batteries were all crowded with spectators, gazing
in astonishment at the quiet and regularity which prevailed
through all the British ships, and the dangerous vicinity
in which they placed themselves to such formidable
means of defence. Lord Exmouth, therefore, began
to conceive hopes that his demands would still be granted;
but the delay, it appeared, was caused by the Algerines
being completely unprepared for so very sudden an
approach, insomuch that their guns were not shotted
at the moment when the Queen Charlotte swept past them,
and they were distinctly seen loading them as the
other ships were coming into line. Anxious, if
possible, to spare unnecessary effusion of blood,
his lordship, standing on the quarter-deck, repeatedly
waved his hat as a warning to the multitudes assembled
on the mole to retire, but his signal was unheeded,
and at a quarter before three in the afternoon the
first gun was fired at the Queen Charlotte from the
eastern battery, and two more at the Albion and Superb,
which were following. Then Lord Exmouth, having
seen only
the smoke of the gun, before the sound
reached him, said, with great alacrity, ’
That
will do; fire my fine fellows!’ and I am
sure that before his lordship had finished these words,
our broadside was given with great cheering, which
was fired three times within five or six minutes;
and at the same time the other ships did the same.
This first fire was so terrible, that they say more
than five hundred persons were killed and wounded by
it. And I believe this, because there was a great
crowd of people in every part, many of whom, after
the first discharge, I saw running away, under the
walls, like dogs, walking upon their feet and hands.
“After the attack took place on both sides in
this horrible manner, immediately the sky was darkened
by the smoke, the sun completely eclipsed, and the
horizon became dreary. Being exhausted by the
heat of that powerful sun, to which I was exposed
the whole day, and my ears being deafened by the roar
of the guns, and finding myself in the dreadful danger
of such a terrible engagement, in which I had never
been before, I was quite at a loss, and like an astonished
or stupid man, and did not know myself where I was.
At last his lordship, having perceived my situation,
said, ‘You have done your duty, now go below.’
Upon which I began to descend from the quarter-deck,
quite confounded and terrified, and not sure that
I should reach the cock-pit alive; for it was most
tremendous to hear the crashing of the shot, to see
the wounded men brought from one part, and the killed
from the other; and especially, at such a time, to
be found among the English seamen! and to witness
their manners, their activity, their courage, and their
cheerfulness during the battle!—it is really
most overpowering and beyond imagination.”