For many years a long white cicatrice recorded the fact in my
right hand. The
ordeal was, I fancy,
unique - a prerogative
of the naval 'bull-dogs.' The other
torture was, in those
days, not unknown to public schools. It was to hold a boy's
back and breech as near to a hot fire as his clothes would
bear without burning. I have an indistinct
recollection of a
boy at one of our largest public schools being thus exposed,
and left tied to chairs while his companions were at church.
When church was over the boy was found - roasted.
By the advice of a chum I
submitted to the scorching without
a howl, and thus obtained
immunity, and
admission to the
roasting guild for the future. What, however, served me
best, in all matters of this kind, was that as soon as I was
twelve years old my name was entered on the books of the
'Britannia,' then flag-ship in Portsmouth Harbour, and though
I remained at the Academy, I always wore the uniform of a
volunteer of the first class, now called a naval cadet. The
uniform was respected, and the wearer shared the benefit.
During the winter of 1839-40 I joined H.M.S. 'Blonde,' a 46-
gun
frigate commanded by Captain Bouchier, afterwards Sir
Thomas, whose
portrait is now in the National Portrait
Gallery. He had seen much service, and had been flag-captain
to Nelson's Hardy. In the middle of that winter we sailed
for China, where troubles had
arisen anent the opium trade.
What would the cadet of the present day think of the
treatment we small boys had to put up with sixty or seventy
years ago? Promotion depended almost entirely on interest.
The service was entered at twelve or thirteen. After two
years at sea, if the boy passed his
examination, he mounted
the white patch, and became a midshipman. At the end of four
years more he had to pass a double
examination, - one for
seamanship before a board of captains, and another for
navigation at the Naval College. He then became a master's
mate, and had to serve for three years as such before he was
eligible for
promotion to a lieutenancy. Unless an officer
had family interest he often stuck there, and as often had to
serve under one more
favoured, who was not born when he
himself was getting stale.
Naturally enough these old hands were
jealous of the
fortunate youngsters, and, unless
exceptionally amiable,
would show them little mercy.
We left Portsmouth in December 1839. It was bitter winter.
The day we sailed, such was the
severity of the gale and
snowstorm, that we had to put back and
anchor at St. Helens
in the Isle of Wight. The next night we were at sea. It
happened to be my middle watch. I had to turn out of my
hammock at twelve to walk the deck till four in the morning.
Walk! I could not stand. Blinded with snow, drenched by the
seas,
frozen with cold, home sick and sea sick beyond
description, my opinion of the Royal Navy - as a
profession -
was, in the course of these four hours,
seriously subverted.
Long before the watch ended. I was reeling about more asleep
than awake; every now and then brought to my senses by
breaking my shins against the carronade slides; or, if I sat
down upon one of them to rest, by a
playful whack with a
rope's end from one of the crusty old mates aforesaid, who
perhaps anticipated in my poor little
personality the
arrogance of a possible commanding officer. Oh! those cruel
night watches! But the hard training must have been a useful
tonic too. One got accustomed to it by degrees; and hence,
indifferent to
exposure, to bad food, to kicks and cuffs, to
calls of duty, to subordination, and to all that constitutes
discipline.
Luckily for me, the midshipman of my watch, Jack Johnson, was
a trump, and a smart officer to boot. He was six years older
than I, and, though
thoroughlygood-natured, was formidable
enough from his strength and
determination to have his will
respected. He became my
patron and
protector. Rightly, or
wrongly I am afraid, he always took my part, made excuses for
me to the officer of our watch if I were caught napping under
the half-deck, or
otherwise neglecting my duty. Sometimes he
would even take the blame for this upon himself, and give me
a 'wigging' in private, which was my severest
punishment. He
taught me the ropes, and explained the elements of
seamanship. If it was very cold at night he would make me
wear his own
comforter, and, in short, took care of me in
every possible way. Poor Jack! I never had a better friend;
and I loved him then, God knows. He was one of those whose
advancement depended on himself. I doubt whether he would
ever have been promoted but for an accident which I shall
speak of presently.
When we got into warm latitudes we were taught not only to
knot and splice, but to take in and set the mizzen royal.
There were four of us boys, and in all weathers at last we
were practised aloft until we were as active and as smart as
any of the ship's lads, even in dirty weather or in sudden
squalls.
We had a capital naval
instructor for lessons in navigation,
and the quartermaster of the watch taught us how to handle
the wheel and con.
These quartermasters - there was one to each of the three
watches - were picked men who had been captains of tops or
boatswains' mates. They were much older than any of the
crew. Our three in the 'Blonde' had all seen service in the
French and Spanish wars. One, a tall, handsome old fellow,
had been a smuggler; and many a fight with, or narrow escape
from, the coast-guard he had to tell of. The other two had
been badly wounded. Old Jimmy Bartlett of my watch had a
hole in his chest half an inch deep from a boarding pike. He
had also lost a finger, and a
bullet had passed through his
cheek. One of his fights was in the 'Amethyst'
frigate when,
under Sir Michael Seymour, she captured the 'Niemen' in 1809.
Often in the calm
tropical nights, when the helm could take
care of itself almost, he would spin me a yarn about hot
actions, cutting-outs, press-gangings, and perils which he
had gone through, or - what was all one to me - had invented.
From England to China round the Cape was a long
voyage before
there was a
steamer in the Navy. It is impossible to
describe the charm of one's first
acquaintance with
tropicalvegetation after the
tediousmonotonyunbroken by any event
but an
occasional flogging or a man
overboard. The islands
seemed
afloat in an
atmosphere of blue; their jungles rooting
in the water's edge. The strange birds in the
daytime, the
flocks of parrots, the din of every kind of life, the flying
foxes at night, the
fragrant and spicy odours, captivate the
senses. How
delicious, too, the fresh fruits brought off by
the Malays in their scooped-out logs, one's first taste of
bananas, juicy shaddocks, mangoes, and
custard apples - after
months of salt junk, disgusting salt pork, and
biscuit all
dust and weevils. The water is so crystal-clear it seems as
though one could lay one's hands on strange coloured fish and
coral beds at any depth. This, indeed, was 'kissing the lips
of
unexpected change.' It was a first kiss
moreover. The
tropics now have ceased to
remind me even of this spell of
novelty and wonder.
CHAPTER V
THE first time I 'smelt powder' was at Amoy. The 'Blonde'
carried out Lord Palmerston's letter to the Chinese
Government. Never was there a more iniquitous war than
England then provoked with China to force upon her the opium
trade with India in spite of the harm which the Chinese