Naval Songs and Ballads

Naval Songs and Ballads

Author: Charles Harding Firth

Publisher:

Published: 1908

Total Pages: 526

ISBN-13:

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A collection of ballads illustrating the history of the British navy from the sixteenth to the middle of the ninteenth century.


Sailors' Knots

Sailors' Knots

Author: William Wymark Jacobs

Publisher: IndyPublish.com

Published: 1910

Total Pages: 372

ISBN-13:

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"Sailormen ain't wot you might call dandyfied as a rule," said the night-watchman, who had just had a passage of arms with a lighterman and been advised to let somebody else wash him and make a good job of it; "they've got too much sense. They leave dressing up and making eyesores of theirselves to men wot 'ave never smelt salt water; men wot drift up and down the river in lighters and get in everybody's way." He glanced fiercely at the retreating figure of the lighterman, and, turning a deaf ear to a request for a lock of his hair to patch a favorite doormat with, resumed with much vigor his task of sweeping up the litter. * Included in this volume are Jacobs's classic sea stories "Deserted," "Homeward Bound," "Self-Help," "Sentence Deferred," "'Matrimonial Openings, '" "Odd Man Out," "'The Toll-House, '" "Peter's Pence," "The Head of the Family," "Prize Money" "Double Dealing," and "Keeping Up Appearances."


The Fleets Behind the Fleet

The Fleets Behind the Fleet

Author: William Macneile Dixon

Publisher: Createspace Independent Publishing Platform

Published: 1917

Total Pages: 106

ISBN-13:

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What follows is not written to praise our merchant sailors and fishermen. They are indeed worthy of all praise. But we looked for nothing else than that they would in every circumstance of trial and danger show themselves to be what they are, peerless. At what date or on what occasion in their history have they failed? From a fierier ordeal a firmer courage and a harder resolution have emerged, as we believed it would. Of this the world is already very well aware. Their friends know it and their foes. What remains then is not to praise them but to instruct ourselves. Our vision has been limited. We knew that in the Navy lay our strength, but in our thoughts we defined it as the Royal Navy. Till these troubled years the Merchant Service had for many Englishmen only a shadowy existence. For the first time it has come acutely home to us that "the sea is all one, -the navy is all one."