Read Mr Midshipman Easy Online
Authors: Captain Frederick Marryat
1Â Acquisitiveness | 22Â Hope |
2Â Agreeableness | 23Â Human Nature |
3Â Alimentiveness | 24Â Ideality |
4Â Amativeness | 25Â Imitation |
5Â Benevolence | 26Â Individuality |
6Â Approbativeness | 27Â Inhibitiveness |
7Â Calculation | 28Â Language |
8Â Cautiousness | 29Â Locality |
9Â Color | 30Â Mirthfulness |
10Â Continuity | 31Â Order |
11Â Combativeness | 32Â Parental Love |
12Â Conscientiousness | 33Â Secretiveness |
13Â Conjugality | 34Â Self-Esteem |
14Â Constructiveness | 35Â Size |
15Â Causality | 36Â Sublimity |
16Â Comparison | 37Â Spirituality |
17Â Destructiveness | 38Â Time |
18Â Eventuality | 39Â Tune |
19Â Firmness | 40Â Veneration |
20Â Form | 41Â Vitality |
21Â Friendship | 42Â Weight |
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Library of Congress Cataloging-in-Publication Data
Marryat, Frederick, 1792-1848.
Mr. Midshipman Easy / Frederick Marryat.
p. cm. â (Classics of nautical fiction series; no. 2)
ISBN 0-935526-40-4 (paperback)
1. Napoleonic Wars, 1800-1815âFiction. 2. Great BritainâHistory, Naval
â19th centuryâFiction. I. Title. II. Series.
PR4977.M7 1997
823'.7âdc21
Mr Midshipman Easy
was first published in 1836. This text is based on the 1896 edition of
The Novels of Captain Marryat
edited by R. Brimley Johnson and published by J.M. Dent and Co. in London and Little, Brown and Co. in Boston. Corrections were made for consistency and clarity, but most of the original spelling and punctuation remain intact.
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ENGLAND'S greatness as a world power in the sixteenth through nineteenth centuries was based on her nautical might. The Royal Navy and the merchant fleet were the tools that built and maintained the British Empire.
England fought wars against the Spanish, the Dutch, and other European powers, forming and breaking alliances, but its epic military struggle was against France. For more than 125 years, from 1689 to 1815, England and France waged a series of wars. This almost ceaseless conflict was the first to attain a truly global scale. A tale of enmity that often involved other nations, its “chapters” bear names such as the Nine Years War, the War of the Spanish Succession, the War of the Austrian Succession, the Seven Years War (the American subchapter was called the French and Indian War), the War of American Independence, and the Napoleonic Wars.
Safe at home, the British citizenry eagerly read the newspapers and broadsheets that described the numerous naval campaigns and battles. Noble sea captains and brave sailors were celebrated in stories and popular songs. Perhaps the most popular British hero was the legendary rear-admiral, Lord Horatio Nelson. Nelson died in 1805 at the moment of his greatest victoryâ the Battle of Trafalgarâand became a figure of mythic proportion.
Another great hero was Captain Lord Cochrane. The adventurous Cochrane became famous when his ship, the
Flying Pallas
captured four richly laden Spanish galleons off the Azores, and the prize-money made every member of his crew a rich man. In 1806, a fourteen-year-old midshipman, Frederick Marryat, signed on with Lord Cochrane's next command, the frigate
Impérieuse.
Marryat made lieutenant in 1814. The next year he was promoted to commander. From 1820 to 1822 Marryat commanded the sloop
Beaver
which, among other duties, cruised off St. Helena, in the South Atlantic, to guard against Napoleon's escape from his second forced exile from France. He rose to captain and his later posts included an appointment as Senior Naval Officer in Burma. Because of Frederick Marryat's successes in Asia, the Crown bestowed upon him the C.B. (Companion, Order of the Bath), a high honor. Altogether, Captain Marryat saw action in fifty battles.
In 1829, Marryat was still serving in the Royal Navy as captain of the
Adriade
when he wrote his first novel,
Frank Mildmay
or
The Naval Officer.
He had previously published a book of ship's flag signals and a polemic calling for the abolition of the impressment of sailors. Marryat's fiction was such a success that he quit the Navy to devote himself to writing. Over a nineteen-year writing career, Marryat authored 22 novels or books of stories. His early writings were nearly all set on or around the sea. Most of his later works were adventure stories intended for young people. He journeyed to America and, in 1839, published a widely read, six-volume, rather acerbic, account of his travel experiences. Marryat died in 1848 at the age of 56.
Marryat's writing followed notable examples of the sea-story genre by Daniel Defoe and Sir Walter Scott. In turn, his writing influenced Herman Melville and Joseph Conrad andâin our timeâC.S. Forester, Alexander Kent, and Patrick O'Brian. What made Marryat different than some of the aforementioned writers was that he lived the adventures about which he wrote. Marryat had skylarked in the rigging with other midshipman, he had heard the roar of the cannon, and he had commanded a surging man-of-war into battle. Lord Cochrane, the first naval captain under whom Marryat served, was the model for Forester's Horatio Hornblower and O'Brian's Jack Aubrey. But Marryat was there first. His Midshipman Jack Easy was the first fictional character modeled after Lord Cochrane.
Patrick O'Brian's phenomenally popular Aubrey/Maturin series of historical novels has reawakened interest in this venerable genre of English literatureânautical fiction. As readers explore this realm, they will find that Marryat is still well worth reading. His value is not just in the perfectly authentic lore of the navy of wooden ships, present in every page of his books. Marryat's sharp wit, love of word play, sense of irony, and interest in the strange and the scandalous are evident throughout his works.
PRE-EMINENT among the kindly, good-humoured portraits that hang in Marryat's long gallery of fun stands “equality Jack,” Mr Midshipman Easy. The critical reader to-day, quoting the science of heredity as taught in continental fiction, may smile at the absurd production of so shrewd a youth from such thoroughly imbecile parents. But the comment is irrational and pedantic. To appreciate a farce we must grant to the author his “impossible” conditions; and may
then
demand that he should manipulate them effectively.
Given the mad father, the doting mother, etc., and his own clever, manly, and affectionate nature, Jack's conduct in the middies' berth is no libel on humanity. It possesses the further merit of being extremely amusing. He argues with so much point and persistence, and accepts the consequences of differing from his superior officers with so much genuine philosophy, that the reader scarcely knows whether to laugh at or with him. Certainly Jack is no fool, and as experience developes his character we find ourselves, without fear of inconsistency, slowly changing our point of view and confessing to a certain measure of cordial respect for the lad we were once nearly tempted to despise.