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<h2> THE CRUISE OF THE "WASP" </h2>
<p>A crash as when some swollen cloud<br/>
Cracks o'er the tangled trees!<br/>
With side to side, and spar to spar,<br/>
Whose smoking decks are these?<br/>
I know St. George's blood-red cross,<br/>
Thou mistress of the seas,<br/>
But what is she whose streaming bars<br/>
Roll out before the breeze?<br/>
<br/>
Ah, well her iron ribs are knit,<br/>
Whose thunders strive to quell<br/>
The bellowing throats, the blazing lips,<br/>
That pealed the Armada's knell!<br/>
The mist was cleared,—a wreath of stars<br/>
Rose o'er the crimsoned swell,<br/>
And, wavering from its haughty peak,<br/>
The cross of England fell!<br/>
—Holmes.<br/></p>
<p>In the war of 1812 the little American navy, including only a dozen
frigates and sloops of war, won a series of victories against the English,
the hitherto undoubted masters of the sea, that attracted an attention
altogether out of proportion to the force of the combatants or the actual
damage done. For one hundred and fifty years the English ships of war had
failed to find fit rivals in those of any other European power, although
they had been matched against each in turn; and when the unknown navy of
the new nation growing up across the Atlantic did what no European navy
had ever been able to do, not only the English and Americans, but the
people of Continental Europe as well, regarded the feat as important out
of all proportion to the material aspects of the case. The Americans first
proved that the English could be beaten at their own game on the sea. They
did what the huge fleets of France, Spain, and Holland had failed to do,
and the great modern writers on naval warfare in Continental Europe—men
like Jurien de la Graviere—have paid the same attention to these
contests of frigates and sloops that they give to whole fleet actions of
other wars.</p>
<p>Among the famous ships of the Americans in this war were two named the
Wasp. The first was an eighteen-gun ship-sloop, which at the very outset
of the war captured a British brig-sloop of twenty guns, after an
engagement in which the British fought with great gallantry, but were
knocked to Pieces, while the Americans escaped comparatively unscathed.
Immediately afterward a British seventy-four captured the victor. In
memory of her the Americans gave the same name to one of the new sloops
they were building. These sloops were stoutly made, speedy vessels which
in strength and swiftness compared favorably with any ships of their class
in any other navy of the day, for the American shipwrights were already as
famous as the American gunners and seamen. The new Wasp, like her sister
ships, carried twenty-two guns and a crew of one hundred and seventy men,
and was ship-rigged. Twenty of her guns were 32-pound carronades, while
for bow-chasers she had two "long Toms." It was in the year 1814 that the
Wasp sailed from the United States to prey on the navy and commerce of
Great Britain. Her commander was a gallant South Carolinian named Captain
Johnson Blakeley. Her crew were nearly all native Americans, and were an
exceptionally fine set of men. Instead of staying near the American coasts
or of sailing the high seas, the Wasp at once headed boldly for the
English Channel, to carry the war to the very doors of the enemy.</p>
<p>At that time the English fleets had destroyed the navies of every other
power of Europe, and had obtained such complete supremacy over the French
that the French fleets were kept in port. Off these ports lay the great
squadrons of the English ships of the line, never, in gale or in calm,
relaxing their watch upon the rival war-ships of the French emperor. So
close was the blockade of the French ports, and so hopeless were the
French of making headway in battle with their antagonists, that not only
the great French three-deckers and two-deckers, but their frigates and
sloops as well, lay harmless in their harbors, and the English ships
patroled the seas unchecked in every direction. A few French privateers
still slipped out now and then, and the far bolder and more formidable
American privateersmen drove hither and thither across the ocean in their
swift schooners and brigantines, and harried the English commerce without
mercy.</p>
<p>The Wasp proceeded at once to cruise in the English Channel and off the
coasts of England, France, and Spain. Here the water was traversed
continually by English fleets and squadrons and single ships of war, which
were sometimes covoying detachments of troops for Wellington's Peninsular
army, sometimes guarding fleets of merchant vessels bound homeward, and
sometimes merely cruising for foes. It was this spot, right in the teeth
of the British naval power, that the Wasp chose for her cruising ground.
Hither and thither she sailed through the narrow seas, capturing and
destroying the merchantmen, and by the seamanship of her crew and the
skill and vigilance of her commander, escaping the pursuit of frigate and
ship of the line. Before she had been long on the ground, one June
morning, while in chase of a couple of merchant ships, she spied a sloop
of war, the British brig Reindeer, of eighteen guns and a hundred and
twenty men. The Reindeer was a weaker ship than the Wasp, her guns were
lighter, and her men fewer; but her commander, Captain Manners, was one of
the most gallant men in the splendid British navy, and he promptly took up
the gage of battle which the Wasp threw down.</p>
<p>The day was calm and nearly still; only a light wind stirred across the
sea. At one o'clock the Wasp's drum beat to quarters, and the sailors and
marines gathered at their appointed posts. The drum of the Reindeer
responded to the challenge, and with her sails reduced to fighting trim,
her guns run out, and every man ready, she came down upon the Yankee ship.
On her forecastle she had rigged a light carronade, and coming up from
behind, she five times discharged this pointblank into the American sloop;
then in the light air the latter luffed round, firing her guns as they
bore, and the two ships engaged yard-arm to yard-arm. The guns leaped and
thundered as the grimy gunners hurled them out to fire and back again to
load, working like demons. For a few minutes the cannonade was tremendous,
and the men in the tops could hardly see the decks for the wreck of flying
splinters. Then the vessels ground together, and through the open ports
the rival gunners hewed, hacked, and thrust at one another, while the
black smoke curled up from between the hulls. The English were suffering
terribly. Captain Manners himself was wounded, and realizing that he was
doomed to defeat unless by some desperate effort he could avert it, he
gave the signal to board. At the call the boarders gathered, naked to the
waist, black with powder and spattered with blood, cutlas and pistol in
hand. But the Americans were ready. Their marines were drawn up on deck,
the pikemen stood behind the bulwarks, and the officers watched, cool and
alert, every movement of the foe. Then the British sea-dogs tumbled
aboard, only to perish by shot or steel. The combatants slashed and
stabbed with savage fury, and the assailants were driven back. Manners
sprang to their head to lead them again himself, when a ball fired by one
of the sailors in the American tops crashed through his skull, and he
fell, sword in hand, with his face to the foe, dying as honorable a death
as ever a brave man died in fighting against odds for the flag of his
country. As he fell the American officers passed the word to board. With
wild cheers the fighting sailormen sprang forward, sweeping the wreck of
the British force before them, and in a minute the Reindeer was in their
possession. All of her officers, and nearly two thirds of the crew, were
killed or wounded; but they had proved themselves as skilful as they were
brave, and twenty-six of the Americans had been killed or wounded.</p>
<p>The Wasp set fire to her prize, and after retiring to a French port to<br/>
refit, came out again to cruise. For some time she met no antagonist<br/>
of her own size with which to wage war, and she had to exercise the<br/>
sharpest vigilance to escape capture. Late one September afternoon, when<br/>
she could see ships of war all around her, she selected one which was<br/>
isolated from the others, and decided to run alongside her and try to<br/>
sink her after nightfall. Accordingly she set her sails in pursuit, and<br/>
drew steadily toward her antagonist, a big eighteen-gun brig, the Avon,<br/>
a ship more powerful than the Reindeer. The Avon kept signaling to two<br/>
other British war vessels which were in sight—one an eighteen-gun brig<br/>
and the other a twenty-gun ship; they were so close that the Wasp<br/>
was afraid they would interfere before the combat could be ended.<br/>
Nevertheless, Blakeley persevered, and made his attack with equal skill<br/>
and daring. It was after dark when he ran alongside his opponent,<br/>
and they began forthwith to exchange furious broadsides. As the ships<br/>
plunged and wallowed in the seas, the Americans could see the clusters<br/>
of topmen in the rigging of their opponent, but they knew nothing of<br/>
the vessel's name or of her force, save only so far as they felt it. The<br/>
firing was fast and furious, but the British shot with bad aim, while<br/>
the skilled American gunners hulled their opponent at almost every<br/>
discharge. In a very few minutes the Avon was in a sinking condition,<br/>
and she struck her flag and cried for quarter, having lost forty or<br/>
fifty men, while but three of the Americans had fallen. Before the Wasp<br/>
could take possession of her opponent, however, the two war vessels<br/>
to which the Avon had been signaling came up. One of them fired at the<br/>
Wasp, and as the latter could not fight two new foes, she ran off easily<br/>
before the wind. Neither of her new antagonists followed her, devoting<br/>
themselves to picking up the crew of the sinking Avon.<br/>
<br/>
It would be hard to find a braver feat more skilfully performed<br/>
than this; for Captain Blakeley, with hostile foes all round him, had<br/>
closed with and sunk one antagonist not greatly his inferior in force,<br/>
suffering hardly any loss himself, while two of her friends were coming<br/>
to her help.<br/></p>
<p>Both before and after this the Wasp cruised hither and thither making
prizes. Once she came across a convoy of ships bearing arms and munitions
to Wellington's army, under the care of a great two-decker. Hovering
about, the swift sloop evaded the two-decker's movements, and actually cut
out and captured one of the transports she was guarding, making her escape
unharmed. Then she sailed for the high seas. She made several other
prizes, and on October 9 spoke a Swedish brig.</p>
<p>This was the last that was ever heard of the gallant Wasp. She never again
appeared, and no trace of any of those aboard her was ever found. Whether
she was wrecked on some desert coast, whether she foundered in some
furious gale, or what befell her none ever knew. All that is certain is
that she perished, and that all on board her met death in some one of the
myriad forms in which it must always be faced by those who go down to the
sea in ships; and when she sank there sank one of the most gallant ships
of the American navy, with as brave a captain and crew as ever sailed from
any port of the New World.</p>
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