
audiobook
by R. M. (Robert Michael) Ballantyne
In the sweltering heat of an 1883 night on the Indian Ocean, a lone brig drifts near the spice‑laden islands of the Malay Archipelago. The darkness is thick, the sea almost still, and the faint glow of a binnacle lamp casts long shadows across the quarterdeck. Here two figures dominate the silence: a weather‑worn captain, his voice roughened by countless storms, and his son, a lanky, idealistic first mate whose mind drifts toward poetry even as the ship creaks beneath them.
Their conversation reveals a clash of generations—practical duty versus the lure of verse, filial expectation against personal yearning. As the captain tries to tether his son to the hard realities of seamanship, the younger man clings to a softer inheritance from his mother, a hidden well of lyrical longing. This tension sets the stage for a voyage that will test both their resolve and the fragile balance between the relentless sea and the quiet inner world they each carry.
Language
en
Duration
~9 hours (529K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Nick Hodson of London, England
Release date
2007-11-06
Rights
Public domain in the USA.
Subjects

1825–1894
A Scottish adventure writer whose stories of survival, exploration, and moral courage thrilled generations of young readers. Best known for The Coral Island, he drew on real experience and a gift for vivid storytelling to bring distant worlds to life.
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