards, another Stuart should have become proprietor of the “Courier” about 1831. He was said to be a city coal merchant, and in the mercantile spirit of the present, rather than the past time in such concerns, he went down to Lord Grey soon after the accession of the noble lord to office, and offered him the support of the Tory “Courier” in exchange for the Treasury patronage. Lord Grey looked at him with indignation, rang the bell, and when the attendant entered, bade him “show that gentleman the door.” The Editorship of this paper was once offered to myself, but I declined it at a moment its acceptance would have been of great service to me. I adhered to the old principle, not to write when I could not write with the whole will bearing upon the expressed opinion.
The paper most respected for principle at that time was the “Morning Chronicle,” the organ of the old Whig party, patronized by Charles Fox and his friends after him. The Whigs were notorious for neglecting those who supported them, and for rewarding their political opponents, in this respect contrasting ill with the straightforward gratitude of the Tories. Perry, the
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The “Statesman” was an opposition paper, edited by a Mr. Lovel in Fleet Street. It affected to be an ultra-Liberal of those times.
The “Sun” was edited by John Taylor, a kind-hearted man of great play-going renown. His paper, Peter Pindar used to tell him, was a Sun without a ray of light when old George Rose had it, and he hoped Taylor would light it up. I believe it made little way under a play-goer and punster of the best intentions, the author of the farce of ‘Monsieur Tonson.’
The “Traveller” and “Globe” were edited by Edward Quin, a noted member of the Common Council of London, where he was renowned for his orations. He was an agreeable man, and a good speaker. I was introduced to him by Major Kavanagh. He had a son at the bar, who went the Warwick Circuit, and died in the prime of life, just as he was getting into extensive practice. I must break the chain of time here, as I shall often do, to mention that, some years after I had long parted from the sight both of father and son, I met the latter in the assize court at Warwick. Our meeting was rendered memorable by a specimen Judge Best gave of his bland temper. We were seated at the barristers’ table. A man named Edmonds was on trial for a blasphemous libel, as it was styled under the
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 97 |
“There, Redding, did your hear that?” said Quin, the bar tittering, and Reader, once so well known, who went that Circuit, laughing audibly.
I replied, I had heard nothing.
“You observe that gentleman who is taking his seat by the judge—a friend, I suppose. You see Best is in a towering passion with the defendant. When the gentleman introduced himself, Best said to him, loud enough for everybody to hear, ‘I’ll be d—d if I will sit and hear the Christian religion reviled in this way!’ This notion of religion recalled to my memory that of the boatswain, who was sent after a youngster missing at divine service-time on board, and found him asleep in a cask; hitting him with a rope’s end, he bade him, with an oath, get out and save his young sinful soul.”
“Very becoming in Best as a judge,” I observed to Quin. I never saw him afterwards. This gentleman must not be confounded with Quin of Gray’s Inn, who wrote ‘Travels by the Danube.’
A morning paper, called the “Aurora,” was started about 1807, in Fleet Street. Of the editors, or proprietors, I know nothing. I only remember that its career was short, and that it exhibited no talent of any attractive kind.
If I remember correctly, Captain Macdonnell, a pale, sickly-looking man, of very gentlemanly manners,
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The “Times” was more noticed by its past unmerited persecutions than by its talents, even at this time. Walter, the proprietor, had, some years before, been tried and imprisoned for stating that the Duke of Clarence had returned home without leave. It was true enough. The priority of news of this paper was then noted by the public.
There was a paper called the “Scourge” or “Satirist”—I forget which, edited by an individual named Manners, a barrister, whom I several times met in society. It attacked age and sex alike, provided they were anti-ministerial, in the most scandalous manner; and, for this dirty work, Manners obtained the consulship at Boston, United States, which he held up to the time of his decease a few years ago. He was a tall, stout, clumsy man in person.
Another dishonour of the press, at this time, was the notorious Jew Goldsmith, already named. He advocated republican principles here, and then became editor of the “Argus” in Paris, writing against England. He left France, and, coming home, libelled the French in their turn. He trumped up extravagant falsehoods regarding the public men in France. Napoleon, he declared, was the son of a shoemaker named Nicholas. His libels and falsehoods were read with great zest during the
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It must be observed that Goldsmith’s libel upon France and Frenchmen had not been concealed after he had left the “Argus;” and his diatribes had naturally caused him to be regarded, in France, in the light he merited. He replied:
“No, I am not here in my own name; but if I
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To go back to 1808—Beresford’s silly book, “The Miseries of Human Life,” made its appearance, and passed through four editions. Beresford, an Oxford clergyman, soothed the severity of his theological studies by recording the petty annoyances of social life.
At this time, I met Thomas Hardy, once the Secretary of the Corresponding Society, and the keeper of a bootmaker’s shop on the north side of Fleet Street, where I bought such goods. Boots and leather brogues were then the fashion. He was a plain man, with much simplicity of manner, the last to be expected to plan evil against a monarchy. I met this quiet man in Waterloo Place just after the Reform Bill had
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 101 |
To an officer of militia, I met sometimes in Hardy’s shop, named Porter, an Irishman, London was ever an inextricable labyrinth. A story told of him was a counterpart of his dullness in this way. The subalterns were ordered sometimes to put the regiment through the manual exercise, and the customary manœuvres of the parade. He was performing his duty, and got the regiment into a square; but he could not recollect the words of command to get the men out of it again. Time passed—his memory was still treacherous. The brilliant idea struck him that, if he called out “Ugh! ugh!” the men would move out of the square of their own accord. “Men, attention! ugh! ugh!” The regiment remained stock still. “Ugh! ugh!” he repeated. There was no movement. At length, fairly at his wit’s end, he bawled out “Ugh! ugh!” adding “get out of that there, I say.”
Life is ruled by trivial events. It is vain to repine. We are the slaves of circumstance, not of our talents nor will, as our self-conceit generally makes us suppose. A straw across life’s pathway will bar our fortunes, quench our proudest aspirations, and convince us how little we do against accident.
The individual whom we had sent to Plymouth, was
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* In Mr. Jerdan’s Autobiography, in a passage which mentions my connexion with the ‘Pilot’, he states that he held a department in, or was a contributor to it, during Compton’s editorship. This must have taken place after I quitted London on the above occasion. I did not know Mr. Jerdan until my return from the continent, ten years after I left the ‘Pilot.’ As I was connected with the paper at its commencement, I must in any other case, have had a personal knowledge of that gentleman. |
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I unexpectedly met my old friend Hambly, then first lieutenant of the ‘Defence,’ a seventy-four, commanded by the late Sir Charles Ekins. One day I went off to the ship, and was surprised to see at the mess several foreign officers, dressed in blue with red facings. They were Spaniards from the ‘Algeziras,’ the first vessel of war that entered an English port after the peace with Spain. The ‘Algeziras’ was a French ship, taken at Trafalgar. In the gale that followed the battle, she escaped into Cadiz. The Spaniards had now seized and appropriated her. The officers were gentlemanly young men; and we made merry enough. The compliment of breaking the glasses after national toasts, by throwing them over our heads, smashing them against the guns, I saw for the first time. The intention being, that they should never be drunk out of again after the sentiment given. We drank the King of England with that honour, and then (Heaven “forgive me!) Ferdinand VII.; but the peculiar virtues of Ferdinand were not then known, nor had he embroidered petticoats for the Virgin Mary and other lady idols. Before we separated, the Dons were rather heady; but they reached their vessel in the Sound safely. In the return invitation, they did me the honour to insist on my presence. The celebrated Breakwater was not then begun. A tumbling sea rolled in from the south-west. The boatmen who took me out were “two sheets in the wind;” and we had some trouble to get alongside. The ‘Algeziras’
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“That man has been on shore. He has had twenty-four hours’ leave—no refusal is ever given in our ship to a request to go on shore, if the duty will admit of it.”
“Then you have desertions?”
“No, we have no reason to complain. We make a man who asks for leave, find two sureties on board, that he will be back to his duty at the time his leave expires.
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 105 |
Captain Hillyar of the ‘Phœbe,’ was another officer, who used his crew so well that he did not suffer from desertions. He used to land his men and march them to Stonehouse Church on Sunday mornings, leaving none but the cooks on board. Some of his brother officers, on that account, called him the psalm-singer. One day, I saw him marching at the head of his men, when he met a brother officer in commission, and pointing to his crew, said, “Do it, my boy—you daren’t!” It was too true. Few in those days dared to follow his example.
This desertion was not wonderful in men who had been pressed, I was told of a man who had not set his foot on shore for five years, yet the anchorage to which he came, when his ship ran in from the Channel Fleet, was in sight of his own home!
Ships having officers of a character that stood high with the seamen, were often filled with volunteers in those days, while others could not get a man. Lord Cochrane in the ‘Impérieuse,’ was one of the sailors’ favourites. I have heard a captain say, he had not a good man in his ship that was not a Yankee, the rest were made up of all he could kidnap, and he was not nice how he got them. He could flog them into duty. What a system! Captain M’Culloch, of the Engineers, a brother of the well-known Dr. M’Culloch, and an old boy companion, I fell in with here. He had as many per-
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There was a tall, stout, brawny lieutenant whom I sometimes used to meet, the best tempered fellow in the world. Dining in his company with a party of blue and red coats, a marine officer got angry at some joke the lieutenant passed, being a little fiery fellow. He rose from the table, evidently, for the purpose of going out to send a challenge. There could be no other interpretation put upon his conduct.
“Don’t go—don’t go. I am your commanding officer. I’ll put you under arrest if you do. I won’t consent to be murdered,” said the blue-coat coolly.
“I am not in a jesting mood, Sir,” replied the marine.
“Nor I,” said the Lieutenant, “I have more at stake than you can have. I’ll be chalked, if you must have satisfaction.”
“Chalked! What does that mean?” I asked.
“Why, C—— shall be chalked out full size upon my body, and if he hits outside the mark, it shall be murder.”
The laugh went round. The Lieutenant asked the marine to take a glass of wine, and in a few minutes
LITERARY AND PERSONAL. | 107 |
Just after I went to the West the second time, I attended the first naval court-martial of which I had been witness. A master’s mate of the ‘Parthian’ had shot his captain for threatening to disrate him. His name was John Smith, son of a planter at Vera Cruz, a fine young man, aged only twenty. Such a trial was a rare occurrence. Captain Quilliam, a Manx man, Lord Nelson’s first lieutenant at Trafalgar, whom I knew, was one of the court. It was a painful scene. There were not more than twenty spectators besides myself. The public knew nothing of the proceedings, but I had always private information whenever anything of moment was about to occur. The prisoner in custody of the sergeant-at-arms was introduced, unshackled, into the ward-room of that noble first-rate, the ‘Salvador del Mundo.’ It was a soul-harrowing scene to the spectator. I stood close to the culprit, and was astonished at his imperturbability. He had mentally assented to his doom. When the evidence closed, and he was asked what he had to say in his defence, he replied with firmness, “nothing.” He spoke in a mild tone, not without deep feeling. He had no defence to offer for such an outrageous act. He was not master of himself, through intoxication, when he committed the crime, and as he knew that was no excuse, he made up his mind to a sentence of
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A remarkable incident occurred during the proceedings, showing how intently my senses were fixed upon what was going forward. As I ascended the gangway to leave, I smelt powder and remarked it.
“To be sure you do,” said one of the lieutenants, “we have just fired a salute of twenty-one guns.”
“I declare solemnly, I never heard a gun,” I replied.
“It is true,” he answered, with a smile of incredulity, “a great deal of the sound does go outside the ports.”
The weather was cold, and the ports were shut close where the court sat. I recollected that I had once or twice shifted my footing, I knew not why, but I now attributed it to the vibration or tremour of the timbers under my feet; but I heard nothing. My absorption in the proceedings may thus be guessed, while had it not happened personally, I should scarcely have believed such a thing possible. Quilliam and myself were engaged to spend the Saturday and Sunday following at Wembury House, five miles from Plymouth. The order of the Admiralty had come down for Smith’s execution. On the Monday he was to die. Admiral Young ordered that the officers, who composed the court-martial, should attend the execution, a very unusual order. Saturday and Sunday we passed pleasantly in the hospitable mansion where we were entertained.
“The execution will be at eight o’clock,” said Quilliam, “we must rise early, and be in town by half-past seven, then I shall have time to go off to the ‘Parthian,’ where the execution takes place.”
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We rose early—it was a dark frosty morning—breakfast delayed us. Some rain, too, had fallen, and frozen upon the surface of a hilly road. We calculated minutes hurrying on at a rapid rate, both able to take long strides, for Quilliam, as well as myself, was above six feet high.
“We shall do it,” said Quilliam.
“But if we don’t find the passage-boat to cross the Lara?” I remarked.
“O, I had forgot that, we must double our speed.”
In a state of exhaustion we reached the water, and the boat was on the opposite side. The Captain was in a fit of great impatience. Minutes seemed hours, for Admiral Young was a strict disciplinarian. We crossed the ferry, proceeded at a running pace, and had got within a quarter of a mile of the spot, and I had just said “good morning,” having had enough exercise, without any desire to see the death of the criminal, when the echo of the gun reverberated from the rocky heights. “He’s at the yard arm,” said Quilliam, posting on still more rapidly. He reached the vessel twenty minutes after the sufferer had been suspended. The Admiral passed over the breach of order. We neither of us recovered the effects of that day’s effort for some time afterwards. Quilliam went to his native island at the general peace, amused himself on his estate, and died in the prime of existence.
Sir William Beatty, Lord Nelson’s medical officer, was resident as physician to the Channel Fleet on my arrival in the port. We used often to meet during the five years of my residence there. Thirty years afterwards in Baker Street, we casually met again.
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Beatty’s frame promised a longer existence. Another acquaintance in Plymouth was the Hon. Willoughby Bertie, of the ‘Satellite,’ in which vessel he perished, going down with all his crew in the Channel. In fact, my nautical acquaintances were numerous.
There were a few literary and scientific individuals, too, in the town whom I knew, and who, occasionally, made up a small circle for conversation. One of these was Samuel Northcote, a brother of the painter of that name, and a superior man in mind to the artist. He was of a shy unobtrusive disposition, and his confidence was necessary to be acquired before he could be brought out. He had nothing of the cynical ill-nature, close disposition in pecuniary affairs, or small views of his brother. Meek in manner, and a profound thinker, he was one of those who attracted little public notice, either through his unobtrusiveness, or from that sterling love of independence which often rules superior minds, and keeps them retired. He possessed no wealth. He was above all the trickery of trading accumulation. Getting infirm, his brother wished him to come to town and reside in his house. He consented, but the cramped mind and narrow spirit of the painter, did not suit his more enlarged views and generous aspirations. He returned to his old home again, where he died. The Rev. Dr. Bidlake, Master of the Grammar School at Plymouth, was another of this small party. An excellent scholar, in person small and deformed, but with a well-stored mind. He had a brother, a colonel
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One who occasionally joined our symposia in the town was Mr. William Eastlake, the elder brother of the present Royal Academician. He possessed much information, and was somewhat of a metaphysician. He was afflicted with asthma. I met him for the last time in Paris, in 1817. One brother, I remember, took it into his head to become a traveller in Africa, and prepared himself for that object. I could not help remarking to his relatives that his stout, full make and
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There was also a gentleman, an old inhabitant, named Cookworthy, somewhat eccentric, of reflective habits, whose family established the first porcelain manufactory in England, about 1760, principally of Cornish materials. Some specimens of this manufacture are still unrivalled in this country. He used, when walking on the flag pavement, always to put his feet on particular stones. There was a medical practitioner of the same respectable family whom I met here, newly entered upon his professional duties.
Obliged to pay a hurried visit to London, I found the O. P. riot in full exercise, and went twice. The theatre was crowded to suffocation. When the actors came on, people stood up, and the whole beat time with their feet, turning their backs to the stage. Clouds of dust rendered dim the pantomimical actors. Whistles, catcalls and small bugles contributed to the dissonance, at such a scene as never before took place in a theatre. Bow Street officers were present; but they could do
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While on this short visit to town, the proprietors of the ‘Pilot’ gave a dinner to some of the officers of the Horse Guards at the British Coffee House. After a sumptuous repast, in the fashion of the time, we sat down to wine. There was present a bustling little man, a Scotch colonel, named Macleod, with his son, a fine young man, about twenty years old, who sat by me. He was an only son, with a number of sisters. The bottle was pushed hard. The youth partook too freely for one of his years. He was seized with fever and died. The estate entailed went by his death to distant relatives; and his mother and sisters, who would have had to depend on him, were left pennyless on the father’s demise.
I returned by the mail to the West. The sea breezes and a little cruising off the headlands during the leisure time at my command, strengthened my healthful feelings. Off the Eddystone, I fell into the midst of the fleet and transports returning with the wreck of Sir John Moore’s army from Corunna. Some of the vessels went on to Portsmouth. I learned the particulars of the battle. No troops could be in a more wretched plight. Those who have only seen soldiers on a parade ground can
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“Wounded, my good man?”
“No, no, weak—only weak.”
The fine military hospital at Plymouth, and the noble naval one, before nearly empty, were both filled with sick and wounded men. The officers were accommodated in private houses. The cavalry had been on board ship before the battle, having shot their horses, and were far better off than the infantry, the latter having embarked in confusion. A naval officer who assisted in the embarkation told me he thought he had a man in one of his boats from every regiment in the service. Most of the badly wounded were left behind. The French moved down field pieces, and fired at some of the transports, which cut their cables, their commanders being frightened. “We got our broadside to bear upon them, and our heavy shot sent them off scampering, pop-guns and all,” said my friend. The seamen had difficulty in avoiding the pressure of the troops into the boats. “Come, my men, a little patience; we’ll be quickly back for you all. See, our ship’s broadside will protect you; the shot will hit high and dry, passing above your heads.” Most vigorously did the seamen labour, and cheerfully did they divide their allowance
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The same year, I saw the military suffering under the Walcheren fever. I called upon a medical officer I knew in the cavalry, on my way down from London.
“We landed,” the surgeon said, “on our return, with not twenty men ill in the country, having been little on the Dutch shore. Now we are in a worse state than any other regiment. We have not men left in health to look after the horses, and have retained ostlers and grooms for that purpose. Major Orde is lying dead over the mess-room, and others are ill, some dying; meet us at the mess to-day—it will be a charity, for there is no overcoming the gloom—there is no excitement.”
“Thank God, then, you are well.”
“I shall have my turn, I dare say. Come with me. I will show you such a sight as you never saw before.”
“But I shall get the fever.”
“No, you are not acclimated—you must be acclimated to take it.”
I passed from room to room, and bed to bed, and confess I was never before or since so painfully affected. The want of a visible cause for the suffering I encountered, seemed to enhance the impression it made. I have been through civil hospitals, but never saw anything like it in them. The wounded and sick of Sir John Moore’s army, were no parallel. There was an obvious
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In this expedition, which exhausted the provident genius of Lord Castlereagh, and the martial prowess of General the Earl of Chatham, our real loss was never known. The pretensions of a coup de main, in a commander who embarked with twelve pair of silver candlesticks, and sat down to a siege as a beginning, was odd enough. Walcheren was taken by as fine an army of 30,000 men as ever left the English shore. By the time the siege was over, the coup de main, which the French say must have succeeded, had become impracticable. When this was admitted, why did the army not return? There was no reply. Five weeks’ idle encampment on the pestilential ground, for no possible end, made the work of death surer. The poison lurked in the human frame sometimes months before its effects appeared, and killed at last. Change of place was no security. A most pompous medical staff was sent out, which just knew as much of the existence of the malady as of the earth’s interior. Every smuggler and
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In the first two or three weeks only 23,000 out of 30,000 men were fit for duty. In a little time, some 11,000 were down. How many got the fever after their return is still a secret. I knew officers who went to the West Indies to avoid a return of the complaint, and died there.
I did not dine at the mess on the above occasion, but drank a glass or two more of wine at dinner that day, than I should have done, but for the scene in the morning. My friend was nine or ten months before he got the fever, and escaped with life.
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