Page:The Naval Officer (1829), vol. 1.djvu/174

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THE NAVAL OFFICER.

ordered by him to cruize between Perpignan and Marseilles. We parted from the fleet on the following day, and kept the coast in a continued state of alarm. Not a vessel dared to shew her nose out of port: -we had her if she did. Batteries we laughed at, and either silenced them with our long eighteen-pounders, or landed and blew them up.

In one of these little skirmishes I had very nearly been taken, and should, in that case, have missed all the honour, and glory, and hairbreadth escapes which will be found related in the following pages. I should either have been sabred in mere retaliation, or marched off to Verdun for the remaining six years of the war.

We had landed to storm and blow up a battery, for which purpose we carried with us a bag of powder, and a train of canvas. Every thing went on prosperously. We came to a canal which it was necessary to cross, and the best swimmers were selected to convey the powder over