Ramage And The Drum Beat (36 page)

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Authors: Dudley Pope

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‘From the Commander-in-Chief,’ he said, handing Ramage a sealed letter addressed to Lieutenant Lord Ramage, formerly of His Majesty’s late cutter, ‘Kathleen’. ‘I’ve signed for it. One’s gone to every captain.’

Ramage read the letter and then wondered if it was identical in wording to the others. Not a mention of the Commodore, either by name or the rôle of the Captain. Nor Captain Troubridge and the Culloden, Captain Frederick and the Blenheim, nor Captain Collingwood and the Excellent.

Dated ‘Victory, Lagos Bay, 16th February, 1797’, it said:

 

Sir,

No language I am possessed of can convey the high sense I entertain of the exemplary conduct of the flag officers, captains, officers, seamen, marines and soldiers embarked on board every ship of the Squadron I have the honour to command, present at the vigorous and successful attack made upon the Fleet of Spain on the 14th inst. The signal advantage obtained by His Majesty’s arms on that day, is entirely owing to their determined valor [sic] and discipline; and I request you will accept yourself, and give my thanks and approvation to those composing the ship under your command.

 

I am, Sir,

Your most humble servant,

 

J Jervis.

 

Southwick was watching him closely and said, ‘It’s going to cause trouble, sir.’

‘How do you know? Have you read it?’

‘No, sir, not yours; but Captain Martin gave me a sight of his before he read it to this ship’s company. He was pretty angry – reckons it’s an insult to the Commodore.’

‘Well, it mentions no names, so there’s no favouritism.’

‘No, but I heard by a side wind from the Victory that Sir John’s official letter to the Admiralty doesn’t mention captains or ships either.’

This seemed so improbable that Ramage grunted his disbelief.

‘It’s true, sir, the whole Fleet knows by now that Sir John wrote one letter, then Captain Calder read it and, being a spiteful man, said if the Commodore was given any praise it’d encourage others to disobey orders. So Sir John wrote another, mentioning no names at all.’

Calder! Ramage knew at once the story was probably true: it was common knowledge Calder was more than jealous of the Commodore. (And that, he suddenly realized, probably accounted for Calder’s hostility towards him: he probably thought he was one of the Commodore’s protégés.) Surprising that Sir John didn’t see through such spitefulness.

There was a knock on the door and the Commodore himself walked in.

‘Sitting up and taking nourishment, eh?’

‘Precious little nourishment in this, sir,’ Ramage said, waving the letter.

‘Oh well, words on paper count less than actions, Mr Ramage,’ Nelson said banteringly. ‘In the battle the Prince George expended 197 barrels of powder, the Blenheim 180, the Culloden 170 and the Captain 146. The Captain fired more shot than she would have had on board – when we had no more round or grapeshot for the 32-pound carronades my men began using 9-pound roundshot. But when the official letter is published, I doubt if you’ll see the four ships named even once. Yet does it matter, really? Those whose opinions any of us value will soon get to know, and who cares about the rest? Remember, if you don’t fret and expect justice, you’ll probably hoist your flag eventually and live to a ripe old age!’

‘I hope you’ll guarantee that in writing, sir!’

‘I’ve just told you not to expect justice! But seriously, Ramage, it’s more important to forget the profit and loss account in a battle and think of the total effect on the enemy.’

‘I don’t see the difference, sir.’

‘Well, Sir John’s despatch will delight the Press; the politicians will gleefully announce in Parliament that a British Fleet of fifteen sail of the line met twenty-seven Spanish sail of the line, gave them a good trouncing and captured four at no loss to themselves. They won’t reveal – won’t even realize – the most valuable and significant part of the victory.’

‘But–’

‘It’s the men that matter, Ramage, not ships. The finest and largest fighting ship in the world is useless if her captain and crew are frightened of the enemy. The worst and smallest fighting ship is invaluable if her captain and crew believe they will win. Good heavens man, you tackled the San Nicolas with the Kathleen, didn’t you?

‘Remember that, and then think beyond the horizon: this is the first battle the Spaniards have fought against us in this war. In sheer numbers they had nearly twice as many ships and twice as many guns – and that doesn’t take into account most of their ships were larger. They had the weather gage, and they fought knowing they had Cadiz to leeward as a refuge for refitting. Yet they lost – decisively!’

‘And,’ Ramage said, ‘they lost knowing that their admiral was useless, their broadsides counted for very little and that one British seventy-four boarded and captured one of their eighty-fours and then did the same to a 112-gun ship!’

‘Precisely,’ Nelson said. ‘When the rest of the Spanish Navy hears the details of the battle, there’ll hardly be a single man, whether cook’s mate or admiral, who won’t secretly believe deep inside him – and that’s where it matters, that’s where the fighting’s lost or won – that one British ship equals two Spanish. The first battle of the war has given them indisputable evidence.’

‘So from now on,’ Ramage said, ‘the Dons are likely to feel beaten before they set sail!’

‘I hope so!’ Nelson said soberly. ‘I hope every man, from the King and the Minister of Marine downwards, will think twice before sending the Spanish Fleet to sea – and then order it to stay in port. That’ll give us a chance to deal with the French and the Spanish ships a chance to rot.’

The Commodore took an envelope from his pocket, gave it to Ramage, and said he would return later.

Ramage took the envelope but, preoccupied with Nelson’s words, did not open it at once. If the Spanish Fleet had reached Cadiz safely (and they might have done but for the gale which blew them out into the Atlantic, allowing Sir John time to catch them as they struggled back) they might have gone on up to Brest, driven off the British Squadron blockading the French Fleet and let it out, and sailed for England…

But they met a gale, then they met Sir John’s Fleet. And they lost four ships. Yet at least two of those ships, Ramage realized with a start, would not have been captured by the Commodore unless the Kathleen had delayed the Spanish van by ramming the San Nicolas…

It’d taken him all this time to realize that. Southwick had known and the men had known – he recalled Southwick’s message from the Kathleens. But Lieutenant Nicolas Ramage had not known. And yet in a way he had. Not by thinking of it as a complete sequence of events: he hadn’t steered the Kathleen for the San Nicolas with the idea of trying to defeat a Franco-Spanish Armada against England. He’d done it to slow down Cordoba’s van. But, he realized, the greatest archway ever built was made of small bricks and rocks, and each one of them depended on the others, and they all depended on one, the keystone.

He broke the seal of the letter. It was from one of the Admiral’s staff. The Lively frigate was leaving for England with the Commander-in-Chief’s dispatches for the Admiralty, and Lieutenant Ramage was to return in her – as a passenger – if he was well enough to be moved. In view of the fact the frigate was well below her complement, Lieutenant Ramage was to name twenty-five of the best men from among his former ship’s company and send them on board with the Master. For Lieutenant Ramage’s personal information, the letter added, another frigate was leaving the Fleet shortly for Gibraltar and then returning to England with the Marchesa di Volterra, and if Lieutenant Ramage wished to write…

Which meant, he realized with a joy which drove away all thoughts of the pain in his head, he’d be waiting to welcome her to English soil. And if the Spring arrived at St Kew before an Admiralty letter bringing him orders, they’d walk together among the blossoms and the fresh green grass, alone for, the first time without the threat of urgency of war tapping them on the shoulder.

 

Series order & Synopses

Dates given are for first publication and (for Ramge series) year in which novel is set.

 

Ned Yorke Series

These Titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels

1.   Buccaneer
1981
2.   Admiral
1982
3.   Galleon
1986
4.   Corsair
1987
5.   Convoy
1979
6.   Decoy
1983

 

Ramage Series

These Titles can be read as a series, or randomly as standalone novels

1.   Ramage
1796
1965
2.   Ramage & the Drumbeat
1797
1968
3.   Ramage & the Freebooters
1797
1969
4.   Governor Ramage RN
1797
1973
5.   Ramage’s Prize
1798
1974
6.   Ramage’s Mutiny
1799
1977
7.   Ramage & the Rebels
1800
1978
8.   The Ramage Touch
1800
1979
9.   Ramage’s Signal
1800
1980
10. Ramage & the Guillotine
1801
1975
11. Ramage & the Renegades
1802
1981
12. Ramage’s Devil
1803
1982
13. Ramage’s Trial
1803
1984
14. Ramage’s Challenge
1803
1985
15. Ramage’s Diamond
1804
1976
16. Ramage at Trafalgar
1805
1986
17. Ramage & the Saracens
1806
1988
18. Ramage & the Dido
1806
1989

 

 

Synopses (Fiction & non-fiction)

Published by House of Stratus

A. Ned Yorke Series
Buccaneer
It is the 1650's and Spain considers the Caribbean to be its own private sea. But England, Holland and France conspire to battle for freedom on the oceans set in days littered with the plunder of piracy. Ned Yorke, a loyal Royalist living in Barbados has a small vessel and devoted crew and together they sail, hunted by Roundheads and Spaniards, determined to pay whatever the price for freedom from tyranny. What transpires is a colourful, dramatic retelling of historical events surrounding the capture of Jamaica and the infamous raid on Santiago.
Admiral
Charles II returns from exile bringing with him unease to the Spanish Main. In this vivid description of seventeenth-century buccaneers, Ned Yorke, the leader and hero of the swashbuckling band are depended upon for the defence of Jamaica, fighting with captured Spanish guns. Daring raids on the Spanish seem inevitable, as Yorke sets out on the high seas to distant adventures on behalf of the King and his own honour.
Galleon
As England falls under a blanket of peace with the restoration of Charles II, in distant Jamaica all is not well. Though there is peace with Spain, there is No Peace Beyond the Line. It seems that the West Indies have become the private estate of the King of Spain. But Ned Yorke, Admiral of the Brethren, leader of the Buccaneers will not kowtow to the new Governor in Jamaica who is bent on weakening the Island’s defences and destroying its currency. Ned Yorke and his Buccaneers must not remain idle. The third in a series set in the Caribbean, Dudley Pope reveals a masterful plot of subtle, seafaring lore wound around the tense excitement of adventure on the high seas.
Corsair
In the 1660's Jamaica was an uneasy island, occupied by Spain but settled by the English and French. When Admiral of the Brethren, Ned Yorke, a brave, loyal Buccaneer, learns that Spain is mounting a Caribbean fleet perhaps to protect the treasures of Spanish ships, or carry an army to Jamaica, he vows to find out the truth. Yorke’s audacious attacks on Spanish camps reveal all and the Buccaneers must fight a bloody, desperate battle to try and hinder them.
Convoy
A deadly game of cat and mouse unravels its way out of this spine tingling war story as Lieutenant Yorke must find an answer to one vital question: how are German U-Boats sinking merchant ships from inside the convoys? In this gripping saga of heroism and intrigue, Yorke discovers the fate of one entire convoy. Only his wit and daring can lead to its survival and that of himself.
Decoy
It is February 1942 and the war in the Atlantic looks grim for the Allied convoys. The ‘Great Blackout’ has started, leaving the spy centre of Bletchley Park in Buckinghamshire at a loss as to what the Nazis are planning. U-boat Command has changed the Hydra cipher. The Enigma cannot be broken. Cipher experts can no longer eavesdrop on Nazi command, which leaves convoys open for attack by packs of marauding Nazi submarines. Winning the Battle of the Atlantic will surely give Hitler a final victory. And who can stop him?

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