For Turner’s picture,
The Battle of Trafalgar, as Seen from the Mizen Starboard Shrouds of the Victory (Tate
N00480), exhibited at Turner’s Gallery in 1806, see the Introduction to this sketchbook. While noting that there are many studies of the
Victory in this sketchbook, Butlin and Joll do not mention this drawing in their entry for the picture,
1 although it is by far the closest to the composition as Turner painted it. Extending to the left on to folio 14 verso (
D41427), it advances the slighter sketch drawn as a double page spread on folios 27 verso–28 (
D05471–D05472; Turner Bequest LXXXIX 20a–21) and (now separated) on its own verso and 11 (
D05482,
D05460; Turner Bequest 26a, 13). Seen from an elevated position above the starboard side of the poop, the quarterdeck of the
Victory occupies the centre, with the wounded Nelson and surrounding figures already roughly indicated. The Spanish flagship
Santissima Trinidad (for which see chiefly folio 21 verso,
D05458; Turner Bequest LXXXIX 12) is in the left middle distance, and at right are the French
Redoutable, from whose mizzen top the shot that killed Nelson was fired (see also chiefly folio 10,
D05457; Turner Bequest LXXXIX 11) and the British
Temeraire.