
By Joseph Conrad
In the sleepy harbour town of Colebrook, a solitary figure looms over the narrow streets: Captain Hagberd, a retired skipper with a beard as long as the tide and a habit of dressing in sail‑cloth even for mundane chores. He has bought a modest plot, erected two ugly yellow brick cottages, and now lives side‑by‑side with the blind boat‑builder Josiah Carvil and his daughter Bessie, whose daily routines across the shared fence become a quiet stage for the captain’s curmudgeonly observations.
Rumors swirl as Hagbert spends his days staring at the sea, muttering about “next month” and the return of a son who vanished years ago on a daring voyage. His odd rituals and the cryptic letters he received hint at a lingering hope, while the townsfolk—barbers, tailors, and tavern keepers—watch his eccentricities with a mix of pity and fascination. As the captain’s solitary world inches toward an inevitable encounter, the quiet tension in Colebrook hints at deeper currents waiting to surface.
Language
en
Duration
~59 minutes (56K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Judith Boss and David Widger
Release date
2006-01-09
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1857–1924
Drawn from a life at sea and shaped by exile, these stories turn adventure into something darker, stranger, and deeply human. Best known for Heart of Darkness and Lord Jim, this writer brought moral tension and unforgettable atmosphere to English fiction.
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by Joseph Conrad

by Joseph Conrad

by Joseph Conrad

by Joseph Conrad

by Joseph Conrad

by Joseph Conrad

by Joseph Conrad

by Joseph Conrad