The Voyage of the Arrow

Fiction & Literature, Action Suspense, Classics
Cover of the book The Voyage of the Arrow by T. Jenkins Hains, PublishDrive
View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart
Author: T. Jenkins Hains ISBN: 6610000029570
Publisher: PublishDrive Publication: September 2, 2017
Imprint: Merkaba Press Language: English
Author: T. Jenkins Hains
ISBN: 6610000029570
Publisher: PublishDrive
Publication: September 2, 2017
Imprint: Merkaba Press
Language: English

In setting down this tale, I will say at the beginning that I am only a sailorman, and rough. Therefore, if I offend, I crave pardon, for my knowledge is only that of the sea, and my manners are ocean-bred. If any one is too delicately constituted to listen to a man like myself, and prefers a tale of gentleness and delicate desire, he had best pass over this narrative of part of my life, which has already received so much publicity. I know many people hold off from me. I know some sweet-scented sea lawyers who fancy they have a taste for description have called me many hard names, and that many honest folk hold away from me because of it. This and much more. But I have gone my way insilence and lived according to the little voice within me, as a strong man should. And it is not weakness now that prompts me to speak. I feel it my duty, and will tell what I know and remember about the part of my life which the public have chosen to discuss so freely.

I do not know who will believe a sailor’s tale, for sailors have been known to enlarge on their yarns, but my father was a sailor before me and was an honest man. So were many of the Gores, and I myself have been master of a deep-water clipper-ship.

In spite of this I hardly feel that I have reached an exalted pinnacle of human fame, for most people do not regard me as a success, nor am I held up as a shining example of what man might accomplish in his life’s work, although I was captain of the Southern Cross—until I ran her ashore and lost her on the Irish coast.

This was all owing to misdirected effort—that is, her loss was; for, after slaving twelve years fore and aft to get command of a ship and at last getting one, I tried to break the record from Hongkong to Liverpool. I did this by five days, and instead of holding offshore until the weather moderated, I overran my distance during a foggy, driving gale and left the whitening ribs of the Southern Cross to mark the success of my endeavour. Had I made harbour, my name would have gone down to posterity as that of the best sailor afloat, and I would have had the pick of the whole deep-water fleet, instead of being forced, as I was, to sign on as mate of the Arrow.

It made my eyes misty and something rose in my throat as I did this. I, a man of twenty-nine, signing the papers for a mate’s berth just as I had done years ago when barely twenty.

View on Amazon View on AbeBooks View on Kobo View on B.Depository View on eBay View on Walmart

In setting down this tale, I will say at the beginning that I am only a sailorman, and rough. Therefore, if I offend, I crave pardon, for my knowledge is only that of the sea, and my manners are ocean-bred. If any one is too delicately constituted to listen to a man like myself, and prefers a tale of gentleness and delicate desire, he had best pass over this narrative of part of my life, which has already received so much publicity. I know many people hold off from me. I know some sweet-scented sea lawyers who fancy they have a taste for description have called me many hard names, and that many honest folk hold away from me because of it. This and much more. But I have gone my way insilence and lived according to the little voice within me, as a strong man should. And it is not weakness now that prompts me to speak. I feel it my duty, and will tell what I know and remember about the part of my life which the public have chosen to discuss so freely.

I do not know who will believe a sailor’s tale, for sailors have been known to enlarge on their yarns, but my father was a sailor before me and was an honest man. So were many of the Gores, and I myself have been master of a deep-water clipper-ship.

In spite of this I hardly feel that I have reached an exalted pinnacle of human fame, for most people do not regard me as a success, nor am I held up as a shining example of what man might accomplish in his life’s work, although I was captain of the Southern Cross—until I ran her ashore and lost her on the Irish coast.

This was all owing to misdirected effort—that is, her loss was; for, after slaving twelve years fore and aft to get command of a ship and at last getting one, I tried to break the record from Hongkong to Liverpool. I did this by five days, and instead of holding offshore until the weather moderated, I overran my distance during a foggy, driving gale and left the whitening ribs of the Southern Cross to mark the success of my endeavour. Had I made harbour, my name would have gone down to posterity as that of the best sailor afloat, and I would have had the pick of the whole deep-water fleet, instead of being forced, as I was, to sign on as mate of the Arrow.

It made my eyes misty and something rose in my throat as I did this. I, a man of twenty-nine, signing the papers for a mate’s berth just as I had done years ago when barely twenty.

More books from PublishDrive

Cover of the book Spelled By The Sea by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book The Essays or Counsels, Civil and Moral by Francis Bacon - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book The Complete Poems by John Buchan - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book Electric Pressure Cooker Cookbook by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book 中英双语圣经 No5 by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book Jack and Jill by Louisa May Alcott (Illustrated) by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book SoulFate by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book Tamburlaine the Great Parts 1 and 2 by Christopher Marlowe - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book The Śikṣā-guru by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book English Hungarian Bible by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book Sense and Sensibility by Jane Austen (Illustrated) by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book Zanna Bianca by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book Tarzan of the Apes by Edgar Rice Burroughs - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book Master Humphrey’s Clock by Charles Dickens (Illustrated) by T. Jenkins Hains
Cover of the book On the Future of Our Educational Institutions by Friedrich Nietzsche - Delphi Classics (Illustrated) by T. Jenkins Hains
We use our own "cookies" and third party cookies to improve services and to see statistical information. By using this website, you agree to our Privacy Policy