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Sketches From My Life 
 
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Title: Sketches From My Life By The Late Admiral Hobart Pasha 
Author: Hobart Pasha 
Release Date: July 15, 2005 [EBook #16296] 
Language: English 
Character set encoding: ISO-8859-1 
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FROM MY LIFE *** 
 
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{~--- UTF-8 BOM ---~} 
SKETCHES
FROM 
MY LIFE 
BY THE LATE 
ADMIRAL HOBART PASHA 
 
WITH A PORTRAIT 
THIRD EDITION 
LONDON LONGMANS, GREEN, AND CO. 1887 
All rights reserved PRINTED BY SPOTTISWOODE AND CO., 
NEW-STREET SQUARE LONDON 
 
PREFACE. 
These pages were the last ever written by the brave and true-hearted 
sailor of whose life they are a simple record. 
A few months before his death, some of his friends made the fortunate 
suggestion that he should put on paper a detailed account of his 
sporting adventures, and this idea gradually developed itself until the 
work took the present form of an autobiography, written roughly, it is 
true, and put together without much method, part of it being dictated at 
the Riviera during the last days of the author's fatal illness. Such as it is, 
however, we are convinced that the many devoted friends of Hobart 
Pasha who now lament his death will be glad to recall in these 
'Sketches' the adventures and sports which some of them shared with 
him, and the genial disposition and manly qualities which endeared him 
to them all.
CONTENTS 
CHAPTER PAGE 
I. A ROUGH START IN LIFE 1 
II. PERILS BY SEA AND LAND 14 
III. A TRAGICAL AFFAIR 27 
IV. RIO DE JANEIRO 36 
V. SLAVER HUNTING 43 
VI. SLAVER HUNTING (_continued_) 53 
VII. LOVE AND MURDER 62 
VIII. THE QUEEN'S YACHT 71 
IX. IN THE BALTIC 78 
X. BLOCKADE-RUNNING 87 
XI. EXCITING ADVENTURES 103 
XII. A VISIT TO CHARLESTON 120 
XIII. NEVER CAUGHT! 133 
XIV. LAST DAYS ON THE 'D----N' 147 
CHAPTER PAGE 
XV. RICHMOND DURING THE SIEGE 159 
XVI. THE LAND BLOCKADE 175 
XVII. I ENTER THE TURKISH NAVY 186
XVIII. THE WAR WITH RUSSIA 201 
XIX. THE TURKISH FLEET DURING THE WAR 217 
XX. SPORT IN TURKEY 235 
XXI. SPORT AND SOCIETY 253 
EXTRACT FROM THE 'DAILY TELEGRAPH' 277 
SKETCHES FROM MY LIFE. 
CHAPTER I. 
A ROUGH START IN LIFE. 
To attempt to write and publish sketches of my somewhat eventful 
career is an act that, I fear, entails the risk of making enemies of some 
with whom I have come in contact. But I have arrived at that time of 
life when, while respecting, as I do, public opinion, I have hardened 
somewhat into indifference of censure. I will, however, endeavour to 
write as far as lies in my power (while recording facts) 'in charity with 
all men.' This can be done in most part by omitting the names of ships 
in which and officers under whom I have served. 
I was born, as the novelists say, of respectable parents, at 
Walton-on-the-Wold, in Leicestershire, on April 1, 1822. I will pass 
over my early youth, which was, as might be expected, from the time of 
my birth until I was ten years of age, without any event that could 
prove interesting to those who are kind enough to peruse these pages. 
At the age of ten I was sent to a well-known school at Cheam, in Surrey, 
the master of which, Dr. Mayo, has turned out some very distinguished 
pupils, of whom I was not fated to be one; for, after a year or so of 
futile attempt on my part to learn something, and give promise that I 
might aspire to the woolsack or the premiership, I was pronounced 
hopeless; and having declared myself anxious to emulate the deeds of 
Nelson, and other celebrated sailors, it was decided that I should enter
the navy, and steps were taken to send me at once to sea. 
A young cousin of mine who had been advanced to the rank of captain, 
more through the influence of his high connections than from any merit 
of his own, condescended to give me a nomination in a ship which he 
had just commissioned, and thus I was launched like a young bear, 
'having all his sorrows to come,' into Her Majesty's navy as a naval 
cadet. I shall never forget the pride with which I donned my first 
uniform, little thinking what I should have to go through.    
    
		
	
	
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