Clarissa Oakes

Chapter 5

Awkward Davies was rated able because he had followed Captain Aubrey into ship after ship whatever Jack might do and because the Surprise carried no landsman or ordinary seamen, but he possessed no seamanlike ability whatsoever apart from being able to throw the harping-iron with frightful strength, a skill that he had never been able to exercise in any commission for the last ten or twelve years. By the time Jack came on deck the swordfish, slow to acknowledge death, had at last ceased lashing; the bowline had been pa.s.sed; and a gang from the afterguard, entirely directed by Davies, who would allow n.o.body, officer or not, to have any part in it, was gently raising the fish from the sea, brilliant in the early sun, its grey dorsal fin hanging down.

"He is one of the histiophori," said Stephen, standing there in his nightshirt. "Probably pulch.e.l.lus."

"Can he be ate?" asked Pullings.

"Of course he can be ate. He eats better by far than your common tunny."

"Then we shall be able to have our feast at last," said Pullings. "I have been growing so shamefaced this last fortnight and more I could hardly meet her eye, a bride and all. Good morning, sir," he cried, seeing Jack standing at the hances. "We have caught a fish, as you see."



"I caught him, sir," cried Davies, a big, powerful, swarthy man, usually withdrawn, dark and brooding but now transfigured with joy. "I caught him. Handsomely there, you G.o.ddam swabs. I flung the iron right through his G.o.ddam head, ha, ha, ha!"

"Well done, Davies. Well done upon my word. He must weigh five hundred pounds."

"You shall have his tail and belly, sir: you shall blow out your kite with his tail and belly."

CHAPTER FOUR.

"At least the ship has steerage-way," said Jack, taking off his shirt and trousers and placing them in the hammock-netting well clear of the trail of shining scales. "I do so loathe plunging into the acc.u.mulated filth of two, no, three days and nights. Ain"t you coming?"

"With your leave I shall attend to the anatomy of this n.o.ble fish - Mr Martin, how do you do? - before the slightest change sets in."

"You can"t have the deck above half an hour, Doctor," said Pullings. "This is a saluting-day, you know, and everything has to be tolerable neat."

"Mr Reade, my dear," said Stephen, "may I beg you to run - to jump - downstairs and bid Padeen bring me the large dissecting-case, and then go forward and tell the little girls to bear a hand, to lend a hand; but in their old, dirty pinafores."

Their old, dirty pinafores had already been put to soak; new pinafores were out of the question: they came aft naked, as naked as worms, their small black figures exciting no comment, since they were in and out of the water much of the day in this calm weather. They were valuable a.s.sistants, with their little neat strong hands, their total lack of squeamishness -they would seize a ligament with their teeth if need be - their ability to hold almost as well with their toes as their fingers, and their eagerness to please. Padeen was useful too in heaving on the very heavy parts, and even more in warding off Davies, the ship"s cook, the gunroom cook, the captain"s cook, the ship"s butcher, and all their respective mates, who were urgent to have their pieces out of the sun and into the relatively cool part of the ship or the salting-tubs; for swordfish was like mackerel in these lat.i.tudes, mate, prime before sunset, poor-John the second day, and rank poison the third.

But with all their dispatch - and the seamen hurried off with their prizes the moment they were released by the anatomists - they were not hasty enough for Pullings. He had already sent the gunroom"s compliments to Mr and Mrs Oakes and would be honoured by their presence at dinner, while Jack had accepted even before diving: the first lieutenant therefore had to set everything in train for a feast that would make up for the long delay, and at the same time he had to prepare the ship, dressed all over, for the grave ritual of saluting the Fifth of November. He and the bosun had of course laid aside great quant.i.ties of bunting and streamers, but they knew very well that nothing could be sent aloft until everything below was so clean that a maiden could eat her dinner off of it - until all guns and their carriages were spotless, until what little unpainted bra.s.s the ship possessed outshone the sun, until a whole catalogue of tasks had been carried out, all of them calling for great activity.

Early in these strenuous preparations Stephen handed the fishy little girls over the side, and having seen them thoroughly dipped, and having learnt from Jemmy Ducks that their divisional pinafores were ready for the ceremony, he hurried aft, drawn by the scent of coffee, to have breakfast with Jack, who had also invited West and Reade: it was a pleasant meal, yet with so much to be done none of the sailors lingered.

Stephen followed them on deck, but at the sight of the turmoil he retired to his cabin, and there, having smoked a small paper cigar out of the scuttle, he sat to his desk, reflected for a while and then wrote "My dearest love, when I was a child and had to have my paper ruled for me I used to begin my letters "I hope you are quite well. I am quite well." There the Muse would often leave me; yet even so, as a beginning it has its merits. I hope you are very well indeed, and as happy as ever can be. Come in," he cried. Killick opened the door, laid Stephen"s best uniform, c.o.c.ked hat and sword on the table with a significant look, nodded, and walked off. "When last I sat at this desk," continued Stephen, "I was telling you, if I do not mistake, about Mrs Oakes: but I think I never described her. She is a slim, fair-haired young woman, a little less than the average size, with a slight figure, grey-blue eyes, and an indifferent complexion that I hope will be improved by steel and bark. Her chief claim to beauty is an excellent, unstudied carriage, not unlike yours. As for her face - but where faces are concerned, what can description do? All I will say is that hers reminds me of an amiable young cat: no whiskers, no furry ears, to be sure, but something of the same triangularity, poise, and sloping eyes. Its expression, though modest, is open and friendly, indeed markedly friendly, as though she were eager if not for downright affection then at least for general liking. This, or even both, she has certainly acquired; and a curious proof of the fact is that whereas some time ago all hands were intensely eager to know what crimes or misdemeanours had brought her to Botany Bay, she is now no longer troubled with any of the ill-bred hints that she at one time dismissed with a firmness that I admired - I believe that the very curiosity itself has died away, she being accepted as a person belonging to the ship. The question of guilt or reprobation is quite left aside.

"She is, there is no doubt at all, good company, willing to be pleased, taking an unfeigned interest in naval actions - I was there when West gave her a detailed account of Camper-down and I am sure she followed every stroke - and she never interrupts. She never interrupts! Yet I must insist that there is nothing in the least forward or provocative or inviting about her manner, nothing whatsoever of the flirt; she does not put out for admiration and although some of the officers feel called upon to say gallant things she does not respond in kind - no protestation, no simpering - a civil smile is all. Indeed I should say that she is in general much less aware of her s.e.x than those she is with; and this I say with the more confidence since I have sat with her for hours, right through the afternoon watch for example, when her husband was on duty and I was looking out for Latham"s albatross, or on occasion through much of the night, when it is close below and fresh on deck. We have few things in common: she knows little about birds, beasts or flowers, little about music; and although she has read a certain amount no one could call her a has bleu; yet we talk away in a most companionable manner. And through all our conversations by day or by night, I might have been talking to a modest, agreeable, quite intelligent young man; though few young men I know are more conciliating, more willing to be liked - and none more capable of resisting intrusion on his privacy. Without being in the slightest degree what is called mannish, she is as comfortable a companion as a man. You may say that this is because I am no Adonis, which is very true. But unless I mistake it is the same with Jack, on those rare occasions when he comes to exchange the time of day; the same with Davidge, a more constant attendant; and both are reckoned tolerably good-looking men. Tom Pullings and West, whose nose mortified on the outward voyage, are even less lovely than I am: they are treated with the same friendliness. So is one-eyed Martin, though he, poor fellow, is not always discreet, and has sometimes seen the cold side of the moon, the Medea I spoke of long ago.

"Whether this unguarded friendliness is very wise or in the event very kind I do not know. Men are sadly apt to misinterpret such conduct and even when no masculine vanity or self-love steps in, a tenderness may arise in some bosoms, I fear. A tenderness or perhaps something with a grosser name in certain cases, or a mixture of the two in yet others: for after all, the lady came aboard in circ.u.mstances that could never be called ambiguous, and even the faintest remains of a bad reputation are wonderfully stimulating.

"Dear Jack, who is not insensible to her charms, keeps very much aloof; but to my astonishment I find that he is anxious for my peace of mind. For my peace of mind. Some of his more obscure general remarks upon human happiness became clear to me on Tuesday, when he surprised me extremely by repeating the sonnet that begins Th" expense of spirit, saying it in his deep voice better than I thought he could possibly have done, and ending

All this the world well knows, but none knows well To shun the heaven that leads men to this h.e.l.l

with the fine sullen growl it calls for, generally in vain. I was transfixed. And the words savage, extreme, rude, cruel, not to trust echoed strangely in my mind.

"The bell tells me that I shall see the lady in five minutes, unless she sends to cry off, which is not unlikely, she being to dine with the gunroom today; and although she may have some manly virtues I am sure she is woman enough to spend some hours dressing for a feast, so I shall leave this sheet unfinished."

Stephen was not infallible. He was by no means infallible. The tap at his door five minutes later was his patient, true to her hour. The coming feast had brought some colour into her cheeks and she looked very well, but in point of fact he found neither improvement nor deterioration in her physical state; and when the examination was over he said, "We must persevere with the steel and bark; I believe I shall increase the dose a trifle, and I shall also send a little wine forward, to be drank medicinally, a gla.s.s at noon and two gla.s.ses in the evening."

"How very kind," said Clarissa, her voice m.u.f.fled in the folds of her dress; and again he reflected that she took no more notice of her nakedness than if they had both been men. Perhaps this was because he was a physician and did not count; yet most of his few women patients had made some gestures in the direction of modesty. Clarissa made none, any more than a professional painter"s model would have done. But when her head emerged and she had b.u.t.toned herself and smoothed her hair she said, with a certain awkwardness, "Dear Doctor, may I beg you to do me another kindness, nothing to do with medicine?" Stephen smiled and bowed and she went on, "Something disagreeable happened yesterday. Mr Martin was showing me how to tune the viola when his little cat - you know his little cat?"

The little cat"s mother had joined the ship in Sydney Cove, and had been tolerated so long by Jack-in-the-Dust - she was a good mouser - that it was thought inhuman to turn her ash.o.r.e when she proved to be in kit: and Martin had adopted this survivor from the litter, a stupid, persecuting animal.

Stephen bowed again. "Well, it suddenly jumped on my lap, as it so often does. I dislike cats and I pushed it off, perhaps a little harder than usual. "Oh," cries he, "do not be unkind to my little cat, I beg. Were you not brought up with cats? Were there no cats at home when you were a child?" And a whole string of enquiries. As you know, I dislike questions as much as I dislike cats, and I may have answered him a little sharply."

"Perhaps you did, my dear."

"And I am afraid he may think I am still cross. But what is worse, the wretched creature disappeared last night and he may possibly imagine that I threw it overboard. Please would you seat him next to me at dinner? I should be so sorry if we were not friends."

Stephen, feeling that his eyes might betray his reflexions, looked down and said in a neutral voice "I have no say in these things: Pullings is the president of our mess. But I will mention it to him if you choose."

Another tap at the door, and this time it was Reade, bringing the Captain"s compliments: if Dr Maturin should wish to attend the ceremony he had between four and five minutes in which to change. The message was delivered in an embarra.s.sed mumble, and when Mrs Oakes asked Reade whether her husband was already on deck he flushed and said "yes, ma"am," neither smiling at her nor looking at her, which was in so great a contrast to his usual att.i.tude of open admiration that each gave him a quick, penetrating glance.

Stephen however had little time for quick penetrating glances. Killick was fuming there at the door and even before Mrs Oakes was quite out of the room he had whipped Stephen"s greasy old coat off - a steady stream of nagging reproach.

Dr Maturin, properly uniformed, was propelled up the companion-ladder to the quarterdeck as the noon observation was in progress. He was somewhat astonished first by the flood of midday light after the shaded cabin and then by the colours all about him, high, low and on every hand, a variety of reds and yellows and blues, square, oblong, triangular, swallow-tailed, chequered, strangely brilliant after the eternal blue or grey, for the ship was now dressed over all, a splendid sight under a most luminous and perfect sky. There was just enough breeze to waft out all the flags and streamers that clothed the masts, yards and rigging - a startling mult.i.tude of them, blazing away there in the sun: the whole ship too was very fine, her hammock-cloths stretched to a gleaming white unwrinkled smoothness, everything exactly as a sailor could wish it, decks, guns, falls, a quarterdeck alive with gold lace, the gangways and forecastle filled with hands in high Sunday rig, duck trousers, bright blue bra.s.s-b.u.t.toned jackets, embroidered shirts, ribboned hats.

"Make it twelve, Mr West," said Jack, noon being reported to him, and his words were still floating in the air when eight bells struck.

But whereas they were ordinarily followed by the bosun"s pipe to dinner and a wholehearted Bedlam of cries and trampling feet and thumping mess-kids, now there was a total silence, all hands looking attentively aft. "Carry on, Mr West," said Jack. "Away aloft," cried West, and the ma.s.s of the frigate"s people raced up the shrouds on either side in a swift and even flow. "Lay out, lay out," called West, and they ran out on the yards. When the last light young fellow was right at the end of the starboard foretopgallant yardarm, holding on by the lift, Jack stepped forward and in a voice to be heard in Heaven he uttered the words "Three cheers for the King."

"You must pull off your hat and call out Huzzay," whispered Pullings into Stephen"s ear: the Doctor was staring about him in a very vacant manner.

Huzzay, huzzay, huzzay: the cheers pealed out like so many rolling broadsides, and after the last nothing could be heard but Sarah and Emily, beside themselves with glee, who huzzayed on and on, "Huzzay, huzzay for Guy Fawkes", very shrill, until Jemmy Ducks suppressed them.

"Mr Smith," said Jack, "carry on." And the gunner in his good black Presbyterian-elder"s coat stepped forward with a red-hot poker in his hand: the salute, beginning with Jack"s own bra.s.s bow-chaser, came solemnly aft on either side at exact five-second intervals, the gunner pacing from one to the other with the ritual words "If I wasn"t a gunner I wouldn"t be here: fire seven." When he had reached "fire seventeen" he turned aft and took off his hat. Jack returned his salute and said "Mr West, the hands may be piped to dinner."

A last wild long-drawn cheer, and before the white clouds of smoke had rolled a cable"s length to leeward the usual midday hullaballoo rose to a splendid pitch.

"By land, in the northern parts of Ireland, I have seen the fifth of November celebrated with fireworks," observed Stephen.

"Nothing can exceed the cannon"s n.o.ble roar," said the gunner. "Squibs and burning tar-barrels, even sky-rockets at half a crown apiece, is mere frippery in comparison of a well-loaded gun." Since he was to take the afternoon watch, thus releasing the whole gunroom for their feast, he was now on the quarterdeck, and turning to Jack he said "Well, sir, me and my mate will take our bite now, with your leave, and be on deck in half a gla.s.s. Are there any special instructions?"

"No, Mr Smith: only that I am to be told of any considerable change in the breeze and of course of any sail or land."

Half a gla.s.s went by and then apart from the gunner and his mate and the men at the wheel, the quarterdeck was empty. Stephen and Padeen had carried up two dozen of a pale sherry that had survived the voyage to Botany Bay, entrusting them to the gunroom steward: Stephen had spoken of Mrs Oakes"s wish to poor anxious Pullings, had shown the gunroom steward"s mate an unusually elegant way of folding napkins, had proposed decorating the table with seaweed, producing examples, and had been desired by all his messmates, their differences temporarily overlooked, to go and watch for his Latham"s albatross until four bells. There really was not room for so many people to mill about in so confined a s.p.a.ce; besides, it consumed what little fresh air there was - Martin had already gone into the mizen-top, carrying his silk stockings in his pocket.

Stephen wandered aft to where the Captain was taking his ease in the great cabin, stretched out on the stern-window locker with one foot in a basin of water.

"Do you suffer, brother?" he asked, "or is this part of the Navy"s superst.i.tious horror of the unclean?"

"I suffer, Stephen," said Jack, "but moderately. Do you remember how I stood on the dumb-chalder when d.i.c.k Richards and I cleared the Nutmeg"s rudder?"

"The dumb-chalder. Sure I think of it constantly: it is rarely from my mind."

"Well, it gave me a shrewd knock, and I limped for weeks. And just now I caught my ankle against the linch-pin there, hitting it in just the same place. How I roared!"

"I am sure you did. Will I look at it, now?"

Stephen took the foot in his hands, considered it, pressed it, heard the catch of breath, and said "It is a little small piece of the external malleolus, trying to come out."

"What is the external malleolus?"

"Nay, if you can oppress me with your dumb-chalders, I can do the same with my malleoli. Hold still. Should you like me to take it out now? I have a lancet over there, among the seaweed."

"Perhaps we might wait until after the feast," said Jack, who very much disliked being cut in cold blood. "It feels much better now. I put a great deal of salt into the water."

Stephen was used to this; he nodded, mused for a while, and said "So the gunner has the watch. Tell me, Jack, is it not very amazingly strange that a gunner should have a watch?"

"Oh Lord, no. In a frigate it is unusual, of course, but in many a sloop with only one lieutenant, many an unrated ship, it is quite common for a steady, experienced bosun or gunner to stand his watch. And in our case there is an embarras de choix. I said there is an embarras de choix."

"I am sure of it," said Stephen absently.

"So many of our Shelmerstonians understand navigation and have even commanded vessels of their own that if the whole quarterdeck were wiped out -"

"G.o.d forbid."

"G.o.d forbid - they could still carry the barky home."

"That is a great comfort to me. Thank you, Jack. Now I believe I shall go and read for a while."

In the coach Stephen spread out his authorities, Wiseman, Clare, Pet.i.t, van Swieten, John Hunter. They were prolix about men, but although they had little to say about women they all agreed that there was no diagnosis more difficult than in those cases where the physician was confronted with a deep-seated, atypical, chronic infection. He was still reading Hunter with the closest attention when the bell told him he must join his messmates to welcome the gunroom"s guests.

The gunroom was almost silent, in a state of high anxiety, with West and Adams both frowning at their watches. "There you are, Doctor," cried Tom Pullings. "I was afraid we might have lost you - that you might have taken a tumble down the ladder like poor Davidge here, or fallen out of the top, like Mr Martin - do you think the table looks genteel?"

"Uncommon genteel," said Stephen, glancing up and down its geometrical perfections. He noticed Davidge standing by the far end, his hand to his head: Davidge caught his eye, stretched his mouth in a smile and said "I took a toss down the companion-ladder."

"The bride sits on my right hand, in course," said Pullings, "and then Martin, then you, and then Reade. Mr Adams at the foot. The Captain on my left, then Davidge - you are all right, Davidge, ain"t you?"

"Oh yes. It was nothing."

"Then West, and then Oakes on Mr Adams" right. What do you think of that, Doctor?"

"A capital arrangement, my dear," said Stephen, reflecting that Davidge"s nothing was a d.a.m.ned heavy, turgid, uncomfortable one, a dark swelling from his left temple to his cheekbone.

"I do wish they would come," said Pullings, "the soup is sure to spoil," and West looked at his watch again. The door opened; Killick walked in, said to Pullings Two minutes, sir, if you please," and took up his place against the side, behind Jack"s chair.

Martin edged his way round and with a decently restrained triumph he said "Do not beat me, Maturin, but I have seen your bird."

"Oh," cried Stephen, "have you indeed? And I wearing out the day watching. Are you sure?"

"There can be no doubt, I am afraid. Yellow, blue-tipped bill, a strong dark eyebrow, a confiding expression, and black feet. He was within ten yards of me."

"Well, who ever said the world was fair? But I am sorry to hear that you fell out of the top."

"That was a base slander. In my hurry to come down and tell you my foot made a trifling slip and I hung for a moment or two by my hands, perfectly safe, perfectly in control, and if the well-meaning John Brampton had not heaved me up by main force I should have regained the platform with ease. In any event I came down entirely unaided."

Stephen sniffed and said "Please to describe the bird."

"Well," said Martin and then stopped to turn and bow to Captain Aubrey: the gunroom welcomed their guest, pressed him to take a whet; Davidge once again explained that he had taken a toss on the companion-ladder and Pullings told Jack that he was uneasy about the soup.

Those near the door listened attentively for the Oakeses coming, but in this case there would be no steps on the ladder down to warn them as it had warned them of Jack"s approach, since the midshipmen"s berths, one of which the Oakeses inhabited, were only a short way along the pa.s.sage that led from the gunroom door forward to the great screened-off expanse of the lower deck, deserted now, where the foremast-hands slung their hammocks. Even so, Adams" quick ear caught the swish of silk and he opened the door to the splendid scarlet glow that Stephen had never yet beheld.

"Upon my honour, ma"am," he said when it was his turn to greet her, "I have never seen you look so well. You fairly light up our dim and shabby dining-room."

"Dim and shabby dining-room," said the gunroom steward to Killick in a sea-going whisper, "Did you ever hear such wickedness?"

"That is what we call a genteel compliment," said Killick. "Which it ain"t meant to be believed."

"It is all due to Captain Aubrey"s kindness," she said, smiling and bowing to Jack as she sat down. "Never was such glorious silk."

The sound of chairs being drawn in, the arrival of the swordfish soup and the ladling of it out filled the gunroom with the pleasant confusion of sounds usual at the beginning of a feast; but presently they began to die away. The ill-feeling between Davidge and West was so great that even now, with their Captain present, they barely exchanged a word: Oakes, always more at home in a pot-house, was even more than usually mute, a dogged look on his pale face. Reade, on Stephen"s right, answered with no more than "Yes, sir", "No, sir", looking quite pitifully sad: whilst on his left, Martin maintained his reserved, though perfectly correct, att.i.tude towards Clarissa throughout the soup. Stephen, Adams, and to some extent West made a reasonable amount of noise at the far end of the table about swordfishes they had known, the different kinds of swordfish, the inveterate enmity between the sword-fish and the whale, instances not only of ships but even ships" boats being pierced, and the anguish of those sitting on the bottom, between the thwarts. Jack and Pullings found a good deal to say about tunny in the Mediterranean, with asides to Clarissa about the Sicilian and Moorish way of catching them.

The subject however had its limits, and although both Jack and Pullings would have been happy to engage Mrs Oakes, they were a little shy of doing so. There was the relief of taking soup plates away with a fine mess-deck clatter and bringing on the swordfish fritters, and during the interval both Stephen and Jack reflected upon the amount of ordinary dinner-table conversation taken up by "do you remember?" or "were you ever at?" or "you probably know Mr Blank" or "as I dare say you are aware", questions or implied questions that might offend the lady; or by personal recollections, in which she never indulged.

Stephen, Jack and even more Pullings felt the awful approach of silence, and Jack for one turned to his infallible standby: "A gla.s.s of wine with you, ma"am." Infallible, but not long-lasting; and he was grateful when West made some sudden, prepared observations about the saw-fish. Stephen took up this creature (such was the table"s indigence), and compelled both Oakes and Reade to acknowledge that they had seen its mummified head in an apothecary"s shop in Sydney and had speculated on the use of the saw.

Half-way through the fritters he found to his relief that Clarissa, who was not only beautifully dressed but who was also in looks, with colour in her cheeks and sparkling eyes -Clarissa, who had laid herself out to be amiable throughout the soup, had by now won her point: Martin"s reserve had been overcome and they were talking away at a great rate.

"Oh, Mr West," she called across the table, "I was going to tell Mr Martin about your particular share in the Glorious First of June, but I am sure I would make some foolish landlubber"s blunder. May I beg you to do it for me?"

"Well, ma"am," said West, smiling at her, "since you desire it, I will, though it don"t redound much to my credit." He considered, emptied his gla.s.s, and went on, "Everyone knows about the Glorious First of June."

"I am sure I do not," said Stephen. "And Mr Reade may not either; he was not born at the time." Roused from his unhappiness for a moment, Reade looked at him reproachfully but said nothing.

"And I only know that you were wounded," said Clarissa.

"Well, ma"am," said West, "just the most general lines, for those who may not have been born or who may never have seen a fleet action -" This was aimed at Davidge, who, until Jack took him aboard the Surprise, had seen very little action of any kind: his only acknowledgment of the hit was to drain his gla.s.s. "In May of the year ninety-four, then, the Channel fleet put to sea from Spithead, with Earl Howe in command, the union at the main: the wind had come round into the north-east at last and we all got under way directly, forty-nine men-of-war and the ninety-nine merchants that had gathered at St Helen"s, the East and West Indies convoys and those for Newfoundland - an uncommon sight, ma"am, a hundred and forty-eight sail of ships."

"Glorious, glorious," cried Clarissa, clasping her hands with unfeigned enthusiasm, and all the sailors looked at her with pleasure and approval.

"So we tore down the Channel, and off the Lizard we sent the convoys away with eight line-of-battle ships and half a dozen frigates to look after them: six of those ships of the line were to cruise in the Bay for a very important French convoy from America. That left Lord Howe with twenty-six of the line and seven frigates. We lay off Ushant - I was a youngster in his flagship, the Queen Charlotte, at the time - while a frigate looked into Brest. She saw the Frenchmen, twenty-five of the line, lying in the roads. So we cruised awhile in thick weather, looked in again, and they were gone. Some recaptured prizes told us where they were heading, and since the six ships cruising in the Bay were strong enough to deal with the French convoy, Lord Howe pursued the French fleet with a great press of sail. But it was light, variable airs nearly all the time and thick weather, and we did not catch sight of them until the morning of May 28th, twenty-six of the line now, directly to windward. Well, they bore down to about nine miles from us and formed their line ahead, directly to windward; but they had the weather gage, and seeing they did not seem very anxious to use it and attack, all we could do was to work to windward and hara.s.s them as much as possible. The Admiral sent four of the most weatherly ships forward and there was something of an action; there was another the next day, when we did manage to get to windward of them, though in no very good order and too late in the afternoon to force any decisive battle - we had quite a sea running, and the Charlotte, with her lower-deck ports little more than four foot from the surface, shipped so much water she had to pump all night. And her mizen-yard was so wounded that for a while she could not tack. The day after that the weather grew thicker and thicker - the French disappeared - and although the Admiral threw out the signal for our van ships to keep close order there were times when you could not see your second ahead or astern. But however it cleared a little by nine the next morning - this was the thirty-first, ma"am - and we saw how scattered we were. It was a very horrid sight, and we were very much afraid we had lost the Frenchmen. They came in sight about noon: some fresh ships had joined them, and as some of the ships had not behaved very sensibly in the last engagement, Black d.i.c.k - we called the Admiral Black d.i.c.k, ma"am, but though it sounds disrespectful, it was not so in fact, was it, sir?"

"Oh dear me no," said Jack. "It was affectionate: but I should never have dared use it to his face."

"No. Well, Black d.i.c.k decided against an action that might last until darkness, and he hauled to the wind, steering the course he judged the French would follow. He was quite right. At dawn there they were on our starboard bow, about two leagues to leeward, in line of battle on the larboard tack. Moderate sea; breeze steady in the south by west. We bore down and then hauled to the wind again at seven, four miles from them. The Admiral signalled that he should attack the enemy"s centre - that he should pa.s.s through the enemy"s line and engage to leeward. Then we had breakfast. Lord, how I enjoyed my burgoo! When that was ate, we filled and bore down under single-reefed topsails in line abreast: they were in a close head and stern formation."

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