Returning to Europe at the peace aboard
HMS Barfleur, Schomberg was unemployed until 1786 on half-pay. Returning to the sea, Schomberg was appointed mentor to the notoriously prickly
Prince William Henry, then serving as captain of
HMS Pegasus. Schomberg was far older and more experienced than his commander and also possessed an aggressive temperament, the two rapidly becoming embroiled in a series of bitter and long-lasting disputes. Eventually, in 1787 whilst stationed in the West Indies,
Nelson solved the problem by removing Schomberg from
Pegasus under arrest for a charge trumped-up by William. Within days, the charges were quietly dropped and Schomberg returned to Britain. Three months later
Sir Samuel Hood appointed Schomberg to his flagship
Barfleur. Hood had served with both Schomberg and Prince William before and was well aware of the circumstances of the argument, appointing Schomberg in the hopes of ending the dispute. This hope was dashed when William responded with a torrent of extremely offensive letters to Schomberg, Hood and anyone else who would listen. In 1788 Schomberg was appointed to
HMS Crown under an old friend,
William Cornwallis. For the next two years Schomberg served as acting captain of
Crown and then commander of
HMS Atalanta in the
Indian Ocean, a period in which he was described as "happy beyond expression". Controversy was not far behind however, and in 1790 Schomberg sent two offensive letters to the colonial government in
Madras complaining that his ship had not been given the correct
salute when it entered the port. These letters were passed on to
Sir Richard Strachan and Cornwallis who were so shocked at Schomberg's effrontery that he was dismissed his ship and sent back to England. Cornwallis did however recommend that no further action be taken against him, commenting that the dispute with Prince William had embittered his former friend. Before news of this controversy reached England, Schomberg had been promoted to
post captain. ==French Revolutionary Wars==