The Rest Is History - 514. Nelson: Hero of the Seas (Part 1)
Episode Date: November 18, 2024It’s 1758 and Britain’s greatest naval commander has just been born. The young Horatio Nelson has inherited his father’s love of god and his mother’s hatred of the French. At age 12, he leaves... Norfolk for a life on the high seas. As a teen, Nelson narrowly avoided death on multiple occasions. He survives a nasty encounter with the Sultan of Mysore, the blistering cold on a failed expedition in the North Pole, a nasty bout of Malaria contracted in India, and far more besides. Propelled by his excellence and bravery, he rose quickly to become a captain.This brings us to 1788 where Nelson, now a married man in his thirties and back in his childhood home, learns that England is going to war with France. Without hesitation, he swaps the simple domestic life for the thrill of the high seas once more… Join Tom and Dominic as they discuss Nelson's early life and adventures, as he sets out along a path that would eventually enable British domination of the seas; and the world. _______ LIVE SHOWS *The Rest Is History LIVE in the U.S.A.* If you live in the States, we've got some great news: Tom and Dominic will be performing throughout America in November, with shows in San Francisco, L.A., Chicago, Philadelphia, Washington D.C., Boston and New York. Tickets on sale now at TheRestIsHistory.com _______ Twitter: @TheRestHistory @holland_tom @dcsandbrook Producer: Theo Young-Smith Assistant Producer: Tabby Syrett Executive Producers: Jack Davenport + Tony Pastor Learn more about your ad choices. Visit podcastchoices.com/adchoices
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platinum. On the quarter deck of his flagship, The Victory, a small, slender figure gazed out at the horizon.
He wore a smart blue coat with gold-embroidered decorations and a dark cocked hat.
He had only one arm, and if you looked closely, you might have noticed that his right eye
was dull and sightless.
All his life he had waited for this moment.
Growing up in a sleepy village at the edge of England, he had always loved stories of
the sea.
He had joined the Royal Navy when he was twelve, sailing to the Arctic, the Caribbean, India
and North America.
He had won fame and honor in battle after battle, losing an arm and the
sight in one eye, and becoming one of the most famous men in the world. But this was
the supreme challenge, the hour of destiny, a single titanic showdown to decide the mastery
of the seas once and for all.
He nodded to one of his lieutenants.
A moment later the first of thirty-one little flags began to climb up the masts, sending
a signal to the rest of the fleet.
England expects that every man will do his duty.
And on ship after ship, men began to cheer, raising their voices, shaking their fists
in the air, their hearts pounding with passion and pride.
Now more than ever, they were ready.
And Dominic, after that reading, my heart too is pounding with passion and pride, because
that is the opening of your
new book aimed at children, but a brilliant read that I think would be hugely enjoyed
by all patriotic British adults as well.
Nelson, Hero of the Seas.
And you've described as a new life and times of Britain's greatest hero out now for readers
of all ages.
All ages, Tom.
All ages.
And I think Nelson is Britain's greatest hero.
Yes, yes, I agree with you. I think he's one of the most exceptional leaders that Britain
ever produced. I know Lord Byron called him famously Britannia's God of War. You think there's
a different dimension to Nelson's character? And it goes back to this word hero, the heroes of the
classical world. So he's Britain's answer, I suppose, indeed, to these kind of mythic characters who embody something much
bigger than themselves.
Well, people may remember that we did an episode on Trafalgar about three years ago. And in
that I suggested that Nelson is kind of hero in the classical sense. Classical heroes were
terrible. And there's no question that Nelson is a great of hero in the classical sense. Classical heroes were terrible.
And there's no question that Nelson is a great leader because he does inspire his men to
fight and of course to kill with a terrifying sense of unbridled passion.
And in a way that seemed to Britain's enemies on the sea, most notably the French, something
kind of almost more than human.
And Adam Nicholson, who wrote a brilliant book on Trafalgar, he described the Royal Navy
under Nelson as the most effective maritime killing machine in the world.
And there is something lethal about him in the way that there was say about Henry V,
who we did series on earlier.
But he is also very much a Christian hero.
Nelson did not enjoy war for war's sake. And everyone who knows about Nelson, the one thing that they'll probably remember is that his dying phrase is, kiss me Hardy, and we creatures and often lamented the cruel necessity of it. But it was a principle of duty, which all men owed their country in
defense of her laws and liberty. And in that duty, his record of achievement, when you
come up close to it, it's just amazing. I mean, just stunning victory after stunning
victory and it matters. I mean, vastly more than Henry the fifth's victory, which leads to nothing.
Nelson's victories.
I mean, they secure Britain from invasion and by establishing the supremacy of the
Royal Navy, which endures basically for a century, I mean, maybe even more than
that, it's what enables the British empire to become the global power that it does.
enables the British Empire to become the global power that it does. It essentially provides the global shield for the process of making the world a single kind of polity.
Yeah, globalisation.
Globalisation. People may feel that all of these things are bad things, but also, for
instance, it enables the abolitionists to use the Navy to destroy the slave trade. For
good and bad, he's an incredibly momentous
figure and I think absolutely worth revisiting, even if you hadn't done a book about him.
And also, of course, it provides an interesting counterpoint to what we're doing in the French
Revolution because Nelson defines himself very much against the revolution.
It definitely does. And I think it's important to say he's not just a killing machine. He's
a subtle diplomat. Even when he's not fighting,
he is a brilliant manager of men. I mean, he's a brilliant embodiment actually of bigger things.
We haven't done much in the rest of history about 18th century Britain, the century in which Britain
actually became the most modern country in the world, an industrial superpower. So that he,
I think, is a brilliant window into the story of, you know,
British parliamentary government, the sinews of finance, the story of imperial expansion,
we'll obviously touch on the slave trade, but also everything that he achieves. What makes it
such a great story is it's a combination of his individual genius, and I don't think genius is too
strong a word, with the structures of finance, bureaucracy.
And the industrial revolution.
Yeah.
Beyond that, this world of canals and turnpikes and mills and manufacturers, that has enabled
Britain already in the Seven Years' War, and then will do again in the Napoleonic Wars,
to overturn centuries of French hegemony and Britain to step forward as the kind of handmaiden
of modernisation in the world.
Yeah. I mean, I think he is the human embodiment of everything that is making Britain the great
power that it becomes in the 19th century. And that's why it's so telling that Hitler's
plan for the occupation of Britain, if he'd secured it, would be to remove the great column
of Nelson in the aptly named Trafalgar Square and take it to Berlin.
Nelson in a way is the embodiment of Britain's sense of its own greatness in the 19th century.
But the other thing about Nelson that makes him such an appealing subject is that as well
as being this remarkable naval leader, he's a very human figure.
I find him quite a lovable figure, but he's also quite a comical figure at times.
He is.
His love life is often hilarious.
It's colourful to say the least, isn't it?
He has a tremendous sense of his own uniqueness and his own exceptionalism.
He has a star quality. He believes himself to be a star.
And of course that can be incredibly exciting and inspirational,
but it can, as you say, also be quite funny.
Perhaps if I was being incredibly harsh, I would say there are moments of slight David Brent behaviour from Nelson.
When those medals seem to clank a bit too much.
Yeah, exactly. So let's get into his story and Theo has this under very, very strict
instructions because as a Frenchman, he is terrified that this will balloon into a 20-part series.
You know, the Battle of Cape St. Vincent, the second 20 minutes.
Anyway, we talked about the sense of immense flux, immense
change and progress and excitement in the 18th century.
But Nelson is born into a part of the world that actually is
very sleepy.
He's born in Norfolk, Burnham Thorpe, in September 1758.
He's not that far from the sea, a couple of hours walk.
If he'd walked down to the sea as a little boy, he would have heard sailors
speaking Dutch or German or whatever.
So it is-
Had a broad horizons.
Yes.
It's both kind of deep England, but it's connected to the rest of Europe.
It's a world in which most people, of course, are farm laborers.
Very few in that part of
Norfolk can read and write.
His father is the local vicar.
So his father is the Reverend Edmund Nelson.
And I think the Reverend Edmund Nelson is quite a sweet character, isn't he?
I mean, the weird thing about Nelson is he gets this incredible drive and fighting spirit
from somewhere, but he definitely doesn't get it from Edmund.
Because Edmund. No.
Because Edmund just likes, you know, curling up with an improving book or sitting by the
fire and musing on times gone by.
Yes, toasting a slice of bread.
Exactly.
With his toasting fork.
I mean, but I guess one thing that he does get from his father, who is ministering to
people who are often illiterate, I guess, and quite poor, is that
Nelson picks up a very hierarchical sense of how society should be ordered.
In which those who are well-off, which would include of course the vicar, but local squires
as well, are owed obedience and deference by the poor, but equally the poor can expect
to be treated well by the well- off. So it's, I suppose,
a kind of very paternalistic sense of hierarchy.
Yeah, absolutely.
And this of course is exactly what Nelson will find on the ships of the Royal Navy.
A stern but kindly father.
Exactly.
I think that's how he thinks a captain should be.
But a captain, you know, like a squire, should look out for those below him.
Yes, absolutely.
And Nelson is absolutely wedded to this concept and it's what makes him very loved.
His men know this, absolutely, love him for it.
So Nelson's mother, Catherine Suckling, she was related sort of slightly
distantly to the Walpole family, great family, Sir Robert Walpole.
So they do have family connections.
They have 11 children, Horatio is the sixth.
His mother died when he was nine on Boxing Day 1767 and she left him one great legacy which listeners will be delighted to hear was an intense suspicion of the French
So Nelson once told a friend. He said I'll never have a Frenchman on board my ship except as a prisoner
I put no confidence in them forgive me, but my mother hated the French
So I don't know where his mother got this from. Yeah, where she got that from.
Just the general culture of the 18th century, I suppose, Tom.
And his mother was just a very good judge.
Well, I suppose that France is the great enemy for Britain even before the revolutionary
period.
You know, it's the great rival in the Seven Years' War.
Exactly.
And it's the traditional enemy, isn't it?
It is.
In a sense, an Englishwoman does France honor by hating it, you might say.
Right.
It's respect. It's respect.
It's the respect for a fearsome and sinister adversary, but one at your level.
Yeah. Yeah. I mean, she's not bothering to hate the Dutch, say, or the Danes.
No, no, no. No one cares about them. So the Reverend Nelson is now a single parent from 1767
and he needs to find places for all his children. So an older brother goes off to the tax office,
the girls, he finds work in local haberdasher's and things like that. But he sends Horatio and
his brother William away to boarding school. First of all, they went to a school in Norwich,
then they went to a school called Pate's Grammar School. And later on in Nelson's life, there were
a whole load of anecdotes told about his school days, which were made up.
Yeah, it's kind of stuff from Plutarch, isn't it?
Exactly. But my favorite one, which I guess possibly has the ring of truth.
They were in the dorm apparently one night and they were all talking about these pears
that were growing on the trees in Frogger Jones' garden. And Nelson said, oh, to the older boys,
you don't have the guts to go and get them. I'll get them. And he climbed out of the window,
got all these pears, climbed back up to the window and then distributed them,
but he didn't keep any for himself. And the boy said, why don't you want them? And he
said, I don't actually like pears. I only took them because the rest of you were afraid.
So you see, I mean, it doesn't really matter if that's true or not, because it is true,
obviously, to his character.
Exactly.
Which he will display later in life in which courage is the absolute leitmotif of his achievements. So it is kind of
Plutarchian in that sense. There is no possible way that you can undervalue
Nelson's physical courage. His physical courage is extraordinary. No, unbelievable.
Yeah. The other thing he obviously took from his school days and we can know
this from his letters and whatnot is he clearly did like Shakespeare and he
liked in particular Henry V because he is clearly obsessed by the band of brothers speech because
he refers to it again and again.
We few, we happy few, we band of brothers.
And I think that that speaks to, that gives you a little sense of the sort of romantic
yearnings I think that he has.
But also again, that kind of sense of paternalism because Henry the fifth speech refers to people
being gentled by that sense of brotherhood. It doesn't matter how mean you are.
And Nelson is very, very keen on that. He's very keen on helping people rise above what
other people might have thought was their station.
And it will benefit Nelson himself who will end up a peer of the realm.
Absolutely it would. Yes. I mean, that's the essence of his leadership, isn't it? The Band of Brothers idea.
Yeah.
So when he's 12, his father, they must have read in the newspapers or heard talk of a crisis brewing in of all places, the Falkland Islands.
I'm heard of.
Where there's very bad behavior from Spanish speakers, not for the first time or the last time.
No.
Who are trying to wrest control of these very clearly British islands.
What are they thinking?
They hear that his uncle, so this is Catherine Suckling's brother, Morris, is going to sea.
He's an experienced Royal Navy officer and he's taking a ship called a Raisonable to
sea.
And the Nelsons use this as an opportunity to say, could you take Horatio with you? You
know, this would be a great start for Horatio. And it makes sense, the Navy, right? Because
he's obviously not got the personality of a clergyman that much as clear if he's climbing
out of windows and...
Yeah, and nicking pears.
...stealing pears.
You don't have that in the Church of England.
The army was very expensive to buy a commission in the army, but the Navy is different. The only
things that Edmund, the vicar, needs to pay for really are his uniform and his
sea chest and a little bit of kit and then off he goes because the Navy is
more meritocratic than the army. Yeah, but also it's just sufficiently open to
nepotism. Exactly. That it will benefit Nelson. So as a person who's not going to
be an able seaman you join as a midshipman, don't you?
Yes, you do.
This is kind of like a trainee officer and you're not really allowed to join the Navy
until you're 13.
But Nelson gets in at the age of 12 because Morris Suckling pulls strings for him.
And it's that blend of meritocracy and nepotism suits Nelson to the ground.
It does indeed.
Absolutely it does.
So Morris actually at first says, why poor Horatio?
Why Horatio?
Why he that is so weak that he above all the rest should be sent to rough it out at sea?
And that actually expresses something that is a theme throughout Nelson's career.
People are always astonished when they see him.
Well, he's very slight, isn't he?
And he's very sickly.
He actually gets seasick and he's always got headaches and stomach problems and all of this kind of thing.
He's got a great mop of hair that seems to weigh him down. I mean, he looks like a schoolchild
until quite later, you know, in his teens. Absolutely he does. And actually Morris says,
well, the first time we go into action, a cannonball may knock off his head and provide
for him at once, but I'll take him. Yeah. And so he packs up his trunk and goes off and Dominic, where does he head to, to
join the Navy and embark on his adventures at sea?
I hope you're not going to bring this up every time this place recurs in the story. This
is the one time you're allowed to say it. He goes to Chatham, which is Tom's favorite
place. He goes to Chatham by coach. And yes, we will one day do a podcast all about Chatham by coach and yes, we will one day do a podcast all about Chatham as Tom and the Chatham
tourist board desperately are hoping. So he goes down to Chatham, which is the great dockyard.
Chatham is the epitome of modernity, I guess, isn't it? With its rope works and its kind of
the systems for building the ships and providing for the ships and repairing them and all of that
kind of thing. Yeah, I always remember a phrase that I picked up when I read Neymar Roger, who's the great
historian of the Royal Navy, when we did our episode on Trafalgar. He said that the naval
establishments represented in many respects, so many islands of the 19th century in the
18th century countryside, that a place like Chatham or Portsmouth, that this is the cutting
edge of technology and industrialisation anywhere
in the world. This is the absolute smithy of British greatness because the Royal Navy
is incomparable.
It's the future. It's a preview of the future.
It is the future.
So Nelson goes down there and he gets on the ship, the Raisin Arble.
And Dominic, the Raisin Arble, I mean, that's French. So presumably this is a captured
French ship.
It must be a captured ship. And you'll often see that, that their ships have the wrong names.
Yeah.
Because they've been captured.
Of course, each ship, just to stress this, each ship is an exceedingly
expensive and modern piece of kit of hardware.
So one thing that's important to remember from the very beginning is the one thing
most people don't want to do is to lose their ship because they're so expensive. So to capture an enemy's ship is the ultimate,
and it's quite rare. It doesn't happen as often as you would think because often sea battles are a
bit inconclusive, aren't they? And as we'll see in Nelson's career, one of the extraordinary things
about him is that his sea battles are never inconclusive. Well, yes. And I think that this
is a running theme that we'll explore over the series that
for most of the 18th century, the concept of a sea battle is that you line up and you
fire at each other across a distance, precisely because you don't want to risk losing a ship.
But the technological advances that are being honed in the dockyards and the expertise that
British gunners are able to display relative to their adversaries
means that people like Nelson over the course of the 1790s are starting to think actually
we can practice, aim for a battle of utter annihilation in which we will capture ships
and this is a key, key theme and Nelson basically becomes the cutting edge of that concept.
He does indeed, but for the time being he's obviously just a midshipman. He's 12 years
old. You can imagine him on the ship, probably terrified.
Hey, show Nelson reporting for duty, sir.
Exactly. Nervous but excited. And actually, when I was writing this in the Adventures
in Time book, I thought to myself, this is so much the trajectory of so many great children's
stories.
Tom Brown's school days.
Yeah. The little boy who has to literally learn the ropes.
Yeah, of course.
We know the names of the other boys.
There's one in particular called Charlie Boyles, who was also from Norfolk, who
seems to have taken him under his wing.
Thanks to the captain, they would have learned astronomy, navigation, gunnery.
They'd have learned to climb the ropes.
They'd have learned swordsmanship, pistol shooting, but captains usually
instructed their midshipmen in other
things as well, the more civilized arts. So they might learn to dance or they might learn to speak
French. But not in Nelson's case. No, they would one day go ashore to represent Britain in Naples
or in Menorca or wherever it might be. And they would be expected to be gentlemen. So it's not
just how to run the ship, it's how to be a gentleman.
And actually going back to your point about the modernity, when he's off on the
raisonable, he is now part of the most modern institution of its kind anywhere
in the world. So the best financed, the best organized, the biggest bureaucracy.
I mean the headquarters at the Admiralty is the world's most modern office building.
And the reason for this of course we should just spend a moment to explain why the navy matters so much.
Britain is much smaller than france but it cannot possibly compete with france's land army the way it succeeds is by trade.
is by trade and by the Royal Navy protecting the sea lanes that keep that trade going. So I had a passage in my book, which I admit has a slight degree of invention, where Uncle
Morris, Captain Suckling reads Nelson a passage from A Naval History of England, which was
genuinely published in 1735 by Thomas Ledyard.
Our trade is the mother and nurse of our seamen, our seaman the life of our fleet, and our
fleet the security and protection of our trade, and both together are the wealth, strength
and glory of Great Britain.
And I think Nelson absolutely, you know, he goes off to the Caribbean, he goes off to
India, he is the embodiment of that ethos of trade and naval power interlinked.
I mean, I think that to serve on a Royal Navy ship it's like a constant
process of education. So it's very moving that Nelson keeps a weather log from when he starts
as a midshipman right the way up to his death and he's recording everything that he sees in
terms of the weather and this behavior of the seas and everything because this is what will
enable him to understand what he's doing. But on top of that, as you said, he's learning science.
So it's like going to MIT or something.
He's learning how the economy functions.
So it's like going to business school.
Obviously you're learning the art of gunnery and all that kind of stuff, but
you are also seeing the world you're on a constant horizon, expanding process of
education.
So if you are the kind of boy who is curious,
you know, this is an amazing, amazing opportunity and Nelson is exactly the kind of boy who
is out there to take full advantage of it.
Absolutely. And he must have been good from the beginning because by the time he's 14,
his uncle has got him well, first of all, his uncle gets him a birth for a time going
off to the Caribbean. We don't know much about that.
It seems that as a midshipman, he would almost certainly have spent all his time
pretty much on the ship, kind of fetching and carrying, learning the ropes and all
that stuff. Then he commands a longboat that goes up and down the Thames, sort of
transporting men and messages, kind of visitors to the ship, people going back to
London or that kind of thing.
Again, that's quite a responsibility for a 14-year-old. men and messages, kind of visitors to the ship, people going back to London or that kind of thing.
Again, that's quite a responsibility for a 14 year old.
And then his first really great adventure.
I mean, this is the strange thing about his life.
Most of us would love to have one of these adventures.
Nelson has so many that they all kind of, you know, he must have forgotten half of them.
But this is a tremendous one.
So May 1773, one of his uncle's friends is putting together a crew to go to the Arctic because they've been told
to go and find the Northeast Passage, which is basically, if you look at a map, there's
this great frozen island, Spitsbergen, inside the Arctic Circle, and they're hoping they
can find a channel to the east of Spitsbergen that will take them around the top of Russia.
If you're all the way around the top of Russia. If you're all the way
around the top of Russia, you'll eventually get to Japan. Get to Japan, yeah. And then China. And
one of the captains of this expedition, a man with a splendid name of Skeffington Lutwidge.
Yeah, which is clearly made up. Oh, it's very Harry Potter. He owes Uncle Maurice a favour and
he says, I'll take Nelson, even though the Admiralty has actually said, please just take people who experience this is no place for them.
So Nelson is absolutely the youngest person on this expedition.
By miles.
Yeah.
So they set off to the Arctic.
And again, this is a brilliant example of the Navy's modernity.
They have pioneering sort of Arctic suits called Fiannaut suits.
I love that.
Why isn't someone manufacturing them now?
Fiannaut is a brilliant marketing word.
It is.
They have huge quantities of tea and of sugar and wine and soup.
They have chronometers, sea clocks that will allow them to work out the time.
The great invention.
Exactly.
And off they go.
And he must have, for the first time, have seen seals and whales and things
like that, which must be very exciting.
The Royal Navy are not very good on preserving Marine fauna, are they?
So they only have to see a walrus and they're kind of shooting it.
Yeah, exactly.
And they get to Spitsbergen and whalers say to them, passing whalers say,
there's very thick ice nearby, you know, watch out.
But they keep going anyway, cause you know, they're British.
Ah, whatever, let's plough on.
And basically by the end of July, they've got very deep in the ice pack.
It's incredibly foggy and these two ships and they keep going very slowly.
It's very like the terror.
But if you've seen that TV drama.
Franklin expedition, isn't it?
Yeah.
And then eventually they just grind to a halt and they're
completely trapped in this ice.
And they hear the cracking of ice all around them.
Now there's a story at this point, Tom, that I know you love, but which is completely trapped in this ice. And they hear the cracking of ice all around them.
Now there's a story at this point, Tom, that I know you love, but which is undoubtedly
untrue. Would you like to tell it anyway?
So the story goes, and this is reported throughout the 19th century in escalatingly dramatic
terms, that Nelson ends up confronting a polar bear and he pursues it and kills it. And I'll quote from one of the
Victorian accounts, on his return, Captain Luckwich reprimanded him for leaving the ship
without leave and in a severe tone demanded what motive could possibly induce him to undertake
so rash an action. The young hero with great simplicity replied, I wished sir to get the
skin for my father.
But we know that Edmund Nelson was the kind of man who would have no business with a polar
bear's skin.
And as you say, we know that this didn't actually happen because we have the log.
The log simply says a bear came close to the ship on the ice, but on the people's going
towards him, he went away, which is a good deal less dramatic.
But you will always see in books about Nelson,
the polar bear, kind of dramatic images of the young hero.
I actually had to really restrain myself when I did this book.
I'm heroic forbearance.
From not having, you know, the bear strikes at chapter seven or something. But anyway,
he doesn't fight the bear in the book. So basically what they were going to have to
do was unload the ship and drag everything on these launches towards where they hoped they would find the sea and then
wave and basically hail away. I mean, a terrible scene. They could, I mean, probably they would
have died, I would say, unless they were very lucky. But he is fortunate. Dame Fortune smiles
on him, I think it's fair to say throughout his career, because they've been dragging
these launches for two days or one and a half days, I think it is, to say throughout his career because they've been dragging these launches
for two days or one and a half days, I think it is, and going back to the ship to sleep.
And then one day they get up to do it again, have another go, and they hear this great
cracking sound. The ice is breaking up and what is better, the current is carrying their
ship towards the sea.
Southwards.
So tremendous scenes. They end up making it back home. They
haven't found the North East Passage. But again, for a teenager, what is he 14, 15? 15. Yeah. It
is an unbelievable experience. And he gets a silver watch out of it doesn't he? Yes, he's given by the
commanders of the expedition a silver watch that he treasures for the rest of his life. It's engraved with the details of this kind of Arctic expedition.
So this is an amazing training.
So today while lads will be doing GCSEs, he's off braving the North East Passage.
Exactly.
And then as if that's not enough, when he gets back, Captain Suckling says, oh, I found
you another little trip.
Little birth.
One of my friends is looking for a midshipman on his ship, the seahorse, to go to India.
And there their job is to the Royal Navy is basically providing protection.
It's escorting East India Company trading ships from local pirates and raiders and so
on and so forth.
And this is Nelson's introduction to the fact that being in the Royal Navy obliges you to
have a sense of geopolitics.
Yes, absolutely.
Because he's kind of dealing with the local bigwigs along the Indian coast and so on.
Exactly.
So he goes on this massive journey now.
He's been to the Arctic and now he goes off on this journey.
They go down, round Africa, you know, obviously the heat rising, great
sense of excitement as they near India. When he's on this very long voyage, he meets two
people who are very important for him. One is a young able seaman called Thomas Truebridge.
The fact that he's an able seaman tells you that he's from a humbler background.
So he hasn't gone through that midshipman kind of initiation.
Exactly. He's not on, as it were, the fast track, but Troubridge, as we will see, becomes a very
close friend and comrade of Nelson. And then sadly, a bit of a rival at the end of their lives.
Their relations sour a little bit, but he's really important for Nelson and his name will come up
again and again. And then the other person is the ship's master, who's an Irishman called Thomas Surridge. And he can spot that Nelson is very talented, and Surridge spends a lot of time with him,
teaching him navigation. He gets Nelson...
Lots of maths, isn't there?
Yeah, to take the measurements on the ship. He says, you do it.
And Surridge is the first in a series of patrons, father figures, I suppose.
The Edmund Nelson, his own father, is not a very good father figure to him because they're
so different.
And also he's so far away and he's sat there in front of his fire reading about the Bible.
Exactly.
That's not going to help you kill the French.
No, no, no, no, no.
Or indeed fight off a polar bear, if only apocryphally.
So he spends the summer of 1775 escorting company ships to and fro across the Indian Ocean.
He goes to Basra, he goes to Bombay, he goes to Ceylon, now Sri Lanka.
But this is not a healthy place for Royal Navy sailors, so sickness is very common.
In early 1776, Nelson falls ill with what I think most biographers believe is malaria.
It's malaria, isn't it?
Yeah.
He is seriously ill and arguably he never really recovers.
I mean, this is the thing with malaria in the late 18th century.
If you get it, it will quite probably plague you for the rest of your life.
So he is sent back home to save his life and off they go.
And he's feeling quite despondent, isn't it?
He's very despondent.
You know, he's very ill and he must be worrying that his career is over
almost before it's begun.
Well, Nelson is not, I think it's fair to say, just to talk about his psychology.
We said he was, you know, slender and he's sickly and whatnot.
He's also given to very extravagant mood swings, isn't he?
When he's depressed, he's properly depressed.
He's sweating, he's feverish,
they're going around Africa and he's incredibly miserable. And as you say, I think he thinks,
oh, it's all up. You know, I might die or I'm too sick to stay in the Navy.
But then Dominic, his seal for king and country comes to his rescue. Can I read it?
Do read it, Tom. That'd be lovely.
Okay. Yeah. As you say, he's rounding Africa and he has this kind of this flash of insight
and he wrote about it.
I could discover no means of reaching the object of my ambition.
After a long and gloomy reverie in which I almost wished myself overboard, a sudden glow
of patriotism was kindled within me and presented my king and country as my patron.
My mind exalted in the idea.
Well then, I exclaimed, I will be a hero and confiding in providence,
I will brave every danger.
I love Nelson Tom.
And you know what?
I think he really did think that.
I don't think he's making that up to you.
I think that's exactly the kind of thing he thinks.
Well, I know that we have a lot of listeners in their teens, maybe wondering what to do
with their lives. And I think that they could all profit from that.
They could indeed. Right. Let's take a break. And when we return, let's take the lieutenants
exam and let us confront some of the worst people who will meet in this story. The tax
dodgers of the American colonists.
See you then.
Hello, welcome back to The Rest Is History.
We are following the career of England's greatest hero, Horatio Nelson and Dominic.
We left him feeling sorry for himself and then getting a patriotic
glow and so he's come back from India full of patriotism. What's going on?
So the big thing for him as for any midshipman is to get up the next stage to pass the Lieutenant's
exam. He does that in April 1777. I love this. He has to go to the, to a board, yeah, to
the naval office in the city. There are three officers. Yeah. And one of these officers, who's that? By an extraordinary
stroke of fortune, it's his uncle Morris. Right. There's a turn up for the books. Now,
uncle Morris said later that he only said to the other examiners at the end, after they
had all agreed to pass Horatio. Of course he did. Only at the end did he say, well,
dad, we've decided to pass him because as it happens, he's my nephew. Clearly this isn't the case. And it's that point, isn't it?
The Navy is one of the most meritocratic institutions in the world at that point,
but it is also by our standards, you know, riddled with nepotism and patronage.
Well, you need patrons and that's accepted. And Nelson understands this as someone who is dependent on patronage that they will help
him and in due course when he's in a position to offer patronage, he will do so and go to
great efforts to do it.
That's the system.
And feel that it's not corrupt, that it's his duty.
No.
And nobody at the time, if you'd said to them this is corruption, they would have frowned.
They would have said, no, that's the system.
We just want that put on the record.
Nelson does nothing wrong here.
And also he's going to pass anyway because he's brilliant.
He has been to the Caribbean, he's been to the Arctic, he's been to India.
He literally does know the ropes.
And he's about 10.
He has sailed for almost 50,000 miles.
So clearly he's going to pass.
I mean he's up there with Captain Cook's goat.
So now he's on this ladder that hopefully if he plays his cards right, you know, the
dream is you're on this ladder.
There are a lot of people competing, but what you want is to see your name on that
captain's list, you know, the bottom of the captain's list.
You've got onto the list.
You become Lieutenant, don't you?
Then you become Master and Commander and then you become captain.
Exactly.
And your name will be posted in the London Gazette and you might, if you're lucky,
get a ship of your own because there are actually more ships than there are captains,
which is a slight issue. You mentioned Master and Commander. Those books, the Patrick O'Brien books,
and particularly the first one, Master and Commander, is brilliant on this sort of sense of
gnawing anxiety. You really need to get on the captain's list because only then can you start
to make any serious money out of this.
Yeah, people who've listened to this podcast from the beginning will know that initially
I was very opposed to Patrick O'Brien because there was an excessive rope and I have now
seen the light.
You have indeed, yeah.
And I recognise that they are just as good as everyone says.
It was a very lovely moment when you admitted how wrong you'd been.
I can sometimes admit I'm wrong.
So what he really needs to get on is a war.
And I said in the first half that often fortune is with him.
And once again, fortune is with him because at precise this point, remember it's April
1777, there is a dispute about paying rightful taxes, which some listeners may be familiar
with in the American colonies.
Talks with the rebels have broken down.
American privateers have started attacking British merchant ships.
There is already talk of them potentially threatening the most lucrative part of Britain's empire,
the Sugar Islands of Jamaica and Barbados.
And so Nelson immediately gets a posting, a second in command,
on a frigate called the Lowest
Off which is bound for Jamaica.
So the American Revolution, not all bad.
Not all bad, no.
Because it gives Nelson his opportunity.
Because it did give one of history's greatest characters the chance to advance, which is
lovely.
Yeah, well that's good to bear in mind.
That's nice for American listeners to have some kind words from us for once.
So when he's on the Lowest Off, he meets another of these really, really important patron figures, a captain called William Locker. Locker is extremely experienced.
He has fought against the French many times. He fought against them 20 years earlier.
He's got a French bullet in his leg, hasn't he?
He did. He got a French bullet in his leg because he had stormed a French privateer.
And Locker is massive for Nelson because Locker teaches him, I think, two things. Number
one is how to be a leader. Locker is quite a kindly captain. He's paternalistic. He believes
it's better to be loved than to be feared. Of course, there's always an element of fear.
I mean, you have to have respect. So, you know, the occasional flogging, everyone expects
that.
Yeah. Everybody thinks, I mean, we do that and the rest is history with their producers. Yeah. Yeah.
So there's that element to Locker.
And then the other one is that Locker says to him, you know how to beat the French.
You go straight at them.
Going close.
Because we will always have better firepower, better discipline, and none of this faffing
around from a distance.
Yeah, blasting at each other.
So this is so interesting because this is people working this out. So it's even in the 1780s, this sense that actually we're good enough on the Royal
Navy that we can go in close, we can go in hard. Exactly. We can change our tactics. We can adopt
something else. Nelson picks up on this. Yes. Lay a Frenchman close and you will beat him,
Locker says. And actually, big preview. We will end this series at the Battle of the Nile. And
after the Battle of the Nile, Nelson wrote to Locker.
So this is years later when Nelson is an international celebrity.
And Nelson said to Locker, pretty much everything I have is down to you.
My old friend, nothing can alter my attachment and gratitude to you.
My only merit in my profession is being your scholar and our friendship
will never end but with
my life."
Yeah, very moving. And again, reflection of the way in which the bonds of patronage and
teaching kind of serve to join the generations in the Navy. It's really, really important.
They do. But also a little insight there, I think, into a part of Nelson's character.
He's very sentimental, isn't he, Nelson?
Very.
So if anybody listens to this and thinks, oh, this would be a good Hollywood melodrama or big series. I think Nelson, he thinks like that.
He thinks he's the character in a tremendous story and he behaves accordingly. All his emotions are
in bold colors, not pale pastels. Yeah. And it's a British version of the displays of sensibility
that we've been talking about in the French Revolution series. That you wear your emotions on your sleeve.
And Nelson absolutely does that. Yeah. Even when his sleeve is just dangling there because
his arm has been lost. But we'll come to that. All right. So the lowest off arrives in the
Caribbean. Now sailors hate going to the Caribbean. They hate it because what they kind of do
and they kind of, I mean, captains quite like it, don't they?
Because they say you're either going to die or you're going to win glory.
Or you can make a lot of money. But for ordinary sailors, the risks here of dysentery or malaria or yellow fever are very great indeed.
But of course, what keeps them coming back is the importance of this part of the world to Britain's economy and particularly sugar. And so this, I guess, Tom, is the point at which we should discuss the perhaps slight shadow that has grown over Nelson's reputation
in the last, what, five, 10 years in Britain when his name comes up in the newspapers and
whatnot. And this is the question of Nelson and slavery. So I think one thing we should
say right at the outset is there was one thing that Nelson definitely is not, and that is an abolitionist. He is not an abolitionist
by any vague stretch of the imagination, is he?
No, it's simply something that he doesn't contemplate. And I think this is the age where
abolitionism is starting to pick up steam. So we did an episode on Benjamin Lay, the
Quaker abolitionist, and he's really, even
among Quakers, he's seen as exceptional. And by the time that Nelson is going to the Caribbean,
the Quakers pretty strongly come out against slavery, and you're starting to get evangelicals
as well. But Nelson's not a part of this. You know, he spent his childhood in Norfolk,
and then he spent it at sea. He would have no time to engage with it.
It's plausible. His father is a vicar, but does not seem to have been.
But the father doesn't seem to have had any abolitionist sentiment either.
So I think it's actually very plausible, if you think that Nelson went to ATC when he
was 12, that he has probably never at that point come up against any abolitionist ideas
at all.
And as time goes on, he obviously hears of them, but I guess they're not being promoted by
people within his service because the Royal Navy is hardly a hotbed of abolitionism at
this point. Undoubtedly, he must have seen slavery. There are about 200,000 slaves in
Jamaica alone at this point, but it's important to say he's never personally involved in it.
So he doesn't own slaves. He never serves on a slave ship.
He never trades in slaves.
He never invests his money in sugar plantations.
So he's not like he's escorting slave ships
or anything of that kind.
There is a letter though, isn't there,
in which he seems to show, while in patience perhaps,
would be putting it kindly with William Wilberforce,
the evangelical who in Britain is leading campaign
against the slave trade. And it's a controversial letter, isn't it?
Yes, he does. I can't remember what he calls it. Something like the damnable doctrine of
abolitionism or something like that.
Yeah. I'm still not clear whether this is because people have argued that this has been
doctored. Others say no, it hasn't. I know that Michael Taylor, who's written brilliantly
on abolitionism, says that it is authentic. So I would probably trust his expertise on
this.
Well, here's the thing. I think what this consensus of Nelson scholars about this letter,
that there is definitely a letter written by Nelson and reflects his undoubted skepticism
about abolitionism. However, there's no doubt whatsoever that this letter was doctored after
his death. It was kind of to use the the terminology not unfamiliar to other people in the podcasting world, it was like a dossier
that had been sexed up, Tom, by pro-slavery advocates after his death because they wanted
the interest, the interest exactly, because they wanted to make it look as though Nelson
was more fervently in favour of slavery and against
abolitionism than perhaps he may have been. And so what he actually wrote is very hard to decipher
because what we've got is the kind of doctored version. The one thing we can say is that there
is no evidence actually that Nelson was racist. So this is again, you know, the sort of, oh,
Nelson's column must fall kind of
school of thought is well, since he's not an abolitionist, and since he seems to have
been at least, shall we say, to be kind to him, very skeptical about abolitionism, maybe
he was a racist. I don't think there's any evidence whatsoever that he was racist. We
have thousands of his letters and he never says expresses a hint of prejudice in them.
And as we'll see in due course, I mean, he's going to be going to war with the support of black
communities. Black sailors in the fleet, for example.
He has black sailors serve on his ships. In fact, one of them is illustrated, isn't he,
on the panelling of Nelson's column, The Freezers? Yeah, George Ryan, who served on the victory,
actually. On the victory at Trafalgar. But in an expedition that we're coming to a minute where a British force go off to land
on the sinisterly named and aptly named Mosquito Coast, and they're looking for support from
the local Indians and from black communities that have been settled there, and Nelson gets
on brilliantly well with them.
So just to quote John Sugden, who's the great biographer of Nelson, he's talking
about the Indians and the black communities there. On his part, Horatio was impressed
by the durability of the natives and their skill in weaving the boats around grassy islands
and through tumbling rapids. On theirs, the Indians saw a young man of no great strength
or size struggling with them in vain without any of the common European arrogance. So Nelson is ready to admire courage
where he finds it.
Oh, definitely. We know that later on the Nelson family had a black servant called Price,
who was a freed man, not a slave. And Nelson actually later in life said to Emma Hamilton,
I'd love it if Price could come to live with us. He is, quote, as good a man as ever lived.
And Price actually said, no, I've got better things to do than hang around with Emma Hamilton, which I think is very reasonable.
That's clearly not the behavior of a man who has a kind of racial prejudice.
But I think the honest truth is that Nelson isn't really interested.
I think that's absolutely right.
I think he's just not interested in it. He's interested in sextants and canon and all that
kind of stuff.
Absolutely he is. So now that he's in the Caribbean in the late 1770s, obviously his focus is the war.
And the war is going very badly.
The British army in North America is 3000 miles from home.
They've got very poor supply links, but also the Americans are being funded first of all
with arms and also with money from France.
Then in 1778, the French enter the war directly.
And then in 1778, the French enter the war directly. And then in 1779, the Spanish,
the goal for people like Nelson now is basically try to hold onto as much as we can, particularly
in the Caribbean. And he spends a lot of time and makes a great name for himself actually
readying the defenses of Jamaica against a possible French attack. And that never comes.
And in a way that's a shame for Nelson.
Because he doesn't have a chance to.
Yeah, but even so he has done well enough for the British commander in the Caribbean,
Admiral Sir Peter Parker in 1779 to make him a captain, to put him on that list,
the much prized captain's list.
And the other thing that he gets from his time in the Caribbean is that he again,
he makes more friends who will be with him throughout his career. And the other thing that he gets from his time in the Caribbean is that he, again, he makes more friends who will be with him throughout his career.
And the most celebrated of these is a round faced man from the banks of the Tyne called
Cuthbert Collingwood, who had actually known Nelson since 1773.
So I mean, a long time and was 10 years older, but doesn't become a captain when Nelson becomes
captain, but will do in due course. And there's a sense in which over the course of Nelson's career, Collingwood
is always just behind him.
He is with his dog.
With his dog bounce. And in fact, at Trafalgar, Collingwood will command one of the two columns.
He will indeed.
Alongside Nelson. So worth mentioning him at this point.
So Nelson is now given a ship called the Hinchinbrook, a 28 gun frigate. It is his own ship.
What an amazing moment this is for him to be piped onto the ship for the first time
as the captain.
But his life almost ends at this point because he, as you suggested earlier Tom, he goes
on an incredibly harebrained and foolhardy expedition.
I think it's fair to say that whenever Nelson goes anywhere on land. If it goes wrong. Yeah. Disaster is not far away. Yeah. So the governor
of Jamaica has this mad scheme. This British force will land on the Mosquito coast, which
is on the sort of borderland of Honduras and Nicaragua. They'll raise support among the
local Indians. Then they will strike inland. They'll go up the San Juan river through the
jungle, seize this Spanish fort. From there, they'll go all the way to River through the jungle, sees this Spanish fort from there, they'll
go all the way to the Pacific, that establish a base on the Pacific and they might be able
to intercept the treasure fleets from Lima.
It's the kind of plan that looks very good when you're with a map.
Yeah.
You know, in the officer's mess in Kingstown or something.
Exactly.
When you get there and you find there are just mosquitoes and snakes everywhere, it's
terrible.
Exactly. And this is precisely what happens. So they set off. Nelson, even as they set off
in early 1780, he's a little bit anxious because the troops, the soldiers they're taking are
basically all ragged. Half of them are absolutely wasted on rum or something. So they look like
pirates. They get to the San Juan River. It's incredibly hot and muggy.
As you said, there's snakes and caimans everywhere.
Yeah, there's a famous bit where the local Indian leaders are very impressed with Nelson
because it turns out he spent all night snuggled up with an incredibly poisonous snake.
He kind of stands up and throws out his blanket and the snake goes flying.
And they feel that he's destined for greatness as a result.
That's very Alexander the Great, isn't it?
Isn't it? So anyway, they get to this Spanish fort. They realise a result. That's very Alexander the Great, isn't it? Isn't it?
So anyway, they get to this Spanish fort, they realize, oh, we only brought half the
cannonballs.
What a disaster.
They're all the way back in the mouth of the river or whatever.
Well, we'll have a crack at the fort anyway.
And they get stuck in this swamp underneath this fort.
Fever then takes hold.
The British literally turn yellow.
So Nelson is now bright yellow with yellow fever.
He's too sick to leave his tent.
He's probably going to die because spoiler alert out of 2,000 men who
sail up that river, nine out of 10 of them die left behind two and a half
thousand men and for absolutely nothing.
And then there's an incredible stroke of luck.
Admiral Parker, who's in charge in the Caribbean says, I actually
want Nelson back in Jamaica.
I'm going to send Collingwood to take over the Hinchinbrook.
So, right.
So that's Collingwood following in Nelson's footsteps, Nelson's
footsteps.
Yeah.
So basically Nelson is relieved and ordered back to Jamaica and he's too ill to walk.
He's kind of carried back to the ship to go back to Jamaica. And he goes all the way back to Port Royal and he's too ill to walk, he's kind of carried back to the ship to go back to Jamaica, and he goes all the way back to Port Royal.
And he's extremely ill on the verge of death really, and he is cared for by a friend's housekeeper who is called Cuba, who is a black freed woman.
And she's supposed to have had kind of skill with medicine. And Cuba basically nurses him back to life. Without Cuba, he would have died, I think.
A doctor came and examined him in the late summer of 1780
and diagnosed bilious vomitings, nervous headaches,
visceral obstructions, and many other bodily infirmities.
I mean, you don't want that, do you?
You definitely don't want that.
And the doctor actually said,
look, he can't stay here in the Caribbean.
He's got to go back to England.
Otherwise, he really will die.
Very like when he comes back from India, isn't it?
Well, the same thing happens again. Whenever Nelson is ill and has to go on a long voyage,
the glow of patriotism returns.
Well, God speaks to him.
Yes.
God has chosen him to serve his country. And he believes this, I think, absolutely literally.
He feels all his life that he is, you know, he's being summoned by this kind of this visionary, this prophetic
sense of fire, which he associates with God and that God is his guide.
God has called him and in all his letters, which we have, which are sent to the Admiralty
in his correspondence, and you can compare them with other letters written by people of similar rank. Nelson is far readier to invoke God
than any of his peers.
Interestingly, I was reading a thing the other day, always God, never ever Jesus or Christ.
It's always the Almighty.
No, because Jesus is a loser.
Yeah.
But God's, you know, God's smites and all that kind of thing.
Exactly.
Pillars of fire.
Exactly. I said his sense is prophetic.
Nelson proclaims in a prophet, Nelson will yet be an Admiral.
I shall recover and my dream of glory be fulfilled.
Oh, I love it.
So he gets better.
He's eventually sent back to North America and he assists in the evacuation of New York
where the loyalists are being evacuated in 1783.
He would have seen, of course, Tom,
the thousands of escaped slaves who were being rescued by their British friends and taken north
of the border to Canada and to freedom. So that's great news for Nelson and for everybody.
He has a spell where he's been stopping American ships from coming out, I think,
from Boston Harbor, perhaps.
Yeah, exactly. There's a lot of blockading, which I've skipped over. And his crew start going down with Scurvy. And essentially Nelson is,
he's been inexperienced and he hasn't planned ahead. And this teaches him a crucial lesson
that you absolutely need to have regular supplies of fruit on board. And this is one aspect of
Nelson that really needs emphasizing is that he's not just about the fighting,
he's also about the preparation.
He's brilliant at this, yeah.
And from that point on, he will ensure that the ships that he commands always have enough
supplies of fruit.
Exactly.
And actually, if people are sufficiently interested in Nelson after the series to want to read
like the world's longest ever books published, which are John Sugden's Titanic Lies of Nelson.
There's enormous quantity of stuff in there about the ordering of limes.
And it's absolutely fascinating because this is a way in which the Royal Navy are way in
advance of any other comparable organisation anywhere in the world. And it's a prefiguring,
I suppose, of Amazon's ability to send you a plug or something.
I guess so. Yeah.
I mean, this is where it's beginning.
The victualling board or whatever it's called is the best of its kind that's ever existed at this point.
Because without that, the ships can't stay.
Exactly.
For weeks and months and often years at sea.
Exactly.
So the big thing he gets from the American campaign is he meets Admiral Samuel Hood, a Vicar's son like Nelson.
campaign. You see he meets Admiral Samuel Hood, a vicar son like Nelson. Hood is another one of these people who are saying, you know, we need to develop a new kind of naval warfare to sail
straight at the enemy. Going hard, going hard, total annihilation, total victory. So again,
another building block in Nelson's sort of ideology of war, if you like. The war is over. He comes home.
He's now a captain. He's got a powerful patron,
Admiral Hood. Admiral Hood introduces him to George III, which is great. He goes off to France,
doesn't he? He goes there to learn the language, ostensibly, which he signally fails. He goes with
a friend on the packet boat to Calais and he is impressed, to be fair to him, by the French
countryside. He says, very handsome
country, but he's appalled by two things.
By the inns?
Yeah, by French hospitality, which he thinks is terrible.
He stayed in one inn and he said in England we would consider this a pigsty, but in France
they think this is, you know, it's Rue L'Enchateau hotel or something.
And the other thing is the gap between the rich and poor in France.
Did you see this?
Yeah, I did.
So there's no middling group of people such as Nelson himself. He says there's between the rich and poor in France. See this? Yeah, I did.
So there's no middling group of people such as Nelson himself.
He says there's only very rich and very poor.
I'm not actually sure that's true because that slightly contradicts what we were saying
at the beginning of the French Revolution series.
But it might be true to Nelson's perspective.
I think it's true that he thinks it anyway, should we put it that way.
And then, you know, what's he going to do in peacetime?
Peacetime is always quite boring. And actually, what is worse, he is given what he clearly regards as a terrible job. He is
sent back to the Caribbean to patrol against smuggling. But Dominic, just to say, I mean,
it is a terrible job, but it's better than being stuck at half pay back at home. Of course it is.
So in that sense, it's a marker of, you know, that he's still in the running for promotion. Exactly. That's absolutely true. Cause he could have
course have been put, yeah, basically on the reserve list. Yeah. Kind of moldering. So
he goes back to the Caribbean. His job is basically to stop the plantation owners in
the Caribbean trading for cheap American goods, which they now have a taste for, but which
are prohibited since the peace with the rebel colonists. The Navigation Act. He hates the plantation owners.
He says they're trash because they're smuggling and he thinks this is very unpatriotic of
them.
However, on one of these islands, the island of Nevis, he makes a friend called John Richardson
Herbert who is the president of the local council.
Herbert agrees with him about this clampdown on smuggling.
They become friends, you know, Nelson is always looking for kind of an older man to be a kind of
father figure to him and Herbert plays this role for a bit. And one day, so the story goes,
he meets a little boy playing under the table, this little boy at Herbert's house,
and Nelson sort of says, who are you? And this boy says, oh, I'm Josiah. And then this woman comes in and this is a woman in her mid twenties
called Fanny, who is Josiah's mother.
She's Herbert's niece.
Her husband, who was a doctor has died and left her a widow, a single mother
with this little boy, and she's come back to live with her uncle on Nevis.
She's a very, very sweet person. Isn't she Fanny? She plays
the piano. Kind, solicitous, gentle. Yeah. She speaks French. She paints watercolours.
She's just a lovely person. She's perhaps if you were being harsh, you would say a little
bit bland. Is that harsh Tom? A little bit wet. A bit wet maybe. I think of her as a
kind of Dickensian.
The kind of woman that a Dickens hero would end up marrying and wouldn't be as fun as
all the grotesques that you've met over the course of the novel.
Exactly.
A kind woman who's supportive of her husband, but basically has nothing to say for herself.
Yeah.
And actually on the subject of grotesques, because they end up getting married.
They do.
In 1787. And the man who
gives away, gives her away and is the witness at the wedding is none other than a royal prince,
William Henry, who will go on to become the sailor king, William the fourth in due course.
And he's an absolute lout. He's a terrible man. And he's basically, it's a tricky gig for Nelson
because he's been appointed to serve as chaperone really to William. And William is useless.
He's trapped because Nelson himself is a kind of very reserved man. He's not a man who enjoys
kind of necking entire barrels of port and then flogging his crew. You know, he likes
a cup of tea of an afternoon, but at the same time, you know, this is a prince and Nelson
is a royalist.
So he's completely torn and he's essentially been appointed by his superiors, including
Admiral Hood to try and keep the prince on the straight and narrow. And Nelson doesn't
feel able to do this. And it's the one kind of blot. It's the one time where he damages
his career, I think. And his superiors start kind of thinking, oh, we're not sure about
him.
That's right, because the Admiralty are very cross with Nelson. They say you were told
to keep William Henry in check and to stop him flogging people and shouting and being
sick everywhere and stuff. And actually he's totally disgraced himself in the Caribbean
and it's all your fault. And Nelson, because he's deferential and hierarchical, he doesn't
know what to do. He can't bring himself to discipline William Henry.
And also, Dominic, just to say that all this stuff with the smugglers, I mean, again, it
would have been easier for Nelson to just leave that because he's making enemies, some
of whom are in the Royal Navy itself.
Yes, exactly.
So it's a bad time for him, I think.
Now, William Henry says to everybody, oh, she'll be a wonderful match for Horatio. She's
a pretty girl, sensible girl.
Pretty filly.
I'm sure he won't repent
the step he's taken. But actually everybody else says, I think he probably will repent
the step he's taken because they're such temperamental opposites. Now Nelson's love life in later
episodes, when we could do the second season of Nelson in the spring, which we will, you
will see that the issue with Fanny is basically that they should probably never have got married in the first place. She does not have any understanding of what I might call it the
slightly histrionic quality in Nelson's character. She's a sweet person though. She is. I very much
team Fanny. She is and when she comes back to England she will look after Nelson's elderly
father. You know she will be like a daughter to him. She will indeed because this is what happens
they come home later that year, 1787, they've
got Josiah in tow. Poor Josiah, he's not a brilliant person actually, I don't know
why I'm feeling sorry for him. He's a bit of an oaf himself. But they send him off to
boarding school and then they go back to Burnham Thorpe to Norfolk to live with the Reverend
Edmund Nelson. So he's doddering around thinking about sermons. Fanny arrives and she keeps
house very well. So she and Edmund actually become the very best of friends and they're
talking about sermons and she's doing a kind of embroidering or something and talking to
the servants. She loves it. That's what she wants. Yeah. Shall we, my dear, go and see the birds? Exactly. That kind of thing. Exactly. But Nelson is bored out of his mind. He reads
the paper, he digs the garden, he goes hair coursing, which is sort of hunting. And he
comes back and he says, Oh, I didn't enjoy that. By this point, it's 1788. And in September,
he turns 30. And in 1788, he must be thinking, you know, my career is finished.
The only thing that could conceivably come to my rescue would be a major convulsion in
European affairs.
But it's 1788, what could possibly happen?
So summer 1789, we can surmise that Nelson one day opened the Norfolk bugle or whatever and read to his
horror shenanigans in France of seditious and subversive behaviour on the streets of
Paris.
Now the thing is, Nelson has been primed to dislike the French by his mother.
He thinks the French are Britain's enemies.
He's been to France, he thought it was terrible, the very poor quality of Inns, all of that.
But what is more ideologically he is primed to dislike everything about the French Revolution.
Nelson, as you read out that passage Tom, King and country is what fires him and he
never ever questions it.
There's a famous comment that he supposedly makes, it's possibly apocryphal, but it's
very famous, that he supposedly told a young midshipman, first, you must always obey orders,
secondly, you must consider every man as your enemy who speaks ill of your king, and thirdly,
you must hate a Frenchman as you do the devil. And I think the reason why this reverberates,
even if it's apocryphal, is that it does kind of sum up Nelson's sense of morality really,
because we've talked about his sense of a beneficent hierarchy, a paternalistic hierarchy,
but that obeying orders, I mean, that would include obeying the orders that you get from
God. So it's resonance with his deep sense of piety. You must consider every man as your
enemy who speaks ill of your king. I mean, Nelson, like, you know, a huge majority of people in Britain generally views the British
constitution with its neutered monarchy, its balance of powers as the best constitution
that there could possibly be.
And one that every other country, including the French, would benefit from adopting.
And of course there are lots of people in France who agree with that, actually.
Yeah.
Mirabeau and people like that in the revolution.
Yeah. So Nelson absolutely sees he wouldn't be loyal to a king who was a tyrant. He's loyal to
a king who serves as a symbol of what Nelson sees as the best constitution you could possibly have.
Which of course George III does pretty well, I would say.
Yeah, he does it fine. I mean, partly by being mad.
But also his enthusiasm for farming, Tom, which I think is always very endearing. That as well. And then thirdly, you must hate a Frenchman as you do the devil. I mean, partly by being mad. But also his enthusiasm for farming, Tom, which I think is always very endearing.
That as well.
And then thirdly, you must hate a Frenchman as you do the devil.
I mean, that is a sense, of course, that is then sharpened by the revolution.
Exactly.
Because Nelson correctly comes to see the revolution as a mortal threat to Britain's
independence and to the constitution that Nelson admires so highly.
Exactly.
So Nelson is offstage in the early years of the revolution. We can only really
surmise but you can imagine what he thinks when he reads about the flight of a Wren,
the declaration of war, all the things that we covered.
Well, Britain's not at war with France at this point.
No, it's not. So he must have read all this and you can imagine that he regards this as
a disapproval, but also mounting excitement, I would imagine, as he thinks Britain is going to be drawn into this, into this conflict.
Because for an ambitious officer, the idea of a war with France, I mean, that is something
to get the sort of blood flowing.
By late 1792, as listeners to our French Revolution series will know, the Prussians and the Austrians
have been beaten back.
France is expanding.
It is very clear that war is coming. And by December,
the orders have basically gone out, the word has gone out, prepare for war. You know, war
is coming.
Because the King at this point is on trial in France and in due course is going to be
sentenced to death.
Exactly.
And will be executed in the early weeks of 1793.
On the 6th of January 1793, Nelson is ordered to report the Admiralty and he is told, we
have a ship for you.
It is the 65 gun Agamemnon.
And this is always his favourite ship, isn't it?
It's always the one he looks back on with the fondest memories.
Eggs and bacon, its crew called it because they always used to give them little kind
of nicknames because they didn't know how to pronounce classical terms.
So they call it the eggs and bacon.
On the 1st of February, France declares war on Britain on the 4th of February.
And we are told in health and in great spirits, Nelson kisses Fanny
goodbye and takes the coach South to Chatham and to war.
And Dominic, they will not meet again for another four years.
And when Nelson comes back, he will be a hero, but he will also be severely maimed.
So what we've got to come, the battles of Cape St.
Vincent and Tenerife, the hunt for Napoleon and the Titanic showdown of the battle of the Nile.
Tom, what can people do if they want to hear those right now?
Well, if you want to show the kind of Nelsonian spirit of initiative and dash,
you can go to therestishistory.com and you can join our jolly jack tars there.
Sign up. Until next time, goodbye.
Huzzah! Bye bye.