The Project Gutenberg eBook, The Silent Watchers, by Bennet Copplestone



THE SILENT WATCHERS


By the Same Author

THE LOST NAVAL PAPERS

A series of exciting stories which reveal

the English Secret Service as it really

is—silent, unsleeping, and supremely

competent.

“William Dawson is a great creation, a sheer

delight. If Mr. Bennet Copplestone’s intriguing

book meets with half the success it deserves, the

inimitable Sherlock Holmes will soon be out-rivalled

in popularity by the inscrutable William

Dawson.”—Daily Telegraph.

$1.50 Net

JITNY AND THE BOYS

“The book is full of the thoughts which make

us proud to-day and help us to face to-morrow.

Yes, ‘Jitny’ has my blessing.”—Punch.

“Motoring people could do nothing better than

sit down and have a spin, in imagination, by reading

this book. A clinking motor-car story.”

—Daily Chronicle.

$1.50 Net

New York—E. P. Dutton & Company


THE

Silent Watchers

England’s Navy during the Great War:

What It Is, and What We Owe to It

By

BENNET COPPLESTONE

AUTHOR OF

“THE LOST NAVAL PAPERS”

“The Navy is a matter of machines only in

so far as human beings can only achieve material

ends by material means. I look upon the ships and

the guns as secreted by the men just as a tortoise

secretes its shell.”—Prologue.

New York

E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY

681 Fifth Avenue


Copyright, 1918

By E. P. DUTTON & COMPANY


All Rights Reserved

First Printing, Sept., 1918

Second Printing, Oct., 1918

Printed in the United States of America


NOTE

Between June, 1916, and February, 1918, I

contributed a good many articles and sketches on

Naval subjects to The Cornhill Magazine. They

were not designed upon any plan or published

in any settled sequence. As one article led up

to another, and information came to me from my

generously appreciative readers (many of whom

were in the Service), I revised those which I had

written and ventured to write still more. This

book contains my Cornhill articles—revised and

sometimes re-written in the light of wider information

and kindly criticism—and several additional

chapters which have not previously been published

anywhere. I have endeavoured to weave into a

connected series articles and sketches which were

originally disconnected, and I have introduced

new strands to give strength to the fabric. Through

the whole runs a golden thread which I have

called The Secret of the Navy.

B. C.

March, 1918.


CONTENTS

PROLOGUE [After the Battle]

I. [A Band of Brothers]

II. [The Coming of War]

III. [The Great Victory]

IV. [With the Grand Fleet: A North Sea “Stunt”]

V. [With the Grand Fleet: The Terriers and the Rats]

VI. [The Mediterranean: A Success and a Failure]

VII. [In the South Seas: The Disaster off Coronel]

VIII. [In the South Seas: Cleaning Up]

IX. [How the “Sydney” Met the “Emden”]

X.[From Strength to Strength]

XI. [The Cruise of the “Glasgow”: Part I—Rio to Coronel]

XII. [The Cruise of the “Glasgow”: Part II—Coronelto Juan Fernandez]

XIII. [The Battle of the Giants: Part I]

XIV.[The Battle of the Giants: Part II]

EPILOGUE [Lieutenant Cæsar]


LIST OF MAPS

[The North Sea]

[The Mediterranean Operations]

[The South Seas]

[How the “Sydney” Met the “Emden”]

[The “Sydney-Emden” Action]

[The Cruise of the “Glasgow”]

[The Pacific: von Spee’s Concentration]

[The Cruise of the “Glasgow”]

[The Battle of the Giants]


THE SILENT WATCHERS