calling upon the civil power throughout the country
to support their officers in the discharge of their
duty. The sea-coast was divided into districts,
under the charge of a captain in the navy, who again
delegated sub-districts to lieutenants; and in this
manner all homeward-bound vessels were watched and
waited for, all ports were under supervision; and
in a day, if need were, a large number of men could
be added to the forces of his Majesty’s navy.
But if the Admiralty became urgent in their demands,
they were also willing to be unscrupulous. Landsmen,
if able-bodied, might soon be trained into good sailors;
and once in the hold of the tender, which always awaited
the success of the operations of the press-gang, it
was difficult for such prisoners to bring evidence
of the nature of their former occupations, especially
when none had leisure to listen to such evidence,
or were willing to believe it if they did listen,
or would act upon it for the release of the captive
if they had by possibility both listened and believed.
Men were kidnapped, literally disappeared, and nothing
was ever heard of them again. The street of a
busy town was not safe from such press-gang captures,
as Lord Thurlow could have told, after a certain walk
he took about this time on Tower Hill, when he, the
attorney-general of England, was impressed, when the
Admiralty had its own peculiar ways of getting rid
of tiresome besiegers and petitioners. Nor yet
were lonely inland dwellers more secure; many a rustic
went to a statute fair or ‘mop,’ and never
came home to tell of his hiring; many a stout young
farmer vanished from his place by the hearth of his
father, and was no more heard of by mother or lover;
so great was the press for men to serve in the navy
during the early years of the war with France, and
after every great naval victory of that war.
The servants of the Admiralty lay in wait for all
merchantmen and traders; there were many instances
of vessels returning home after long absence, and
laden with rich cargo, being boarded within a day’s
distance of land, and so many men pressed and carried
off, that the ship, with her cargo, became unmanageable
from the loss of her crew, drifted out again into
the wild wide ocean, and was sometimes found in the
helpless guidance of one or two infirm or ignorant
sailors; sometimes such vessels were never heard of
more. The men thus pressed were taken from the
near grasp of parents or wives, and were often deprived
of the hard earnings of years, which remained in the
hands of the masters of the merchantman in which they
had served, subject to all the chances of honesty or
dishonesty, life or death. Now all this tyranny
(for I can use no other word) is marvellous to us;
we cannot imagine how it is that a nation submitted
to it for so long, even under any warlike enthusiasm,
any panic of invasion, any amount of loyal subservience
to the governing powers. When we read of the military
being called in to assist the civil power in backing