
Chapter One. - Which the reader will find very easy to read.
Chapter Two. - In which Mrs Easy, as usual, has her own way.
Chapter Three. - In which our hero has to wait the issue of an argument.
Chapter Four. - In which the Doctor prescribes going to school as a remedy for a cut finger.
Chapter Five. - Jack Easy is sent to a school at which there is no flogging.
Chapter Six. - In which Jack makes essay of his father’s sublime philosophy and arrives very near to truth at last.
Chapter Seven. - In which Jack makes some very sage reflections, and comes to a very unwise decision.
Chapter Eight. - In which Mr Easy has his first lesson as to zeal in His Majesty’s Service.
Chapter Nine. - In which Mr Easy finds himself on the other side of the Bay of Biscay.
Chapter Ten. - Showing how Jack transgresses against his own philosophy.
Mr. Midshipman Easy begins with the gentle, self‑contented life of Nicodemus Easy, a Hampshire gentleman who spends his days indulging in idle philosophy and a quietly harmonious marriage. His wife, Mrs. Easy, is content to let him ramble about rights and equality while she pursues her own pastimes, and their domestic routine is marked by mutual forbearance and playful compromise. When the couple confronts the prospect of an heir, the easygoing balance of their lives is subtly unsettled, prompting Easy to seek purpose beyond the comforts of home.
Compelled by a mixture of ambition and the lure of adventure, Easy decides to join the Royal Navy as a midshipman, bringing his naïve idealism onto the decks of shipboard life. The narrative follows his comic missteps, earnest yet often misguided attempts at heroism, and the colorful characters he encounters, all while retaining the light‑hearted, satirical tone that defines his early domestic world.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (760K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2007-05-21
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1792–1848
A sailor, storyteller, and sharp observer of life at sea, this early master of nautical fiction turned real naval experience into lively adventures. His books helped shape the sea story and still stand out for their action, humor, and eye for detail.
View all books
by Frederick Marryat

by Frederick Marryat

by Frederick Marryat

by Frederick Marryat

by Frederick Marryat

by Frederick Marryat

by Frederick Marryat

by Frederick Marryat