Battles
of the nineteenth century
. Page
447
The Bombardment Of Alexandria
I do know precisely how many years it is since the fringe of the
East became a fashion for a man with the coupons; but I am convinced
that fashion has done very little for Alexandria.
It may be that the finer glories of Cairo and the Pyramids have
conspired with the keepers of the most expensive hotels in the world, to
rob the city of the Ptolemies of her due share of eulogy and of cheap
trips; it may be that the tourist is unwilling to admit the lesser
fascination when he was experienced the greater.
Certain it is, however, that he permits himself to be hurried
from the bazaars of Alexandria, and carried swiftly fro the streets
while yet his eyes are dazed with the first and unsurpassable
impressions of the East. “All
this you shall see, and more when you come to Damascus.” The claim is true-it is also misleading.
My own memories of Alexandria are chiefly those of ’87-more
particularly, they cling about a fast run I made upon a schooner yacht
from Malta to the Pharos of the later-day bur remembered Ptolemy.
We were then in charge of the exceedingly careful amateur, who
sailed his own ship, and was not a little proud of the exactness of his
mathematics. I remember
well the language he provoked when he fetched us out of bed at three
o’ clock in the morning to assure us we had made the light at the
precise moment of his promise. We
had gone to bed with the dark surging water of the Mediterranean for out
horizon. No ship was to be
seen; no point of sight but the dull and gloomy clouds looming up
heavily from the African coast. But
when we came on deck at the invitation of the master, the scene was
beautiful beyond experience. A
generous moon made lakes of golden light upon the darker background of
the resting seas; a big steamer, whose many lamps shone like the lights
of a moving city, flashed by on her way to Malta; the glowing lantern of
the Pharos stood up like a beacon on a hill.
“Gentlemen,” said the skipper, waving his arm with a lordly
sweep, in sublime unconsciousness of the fact that he wore a dressing
gown,” yonder is the city of Cleopatra.
I will put you on the quay when the sun rises.”
To step from the boat of a yacht to the quay at Alexandria is to
step from the West to the fringe of the East.
All about you are porters, guides, beggars, loafers, thieves,
cutthroats, and impostors. Bales
of cotton, barrels, hampers, trolleys lumber the wharves.
The din and babble are beyond description.
A hundred rogues strive and push if thereby they may touch the
hem of your garment and claim baksheesh.
Pass through the customs, and so out to the native quarters and
to the bazaar, and the scene is scarce to be described.
Men of every Eastern nation seem here to congregate.
Turks curse Greeks; Greeks, in their turn, curse Jews and Copts,
Hindu’s, Nubians, and Albanians.
The blaze of colour is dazzling, yet ever picturesque.
Dirks are sheathed in gorgeous girdles; the butts of pistols
protrude upon richly embroidered vests and amazing tunics.
Black men and white men, brown men and yellow men; some with
jackets, some with long flowing robes, some almost naked, urge you to
deal or throw themselves upon your pity.
Donkey boys hasten to show you how well they understand your
tongue, in the polite and well-meant invitation to “have a donkey,
sir.” Often you step
aside to avoid the lurch of the camel; your eyes follow the stately
swing of the Arab from the desert as he paces some narrow alley, with
head bent and his long gun in his hand.
Priests abound Greek priests, Coptic priests, Roman priests.
No nation seems unrepresentative in the medley of sound and
strange colours; of narrow, crooked, unpaved lanes and gorgeous modern
enterprises.
If this were a description rather of the Alexandria of fifteen
years ago than of the Alexandria of today, it is the better suited for
the purposes of my paper. Any
endeavour to make clear the sequence of events which led up to the
bombardment and subsequent sack of the city must include some attempt to
describe that curious coupling of West to East which has been a teature
of the place since Mehemet Ali sought to restore its greatness, and to
rear up a new fabric upon the ashes of decay which the Turk had left.
In the year 1882 you found many races in the seat of the
Ptolemies; but a broad line of demarcation between the two forces was
clearly laid down. While
Corps and Greeks and Hindu’s and Arabs swarmed in the bazaars, and a
first impression was one of many peoples and many creeds, a rough
division was easy to make Christian and Mohammedans-between these lay
the Egyptian question, so far as the city was concerned with it. Side by side the strongholds of the two powers stood- one,
the dirty unpaved streets, the booths, and kennels and bazaars; the
other, the great square of Mehemet Ali, with the cafes and commercial
buildings, the Palais de Justice, the churches, the theatre, and the
houses of the merchants. Everything,
which tends to promote racial hatred and national instability, was here
to be discerned, when in the earlier months of the year 1882 the
dangerous problem became ripe for partial solution.
A national party strove for so-called freedom; a Christian party
strove for many stable guarantees.
Arabs hated Greeks and Copts; Christians warred against the Arab
in turn, and went in fear of him. Year
by year the beacons of revolution were plied, until, in the last moments
of Arabi’s power, the flicker of a crisis was sufficient to light
them; and these beacons being kindled, gave the signal for the Egyptian
campaign of 1882.
I am not concerned in this paper with the defence of Arabi Pasha,
or with the discussion of those large claims made on his behalf by Mr.
Scawen Blunt and others at the beginning of the Egyptian war.
It is sufficient for me to remember that he was War minister to
the Khedive in the earlier months of each year 1882, and that he was the
spokesman of all those turbulent elements of Mohammedan dominion, which
threatened at one time to make him the most successful dictator of the
latter half of the century. Patriot
possibly he was; but that pure patriotism was not the ultimate goal of
his ambitions all the events of that strange year made manifest.
No doubt, the antipathy to European influences, and general
hatred of the European colony in Egypt, helped Arabi largely in his
demand, in the year 1881, for a general increase of the army, and for a
more popular and purely Egyptian ministry.
But once he found the Khedive pliant in his hands, the step from
agitation to action was a short one.
Early in the next year we find the weak Prince Tewfik nominated
by the Powers, and Arabi setting up practically as the dictator of the
Egyptian peoples. His cry
that the foreigner should be driven out of the country brought thousands
to his banner. That he had
the sympathy of his countrymen there can be no question.
That it was impossible for us as a Power to submit to his
authority, and to the government by arms, which he sought to set up, was
equally apparent. Thus in
June of the year 1882 we found ourselves fighting for the Khedive
against his own minister of War, and engaged in an undertaking which
could end only in our final expulsion from the country or our temporary
occupation of it.
The first sparks of war were to be observed in Alexandria in the
June of the last named year. A
sudden rioting and massacre of Christians principally Greeks-added to an
insult to the British Consul, sowed the seeds of that which was to
mature so quickly. For many weeks our Mediterranean fleet, under the command of
Admiral Sir Beauchamp Seymour, lay off the harbours of the city as a
visible token of our determination to uphold the Khedive against Arabi,
and of our intention to protect the Christian population.
Hundreds of the latter meanwhile fled from Alexandria-some to
Greece, the majority to Italy. It
became dangerous for a European to venture abroad alone even in the
earlier hours of the day. Robberies
were frequent, and assassinations common.
Arabi himself waxed bolder every day.
He boasted that he could, with the forces at his command, hold
the city against the fleets of all Europe.
He busied himself with the training of engineers; he began at the
last to strengthen the forts and to throw up new earthworks.
It was an anxious moment for “Jack” when, on the night of
July 6th, 1882, the search light was turned upon the
fortifications near the Ras-el-Tin Palace, and two hundred of Arabi’s
sappers were seen busy with pick and shovel.
The result was the immediate demand for the cessation of all
works upon the forts, and finally, for the temporary surrender of them.
Arabi, seeking discreetly to temporise, neglected to furnish the
necessary guarantees met us practically with a point blank refusal.
Our reply was the issue of an ultimatum on the morning of July 10th.
Either the force was to be surrendered, or the city was to be
bombarded. Arabi chose
bombardment, and our ships were cleared for action.
This was the situation in the town; let us see what was our
position in the harbours before it.
Admiral Sir Beauchamp Seymour was then in command of eight
battleships and of eleven gunboats; the latter principally of the
smallest class. Nearly all these ships would be regarded as more or less
obsolete today, though the flagship Invincible carried four 80-ton guns
and boasted a speed of 12.6 knots an hour. Of the others, the Inflexible was the largest, this being the
biggest ship in the engagement, and one, which carried, like the
flagship, four 80-ton guns. With
her were the Sultan the Superb, the Alexandra the Temeraire, the
Penelope, and the Monarch. The
latter ship, built in the years 1867 and 1868 respectively, were then
comparatively old’ but the Superb, the Inflexible, the Temeraire, and
the Alexandra represented us in our then most recent naval phase.
That was the day of a belief in big guns.
Europe had watched the building of 68-, 80-, and even 100-ton
guns, and had asked expectantly, “What of the result?”
The revolt of Arabi promised us that which we had speculated
upon, the discussed, and weighed up for forty years-the spectacle of our
fleet in action. When at last the crisis came-when the ultimatum went forth,
and French, American, and Italian warships steamed from the harbours of
Alexandria, while refugees fled from the city as from a pestilence-the
excitement waxed strong. As
for our own Jack Tars, they were sick with hope.
For weeks they had been saying, “Tomorrow, tomorrow is the
day!” For weeks they had
borne with disappointment and postponement as they lay under the shadows
of the great forts, and waited for the booming of the signal gun.
But now, surely, the hour was at hand.
Small wonder of they doubted that such a good thing could ever
be.
For the fuller understanding of the engagement of the famous July
11th, let us take our stand upon the flagship Invincible,
anchored outside the harbour of the city.
If we study the map, which accompanies this chapter, the scene
will be clearer to us. We
see at a glance that there are really two harbours before us-an inner
harbour and a large outer basin defended by the breakwater.
To the southeast there stands up the great Marabout fort, this
forming the southern point of the bay, whereon the city is built.
To the northeast is the Pharos fort, boasting more than a hundred
guns of all calibres, and conspicuous for its massive tower roughly
speaking, you may regard the shape of the shore of the Alexandria of
today of that of a pair of horns sticking out into the sea with the
Pharos Light as the north tip and the Ras-el-Tin Palace and lighthouse
as the southern tip. Southward of this palace, and in the curve of the southern
bay, lie the famous Mex forts, and from these to Fort Marabout the whole
of the shore bristles with guns. It
was against these guns that our men thirsted to try their luck, when on
the night of July 10th they turned in like excited children,
and almost prayed that the morrow would find them listening to the music
of the great artillery.
The Condor was the first ship to be about on the following
morning, but long before six o’clock the whole fleet was moving and
active. At that hour the men were already stripped to their flannel
jerseys, the great guns were charged; the decks were cleared for action.
All now knew the admiral’s plan.
He had determined upon three attacks-the Invincible, the Monarch,
and the Penelope to begin work from the harbour; the Inflexible to
attack the Mex forts; the Superb, the Sultan, and the Alexandra to
centre their first upon the harbour, and to centre their fire upon the
forts by the Ras-el-Tin Palace, and then, steaming to the northeast, to
demolish Fort Ada and the Pharos. As
for the puny gunboats, they were to lie behind the warships, and to act
as occasion required. That
they were permitted soon to depart from this inglorious position the
whole six records makes manifest.
Six o’clock in the morning, and the men were at the stations.
Forbiddingly and majestically, the dark hulls of the eight
ironclads stood up above the sunlit water.
Scores of merchantmen, which had showed their heels to the
harbours directly, bombardment was threatened, now lay securely at
anchor to be spectators of so glorious a sight.
On shore no unusual signs of activity were at first apparent.
There was no ostensible signal of truce.
Lieutenant Smith, who had been sent to report upon the truth of
the story of Arabi’s men were busy with armaments near the
Slaughterhouse, returned to tell of active work and of sappers busy.
Throughout the fleet, excitement was at its zenith.
Jack had stripped himself for the fray with the zest that a
schoolboy strips for football. Wound
up by long weeks of expectation, he scarce dared to believe that the cup
was at his lips, even though the muzzle of the 80-tonners showed grimly
above his decks, and any moment might bring the thunders of discharge.
For nearly an hour stood at his post, hoping against hope.
Half past six came, and still the guns were silent; a quarter to
seven was marked, and no note of command was heard.
Ten minutes later, and in a measure unexpectedly the Alexandra
fired a shell at the Pharos, and the bombardment had begun.
The smoke of this shot had scarce floated away on the breeze when
the flagship hoisted the signal “All vessels engage batteries.”
Such a signal was like the bell of a prompter rung to raise the
curtain upon a stage play. In
a moment the quiet and the expectancy had given place to the thunder of
cannon and the heat of battle. An
American officer, who witnessed the action from a warship in the offing,
declared that a hurricane of sound seemed to rush up over the sea.
Instantly, clouds of smoke and leaping fire began to veil the
forts. Crashing reports,
the sharper noise of smaller guns, even the singing of bullets, made the
music of the morning. While
our own heavy guns were fired at long intervals, while there were pauses
when you might have said that the fleet was resting, the rolling reports
from the shore were never still. Fort
Marabout, with its two 18-ton guns and its host of smaller weapons,
emitted a continuing cloud of fire; the guns by Ras-el-Tin-two of them
of twelve tons-pounded bravely at the Superb, the Sultan, and the
Alexandra. The heavy
weapons of the Pharos, joined anon to those by the Ras-el-Tin, belched
smoke and flame unceasingly. Our
own attack was concentrated upon Fort Marabout, the Mex forts, and the
fortifications near the palace. At
this time the value of fore and aft guns upon our big ships was
illustrated humorously. The
mighty Inflexible, standing off the outer harbour, thundered away with
her fore guns at Ras-el-Tin, while from her stern she pounded Marabout.
If the shooting of some of the ships was not particularly good,
that of others was admirable. Every
shot from the Invincible either burst in the forts or struck the
parapets heavily. Clouds of
dust and earth, heavy lumps of stone rolling seawards, spoke eloquently
of the accuracy of her gunners. A
middy, named Hardy, tucked up in her maintop, helped with signals whose
value was beyond praise. Never
did a marker at Wimbledon follow the path of a bullet with keener eyes
than those with which Midshipman Hardy watched the flight of the great
shells. Though a hail of
shot fell all about him, and the smoke was so heavy over the decks that
the gunners were like men walking in the dark, the accuracy of the
lad’s judgement was unfailing even the admiral thanked him; and as hit
after hit was recorded, the whole crew fell to cheering with voices that
were heard be every sailor in the fleet.
“It was Eton and Harrow over again,” said an observer. And that was true.
If this plucky lad deserves a line of special eulogy, we must not
forget that others were at the same time displaying courage worthy of
the highest traditions of Jack in action.
The story of the Condor has been written many times.
It will bear writing again and yet again whosesoever the record
of our Navy is laid down. I
have said that this gallant little ship, whose only armament was two
small 64-pounders and one 7-inch Woolwich rifled gun, had been the first
to be moving on that memorable day.
She was also the first of the gunboats to get into action.
Though the instructions of the admiral were that the gad-flies
should be more or less spectators, acting as the occasion required, it
was not many minutes before Lord Charles Beresford determined that the
occasion required him to try his three small guns upon the massive
fortifications of Marabout. The
idea, bold to the last point of courage, was not lacking method.
It was lord Charles’s notion that the Gatling might tickle up
the gunners of Marabout and send so many of them to an honourable grave
that the bigger guns would find no servants.
With this in his head, he took a liberal view of the general
instructions, and bringing the Condor to within twelve hundred yards of
the fort-the shoal prevented him from getting nearer- he began his merry
attack. Never did a crew
follow a daring skipper more resolutely.
The men of the Condor had been near to shedding tears of rage in
the early morning when an order from the flagship compelled them to go
to the assistance of the Temeraire, which had floundered upon the shore.
They had thought that they must do the work of a mere tug, and
miss such glorious fun as was to be had in the neighbourhood of
Arabi’s guns. From that
degradation Lord Charles saved them swiftly.
The rattle of the Gatling, the Crack of his larger weapons,
seemed at first like the music of a mere farce.
His shot, said observers would be as a hail of peas to the
gunners in the great fort. That
the gunners took the same view was proved by their action.
They continued to concentrate all their fire upon three warships,
which were troubling them. As for that toy boat which menaced them, they regarded it as
a fine stimulant to laughter.
It is not recorded how soon these laughter loving gentlemen
changed their opinion. Certain
is it that three of their guns were disabled, and that many of them must
have paid the penalty of their humour when at last they awoke to the
situation, and concentrated all their fire upon the wasp whose sting
they had felt so sharply. Shell
after shell then hissed over the plucky little ship.
One struck her heavily, but not in a vital line.
Shot seemed to rain near her decks, and still she stuck to her
work, while other gunboats came to her assistance, and the Bittern, the
Beacon, the Decoy, and the Cygnet were all barking merrily.
Soon the fire from Marabout began to slacken. The telling shooting from the Invincible, whose huge shells
went home, every time, coupled to the merry attack of the gunboats,
finished the work. The
admiral signalled, “Well done, Condor.”
Cheer after cheer-British cheers-rang over the waters.
The Inflexible took up the cry.
Men roared like savages in their delight. The fleet declared that a deed of surpassing bravery had been
done that day.
The hour of action is not the fitting hour to meditate upon
individual deeds, and the attention of Jack was soon called from the
Condor to new scenes. It
was plain to him that the hours of “Horrible Pasha” were numbered in
Alexandria. Marabout was
done with; the guns of the Mex Forts were so far silenced at one
o’clock that a force was despatched to land and, is possible, finish
the business speedily. This
force consisted of Lieutenant Baron Bradford in command, of
Flag-Lieutenant the Hon. Mr Lambton, of Lieutenant Poore of the
Invincible, of Major Tullock, and of Mr. Hardy.
So great was the impatience of its members to get ashore, that
Major Tullock sprang from the launch and swarm to the outworks-an act of
bravery surpassed by no act upon that memorable day.
But the Egyptian soldiers made no reply; a fact for no one has
accounted satisfactorily to this day.
While our men expected every moment to hear the hiss of their
bullets, or to see them sweeping to the charge, not a sound was raised
nor a uniform discerned. Dexterously
and quickly the two 10-inch guns were burst and the others spiked.
A shot from the Invincible had already destroyed the powder
magazine, and half past two had not come when Mex was done with.
From that hour until half past four, when the career of
“Horrible Pasha” in Alexandria was practically closed, the account
of the bombardment is chiefly an account of the silencing of Fort Ada
and of the Pharos. To the
Inflexible was given the greater part of the latter task, and right well
did she acquit herself. The
shells from her 80-ton guns thundered upon the doomed town like a
visitation from the heavens. Earth
and mortar and debris rose in blinding clouds.
The neighbouring buildings suffered heavily; even the English
Consulate was threatened. Anon,
a terrific explosion spoke of the wrecking of her powder magazine.
Two hundred men, an authority computed, were killed by that
single discharge. The
Superb, the Sultan and the Alexandra helping the end, rained great shot
upon the rapidly succumbing forts.
When two bells in the first dogwatch were struck, the voice of
Arabi was no longer to be heard. The
admiral caused the “Cease fire” to be signalled.
The bombardment of Alexandria was a victorious fact.
We can well imagine in what spirits Jack turned into his bunk
that night. To say that he
was excited is to use a commonplace where a commonplace will not
suffice. Few in that fleet had been a shot fired in earnest from a
great battleship. Few had
been permitted to witness a beaten and cowed city in the first hours of
its destruction. When Jack
turned in, flames were still to be seen in the European quarters of the
town. Like beacons of the
defeated, they flared up at many points, kindled as much by the looters,
whom Arabi had left as his legacy, as by the shells which our guns had
dropped. While they burned,
and after the question, “What of tomorrow?” Jack fell to discussing today.
Already it was whispered that the fleet had lost only ten men.
Two were killed upon the Sultan; which had been hit no less than
twenty-three times. The
Alexandra, who had fourteen shells in her, had lost one man.
The Superb and the Inflexible each mourned one brave fellow.
Of wounded there were twenty-seven; the unfortunate Sultan
nursing of these, the Invincible six, the Alexandra three, the
Inflexible two, the Superb one. To the list of dead, unhappily, there was added subsequently
the name of Lieutenant Jackson, who was struck and mortally wounded by
the same shell, which killed the carpenter of the Inflexible. But, viewed in any light, the loss was amazingly small.
Granted that the gunners of Arabi were unworthy of the officers
who led them so gallantly, none the less did it seem miraculous that our
ships should face the fire of some hundreds of guns for ten hours, and
that three of them should not have a dead man to show.
The little Condor had no casualty of any sort.
The crews of the other gunboats were without a scratch.
Jack told his mates this, and his jubilation was unbounded.
Nor could he forget that rewards were ripe for plucking.
The name of Lord Charles was among many tongues.
Midshipman Hardy was a hero of the night.
Major Hardy was a hero of the night.
Major Tullock’s plucky swim through the surf before Fort
Marabout, the daring of his comrades when spiking the guns, was things
to tell and tell again. It
was good to hear that Gunner Harding, of the Alexandra, had picked up a
live shell from his main deck and soused it in water, with the coolness
of a man rinsing a rag. None
knew at that time Arabi had withdrawn his forces and retired upon
Rosetta. “The morning gun
will be a signal for resumption,” said Jack.
In which hope he lay down at last upon a night to be forever
memorable among the nights, which he would live.
On the morning of the 12th an early observation made
it clear that the survivors of Ariba’s force had not been altogether
idle during the night. Fort
Moncrieff, whose two-barbette guns, mounted on the Moncrieff system, had
offered such a stubborn and lasting resistance to the fire of the
Alexandra, the Superb, and the Sultan, obviously had been repaired.
Elsewhere, however, there was no sign either of activity or of
truce; and when this was plain, the Inflexible and Temeraire opened fire
again, their first three shots practically laying low all that Ariba’s
men had done in the night. With
these shots the whole work of the morning ended.
A white flag, displayed upon Ras-el-Tin, caused the admiral to
signal the “Cease firing” almost with the echo of the first gun.
For the rest of the day our men lay idle, while in Alexandria
herself awful scenes of massacre and of pillage were being prepared for. Nearly the last act of Arabi had been to let loose his so
called Bedouins-in reality cutthroats and robbers of the finest brand.
When night fell on the 12th, these men were already
busy. How many Christians
they slaughtered in the streets, what was the sum total of their
pillage, will never be known. All
that our men could surmise was the story of the leaping flames, which
rose up in clouds of lurid fire from every quarter of the city. Alexandria was burning destroyed by those who had boasted of
their desire to become a nation and to save their country.
Throughout the night the nameless horrors were at their zenith.
The tremendous holocaust lighted the devils at their work of
murder and of pillage. How
many defenceless men cried for mercy and were not answered, how many
were stabbed or ripped open and shot, history will never tell us.
We can only imagine the scene so full of terror and of dread.
No sack of modern times is to be named with this sack of the city
of the Ptolemies. During
two days the riot, the incendiaries, and the murder were unchecked.
Lack of instruction held the admiral’s hand.
For forty-eight hours he felt it impossible to send help to the
hunted Christians, whose brother’s blood was running red in the alleys
and in the squares. When,
at last a landing was affected, and a heroic attempt was made to grapple
with the situation, Alexandria was no more.
Empty rocking shells marked the spot where houses had been;
smouldering heaps of cinders stood for churches and for cafes.
In the European quarter there was hardly a building, which had
not some scar to show. The
French Consulate was a heap of ruins.
In the Rue Cherif Pasha, only the Anglo-Egyptian bank stood up.
So great a space had been cleared by fire around the statue of
Mehemet Ali that those most familiar with the centre could not tell
where they were. Ras-el-Tin
had been looted with a fine appreciation of finish.
In the Rosetta Road the very pavements were littered with the
broken clock cases, the remnants of jewel boxes, the splinters of the
plunder and the loot. An
early examination of the forts-one of the first tasks of or men spoke of
a success for our guns beyond any which had been looked for.
Jack heard with wonder that every engineer or gunner in the
service of Arabi had been killed. The
famed Pharos fort was a heap of ruins woeful to see.
The great tower had become a crumbling mass of ruins.
Of the hundred weapons of all sizes, not one had escaped.
Two great 12-ton guns had been so shelled that they stood
straight up on end, their muzzles pointing to the sky.
In Fort Ada the destruction was even greater.
The Mex forts were so many acres of shattered batteries sown with
the dust of parapets. In
Marabout itself there was a fresh testimony to the skill of the
invincible gunners. They had espied from their decks a building in the nature of
a tomb rising up in the centre of Marabout.
The word was given that this tomb should be held scared, if that
were possible. When our men
entered the fort they found the sarcophagus absolutely unharmed, though
shell had fallen all around it, and the environing destruction was
appalling. Nor may I
forget, when speaking of these details, that in Fort Ada, Jack came upon
the customary cat, yawning and prowling, as though inexpressibly bored
the whole thing. Once our
blue jackets were in possession of the city, their task of battling with
the flames and with the marauders was quickly accomplished.
How Sir Archibald Alison and his companies grappled with the
looters bequeathed to us by Arabi, is a story belonging rightly to him
who speaks of the subsequent rightly to him who speaks of the subsequent
campaign in Egypt. It is sufficient to remember here that out ships stood up for
ten hours to forts that would not have disgraced any port in Europe;
that our men proved themselves to be possessed of all those qualities
which gave to our forefathers the supremacy of the sea; that our navy
vindicated itself before Europe as a force worthy of a nation to whom
the kingship of the deep implies all that makes for national greatness.
These things we record, and must ever record, with a deep sense
of gratitude. Whenever the
history of our navy is written, then must the historian beware less he
turn aside lightly from the memorable events of that memorable 11th
of July.