under Admiral Duckworth, were sufficient for service
at Gibraltar and Cadiz, if the latter port was deserted.
Four of the line were about Minorca, constantly, though
inefficiently, threatened from the adjacent coasts
of Spain. Three were blockading Malta, conjointly
with the Portuguese vessels. Sidney Smith with
his division remained in the Levant. Troubridge
was operating with a few ships on the coast of Italy,
against Civita Vecchia, still in the hands of the
French. A small squadron was maintained on the
Riviera of Genoa, disturbing the communications of
the French, and keeping touch with the advance of
the Austro-Russians; but it was expected that the
Russian fleet, as was natural and proper, would soon
assume the duty of co-operating with their general,
Suwarrow. The smaller British cruisers were distributed
among these various duties. The flagship “Foudroyant”
was at Palermo, whither the King returned from Naples
on the 8th of August, and there the headquarters of
the squadron remained during Nelson’s command.
Soon after this arrival in Palermo the King conferred
upon him the title of Duke of Bronte, with an estate
of the same name in Sicily, valued at L3,000 per annum.
After this the admiral for a time signed his papers
as Bronte Nelson,[1] changed subsequently to Bronte
Nelson of the Nile, and finally settled down to Nelson
and Bronte, which was his form of signature for the
last four years of his life. He placed upon his
new estate an annual charge of L500 in favor of his
father for the term of the latter’s life.
“Receive this small tribute, my honoured father,”
he wrote, “as a mark of gratitude to the best
of parents from his most dutiful son.”
On the 20th of September he received letters from
the Admiralty, investing him with the chief command,
“till the return of Lord Keith or some other
your superior officer.” He was not, however,
allowed the appointments of a commander-in-chief,
and often complained of the inadequacy of his staff
to the extent of his duties. Nelson naturally
hoped that his long and eminent services in that particular
field, and the conspicuous ability he had shown on
so many occasions, would lead to the station remaining
permanently in his hands, and that Lord Keith, who
was now in England, would succeed in due course to
the Channel Fleet, whose commander, Lord Bridport,
soon after retired. The Mediterranean was naturally
attributed to a vice-admiral, and one of some seniority;
but Nelson was now a rear-admiral of the Red, the
highest color, not far, therefore, from promotion,
and it would not be an unreasonable conclusion that
the same ministry which had been fortunate enough
to choose him for the campaign of the Nile, might now
prefer to entrust to such able and enterprising hands
the great interests of the Mediterranean at large.