|
by
Richard Woodman
When my first novel was reviewed in 1980, I discovered the introduction of
Midshipman Nathaniel Drinkwater in the late Georgian Navy had involved me in
something one reviewer was pleased to call 'The Hornblower Stakes'. I had
apparently entered into something resembling a horse race, and upon my form,
much depended.
Such a labelling was, I accept, a convenience, intended to convey quickly the
historical backdrop of war against the dastardly French, of floggings and
broadsides, press gangs, spies, revolutionary fervour and good old British
phlegm. It signalled more of the same in a well established genre. |
 |
Ebb
Tide
by
Richard Woodman
List
Price: £5.99
Our Price: £4.79
You Save: £1.20 (20%)
View
to Buy
|
|
Now I cannot in truth object that my Drinkwater stories have a similarity to C.S.
Forester's hero, but the assumption that Forester invented the British sea-hero
of the Napoleonic period is incorrect. What Forester did was reinvent him and
then ride the immediate post-war wave of public interest in matters maritime.
In fact, in creating Nathaniel Drinkwater, I felt I was operating on a slightly
different track, and for rather different reasons. Forester produced his first
Hornblower book, The Happy Return, just before the outbreak of war, intending it
to be a one-off, stand-alone' title. In the event it proved very popular and
Forester had his work cut out explaining how Hornblower, a young midshipman in
1797, could be so senior a captain by 1812, that he was appointed a Commodore.
The suspension of disbelief essential in this authorial legerdemain was
unsuccessful. It robbed Hornblower of credibility in my youthful critical eyes.
But Forester had created a market, and others followed. It was this ready-made
market which encouraged me to set Nathaniel afloat, although there had been
other influences at work and it was a combination of these factors which
actually prompted me to start writing.
First, I had for years nurtured an
ambition to write. Since going to sea at the age of sixteen I had kept a daily
journal and become a diligent correspondent. This not only provided me with an
apprenticeship in technique, but prepared me for the self-imposed discipline
essential to any writer. Second, a sea-going career provided one with a portion
of time in which recreation is essential, and I became a voracious reader.
I usually read history or
biography, but occasionally novels, most of which were historical. I became
interested in the lesser known facts of history, the small, personal mysteries
and the 'what if' syndrome, where the outcome of the battle, so to speak, might
have been different if the nail had not caused the horse to lose a shoe.
|
 |
The
First Nathaniel Drinkwater Omnibus
by
Richard Woodman
List
Price: £9.99
Our Price: £7.99
You Save: £2.00 (20%)
View
to Buy |
 |
The
Bomb Vessel
by
Richard Woodman
US
List Price: $14.95
UK Equivalent: £10.47
Our Price: £9.42
You Save: £1.05 (10%)
View
to Buy |
 |
A
Private Revenge
by
Richard Woodman
List
Price: £5.99
Our Price: £4.79
You Save: £1.20 (20%)
View
to Buy |
The brilliant historical stories of Kenneth Roberts, now hardly ever read, dealt
with aspects of the American War of Independence which fascinated me. I began a
dedicated reading programme which led me to specialise to such an extent that in
1974 I started writing a history of that war, under the vague impetus of the
knowledge that the bi-centenary was coming up. When I had finished this mammoth
task, the Chief Engineer of the ship I was then sailing in, suggested I wrote a
novel based on the research I had carried out.
This suggestion was timely. Another of my passions was the French revolution and
the wars which arose from it. Yet another enthusiasm was a great interest in
sailing. Simultaneously I had conceived a simmering objection to the post-Hornblower
naval hero who seemed to me to have become super-human. This was a revival of
the British conceit which followed victory at Trafalgar and despite receiving a
blow from the Americans during the naval war of 1812-14, blighted the Victorian
navy and cheated the Grand Fleet of an overwhelming victory at Jutland in 1916.
The British tar had become a folk-hero, despite the fact that, irrespective of
whether he served in a naval or a merchant ship, he was abominably treated. In
fact the first phase of the Great War with France which broke out in 1793, was
almost as good as a British defeat at sea, though not to the same extent as the
total loss of sea-power which had occurred in 1781 and compelled Lord Cornwallis
to surrender the American colonies at Yorktown.
My colleague's suggestion chimed in with this view, and into the hiatus in my
writing stepped Nathaniel Drinkwater.
But did we need another naval hero?
Mercifully publishers and readers seemed to think so, and while interest in the
sea has dwindled in the United Kingdom, there is still a faithful band of
devotees who enjoy the genre.
But why Drinkwater? Is he not like Hornblower and the rest? Well literally it
might be said that some parallels might be found, but these are generalisations,
much as any naval sea-officer of the period would share characteristics with any
other. These are perhaps less coincidental than the curious synonymity between
the surnames Forester and Woodman. There, I hope, the parallels end, for unlike
Hornblower and many of his ilk, Drinkwater was born, grew up and prospered at
sea where I worked for over thirty years. Intimacy with conditions at sea, the
psyche of seamen, the boredom as well as the excitement, dangers and
difficulties are able, I hope, to inform my writing. And while the late
twentieth century may not appear to have direct comparisons with the late
eighteenth and early nineteenth, there are substantial enough similarities to
provide me with ideas. Combined with the wide reading of contemporary accounts,
logs, memoirs and the naval fiction of the day, I trust Nathaniel mirrors his
forebears with a haunting verisimilitude.
'a rollicking story-line and the assumption that the mean-spirited French eat
nothing but frogs and snails and align themselves with unclean dagoes'
For instance, I was once involved with a salvage operation which out of the blue
promised to make all members of the crew involved several hundred (and in the
case of the captain, several thousand) pounds better off if we succeeded in
towing a disabled ship to port. The euphoria that affected all involved must
have been very like the seductions of prize money to an eighteenth century
frigate's crew. This translated directly to the events aboard His Britannic
Majesty's frigate Cyclops after Rodney's so-called Moonlight Battle, fought off
Cadiz in 1780. Along with contemporary accounts, such parallel events are
inspirational, but so are the fictionalisations which formed the roots of the
genre which Forester reinvented in 1938.
I am not alone in being a sailor turned author. There have been several others,
so the tradition is quite long and while authors like Monsarrat might be pointed
out as being within this tradition, Monsarrat was first a journalist who became
a sailor by force majeure, and only afterwards a novelist of great distinction.
In fact the naval historical hero is firmly rooted in the navy itself. After the
Napoleonic War, several officers and a few educated seamen bowdlerized their
experiences and set them down as novels. These are chiefly characterised by a
rollicking story-line and the assumption that the mean-spirited French eat
nothing but frogs and snails and align themselves with unclean dagoes. High
moral ground is claimed for the British constitutional monarchy, the divine
right of Britannia to rule the waves and the assumption that a jolly British
tar, if properly led by a young gentleman, can wipe the floor with any
opposition. A lingering of these nonsensical, imperial assumptions leached into
the Hornblower Stakes and began to poison my enjoyment, as I mentioned earlier.
A judicious reading of these 'jolly' novels however, reveals some carefully
concealed shadowy areas. To a sea-officer of the Trafalgar period the word
'imperial' had French, not British connotations. The British monarchy was a joke
and an unreformed Parliament was highly corrupt. Rum, sodomy and the lash,
danger, disease and desertion were the prevailing conditions under which the
vast majority of officers and men lived. Sophisticated though the Georgian navy
was, its sophistication was relative to the temper of the times. Faced with all
these problems combined with the utter tedium of blockade, a pell-mell battle
must have been a cathartic opportunity! No wonder the Royal Navy gained a
fearsome reputation and a string of battle honours.
Captains Marryat and Chamier both wrote revealing books about the Georgian Navy,
full of incident and characters of which the latter are particularly drawn from
life. Marryat, though now best known for his juvenile novel Children of the New
Forest, was a radical in his day, having served with the eccentric and
controversial frigate captain Lord Cochrane. Marryat proposed the navy should be
manned not by press gang, but by volunteers. The then King, William IV, a former
naval officer who had been discreetly removed from command because of his
severity to his men, was exceedingly angry and informed poor Marryat of his
displeasure.
Other authors in this early naval genre were Michael Scott and John Davis. The
former's long stories are similar to Marryat's, but Davis's are a jolly romp
among officers with names like Hurricane and Tempest who inevitably end up in
Venus's bower! Davis had been to sea in East Indiamen and seen action against
pirates on the Indian coast before being pressed into the crack frigate Artois
which was part of a flying squadron operating in the Channel. Another ship in
the same squadron was HMS Indefatigable in which, had we been around at the
time, we might have found a sea-sick midshipman named Hornblower. Davis's story,
The Post Captain, is littered with bad jokes and laboured naval slang much
employed by Captain Tempest and Lieutenant Hurricane in their exclusive
dialogue. Such an unsubtle technique is reminiscent of the writings of the much
greater Tobias Smollett who, a century earlier, wrote out of his own experiences
of naval life (as a surgeon) in Roderick Random and Peregrine Pickle. Indeed,
Smollett really founded the genre and largely for quasi-political reasons, to
expose the corruption, venality and sheer bad management of the expedition to
Vera Cruz in which he was caught up.
'Smollett really founded the genre and largely for quasi-political reasons, to
expose the corruption, venality and sheer bad management of the expedition to
Vera Cruz in which he was caught up.'
The same motivation clearly prompted educated men from the lower deck to take up
the pen. Victims of misfortune or the press, the lower deck was not devoid of
education or manners. An anonymous seaman who wrote as Jack Nastyface exposed
many of the ills of the unfortunate denizens of the Georgian navy's lower deck
and while a degree of exaggeration may be present, it is no worse than the
condescension dogging the pages of his superior officers!
'Attempts by his friends to reclaim him failed and he said that if his soul was
placed on one table and a bottle of gin on another he would sell the former to
purchase the latter.'
Another sailor, 'Bill Truck' (a pseudonym, for the truck is the highest point of
a mast from where a splendid overview of a ship may be obtained) wrote a book in
which he has an old seaman tell the tale of the naval mutiny in 1797. Clearly a
device to get an account sympathetic to the mutineers into print, it records the
quite remarkable organisation inherent in this mutiny, emotionally coloured as
are all naval mutinies by the Hollywood interpretation of the events aboard HMS
Bounty in 1789. Truck's book, The Man O' War's Man also contains vignettes of
life on the lower deck and details of some obscure naval actions such as attacks
on the Norwegian coast which I found useful when writing Beneath the Aurora.
There are also a number of long poems which deal with naval events. William
Falconer who produced a monumental dictionary of sea terms, also wrote an epic
called The Shipwreck. Falconer's yarn is peppered with technical details which
alternate with the classical allusions fashionable among the so-called educated
of the time and neither of these attributes recommend it very highly to modern
readers, despite the footnotes, explanations and a diagram of a ship which
accompany the script.
It was this knowledge of technique that Forester revived and which is considered
indispensable in any modern novel, whether it be detailing the ballistic
characteristics of a Mark 5 Kalashnikov AK47, or the constituent quantity of
chalk added to flour in the Glasgow bakeries of the 1920s.
A similar epic poem though of lighter vein was written by an engagingly
degenerate petty officer named John Mitford. Mitford served with Hood and Nelson
and his work, The Adventures of Johnny Newcome, is a frivolous yarn. Mitford was
well connected, but his naval career came to little as he succumbed to drink.
Once a fop, he languished in London for fourteen years without a roof over his
head, living rough. During this time he managed to edit a periodical called the
Quizzical Gazette. Attempts by his friends to reclaim him failed and he said
that if his soul was placed on one table and a bottle of gin on another he would
sell the former to purchase the latter. He once sold his boots for liquor and
when the man who had bought them returned to say he had sold them on at a
profit, Mitford retorted 'ah, but to do so it was necessary to go out in the
rain'!
Johnny Newcombe was written in 1819 when Mitford was living rough in Bayswater
fields, making a bed at night of grass and nettles and washing his linen in a
pond. Two pennyworth of bread and cheese, and an onion sustained him. his
publisher paid him one shilling a day, so Mitford spent the balance on gin and
it took him 43 days to write the epic. Such is the very stuff of inspiration and
Mitford was as much a part of nautical literary tradition as Jack Nastyface and
Captain Marryat.
In the succeeding decades, sailor-authors have been consistent, writing for all
ages and in several fields. A country with a world-wide maritime empire produced
authors who wrote fiction entirely preoccupied with merchant ships. Others wrote
about the Royal Navy and some did both. All shared the characteristic of having
seen sea-service: W Clark Russell, W.H.G. Kingston, William McFee, F.C. Hendy
(who wrote under the pseudonym of 'Shalimar'), Commander Taprell-Dorling ('Taffrail'),
Douglas V. Duff, and, of course, Joseph Conrad, spring readily to mind. A later
generation, including Brian Callison, Farley Mowatt and one or two others mark
the probable end of the line. The British merchant fleet has almost vanished
from the seven seas and the Royal Navy is greatly contracted. Those of us who
remain, tend the dying blooms of nostalgia with some care, but the death of a
tradition will also reduce a loyal readership.
The literary sailor and the genre which he has created will pass into history,
perhaps to be chewed over by academics, perhaps to be forgotten. The echoes of
distant broadsides will finally fade away, but until then there are still some
rare adventures to be enjoyed.
c Richard Woodman 1997
|