The Two Admirals. Джеймс Фенимор Купер

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every thing is English, and Englishmen have the quarrel entirely to themselves. I do not see how, as a loyal subject of my hereditary prince, I can well refrain from joining his standard.”

      “And would you, Dick Bluewater, who, to my certain knowledge, were sent on board ship at twelve years of age, and who, for more than forty years, have been a man-of-war’s-man, body and soul; would you now strip your old hulk of the sea-blue that has so long covered and become it, rig yourself out like a soldier, with a feather in your hat, – ay, d – – e, and a camp-kettle on your arm, and follow a drummer, like one of your kinsmen, Lord Bluewater’s fellows of the guards? – for of sailors, your lawful prince, as you call him, hasn’t enough to stopper his conscience, or to whip the tail of his coat, to keep it from being torn to tatters by the heather of Scotland. If you do follow the adventurer, it must be in some such character, since I question if he can muster a seaman, to tell him the bearings of London from Perth.”

      “When I join him, he will be better off.”

      “And what could even you do alone, among a parcel of Scotchmen, running about their hills under bare poles? Your signals will not man[oe]uvre regiments, and as for man[oe]uvr-ing in any other manner, you know nothing. No – no; stay where you are, and help an old friend with knowledge that is useful to him. – I should be afraid to do a dashing thing, unless I felt the certainty of having you in my van, to strike the first blow; or in my rear, to bring me off, handsomely.

      “You would be afraid of nothing, Gervaise Oakes, whether I stood at your elbow, or were off in Scotland. Fear is not your failing, though temerity may be.”

      “Then I want your presence to keep me within the bounds of reason,” said Sir Gervaise, stopping short in his walk, and looking his friend smilingly in the face. “In some mode, or other, I always need your aid.”

      “I understand the meaning of your words, Sir Gervaise, and appreciate the feeling that dictates them. You must have a perfect conviction that I will do nothing hastily, and that I will betray no trust. When I turn my back on King George, it will be loyalty, in one sense, whatever he may think of it in another; and when I join Prince Charles Edward, it will be with a conscience that he need not be ashamed to probe. What names he bears! They are the designations of ancient English sovereigns, and ought of themselves, to awaken the sensibilities of Englishmen.”

      “Ay, Charles in particular,” returned the vice-admiral, with something like a sneer. “There’s the second Charles, for instance – St. Charles, as our good host, Sir Wycherly, might call him – he is a pattern prince for Englishmen to admire. Then his father was of the school of the Star-Chamber martyrs!”

      “Both were lineal descendants of the Conqueror, and of the Saxon princes; and both united the double titles to the throne, in their sacred persons. I have always considered Charles II. as the victim of the rebellious conduct of his subjects, rather than vicious. He was driven abroad into a most corrupt state of society, and was perverted by our wickedness. As to the father, he was the real St. Charles, and a martyred saint he was; dying for true religion, as well as for his legal rights. Then the Edwards – glorious fellows! – remember that they were all but one Plantagenets; a name, of itself, to rouse an Englishman’s fire!”

      “And yet the only difference between the right of these very Plantagenets to the throne, and that of the reigning prince, is, that one produced a revolution by the strong hand, and the other was produced by a revolution that came from the nation. I do not know that your Plantagenets ever did any thing for a navy; the only real source of England’s power and glory. D – – e, Dick, if I think so much of your Plantagenets, after all!”

      “And yet the name of Oakes is to be met with among their bravest knights, and most faithful followers.”

      “The Oakes, like the pines, have been timbers in every ship that has floated,” returned the vice-admiral, half-unconscious himself, of the pun he was making.

      For more than a minute Sir Gervaise continued his walk, his head a little inclined forward, like a man who pondered deeply on some matter of interest. Then, suddenly stopping, he turned towards his friend, whom he regarded for near another minute, ere he resumed the discourse.

      “I wish I could fairly get you to exercise your excellent reason on this matter, Dick,” he said, after the pause; “then I should be certain of having secured you on the side of liberty.”

      Admiral Bluewater merely shook his head, but he continued silent, as if he deemed discussion altogether supererogatory. During this pause, a gentle tap at the door announced a visiter; and, at the request to enter, Atwood made his appearance. He held in his hand a large package, which bore on the envelope the usual stamp that indicated it was sent on public service.

      “I beg pardon, Sir Gervaise,” commenced the secretary, who always proceeded at once to business, when business was to be done; “but His Majesty’s service will not admit of delay. This packet has just come to hand, by the arrival of an express, which left the admiralty only yesterday noon.”

      “And how the devil did he know where to find me!” exclaimed the vice-admiral, holding out a hand to receive the communication.

      “It is all owing to this young lieutenant’s forethought in following up the Jacobite intelligence to a market-town. The courier was bound to Falmouth, as fast as post-horses could carry him, when he heard, luckily, that the fleet lay at anchor, under Wychecombe Head; and, quite as luckily, he is an officer who had the intelligence to know that you would sooner get the despatches, if he turned aside, and came hither by land, than if he went on to Falmouth, got aboard the sloop that was to sail with him, for the Bay of Biscay, and came round here by water.”

      Sir Gervaise smiled at this sally, which was one in keeping with all Atwood’s feelings; for the secretary had matured a system of expresses, which, to his great mortification, his patron laughed at, and the admiralty entirely overlooked. No time was lost, however, in the way of business; the secretary having placed the candles on a table, where Sir Gervaise took a chair, and had already broken a seal. The process of reading, nevertheless, was suddenly interrupted by the vice-admiral’s looking up, and exclaiming –

      “Why, you are not about to leave us, Bluewater?”

      “You may have private business with Mr. Atwood, Sir Gervaise, and perhaps I had better retire.”

      Now, it so happened that while Sir Gervaise Oakes had never, by look or syllable, as he confidently believed, betrayed the secret of his friend’s Jacobite propensities, Atwood was perfectly aware of their existence. Nor had the latter obtained his knowledge by any unworthy means. He had been neither an eavesdropper, nor an inquirer into private communications, as so often happens around the persons of men in high trusts; all his knowledge having been obtained through native sagacity and unavoidable opportunities. On the present occasion, the secretary, with the tact of a man of experience, felt that his presence might be dispensed with; and he cut short the discussion between the two admirals, by a very timely remark of his own.

      “I have left the letters uncopied, Sir Gervaise,” he said, “and will go and finish them. A message by Locker” – this was Sir Gervaise’s body-servant – “will bring me back at a moment’s notice, should you need me again to-night.”

      “That Atwood has a surprising instinct, for a Scotchman!” exclaimed the vice-admiral, as soon as the door was closed on the secretary. “He not only knows when he is wanted, but when he is not wanted. The last is an extraordinary attainment, for one of his nation.”

      “And one that an Englishman may do well to emulate,” returned Bluewater. “It is possible my company may be dispensed with, also, just at this important moment.”

      “You are not so much afraid of the Hanoverians, Dick, as to run away from their hand-writing, are ye? Ha – what’s this? – As I live, a packet for yourself, and directed to ‘Rear-Admiral Sir Richard Bluewater, K.B.’ By the Lord, my old boy, they’ve given you the red riband at last! This is an honour well earned, and which may be fitly worn.”

      “’Tis rather unexpected, I must own. The letter, however, cannot be addressed to me, as I am not a Knight of the Bath.”

      “This


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