
A weary letter opens the tale, recalling youthful days in Maubeuge when two aspiring writers first tested their pens amid the clatter of military drills and the hopeful buzz of a fledgling literary scene. Their friendship, forged in the cramped quarters of a garrison, is painted with humor and a touch of melancholy, hinting at the long‑lost dreams that still tug at their hearts. The narrator’s voice drifts between nostalgia and a quiet determination to capture that vanished spark in a new work.
The story then jumps to the deck of the fishing vessel Saint‑RémI, where Captain Guillaume Dubreuil struggles to keep order among a crew haunted by hunger and whispers of revolt. A timid deckhand named Louison voices the men’s growing discontent, while the captain’s iron‑fisted promises mask a deeper unease. As the ship slices through icy waters, the looming threat of mutiny sets the stage for a clash between duty and desperation, drawing the listener into a tense, sea‑bound drama.
Language
fr
Duration
~7 hours (424K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Release date
2006-04-26
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
1828–1879
A restless 19th-century French writer, journalist, and librarian, he turned exile, travel, and politics into adventure-filled fiction. His books often drew on life in North America, blending popular storytelling with a strong taste for history and frontier drama.
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