Horatio Nelson

by Tom Pocock

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This biography of Horatio Nelson juxtaposes details of his daily life, loves, friendships and opinions with the great events which make him one of the most memorable figures in British history. This is the story of the man who saved Britain from invasion and gave it maritime supremacy.

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2 reviews
This biography of Nelson was a Whitbread Biography Award runner up in 1987. It is very well written and comprehensively covers all aspects of the life of this national hero. He was a man of great contrasts: a hero on the national scale who saved the country from the very real threat of French invasion, yet retained the respect, admiration and love of the common sailor; of relatively humble origins compared to other naval officers, the son of a Norfolk clergyman, he was the friend of the highest in society including William Pitt and King George III; while intervening in individual cases of injustice in favour of the common sailor, he was also a reactionary supporter of the monarchy both in Britain and in Naples, who had no sympathy for show more rising liberal ideas promoted by Thomas Paine and others (though he spoke in favour of an old comrade tried and hanged for planning regicide); while brought up in a morally conventional ethos, he flouted society's conventions by his affair with Lady Emma Hamilton, outrageously living in a menage a trois with her and her much older husband, Sir William, and treating his wife Fanny very shabbily.

This book took me a while to get through; I began it after a recent return visit to Portsmouth Historic Dockyard. Parts of it dragged for me and I have always found reading descriptions of military engagements fairly dull, though the description of Trafalgar here is gripping as one leads up to the inevitable outcome. It is undoubtedly a work of great scholarship and a definitive biography.
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This biography of Horatio Nelson juxtaposes details of his daily life, loves, friendships and opinions with the great events which make him one of the most memorable figures in British history. This is the story of the man who saved Britain from invasion and gave it maritime supremacy.

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28 Works 740 Members
Tom Pocock has been described as the foremost authority on Nelson. He is the author of eight books about the admiral and his time, one of which, Horatio Nelson, was runner-up for the Whitbread Biography Award in 1987. He has written biographies of Captain Marryrat, Rider Haggard, and Alan Moorhead, as well as several books documenting his show more experiences as a war correspondent. Former naval correspondent of The Times of London, and defense correspondent of the London Evening Standard, Pocock lives in London show less

Common Knowledge

People/Characters
Horatio Nelson, 1st Viscount Nelson
Important events
Napoleonic Wars (1803 | 1815)

Classifications

Genres
History, Biography & Memoir, Nonfiction, General Nonfiction
DDC/MDS
940.2History & geographyHistory of EuropeHistory of EuropeEurope: Renaissance, Reformation, Enlightenment, Napolean
LCC
DA87.1 .N4 .P57History of Europe, Asia, Africa and OceaniaGreat BritainHistory of Great BritainEnglandHistoryPolitical, military, naval, and Air Force history.
BISAC

Statistics

Members
171
Popularity
188,663
Reviews
2
Rating
(4.05)
Languages
English
Media
Paper, Ebook
ISBNs
8
ASINs
3