The Cruise of the Midge (Vol. 1 of 2)

audiobook

The Cruise of the Midge (Vol. 1 of 2)

by Michael Scott

EN·~9 hours·13 chapters

Chapters

13 total
1

THE CRUISE OF THE MIDGE.

0:50
2

CHAPTER I. - GAZELLES AND MIDGES—THE MIDGE'S WINGS ARE SINGED.

1:03:45
3

CHAPTER II. - THE ATTACK.

35:53
4

CHAPTER III. - THE MIDGE IN THE HORNET'S NEST.

45:58
5

CHAPTER IV. - THE EVENING AFTER THE BRUSH.

48:33
6

CHAPTER V. - AUTOBIOGRAPHY OF SERJEANT QUACCO.

45:20
7

CHAPTER VI. - THE FETISH—CROSSING THE BAR, AND DESTRUCTION OF THE SLAVER.

52:12
8

CHAPTER VII. - A WARM RECEPTION.

32:26
9

CHAPTER VIII. - CAPE MISSIONARIES.

1:04:29
10

CHAPTER IX. - FOUNDERING OF THE HERMES.

38:58

Description

A restless young man, born in Ireland and schooled in Scotland, finds himself torn between the humdrum of a merchant’s counting‑house and the call of the open sea. After four years of apprenticeship in his uncle’s Liverpool firm, he has already logged voyages to the West Indies, Brazil, and the United States, but the lure of a new African cruise—trading ivory, gold dust, palm oil, and timber—still burns bright. He dreams of swapping ledgers for sails, convinced that a life of adventure suits his “harum‑scarum” spirit far better than the confines of a mahogany desk.

Determined to make that dream a reality, he devises a bold, reckless stunt to win his uncle’s reluctant permission. Smuggling cannon and fireworks into his family home, he stages a spectacular display that erupts during dinner, sending rockets and cannon blasts careening through the dining room. The chaos shocks his uncle into a frantic, startled reaction, and, amid the uproar, the young man’s audacious plan finally tips the scales, opening the way for his next daring voyage.

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Details

Language

en

Duration

~9 hours (575K characters)

Publisher of text edition

Project Gutenberg

Credits

Produced by Al Haines

Release date

2014-02-12

Rights

Public domain in the USA.

About the author

MS

Michael Scott

1789–1835

Best known for the lively sea tale Tom Cringle's Log, this Scottish writer turned years in Jamaica and on Caribbean voyages into adventurous fiction with a strong autobiographical feel. His work helped bring the rhythms of travel, trade, and colonial life to nineteenth-century readers.

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