Nelson: Britannia's God of War

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by Andrew Lambert


  We may know little more about Nelson than that he lost an eye and an arm, loved Lady Hamilton and stands in majesty in Trafalgar Square, but that should be enough to encourage fresh questions. Who was this man that he should have been rendered in stone, and placed above his countrymen? In the process we might learn more about who we are, and what it takes to create and sustain a modern state. We need to understand Nelson because he, and the culture of his age, still define the way the British see themselves in the world, and the way the world sees them. Any Nelson we create today will be ours, but it must be securely based in the historical events of his life: we must balance our needs with his truth. If we know him well we might agree with Cuthbert Collingwood – the man who understood him better than anyone – that he was ‘the glory of England’:

  His loss was the greatest grief to me. There is nothing like him left for gallantry and conduct in battle. It was not a foolish passion for fighting for he was the most gentle of all human creatures and often lamented the cruel necessity of it, but it was a principle of duty which all men owed their country in defence of her laws and liberty. He valued life only as it enabled him to do good, and would not preserve it by any act he thought unworthy … He is gone, and I shall lament him as long as I remain.42

  Notes – CHAPTER XVII

  1 Tennyson to Stead, 14.3.1885; in Lang and Shannon, The Letters of Alfred, Lord Tennyson Volume III, pp. 311–12. For Tennyson and defence in the early 1850s see Thompson, N. ‘Immortal Wellington: literary tributes to the hero’, in Woolgar, ed., Wellington Studies III, p. 265

  2 Mackenzie, p. 181

  3 League Pamphlet cited in Marder, The Anatomy of British Sea Power: Naval Policy 1880–1905, p. 52.

  4 See Marder, pp. 44–61

  5 Lambert, ‘HMS Foudroyant and Trincomalee’

  6 Foote, E J. Vindication of his Conduct when Captain of HMS Seahorse etc. 1799, London, 1807

  7 For this issue see Lambert, The Foundations of Naval History; John Knox Laughton, the Royal Navy and the Historical Profession, pp. 173–193.

  8 Davis, J A. ‘The Neapolitan Revolution: 1799 to 1999; Between History and Myth’; the quote is by Croce, p. 350.

  9 Ibid.

  10 Samuel Rawson Gardiner, Editor of the English Historical Review from 1890 to 1902, Laughton’s predecessor as Professor of Modern History at King’s College, a close personal friend and intellectual supporter. Gardiner’s new ‘Scientific’ German historical professionalism provided an authoritative stamp of approval for Laughton’s self-devised ‘scientific’ historical methodology.

  11 Schurman, Julian S. Corbett 1854–1922.

  12 Marder, A.J. From the Dreadnought to Scapa Flow. Vol. I 1904–1914, p. 348.

  13 Gordon, The Rules of the Game: Jutland and British Naval Command addresses this question, and shows how Nelson’s legacy was frittered away.

  14 William Graham-Greene (Secretary to the Admiralty) to John Laughton 18.12.1904; Lambert, A. ed., Letters and Papers of Professor Sir John Knox Laughton1830–1915. Aldershot, 2002 p. 228.

  15 Beresford, Memoirs, pp. 513–14

  16 Beresford and Wilson, Nelson and his Times

  17 Beresford, pp. iii–vi.

  18 In 1815 the new HMS Nelson was the biggest battleship afloat, and although she saw no active service, she remained on the list for four decades, latterly as a steam powered ship. Finally the old ship went out to Australia as a school ship, but the greatest name ever to grace a warship was not re-used until the late 1870s. Even then it was improperly applied to a second rate ironclad, which briefly served in Australian waters in the 1880s.

  19 Mackay, R. Fisher of Kilverstone, pp. 3, 88, 140, 180, 287–9, 365, 385.

  20 The records of these donations can be found in ADM 169/47–926. I am indebted to Dr Quintin Colville for this reference.

  21 Fisher to Arthur Balfour (ex Prime Minister) 23.10.1910; Mackay p. 428

  22 Fisher to Churchill 26.10.1911, 30.12.1911 and 31.7.1914; Churchill, Churchill. Companion Volume II, Part II pp. 1299, 1366 and Part III p. 1965. He repeated the point to opposition leader Balfour on 31.7.1914; Gilbert, M. Churchill Vol. III, p. 16.

  23 Fisher to Arnold White 25.2.1913; in Marder, ed. Fear God and Dreadnought: The Correspondence of Admiral of the Fleet Lord Fisher of Kilverstone. Vol. II 1904–1914, pp. 483–4.

  24 Bold, Greenwich, p. 204. Roberts, Eminent Churchillians, pp. 292–4

  25 Ramsden, J. Man of the Century: Winston Churchill and his Legend since 1945, p. 123. It was no surprise to find Bryant’s account of the Napoleonic wars made very obvious links with Churchill’s wartime leadership.

  26 Ramsden, pp. 57–78. Churchill to G M Young 10.9.1939; Gilbert ed. The Churchill War Papers I: The Admiralty, pp. 69–71. Young was one of the historians who drafted much of the book for Churchill.

  27 Speech of 23.2.1940; Gilbert p. 794

  28 ADM 239/262 quoted in Levy, The Royal Navy’s Home Fleet in World War II, p. 26

  29 John Colville 10.8.1940 re destroyers; Speech of 20.8.1940; Broadcast of 11.9.1940. Gilbert II (1994) pp. 644, 691, 802.

  30 Presented at a Club dinner of 3.10.1940; Gilbert II p. 846

  31 Richards, J. Films and British Identity; From Dickens to Dad’s Army, p. 87

  32 Churchill to Korda 15.6.194 and 1.7.194. Memoirs of Oliver Harvey and Hastings Ismay 2.8.1941; Gilbert III pp. 807, 882 1027–8.

  33 Alexander; Foreword 1942 Mahan, Life of Nelson

  34 Mace, Trafalgar Square

  35 Admiral Leach’s father was captain of the battleship HMS Prince of Wales in 1941, when she engaged the German Bismarck, took Churchill to meet President Roosevelt and was sunk off Singapore. He was lost with his ship.

  36 Thatcher, The Downing Street Years, p. 179

  37 Thatcher, p. 235

  38 Colley, Britons, pp. 8–9 provides a clear indictment of such attitudes.

  39 Colley, p. 9

  40 Hood to Nelson 26.8.1805; Add. 34,930 f 250. Hood admits passing a letter to Lord Aylesbury.

  41 The prominent position given to Nelson was sustained in the 1999 edition of the Doctrine. British Maritime Doctrine BR 1806. London HMSO 1999

  42 Collingwood to Admiral Sir Peter Parker 1.11.1805 and Collingwood to Edward Collingwood 25.10.1805; Owen, C. H. H. ed. ‘Letters from Collingwood, 1794–1809’ in Duffy, M. ed. The Naval Miscellany VI. Aldershot Navy Records Society 2003, pp. 182–5

  Appendix, Sources, Notes and Index

  Appendix: ‘The Black Legend’

  Every great man has his critics – the greater his fame, the more serious the criticism. In the process the truth is often ignored.

  Nelson’s role in the suppression of the Neapolitan republic and the execution of Caracciolo gave rise to a wholly unwarranted attack on his public character and moral integrity. The attack was given credibility by the repetition of highly critical verdicts by his greatest biographer, Robert Southey, back in 1813. Since Southey, the public and private events of Nelson’s period in and around the Neapolitan court have customarily been considered as a parade of weakness and error. His private relationship with Lady Hamilton, which eventually became intimate, is enmeshed with his public actions – the immorality of the former is seen to taint the latter. The ‘Black Legend’ – namely, that Nelson betrayed an armistice freely given by a British officer and a Neapolitan cardinal to the defeated Jacobin rebels in Naples, and caused the judicial murder of the Neapolitan officer Francesco Caracciolo – is still frequently believed, despite the fact that these accusations have been demonstrated to be false in all but one of the major studies of Nelson. The fact that they are still being repeated demonstrates the enduring power of malicious gossip and human credulity, as well as a woeful lack of research.

  In point of fact, Nelson had full authority to act in the King’s name at Naples; the armistice was unauthorised by the King, as Cardinal Ruffo knew, and Captain Foote was deceived into signing it. The Jacobins, as a group, and Caracciolo as an individual, were victims of their
own folly. They had taken the opportunity of a French invasion to repudiate their duty to their sovereign, and used French bayonets to set up a republic over the broken bodies of the common people who had fought to uphold their King and their country against a foreign invader. At a time when the fate of Britain hung in the balance, Nelson acted on his professional and political judgement, backed by his admiral, the King of Naples, and the British Minister. To have connived in the escape of the rebels would, as the Queen stressed, have threatened the very existence of a useful ally, at a time when Britain had very few. The French troops were allowed to surrender and leave, but the rebels were not. Caracciolo was guilty of throwing off his allegiance, and ordering the rebel ships under his command to fire on those of his erstwhile King, killing loyal seamen. He had no cause for complaint about his trial, or the sentence, and it was customary for the sentence to be carried out without delay.

  The issue of Naples was brought into the public domain by Charles James Fox, soi disant leader of the rump Whig opposition, and no friend of the Bourbons. After a long absence from active politics, Fox rose in the House of Commons on 3 February 1800 to suggest, on the basis of Consul Loeti’s self-serving letters, that the ‘atrocities’ attrib-uted to France were paralleled by those that followed the reconquest of Naples, and that a party of rebels in Castello dell’Uovo had made terms with a British officer for safe passage. The fact that the restored Bourbon regime had taken revenge on a parcel of noble-born traitors was undisputed, but this was not Nelson’s responsibility. He had no occasion to intercede between the traitors and their sovereign: lest it be forgotten, the counter-revolutionary excesses were entirely the work of an enraged population, fuelled with religious and political loyalties that Nelson did not share. His detractors forgot that the atrocities in Naples only ended when Nelson placed the Jacobins on the ships in harbour, under his protection and out of reach of the enraged lazzaroni. Order on shore was only re-established when naval personnel took control of the key points. Nelson ended the bloody chaos and anarchy that followed Ruffo’s occupation, and handed over a tranquil and settled city to the King.

  Although it was dismissed by the House of Commons, Fox’s public imputation of bad faith stuck, and when Nelson heard about it he was moved to respond immediately. His rebuttal of Fox’s attack satisfied the government, but unfortunately the matter did not rest there. In 1801 Helen Maria Williams, a pro-republican authoress and long-time French resident, produced Sketches of the State of Manners and Opinions in the French Republic, a dire book that included a highly inaccurate account of the Neapolitan affair. After eulogising the rebels, she accused Nelson of tricking them out of the castles.1 Nelson read the book, and a copy with his marginalia is among his papers. He dismissed her remarks, noting that Foote’s agreement ‘was fulfilled most religiously’. Three years later he advised a prospective historian that the Neapolitan sections of her book were ‘either destitute of foundation, or falsely represented’.2

  John Charnock’s 1802 biography was distinguished by his access to Locker’s collection, and the disclaimer of anything more than a desire to ‘correct the defects and mistakes of such miserable sketches as have already appeared’.3 While the book is not particularly enlightening, his account of the central incident at Naples bears re-reading:

  Cardinal Ruffo had moreover ignominiously signed a disgraceful armistice and convention, not only with the French general, but also with the Neapolitan rebels. The terms of the Treaty, however, which had been agreed to with the Prince Carracioli and others who were the principal leaders of the revolution, Lord Nelson refused to accede to.

  These leaders paid for their crimes, ‘under a sentence regularly passed on them by the court constituted to take cognisance of their offences’.4 This was clear enough, although Caracciolo had not signed any documents. Significantly Charnock produced a book entirely free of Emma.

  After Nelson’s death there was an unseemly rush to print any thing that might pass for a book about him, and many peddled the Fox-Williams line. Even when they managed to take a more correct perspective, they invariably confused the issue.5 The one early publication to have some claim to authenticity was James Harrison’s book. Emma’s object, as its editorial director, was to deal with ‘the many dishonourable insinuations which have been promulgated by bold speculators on public credulity’.6 She argued that Nelson lamented Caracciolo’s fate, and would have recommended him for clemency ‘if it was not so at odds with the temper of the people, and would have operated against the King’s interest; without preserving the culprit from the worst effects of their fury.’ Yet there is nothing in Nelson’s own writings to support this construction: it is more likely to have been Emma’s view.7 However Harrison included one of the many letters in which Nelson called Ruffo’s armistice ‘infamous’,8 and this proved too much for Captain Foote. Foote was still disturbed by the events of 1799, and appeared to believe that Nelson’s letter attached some of the stigma to him. In 1807 he publicly asked Harrison to remove the offending passage, but as his letter stirred up enough interest to warrant a second edition, Harrison did nothing. Confused and angry, Foote published a Vindication of his conduct. This unfortunate epistle worked from the assumption that the only way to clear his own name was to blame Nelson. Foote took from Williams’ book the explanation that Nelson’s conduct could be attributed to the influence of Lady Hamilton, and adopted it in order to avoid attacking the national hero directly – though he argued that 1799 ‘was the only occasion upon which the character of Admiral Lord Nelson has been found materially defective’. He then proceeded to quote Fox’s partisan and feeble speech, despite saying he was not of Fox’s party. While observing that it would be best to ‘bury the transaction in oblivion’, he did exactly the opposite.9

  Foote’s paper war with Harrison attracted the attention of the official biographer, Clarke, who proceeded to enter into an ill-advised and inconclusive dialogue with the disturbed captain.10 In truth, neither Nelson nor Harrison had meant to insinuate anything about Foote: the ‘infamous’ armistice was the work of Micheroux and Ruffo, and Foote merely had the misfortune to be misled by two men far less scrupulous than himself. But Foote simply would not accept that Ruffo had tricked him. Clarke was ‘laid on his beam ends’ by Foote’s attitude, and despite all the evidence in his hands that established Nelson’s case, he continued to correspond with a man who clearly could not be advised. Somewhat obsequiously, he assured Foote that supporting Nelson’s conduct ‘surely cannot in any way prove that I wished to attach blame to you’. Foote, by contrast, considered that it was impossible to vindicate both himself and Nelson. He was not appeased by the proof sheets of the relevant chapter, and decided to republish his Vindication, with Clarke’s correspondence attached. This just added another confused and bitter text to a catalogue of hostile, judgmental, ill-informed or downright dishonest works, from which the ‘Black Legend’ would be created.

  Clarke, meanwhile, was being fed hostile commentary on Emma by the Earl and Fanny. Initially he was disposed simply to follow the Williams line when preparing his authorised ‘Life’ – then he read the papers and shifted his position much closer to Nelson’s.11 Clarke’s purpose was to recover Nelson from his association with Emma, while using her as a convenient excuse for any conduct that appeared questionable. His biography pivots around the events of 1798–9, but the fact that the whole issue is based on a false premise – the same that so troubled the hero of Barry Unsworth’s Losing Nelson – escaped Clarke. Nelson’s faults are attributed to the fact that he ‘enjoyed a delightful, but dangerous relaxation in the extraordinary talents and captivating flattery of Emma, Lady Hamilton’. This, with his ill-health, ‘led him to indulge a confidence which was fatally adapted to mislead his affectionate disposition, and to warp his judgment’.12

  Because Clarke lacked the confidence to produce his own account, and did not know how to deal with Foote’s pamphlet, he then began quoting large sections of Foote’s work almost verbatim, as if
he could buy off a deluded monomaniac. He also stated that Emma was present at the trial and execution of Caracciolo and other Jacobins – this is absolutely false, and demonstrates better than anything the origins of his confusion, and the purpose of his judgement. With Earl William controlling access to the papers, he was obliged to tell a particular story. But his weak, inconclusive and shuffling account of what he knew to be the central story of the book was never going to convince anyone that Nelson was innocent of the imputation of dishonourable conduct. It is typical of Clarke’s incompetence that he did not see through Foote’s very partial recollection of the events: Foote’s barge had been prominent among the craft that seized the Jacobin ships on the King’s orders, and Ferdinand had rewarded him for his services.13 And in his anxiety to exculpate Nelson by blaming Emma, Clarke overlooked that fact that although Nelson would fall passionately in love with Emma, he had not done so in July 1799. It would be January 1800 before they accepted the inevitable, and even then Nelson was far too professional to allow his private passions to override his public duty.

  Clarke’s failure was the more remarkable because it appeared in the official life, a work intended to serve as a timeless lesson to the country, and the basis for the political, clerical and financial claims that the Earl was going to make. Clarke had a duty to demolish the petty, politically motivated and spiteful attacks that had been made on Nelson’s conduct in 1799. Rather than trying to see both sides and meet Foote halfway, he should have taken a clear line, following Nelson’s own robust and consistent defence. Emma – whatever the faults of Harrison’s book, and they are many – produced a far better account of what happened in 1799. By imposing Clarke on the Earl, the Prince of Wales served his supposed friend vey badly, leaving his reputation in tatters and open to ill-intentioned and ignorant attacks.

 

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