Great Sea Stories...It is one of the curiosities of literature, a fact that old Isaac Disraeli might have delighted to linger over, that there have been no collectors of sea-tales; that no man has ever, as in the present instance, dwelt upon the topic with the purpose of gathering some of the best work into a single volume. And yet men have written of the sea since 2500 B.C. when an unknown author set down on papyrus his account of a struggle with a sea-serpent. This account, now in the British Museum, is the first sea-story on record. Our modern sea-stories begin properly with the chronicles of the early navigators-in many of which there is an unconscious art that none of our modern masters of fiction has greatly surpassed. ... |
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... which stretched away inland till it was lost in the shades of evening — all
seemed one horrid complicated trap for him and his ; and even where , here and
there , he passed the mouth of a lagoon , there was no opening , no relief nothing
but ...
Town seemed built of cards — black faces — showy dresses of the negroes -
dined at Mr . C ' s capital dinner - little breezemill at the end of the room , that
pumped a solution of salpetre and water into a trough of tin , perforated with small
holes ...
But the guest at his right hand , a happy - looking , red - faced , welldressed man ,
soon drew his attention towards me . The party to whom I was thus indebted
seemed a very joviallooking personage , and appeared to be well known to all ...
It seemed that , about a week before , a large American brig , bound from Havana
to Boston had been captured in this very channel by one of our men - of - war
schooners , and carried into Nassau ; out of which port , for their own security ,
the ...
... had been stirred about by a gigantic invisible spurtle , until everything hissed
again ; and the curious part of it was , that the agitation of the water seemed to
keep ahead of us , as if the breeze which impelled us had also floated it onwards
.