Mark Barrett wrote:
The story of Malta/Victory/Lady Hamilton seems complete gobbledegook to me.
Victory wouldn't have been there surely - and I don't believe Emma ever set foot on board her.
Tell me if you can see any semblance of truth in that and I will willingly eat humble pie.

MB
The story doesn't put
Victory or Nelson at Malta - Mrs Barnes went to Malta in
Mars, and then proceeded to Palermo with Mrs Spencer Smith, where she supposedly went on board
Victory, and it states this was early in April 1805. Nelson did of course proceed to Sicily in 1805 in
Victory after Villeneuve's fleet escaped from Toulon, and was off Palermo on 15 April 1805. However, as you have all said, Lady Hamilton was not in the Mediterranean at all in 1805, having been told firmly by Nelson to stay at Merton.
The story certainly reads as though it has been concocted from some Victorian book of famous lives, and the fact that the correspondent to the Telegraph was trying to raise money for Mrs Barnes makes it highly likely that the story has been greatly embellished, if not invented. There may be some grains of truth in it, but most of them were probably used in the bread at Gore's bakery.