News now arrives that the Dutch fleet…
June 1797 CE
Duncan issues orders for the fleet to weigh anchor, but the men disobey and ship after ship overthrows their officers and joins the mutineers at the Nore.
Eventually Duncan is left with only his own Venerable and Hotham's Adamant to contain the entire Dutch fleet.
Aware that the escape of the Dutch fleet into the North Sea at such a vulnerable time could be disastrous for Britain, Duncan maintains his position off Texel for three days, during which the wind is ideal for a Dutch foray, and he disguises his two vessels as different ships on each day and orders the frigate HMS Circe to make a flurry of nonsensical signals to a fictitious British fleet beyond the horizon.
He is subsequently joined by two additional ships, HMS Russell and Sans Pareil, and on the fourth day, with conditions still perfect for the Dutch, he anchors his squadron in the Marsdiep Channel and gives orders for them to fight until their ships sink, thereby blocking the channel.
The expected attack never comes: the Dutch army that is to have joined the fleet is not prepared, and Duncan's misleading signals have successfully convinced De Winter that a large British fleet waits just beyond the horizon.
The winds subsequently change direction, and, on June 10, six more ships join Duncan's squadron from the Channel Fleet, and, on June 13, a Russian squadron arrives.