Anna,
I think there are different threads here.
Firstly whilst Nelson famously 'hated the French', an attitude acquired from his mother who in turn, we assume, acquired it from her brother, Maurice Suckling, the earlier French wars and the attitudes of that time, he could modify that view with his own first-hand experience of war, of which naturally his mother had no experience. For him, this simple view would have been tempered by the later events of the French Revolution, the spread of its tenets by the French to other countries and the rise of Napoleon Bonaparte, intent on European domination. He would naturally have also been influenced in his own sphere, since the ships which he fought against were more often than not French. Thus it would be surprising if he did not both have an antipathy towards that nation, as being the cause of so much of the evils of the time and the deaths of so many thousands of people, and the desire want to stop its spread in the only way he knew how – through fighting them. Therefore it would only be perhaps natural that he should acquire the aggression and exhileration in battle noted by so many observers.
Even though he did not have quite the same attitude towards the Spanish, they were after all allied to the French for much of the time and had declared war on England. Thus they also became the enemy and he showed the same tenacity towards them, so that when the opportunity presented itself for him to turn out of the line and then personally board the San Josef and the San Nicholas at Cape St Vincent, even though he were a commodore, he took it, displaying the same qualities. (In passing, poor Fanny assumed that boarding was done by captains, whereas in fact it was usually left to lieutenants or even on occasion midshipmen.)
Then there is the other side of Nelson's character, his humanity and feelings towards and for his men. I think we can wholeheartedly believe Collingwood's words, as from one who had served with him for many years and who probably understood many of Nelson's innermost thoughts. I can also imagine Nelson in tears at the number of those killed at Copenhagen – and probably not only from numbers of British dead - as this was probably the hardest fought of Nelson's battles and the most costly in lives on both sides, there being significantly more lost by the Danes. Probably what also affected him was the fact that the battle against 'the brothers of Englishmen' might have been avoided. For one who would never needlessly throw men's lives away, it is quite understandable that he considered this one of the hardest of his battles in terms of lives lost.
Lastly, the mercenary. This type of soldier, for they are usually soldiers, are of course nothing knew in war and have been around since the earliest times. Whilst I think many, including myself, would think this a particularly despicable type of soldier, willing to hire himself out to any warring faction for payment, I can perhaps understand the desire or even neccessity for doing it. After all he is probably well trained, his skills having been learned in either the British or other national army, has done his time and is now out in civvy street with perhaps no other skill to acquire a job. Probably, having then found that life outside the army doesn't have the same excitements and exhileration and is mild by comparison, he seeks to return to the life that he knows and where he can use the skills he has acquired.
I can understand that probably for him and for others fighting a conventional war, warfare itself can be addictive. In that sense Nelson and he would very likely have understood one another, but would have approached other aspects of war from different perspectives.
_________________ Kester.
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