From Powder Monkey to Admiral | Page 3

W.H.G. Kingston
concludes a rattling ballad on old
Admiral Benbow:--
"Well, our walls of oak have become just a joke And in tea-kettles
we're to fight; It seems a queer dream, all this iron and steam, But I
daresay, my lads, it's right. But whether we float in ship or in boat, In
iron or oak, we know For old England's right we've hearts that will
fight, As of old did the brave Benbow."
But, after all, even in war, fighting is only a small part of the sum of
any sailor's life, and the British flag floats over ships on every sea,
whether under sail or steam, in the peaceful pursuits of commerce. The
same qualities of heart and mind will have their play, which Mr
Kingston has described in his stirring story,--a story which will be read
with profit by the young, and with pleasure by both young and old.
DR. MACAULAY, FOUNDER OF "BOY'S OWN PAPER."
CHAPTER ONE.
PREPARING TO START.
No steamboats ploughed the ocean, nor were railroads thought of, when
our young friends Jack, Tom, and Bill lived. They first met each other
on board the Foxhound frigate, on the deck of which ship a score of
other lads and some fifty or sixty men were mustered, who had just
come up the side from the Viper tender; she having been on a cruise to
collect such stray hands as could be found; and a curious lot they were
to look at.
Among them were long-shore fellows in swallow-tails and round hats,

fishermen in jerseys and fur-skin caps, smugglers in big boots and
flushing coats; and not a few whose whitey-brown faces, and
close-cropped hair, made it no difficult matter to guess that their last
residence was within the walls of a gaol. There were seamen also,
pressed most of them, just come in from a long voyage, many months
or perhaps years having passed since they left their native land; that
they did not look especially amiable was not to be wondered at, since
they had been prevented from going, as they had intended, to visit their
friends, or maybe, in the case of the careless ones, from enjoying a
long-expected spree on shore. They were all now waiting to be
inspected by the first lieutenant, before their names were entered on the
ship's books.
The rest of the crew were going about their various duties. Most of
them were old hands, who had served a year or more on board the
gallant frigate. During that time she had fought two fierce actions,
which, though she had come off victorious, had greatly thinned her
ship's company, and the captain was therefore anxious to make up the
complement as fast as possible by every means in his power.
The seamen took but little notice of the new hands, though some of
them had been much of the same description themselves, but were not
very fond of acknowledging this, or of talking of their previous
histories; they had, however, got worked into shape by degrees: and the
newcomers, even those with the "long togs," by the time they had gone
through the same process would not be distinguished from the older
hands, except, maybe, when they came to splice an eye, or turn in a
grummet, when their clumsy work would show what they were; few of
them either were likely ever to be the outermost on the yard-arms when
sail had suddenly to be shortened on a dark night, while it was blowing
great guns and small arms.
The frigate lay at Spithead. She had been waiting for these hands to put
to sea. Lighters were alongside, and whips were never-ceasingly
hoisting in casks of rum, with bales and cases of all sorts, which it
seemed impossible could ever be stowed away. From the first
lieutenant to the youngest midshipman, all were bawling at the top of

their voices, issuing and repeating orders; but there were two persons
who out-roared all the rest, the boatswain and the boatswain's mate.
They were proud of those voices of theirs. Let the hardest gale be
blowing, with the wind howling and whistling through the rigging, the
canvas flapping like claps of thunder, and the seas roaring and dashing
against the bows, they could make themselves heard above the loudest
sounds of the storm.
At present the boatswain bawled, or rather roared, because he was so
accustomed to roar that he could speak in no gentler voice while
carrying on duty on deck; and the boatswain's mate imitated him.
The first lieutenant had a good voice of his own, though it was not so
rough as that of his inferiors. He made it come out with a quick, sharp
sound, which could be heard from the poop to the forecastle, even with
the
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