| From Robert Southey’s ( 1774-1843) Life of Nelson.
The execution of Francesco Caracciolo, admiral of the navy of the Neapolitan Republic Caracciolo was brought on board at nine in the forenoon, and the trial began at ten. It lasted two hours. He averred in his defence that he had acted under compulsion, having been compelled to serve as a common soldier till he consented to take command of the fleet. This, the apologists of Lord Nelson say, he failed in proving. They forget that the possibility of proving it was not allowed him, for he was brought to trial within an hour after he was legally in arrest; and how, in that time, was he to collect his witnesses? He was found guilty, and sentenced to death; and Nelson gave orders that the sentence should be carried into effect that evening, at five o’clock, on board the Sicilian frigate La Minerve, by hanging him at the fore-yard-arm till sunset, when the body was to be cut down and thrown into the sea. Caracciolo requested Lieutenant Parkinson, under whose custody he was placed, to intercede with Lord Nelson for a second trial --for this, among other reasons, that Count Thurn, who presided at the court-martial, was notoriously his personal enemy. Nelson made answer that the prisoner had been fairly tried by the officers of his own country, and he could not interfere, forgetting that if he felt himself justified in ordering the trial and the execution, no human being could ever have questioned the propriety of his interfering on the side of mercy. Caracciolo then entreated that he might be shot. ‘I am an old
man, sir,’
said he [he was forty-seven]; ‘I leave no family to lament me,
and
therefore cannot be supposed to be very anxious about prolonging my
life,
but the disgrace of being hanged is dreadful to me.’ When this was
repeated
to Nelson, he only told the lieutenant, with much agitation, to go and
attend his duty. A a last hope Caracciolo asked the lieutenant if he
thought
an application to Lady Hamilton would be beneficial. Parkinson went to
seek her. She was not to be seen on this occasion -- but she was
present
at the execution. She had the most devoted The body was carried out to a considerable distance, and sunk
in the
bay, with three double-headed shot, weighing two hundred and fifty
pounds,
tied to its legs. Between two and three weeks afterwards, when the king
[Ferdinand IV] was on board the Foudroyant, a Neapolitan
fisherman
came to the ship, and solemnly declared that Caracciolo had risen from
the bottom of the sea, and was coming as fast as he could to Naples,
swimming
half out of the water. Such an account was listened to like a tale of
idle
credulity. The day being fair, Nelson, to please the king, stood out to
sea; but the ship had not proceeded far before a body was distinctly
seen,
upright in the water, and approaching them. It was soon recognized to
be,
indeed, the corpse of Caracciolo, which had risen and floated, while
the
great weights attached to the legs kept the body in a position like
that
of a living man. A fact so extraordinary astonished the king, and
perhaps
excited some feeling of superstitious fear akin to regret. He gave
permission
for the body to be taken on shore and receive Christian burial.
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