The Life and Heroics of Lord Horatio Nelson

The brilliant but flawed British Adm. Horatio Nelson rose from a frail boy to a naval legend.
The Life and Heroics of Lord Horatio Nelson
"Battle of the Nile, August 1st 1798 at 10 pm," 1834, by Thomas Luny. Private Collection. This battle reestablished British naval presence in the Mediterranean. Public Domain
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Lord Horatio Nelson was not an imposing figure. At 5 feet, 4 inches, with one arm and one eye, he hardly looked like the debonair, swashbuckling terror of Napoleon Bonaparte’s nightmares. Yet he was exactly that. Few figures in naval history accomplished so much—or secured so lasting a place in the imagination of their nation.

An Unlikely Figure of Legend

Fittingly, Nelson grew up by the sea. Born in 1758 to Catherine and Edmund Nelson, he spent his early years in a quiet village in Norfolk, England two miles inland. That peaceful childhood ended with his mother’s death. With 10 other children to support on a rector’s modest income, his father sent him to sea.

Like many naval officers of the era, Nelson began young. At 12, he joined his uncle, Capt. Maurice Suckling, in the Royal Navy. Frail and slight, he hardly seemed suited to the life. Suckling reportedly asked, “What has poor Horatio done, who is so weak, that he, above all the rest, should be sent to rough it out at sea?” Yet he took the boy under his wing, beginning one of the most remarkable careers in naval history.

Walker Larson
Walker Larson
Author
Before becoming a freelance journalist and culture writer, Walker Larson taught literature and history at a private academy in Wisconsin, where he resides with his wife and daughter. He holds a master’s in English literature and language, and his writing has appeared in The Hemingway Review, Intellectual Takeout, and his Substack, The Hazelnut. He is also the author of two novels, “Hologram” and “Song of Spheres.”