
Chapter One. - Introduction of Divers Parties and a Red-Herring.
Chapter Two. - Showing what Became of the Red-Herring.
Chapter Three. - A Retrospect, and Short Description of a New Character.
Chapter Four. - In which there is a Desperate Combat.
Chapter Five. - A Consultation in which there is much Mutiny.
Chapter Six. - In which as often happens at Sea when Signals are not made out, Friends exchange Broadsides.
Chapter Seven. - In which Mr Vanslyperken goes on Shore to woo the Widow Vandersloosh.
Chapter Eight. - In which the Widow lays a Trap for Mr Vanslyperken, and Smallbones lays a Trap for Snarleyyow, and both bag their Game.
Chapter Nine. - A Long Chapter, in which there is Lamentation, Singing, Bibbling, and Dancing.
Chapter Ten. - In which is explained the Sublime Mystery of Keelhauling—Snarleyyow saves Smallbones from being drowned, although Smallbones would have drowned him.
A bitter January wind sweeps the English Channel in 1699, rattling a lone, black‑sided cutter as it patrols the coast near Beachy Head. On deck, the gaunt lieutenant‑commandant Cornelius Vanslyperken stalks the quarter‑deck in his long coat, while the grizzled steersman Obadiah Coble watches the compass through a frosty breath. Their rigid routine is broken only by the low‑hum of the sea and the occasional clatter of iron guns, setting a stark, almost theatrical stage for what follows.
Beside Vanslyperken trudges an extraordinary companion—a hideously yellow, mangy cur whose mismatched eye and twisted jaw mark it as a creature of both comedy and menace. The dog mirrors its master’s awkward gait, trailing him with uncanny precision, hinting at a bond that is as unsettling as it is loyal. As the vessel cuts through the icy water, the pair’s strange partnership promises a tale of nautical oddities, eccentric characters, and the uncanny adventures that await beyond the first watch.
Language
en
Duration
~13 hours (780K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2007-05-22
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1792–1848
Best known for lively sea tales drawn from real naval experience, this early master of nautical adventure wrote with the speed, humor, and danger of life aboard ship. His stories helped shape the modern maritime novel and still carry the pull of the open sea.
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