Patrick O'Brain may not have been entirely consistent in everything he
said about his fictional Surprise. But it is worth noting
that he repeatedly came back to one absolute distinguishing
characteristic of his fictional Surprise:
The fictional surprise was a 28 gun frigate of French
build. She however had a standard 32 gun frigate's main
mast. This made her profile highly distinctive and somewhat
lopsided. O'Brian went out of his way to describe how Jack
Aubrey had it installed off South America shortly after he first took
command of her, during a trip to the East Indies, in the book
HMS Surprise.
From that time onwards, the fictional Surprise would carry the big main
mast until she sails into the sun set in
Blue at the Mizzen.
In between, he came back to this point again and again. It was there in the
Ionian Mission, where even the
landlubber Maturin, who was normally unable to distinguish a frigate from a sloop, or a Brig
from a Snow, swiftly distinguished the
joyful Surprise from any other vessel by her oversized main mast, despite the fact that the Surprise was now under someone else's command, painted blue and
otherwise looking totally different from when he say her last.
The lopsided Main Mast was there again in
The Far Side of the World, and the
NutMeg of Consolation, and the
True Love, and the
Blue at Mizzen. On several more occasions, temporary characters were able to instantly recognize the Surprise by her unforgettably oversized main mast.
Clearly, the lopsided mast was not merely a plot device concocted to
add color to one book. It was meant to set forth a
defining characteristic of Aubrey's favorite ship throught out the
entire serie.
Now let us look at where O'Brain may have gotten the idea for this
lopsided main mast. Surprise! The is
only one real HMS
Surprise that also had a lop sided 34 gun frigate's main mast.
In fact
that real surprise was the
only British frigate we know of that permanent
shipped a non-standard, outsized mainmast belonging to ships one rate above her own.
Given that O'Brain chooses to endow the fictional Surprise with a extraordinary trait shared by just one ship of exactly the same name from the real Royal Navy, can there really be any doubt about which was the Surprise O'Brian meant to protray in his masterful serie, despite occasional artistic licenses and accuracy lapses?