The Yellow Admiral by Patrick O’Brian

Well before that awe-inspiring (but scarcely unexpected) name, the captains’ servants began titivating their masters’ best uniform against the almost inevitable signal Captains repair aboard the flag and the first lieutenants hurried about anxiously looking for imperfections that might bring discredit on the ship. Unhappily there was no time for blacking the yards, but at least everything that should be taut was tautened with tackles, Spanish buttons or just plain heaving

staves, while the dirtier midshipmen were sent below to wash, while all were desired to brush their hair, change their shirts and put on gloves.

Aboard the Bellona every urgent measure had been taken and they were beginning the fine-work, such as whitening lanyards, when with real concern they saw the flagship round to and at once begin to lower down her barge. Captain Fanshawe was the senior captain present and his ship, the Admiral’s natural victim, was seized with a renewed frenzy of zeal, her people hurrying about like ants in an overturned ant-hill: but they were mistaken.

Very soon it became apparent that the barge was heading for Bellona, whose Royal Marine officers now conducted the most rapid and thorough-paced reviewof their 120-odd men in the history of the corps, finishing only when the barge, in answer to the wholly superfluous hail, replied ‘Flag’, and hooked on.

Lord Stranraer came nimbly up the side, followed by his flag-lieutenant and a much duller figure in a blue coat with no gold lace, the Queen Charlotte’s surgeon, Mr Sherman. The Admiral saluted the quarterdeck, and acknowledged the Marines’ flashing presentation of arms and Jack’s salute by touching his hat, and saying ‘Captain Aubrey, I hope you and all the other captains of the inshore squadron, will dine with me this afternoon: but for the moment Mr Sherman and I should like to see Dr Maturin.’

‘Certainly, my lord,’ said Jack. ‘If you choose to walk into the cabin, I will desire him to join you. In the meantime, may I offer you a glass of madeira?’

Jack, Harding and all those who had any pride in the ship’s beauty and her seamanlike appearance had done virtually everything in human power to make it impossible for any candid eye, however severe, to find fault with her: they knew that the Admiral could not honestly say that her yards were not exactly squared, nor could he complain that the hens had flung their litter about the deck (a not unusual grievance when there was nothing else to blame) because no poultry whatsoever had survived the dearth. But they had never thought of Stephen. No one had washed, brushed or dusted

Dr Maturin, and he came up in more than his usual squalor, unshaved, fresh – if such a word can be used – from his greasy, malodorous task of dissecting the inedible parts of yet another porpoise.

None of this disturbed the Admiral, stickler though he was for precision in uniform. ‘My dear Dr Maturin,’ he cried, leaping, leaping from his chair and coming forward with outstretched hand. ‘I could not miss this opportunity of coming across to express my sense of your – of your great goodness in prescribing for me. I knew it would answer, your physic, but I had no idea it would answer so prodigious well – I was in the maintop this morning, sir: I ran up to the top! I had hoped to be allowed to consult you, but Mr Sherman here assured me it would never do – would be quite impossible – that he had a lien upon me – and that no physical gentleman of your eminence would consent to examine one of his patients without he was there.’

‘Sure, Mr Sherman was in the right of it entirely,’ said Stephen. ‘In the medical world we too have our conventions, perhaps as rigid as those of the service. Some of them are puzzling to patients who in the wild licentiousness of their imaginations supposed that they can wander from physician to surgeon to quacksalver and back again just as the whim bites; and some are, on occasion, thought offensive, such as our rule of using Latin when we discuss the sufferer’s case in his presence. This has its advantages, such as extreme accuracy of definition and from the nature of the language an admirable concision. But if my colleague agrees, I should be perfectly happy if we were both to examine you.’

Bows all round, and Captain Aubrey withdrew. The examination was thorough and although Killick, on the other side of the door, was of a contrary opinion (‘Once they start talking foreign, mate, it is all up: you can send for the sexton as soon as you like – here lieth Arthur Grimble, died of the marthambles, Brest bearing west by north ten leagues 1814’) profoundly satisfactory. Stephen’s only advice was extreme caution with the digitalis – dose to be steadily diminished -patient not to be told the name of the drug, still less allowed

access to it. ‘More men, particularly sailors, have died from self-administered doses than ever the enemy killed in action,’ he observed; and turning to the Admiral, ‘My lord, you are the most gratifying of patients. The anomalies that we noticed before have virtually disappeared, and if you will run up to the maintop every morning, half an hour after a light breakfast, and observe Mr Sherman’s precepts, I see no reason why you should not rival Methusalem, and succeed officers as yet unborn as Admiral of the Fleet.’

‘Ha, ha, ha! How well you speak, dear Doctor,’ said the Admiral. ‘I am infinitely obliged to you – to you both (a bow to Sherman) – for your advice and care.’ He put on his clothes, and with a certain embarrassment asked Stephen to dine aboard the Charlotte with Aubrey and the other captains.

Lord Stranraer’s dinner was as splendid, as far as the food was concerned, as anyone would expect from a flagship; but for the captains of the inshore squadron, deprived of almost everything for so long, it was far, far beyond even the most fervent expectations and they ate with a steady intensity of greed from the first course to the last. There was almost no conversation apart from ‘Just another leg, if you please,’ or ‘Well, perhaps another couple of slices,’ or ‘May I trouble you for the bread-barge?’

The Captain of the Fleet, however, who sat next to Stephen at the foot of the table, entertained him in a low confidential voice to a very highly-detailed account of his digestive processes – his very complicated and prolonged digestive processes – and a catalogue of the substances he could not eat: on the subject his usually pale, phlegmatic face grew pink and assumed a look almost of enthusiasm. He was dealing with the effect of cardamon in all its varieties when he became aware of a silence all along the table and of the Admiral at its head, clearly poised to make an announcement.

‘Gentlemen,’ he said, ‘before we drink the loyal toast, I think I should give you some news that may perhaps incline

you to drink it with even greater fervour. But first, since contrary winds and foul weather have cut most of you off from the world for so long – not for nothing do we call certain parts of this station Siberia – I may be allowed to give you a short account of recent events on the Continent. It may well be imperfect: there are many land-borne officials who do not always understand the seaman’s hunger for news. But in the main I think it accurate enough. I dare say you are all aware that Napoleon suffered a severe defeat before Leipzig some months ago, but that even so he beat the Germans and Austrians again and again – he was doing so even a week or two ago. But that was his undoing. His forces are all away in the north-east, his left flank is open and the Allies are marching upon an almost undefended Paris. Wellington, as you know, has taken Toulouse. He has now crossed the Adour and he is moving north at a great pace. At present there is some kind of a congress meeting at Châtillon; but since Napoleon was offered reasonable terms three times even after Leipzig and refused them all, he will gain nothing from this congress, now that he has no organized army at all. The ships that sailed from Brest and those we met with west of Ushant had intended to join by way of a final fling; but they never met; the gallant Captain

Fanshawe here, and Beveridge offshore put an end to their capers.’ Many hands beat discreetly on the table, many officers raised their glasses, bowing to Fanshawe and Beveridge; and the Admiral went on, ‘It is usually considered unlucky to predict a fortunate outcome of anything whatsoever: but on this occasion I shall be so bold as to foretell a sensible end to this congress at Châtillon, the downfall of Napoleon, the end of this war, and our return to England, home and beauty. Gentleman, the King.’

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