
A restless young clerk from Glasgow is about to trade the clatter of city streets for the relentless roar of the sea. Bound for a grueling seventeen‑month apprenticeship aboard a starving Scotch barque, he faces the harsh reality of cramped decks, a reduced crew, and the unforgiving weather around Cape Horn. The narrative captures his mix of pride, fear, and the promise of adventure that drives him and his fellow apprentices toward an uncertain horizon.
Through vivid street sounds and the mournful call of distant steamers, the story sketches a world where ambition collides with the brutal demands of maritime life. The characters—seasoned mates, hopeful apprentices, and skeptical onlookers—bring humor and tension to a life of hard labor and fleeting camaraderie. Listeners will be drawn into the gritty, wind‑blown world of 19th‑century seafaring, feeling the pull of the tide and the weight of a brass‑bound uniform.
Language
en
Duration
~5 hours (317K characters)
Publisher of text edition
Project Gutenberg
Credits
Produced by Al Haines
Release date
2010-03-04
Rights
Public domain in the USA.

1874–1959
A sea captain turned storyteller, he drew on years in sail and steam to write vivid, sharply observed fiction and memoirs of life at sea. His best-known work, The Brassbounder, helped fix his name in maritime literature.
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