The Examination for Lieutenant

The Examination for Lieutenant is an episode of the British television series Hornblower. It is loosely based on part of Mr. Midshipman Hornblower by C. S. Forester. It was released on DVD in the United States under the title The Fire Ships.

The Examination for Lieutenant
Written byMike Cullen
Directed byAndrew Grieve
StarringIoan Gruffudd
Robert Lindsay
Ian McNeice
Denis Lawson
Country of originUnited Kingdom
Original language(s)English
Production
Editor(s)Keith Palmer
Chronology
Preceded byThe Even Chance
Followed byThe Duchess and the Devil

Plot

Sir Edward Pellew, captain of HMS Indefatigable decides to put his protégé, Horatio Hornblower, forward for the examination for lieutenant. Leading up to the exam, Hornblower faces many challenges.

Spain has made peace with France and is no longer an ally of Britain – Spanish ships, although technically neutral, begin to attack British ships. Wreckage from one supply ship has already been found by Indefatigable. Indefatigable finds three survivors, among them Captain "Dreadnought" Foster, a famously heroic officer who influences the ambitious Hornblower.

Spain's actions have deprived the Gibraltar fleet of its supplies leaving Pellew no alternative but to cut rations by half. This leads seaman Bunting (Andrew Tiernan) to steal food. He is caught by Hornblower, reprimanded by Pellew and punished by being made to run the gauntlet.

Soon as Mr Tapling from the diplomatic service arrives, he and Hornblower head ashore to Oran, in Ottoman Algeria, to buy grain and cattle for the fleet. They soon discover that the Plague has broken out. Anyone who went ashore must be quarantined for three weeks before being allowed to rejoin the fleet, so Hornblower is appointed captain of Caroline, a transport schooner carrying desperately needed food and cattle. Bunting is caught trying to escape in the longboat by Hornblower. Hornblower, short of hands on Caroline, but also keen to redeem Bunting, gives him a chance to prove his worth. Later, while they are ashore to load water, they are attacked by Spanish soldiers, and Bunting tries to escape again. Hornblower catches him, but Bunting forces Hornblower to shoot him.

When Caroline encounters HMS Dreadnought, Captain Foster sends a boarding party to take a few sides of beef, despite Hornblower warning him the quarantine has not expired. In the end nobody is infected and they rejoin the fleet, where Hornblower receives a mild rebuke from Pellew for the "wanton extravagance" of allowing his men to eat fresh beef.

Back at Gibraltar Hornblower attempts his exam, a viva voci conducted by a group of senior officers including Foster. The examination begins badly but is interrupted when a fire ship sails into the anchorage. Hornblower and Foster board it and steer it clear of the fleet. In recognition of this, Hornblower is not demoted to Midshipman (as would normally have happened in the circumstances) but keeps his rank of Acting Lieutenant and is allowed to take the exam again sometime in the future.

Cast

The events of this episode are drawn, with some alterations, from two chapters of Mr. Midshipman Hornblower. The section involving the cattle and the quarantine is from the chapter "Noah's Ark", and that of the exam and the fire ship is from the chapter "The Examination for Lieutenant". (The book also has a chapter in which Spain goes over to the French and Hornblower earns the rank of acting-lieutenant, but it is not used in this episode.) The subplot involving Bunting does not appear anywhere in the book.[1]

gollark: I'm not sure that's a good thing, though - if you have more interconnected locations, they can load-balance in case of high demand.
gollark: Isn't it already *fairly* decentralized? Different regions have their own grids, sort of thing?
gollark: Personally, I don't think anything which heavily centralizes power, i.e. dictators or centrally planned economies, is a good idea.
gollark: Well, I finished reading... yet another discussion on communism, I guess?
gollark: > 348 new messagesoh no.

References

  1. Forester, C.S., Mr. Midshipman Hornblower (Chivers Press, 1994).
This article is issued from Wikipedia. The text is licensed under Creative Commons - Attribution - Sharealike. Additional terms may apply for the media files.