Under Enemy Colours

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Under Enemy Colours Page 52

by Sean Thomas Russell


  One of the things that always astonishes me when I’m watching a film that involves a sailing ship is how the captain orders a course change and the helmsman simply spins the wheel and off they go in a new direction. As anyone who sails knows, virtually every time you change course you trim your sails. Unless you are sailing in the trades or the westerlies, winds have a frustrating habit of varying, often in both direction and strength (in truth, they can do this in belts of “constant” winds too). I remember a day when a friend and I set out to sail back to our home-harbor— an easy day’s sail. We began the morning wearing bathing suits and sunglasses, with a lovely fair wind from the northwest. Sixteen hours later, in a howling southeast gale, we tied up at the dock wearing, beneath our foul-weather gear, every piece of clothing we had aboard. In between we’d had wind from all points of the compass. We’d been becalmed, drenched in a deluge, and chilled to the bone. We changed our headsail so often that I lost count and reefed and shook reefs out of the main over and over. Imagine how much sail-handling that would have meant aboard a square-rigged ship? You might have noticed, in this book, that, unless following a change of wind, every time the course was altered, sails were trimmed and yards shifted.

  So much for the facts. As to the truth, well, everything that is not fact is my attempt to reach the truth.

  For devotees of Laurence Sterne, yes, it’s true, Griffiths’ rant against the lack of originality in books is taken almost word for word from Sterne’s The Life and Opinions of Tristram Shandy, but in Griffiths’ defense, the brilliantly comic Sterne stole it from Burton’s Anatomy of Melancholy. Sterne’s book, and his theft from Burton, would have been well known to readers of that time, though apparently none of Griffiths’ supper companions caught the reference.

  Anyone interested in reading more about the British Navy in this era is in luck, as a little industry has sprung up publishing books to fill that need. I highly recommend Brian Lavery’s Nelson’s Navy, John Harland’s Seamanship in the Age of Sail, and the nautical dictionary titled The Sailor’s Word – book, for starters. If these three books do not satisfy your hunger, not to worry, there is a veritable feast of titles out there waiting for you.

  Will there be another novel following the career of Charles Saunders Hayden? One is in the works. And yes, Mr. Barthe should reappear, as well as Wickham, Griffiths, Hawthorne, and various others from the cruise of the Themis. Look for Mr. Hayden’s new vessel to heave into view sometime in 2009.

  Oh, and by the way, the scientific name for the Sardinian warbler is Sylvia melanocephala. Scorbutus cani, the name given by Hayden in the novel, translates roughly as “scurvy dog.” Hayden, apparently, thought himself a wit.

  S.T.R.

  British Columbia

  February 2007

  Acknowledgments

  This book, two years in the writing and many more in planning, would never have come into being without the help of many people. I’d like to thank my friends John and Francine, who put their many years and thousands of miles of sailing experience at my disposal and read the manuscript with great care. Many thanks to John Harland for his painstaking reading of the manuscript and for putting his encyclopedic knowledge at my disposal; any mistakes, however, are mine. For the French translations I have to thank author Margo McLoughlin and author and translator Guillaume Le Pennec (who so ably translated several of my previous books into French). My agent, Howard Morhaim, read numerous drafts and, as always, gave me the benefit of his insight. I thank my editors in New York and London, Dan Conaway and Alex Clarke, for their fantastic enthusiasm and constant support. Last, but first in my heart, I thank my wife, Karen, for her support and for all of her intelligent feedback on this book from inception through to final copy. I couldn’t have done it without you, darling.

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  First published in the United States of America by G. P. Putnam’s Sons, a member of the Penguin Group (USA) Inc. 2007

  First published in Great Britain by Michael Joseph 2008

  Copyright © Sean Thomas Russell, 2007

  The moral right of the author has been asserted

  Illustration of H.M.S. Themis on pp. vi–vii © John W. McKay

  This is a work of fiction. Names, characters, places, and incidents either are the product of the author’s imagination or are used fictitiously, and any resemblance to actual persons, living or dead, businesses, companies, events, or locales is entirely coincidental.

  All rights reserved

  978-0-141-91048-2

  ∗ “Prepare to receive boarders! Do not make any sign of resistance or our ship will open fire.”

  * My Darling Marie:

  I write in great haste, for though we are entering the Goulet that leads into the Rade de Brest, an English frigate is all but upon us and the wind will not allow any ships to come to our aid. We will surrender if we must, but fight if we can. I do not know what the next hours will hold. My fate is in the hands of God, and if I meet Him I will regret nothing in this life but the loss of the days I had hoped to share with you.

  *“Ship dead ahead! Alter course to larboard!”

  † “Why are you showing no lights?”

 

 

 


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